• #101: AI search uncovered: how to get your SaaS brand cited by ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini
    Jun 30 2026

    In this episode, Ryan sits down with Daisy, Rocket SaaS's new Head of SEO and AI Search, to tackle one of the biggest shifts happening in marketing right now. Organic traffic from Google is declining. 95% of B2B buyers are now using LLMs as part of their buying journey. And most SaaS brands are not appearing in any of it. This episode covers what AI search actually is, how it differs from traditional SEO, and the specific things you can do to start showing up where your buyers are looking. Whether you have heard it called GEO, AEO or AI search, the principles are the same and Daisy breaks them down clearly.

    Takeaways:

    • 95% of B2B buyers are now using LLMs as part of their buying journey, and if you are not appearing in those results you are potentially not making the shortlist
    • AI search operates higher up the funnel than Google: people use LLMs to solve problems, not just find products
    • Clear, specific messaging matters more than ever. Buzzword-heavy websites will not get cited because LLMs do not use those terms
    • Over 80% of LLM citations come from third-party websites, not your own domain
    • YouTube is one of the most highly cited sources in AI search and is significantly underused by most SaaS brands
    • Podcast transcripts, press mentions and thought leadership published across multiple channels all feed into LLM citation
    • Original proprietary data and research is favoured by LLMs because it gives them information outside their training data
    • The brands that win at AI search are creating genuine problem-solving thought leadership consistently, not those chasing shortcuts

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    23 mins
  • #100: The Greatest Hits
    Jun 23 2026

    Episode 100. We're marking the milestone by doing something a little different. Ryan takes a step back to reflect on what building a weekly B2B SaaS marketing podcast from scratch actually looks like — the numbers, the lessons, the content strategy behind it, and why it's become one of the best business decisions Rocket SaaS has made.

    Ryan breaks down the top episodes by downloads and what the data tells you about what SaaS founders actually care about, the biggest marketing lessons distilled from 100 episodes of conversations, what's changed in the SaaS marketing landscape since episode one, and why a consistent content engine — built around a sub-brand — is one of the highest ROI moves any SaaS business can make.

    Whether you've been here since episode one or you're just discovering the pod, this is a good one.

    Takeaways:

    • A sub-branded podcast removes the sales intent barrier that kills engagement on company-branded content — give your content its own identity
    • The pod became the seed of everything: newsletters, blogs, LinkedIn posts, webinars, breakfast events, and a pipeline that keeps growing
    • Your top performing content will cluster around 2–3 themes — find the pattern and double down instead of chasing variety
    • 95% of your audience isn't ready to buy yet. If your marketing only speaks to the bottom of the funnel, you're invisible to most of your market
    • Help-first CTAs consistently outperform transactional ones — switching to a free strategy call tripled Rocket SaaS conversions
    • Consistency beats perfection. 100 weekly episodes, never missed. The compounding effect on brand awareness and pipeline is real
    • The content calendar is already in your sales calls — most SaaS founders just haven't gone looking for it yet

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    25 mins
  • #99: How Rocket SaaS flew from $5M to $7M ARR in 90 days
    Jun 16 2026

    In this episode, Ryan sits down with Jamie to share exactly how Rocket SaaS grew from $5M to $7M ARR in the space of three months. Three things drove it: a pricing restructure, a serious focus on reducing churn, and an 18-month process that culminated in landing a million dollar deal. This is not a theory episode. Ryan and Jamie walk through the specific decisions they made, why they made them, and what other SaaS companies and agencies can take from each one. Honest, specific and genuinely useful for any founder or marketer trying to scale a recurring revenue business.

    Takeaways:

    • If your close rate is above 30%, you are probably underpricing. At 48%, Rocket SaaS raised prices and revenue jumped without close rate dropping
    • Deleting your lowest pricing tier can force customers into more profitable packages and drive you upmarket almost overnight
    • A weekly traffic light dashboard tracking client happiness scores lets senior leaders act on churn risk before it becomes a cancellation
    • Proactive, structured client communication reduces churn more reliably than reactive responses to problems
    • Recording every customer call and feeding it into AI reveals patterns in what your clients actually want, which becomes marketing gold
    • Strategic hiring from brands you admire elevates your business in every sales conversation, even before the hire joins
    • Partnerships work best when you give away a lot upfront with no guarantee of return. Vague referral agreements almost never work
    • Clients who move companies often take their preferred suppliers with them. Relationships and results compound over time

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    31 mins
  • #98: Broke freelancer to multi-million $ business. Personal brand and why fundamentals beat AI hacks
    Jun 9 2026

    In this episode, Ryan steps to the other side of the mic as a guest on Chris Nelson's Human Marketing podcast. It is a wide-ranging conversation covering the full Rocket SaaS story, from starting out as a freelance web designer with no niche and nearly going out of business, to niching hard into B2B SaaS and hitting 100% growth in a single year. Ryan also gets into the demand generation philosophy that underpins everything Rocket SaaS does, why the podcast became the engine of the whole content system, how personal brand drove the majority of early growth, and why he thinks the obsession with AI tools and growth hacks is the biggest mistake most SaaS marketers are making right now.

    Whether you're new around here or a regular listener, this is a a really insightful episode that covers a lot of ground and works as a useful introduction to how Ryan thinks about marketing and growth.

