Hari Ganesh

Citera - AI agents that interview your team and ship daily content

by
Buyers ask ChatGPT and Perplexity which tool to pick before they ever visit your website. Most B2B SaaS teams aren't showing up. Agencies charge $10K/mo and write generic content. AI tools do the same for less. Neither works because neither knows your team or product. Citera interviews your experts first. Then AI agents research, write, verify, and sandbox-test every article against the live winners before publishing. Expert-driven content that ranks on Google and gets cited by AI.

Add a comment

Replies

Best
Hari Ganesh
Maker
📌

Hey Product Hunt! Hari here, founder of Citera.

Agencies charge $10K/mo and write generic content. AI tools

do the same for less. Neither ranks anywhere that matters

because neither knows your team, your product, or how you

actually think.

The fix isn't more AI. It's better inputs.

Citera starts by interviewing your founders and team leads

in 15 minutes. Their actual words and expertise become the

seed. Then AI agents research what's already winning on

Google and getting cited in ChatGPT and Perplexity, draft

from your team's words, verify every fact against its source,

and sandbox-test each draft against the live winners before

publishing. Every two weeks everything gets refreshed.

Expert-driven content that ranks on Google and gets cited

by AI. Not generic. Not outsourced. Actually differentiated.

Buyers are already asking ChatGPT and Perplexity which tool

to pick before they visit a website. The companies showing up

are winning deals before the conversation starts. Most B2B

SaaS teams aren't showing up at all.

3 founding partner spots at $397/mo locked forever. Standard

pricing goes to $997/mo in July.

Two questions for the PH community:

1. Agencies or AI tools: which has disappointed you more

for content?

2. Would you trust AI content if it started with a real

interview of your team?

Happy to answer anything.

Thami Benjelloun

Most AI content feels like it never talked to the people who actually built the thing. How do you keep the finished articles sounding like the team’s voice instead of getting that generic SaaS style reply?