Launching on Product Hunt this Thursday. Equal parts excited and terrified.

Hi everyone! I am a marketer for Scribble - we help brands improve their AI visibility.

We've done some good work already over the last few months and are launching on PH this Thursday

It's my first time doing a launch like this on PH and I'm freakingg. I've read up about PH launches extensively but I still feel like we do not have everything covered.

I understand PH launches are not to be treated as the full and final launch and that the real work starts after that. But I really hope we get an initial hype on launch day.

I'm proud of the product we've built and hope PH gives us the connections which we will nurture whole heartedly.

For anyone who's had a successful PH launch, any kind of tips whatsoever is highly appreciated.

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u/Alternative-Flan-460 — 6 days ago

First big launch on Product Hunt this Thursday. Any advice?

I launched a small side project on Product Hunt once before which didn't get much traction.

Looking back, we also made quite a few rookie mistakes, but it was a side project, so it wasn't a huge deal.

This time however, it's our main product.

We're launching Scribble, an AI visibility platform we've spent the last couple of months building, and we'd really like to do this one right.

For those of you who've had successful PH launches:

  • What made the biggest difference?
  • I have 3 days to launch. What should I be doing/who should I be talking to?

Would genuinely appreciate any tips. Hoping to learn from people who've been through it before.

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u/Alternative-Flan-460 — 7 days ago

Some findings from working on branded AI visibility campaigns

I work at an AI visibility platform, and over the last few months we've been running campaigns to improve how brands show up in ChatGPT, Perplexity, Grok, etc.

We've been running a ton of experiments to see what works (since there isn't really a playbook for this yet) and happy to report that we've had some good success with this.

Not getting into too much detail about the campaigns but I recently crunched some numbers to find a pattern and here is what I noticed.

(This was for a DeFi client but could be true for other industries also)

Few things to note:

- For every brand we identify their top 4-5 competitors and then track about 25-30 most asked queries in their category.

- We track the top questions being asked in this category, what percentage of that our client is showing up for, and the sources AI is getting thei information from.

We track this across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, CoPilot, and Grok but sharing findings across GPT, Perplexity and Grok only here.

A few observations that stood out:

1. The three models don't trust the same internet.

For this study specifically, we tracked 1,504 citations across 25 queries for our client's category. Grok cited 163 unique domains, ChatGPT 118, and Perplexity just 56. Perplexity seems far more selective with where it pulls information from.

2. Editorial mentions beat official websites.

Across all three models, third-party blogs and editorial content consistently made up the largest share of citations. Official product websites represented only about 6–12% depending on the model.

3. Each model has obvious preferences.

ChatGPT leaned much more heavily on news publications.

Perplexity cited Reddit and community discussions far more than the other two.

Grok was the only one that regularly pulled from YouTube, LinkedIn, Medium, and Substack.

On a side note, I absolutely do not believe that SEO is dead. If your brand has good SEO, it is closer to having good GEO.

You still need to have a solid website and a LOT Of content you push out by yourself too.

Then of course, your broader footprint across editorials, communities, data platforms, and creator content will add up.

Curious if anyone else working on GEO has been seeing similar patterns, or if you've found completely different behaviour across models.

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u/Alternative-Flan-460 — 7 days ago

[HIRING] Looking for Football/Sports Writers With Established Blogs ($150+/article + AI citation bonuses)

The last time I posted here looking for tech writers, we ended up working with two fantastic writers from this community. So I'm back with another hiring post.

This time, we're looking for writers in sports and football specifically. Experience writing about sports betting, prediction markets, or football prediction platforms is a big plus, as that's the space our client operates in.

This isn't ghostwriting.

You'll publish on your own website, Medium, Substack, Paragraph, relevant subreddits or other established publications.

If you're active in football/sports prediction market subreddits, that's actually a huge plus.

Compensation

  • $150 per 1,000-word article
  • Additional payouts when (and every time) your content is cited by chatgpt/gemini/grok/copilot or Gemini

We're looking for writers who:

  • Understand football and is actively writing about WC26
  • Can research thoroughly and write original, opinionated pieces
  • (Bonus) Have covered prediction markets, sports betting, or similar topics before

Hmu if interested

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u/Alternative-Flan-460 — 10 days ago

[HIRING] Looking for Tech/Product Blog Writers With Established Blogs ($150/article)

I work for an AI visibility platform and we have worked with over 100 brands in the last two years. We analyse a brand's GEO score and identify their content gaps. We then curate creator/writer campaigns to bridge this gap and imprve their AI search visibility.

We’re looking to work with writers who already run established blogs (own website/medium/substack/paragraph) in tech, product reviews, AI, SaaS, Web3, consumer apps, developer tools, or adjacent niches.

This is not ghostwriting.

You’ll be publishing articles on your own platform about brands/products we work with.

Details:
• $150 per article (1000 words)
• Roughly 2-3 articles a month
• Long-term opportunity since we work with multiple brands

Hmu if interested

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u/Alternative-Flan-460 — 1 month ago