    Takeaways:

    • Niching is not optional. Eight years of generalist agency work led nowhere. One decision to niche changed everything
    • A podcast sub-brand with its own name, logo and website removes the barrier to engagement that a company-branded podcast creates
    • One weekly podcast episode powers a newsletter, five LinkedIn posts, a monthly ebook, a monthly webinar, an annual summit and a quarterly event
    • Personal brand is the highest ROI marketing investment at the early stages of growth, when ad budget is limited
    • Consultative selling requires a marketing expert on the call, not a salesperson. Teaching a marketer to sell is far easier than teaching a salesperson to consult
    • Culture-first hiring means almost nobody leaves, which means no client disruption and no rehiring cost
    • 49 out of 50 SaaS companies Ryan meets have poor marketing fundamentals. No AI tool or growth hack will fix that

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    40 mins
  • #97: Content audit revealed: what we're changing at Rocket SaaS
    Jun 2 2026

    In this episode, Ryan sits down with Sam Gocher, Head of Content at Rocket SaaS, to pull back the curtain on the full content audit Sam carried out when he joined the business. From digging into self-reported attribution data to discovering that nearly 100 blogs had generated just 300 visitors, this episode covers what was working, what was not, and the strategy now in place to fix it. Whether you are a founder still doing content yourself, a marketer trying to work out where to focus, or thinking about hiring your first content specialist, this is a rare and honest look inside a real content engine being rebuilt from the ground up.

    Takeaways:

    • Self-reported attribution is the simplest way to find out which content is actually driving pipeline
    • Most businesses are producing blogs that nobody is reading, and the data will tell you that quickly
    • When something is working, the move is to double down on it rather than spread effort across more channels
    • Poor-quality video clips are one of the most common things holding back an otherwise strong podcast
    • Implementing hooks on short-form clips is one of the highest-impact changes you can make to your repurposing strategy
    • YouTube shorts and long-form content should be treated as two completely separate channels with different audiences
    • Expanding personal brands beyond the founder multiplies your content reach and builds trust at scale
    • Getting senior leaders posting consistently is about removing friction, not just asking them to do it

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    26 mins
  • #96: 10 ways to find out what your ICP actually wants
    May 26 2026

    In this episode, Ryan flies solo to walk through one of the most underused, undervalued and quietly powerful things in marketing: market research. He shares the survey that reshaped Rocket SaaS's entire upmarket strategy, and then runs through 10 different ways to find out what your ICP actually wants, from the expensive and rigorous to the free and scrappy. If you are about to launch a campaign, shift your ICP, change your pricing, or you are pouring budget into ads that just are not converting, this episode will tell you exactly what to do before you spend another pound.

    Takeaways:

    • Most founders and marketers skip market research because they think they already know what their ICP wants, and that assumption is the fastest way to walk down the wrong path
    • Wynter is the gold standard for surveying senior buyers, and the spend pays for itself the moment it stops you launching the wrong campaign
    • Pollfish is a cheaper alternative for broad market validation, but you get what you pay for and it is less reliable for upmarket ICPs
    • Customer interviews, closed-lost calls and churn exit interviews are sat right there in your CRM, and most teams never run them
    • Negative G2 and Capterra reviews of your competitors are where the real gold lives, both for product gaps and messaging angles
    • The LinkedIn ads library is free competitive intelligence, and it will tell you exactly what narrative your competitors are leading with
    • Cheap Meta ad tests are the fastest way to pressure-test hooks, headlines and webinar ideas before you commit real budget behind them
    • Recording every sales call and running the transcripts through an LLM will surface the objections, language and pain points your prospects actually care about
    • If your ads are not driving leads, the answer is rarely more ad spend, it is pausing for a month and reinvesting that budget into research
    • Market research is boring, but the alternative is burning months of time and hundreds of thousands of pounds walking down the wrong path

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    17 mins
  • #95: Scaling construction SaaS: the definitive marketing playbook
    May 19 2026

    In this episode, Ryan sits down with Jamie, Rocket SaaS's Head of Strategy, to share everything they have learned from working with many construction SaaS clients. From the ad platforms that actually work to the content formats that convert, this is the Rocket SaaS construction marketing playbook laid bare. If you run, found, or market a construction SaaS business and you are not getting the pipeline results you want, this episode will tell you exactly why and what to do about it.

    Takeaways:

    • Meta consistently outperforms LinkedIn for reaching construction audiences, and the reasons why are simpler than you think
    • Leading with the problem rather than your features or your AI capabilities is the single biggest lever in construction SaaS marketing
    • Construction buyers are sceptical by nature, and user-generated content from real construction professionals is the fastest way to build trust
    • Short selfie-style videos from happy customers on site will outperform polished brand content almost every time
    • Avoid SaaS language entirely and learn how construction people actually describe their own problems
    • Competitive comparison campaigns work particularly well in construction, and being bold about naming the big incumbent pays off
    • Planning application data is a powerful and underused intent signal that can tell you exactly when a company is about to need your platform
    • Construction SaaS translates well internationally, but nail one market first before expanding

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    27 mins
  • #94: The strategy that tripled Rocket SaaS' sales calls
    May 12 2026

    In this episode, Ryan breaks down one of the single biggest growth levers he has introduced at Rocket SaaS: consultative selling. Not a tweak to the sales process, but a fundamental shift in how the business attracts and converts prospects, and one that tripled inbound sales calls almost immediately after launching.

    If your main call to action is a demo or a request a quote form, this episode will challenge you to rethink it entirely.

    Takeaways:

    • What consultative selling actually is and why it consistently outperforms traditional selling
    • Why moving your call to action higher up the funnel dramatically increases the volume of sales calls you get
    • How to structure a free strategy, audit or consultation offer that attracts the right prospects
    • The qualification process that keeps your calendar full of genuinely interested buyers
    • How to lead the call so you are delivering real value and elegantly moving into a pitch
    • Why the expert, not the salesperson, needs to be on these calls
    • How consultative selling sits at the bottom of a wider demand generation content engine and why the two work so well together

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    14 mins