Casey Sullivan

Hands-Off SEO Content for SMB & Agencies - Auto-publish SEO blog content on autopilot

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DropContent is hands-off SEO blogging software built for small businesses and marketing agencies. It automatically generates and publishes SEO-optimized blog content on a daily schedule — so blogs stay active without writers, prompts, or constant oversight. Most small businesses understand that blogging helps with SEO, rankings, and long-term traffic. The problem isn’t belief — it’s execution. DropContent solves this by putting blog content completely on autopilot.

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Casey Sullivan
Hey Product Hunt 👋 I’m the maker behind DropContent — thanks for checking us out! I built DropContent after seeing and experiencing the same problem over and over again: Small businesses and marketing agencies know blogging matters for SEO, but it’s inconsistent, time-consuming, and usually the first thing that gets deprioritized. Most tools help you write content. Many tools help you plan content DropContent focuses on helping you actually keep your blog updated by writing, planning and posting. DropContent automatically generates and publishes SEO-optimized blog posts on a schedule — no prompts, no manual uploads, and no hiring writers. The goal is simple: put blogging on autopilot so SEO doesn’t fall behind. Key Features: - Competitor analysis to spot keywords (up to 100 keywords) - 1,500-2,000 word posts automatically generated to post daily, 30 posts per month - Each post contains 3-4 SEO optimized images (Name, tags, meta description) - 6 Internal links - 3 External Links to authority sites - 100 Credits towards backlinks from our network of blogs I’d especially love feedback from: - Small business owners - SEO consultants - Marketing & local agencies - Anyone managing multiple client blogs Happy to answer questions, share how we built it, or talk SEO strategy. Thanks for the support — really appreciate this community 🙏
Easy Tools Dev

30 posts/month on autopilot solves the consistency problem agencies face. I'm curious about the backlink credits—do you control the network of blogs they link from, and how do you ensure Google doesn't flag them as low-quality PBNs?