Marketing for Developers 2026

Justin Jackson

A podcast for people building software products in the age of AI. Hosted by Justin Jackson.

Episodes

  1. 1D AGO

    Case Study: Freek and His Team Launch a New App

    Justin does a live teardown of the landing page for There There, a new AI-powered help desk from Spatie in Belgium. Practical takeaways for launching a product in the AI age. 00:00 Intro and first look at There There's landing page00:52 Headline and design — clean, modern, tight01:11 Show the humans behind the product (team avatars, hover states)01:24 Why human faces matter in the age of AI vs. autonomous companies like Polsia02:37 Make your product screenshots interactive with hoverable feature highlights03:17 Structured text content on your page feeds LLMs and AI search03:41 Real testimonials with photos build trust (Lars Lofgren conversation callback)04:28 Get reviews on Trustpilot, G2, Capterra, Product Hunt, and Reddit04:59 Team photo and "a real person replies" footer05:52 Pre-launch waiting lists are the most potent marketing moment06:22 The About page — professional team photos signal trustworthiness07:17 Publish your docs early to seed search engines and LLMs08:14 Live test: Googling "what is There There app?" and "is it trustworthy?"09:42 Trust and reputation matter more than ever with so many spammy AI sites10:08 Wrap-up — two thumbs up, just fix a few typosLinks There There — AI-powered helpdesk by SpatieSpatie — Belgian dev agency / open source creatorsPolsia — Autonomous AI company platformFreek Van der HertenFlare, Mailcoach, Ray — Other Spatie productsTrustpilot, G2, Capterra, Product Hunt

    11 min
  2. MAR 23

    Marketing case study: agency launches SaaS product

    Justin sits down with Daniel Coulbourne and John Drexler (the founders of Thunk agency) to workshop the launch of their first SaaS product, Tidy. Built from years of running their own agency, Tidy consolidates time tracking, invoicing, scheduling, and client agreements into one opinionated tool built specifically for hourly-billing agencies. This episode is a live marketing strategy session: positioning, messaging, content, LLM discoverability, influencer partnerships, launch tactics, and landing page feedback.Key Takeaways Sell the philosophy, not just the software. Tidy's real product is an opinionated system for running an agency; the software is how you implement it. Lead with conviction. They should own the term "Build a Zero-Risk Agency."LLM discoverability is the new SEO. Building a wide, authentic web footprint across Reddit, LinkedIn, YouTube, review sites, and the founder's personal accounts is the strategy for a new product launch.The anticipation phase is your most powerful marketing window. Don't wait until launch day to tell people what you're building. A waiting list and a drip of updates are worth more than the launch itself.Human faces convert. Nothing Justin has tested beats having real people (founders, team members, customers) visible on your homepage.Feature copy should come from lived experience. Rewrite every feature description as a story about a problem you've actually faced. "We built this because we got burned" is more persuasive than "track your hours."Links ThunkTidyTransistor.fmBasecamp homepageSparkToro (referenced for "zero click marketing" concept)

    52 min
  3. Marketing in the age of AI – Lars Lofgren

    FEB 6

    Marketing in the age of AI – Lars Lofgren

    Justin Jackson and Lars Lofgren dive deep into how AI and LLMs are fundamentally changing marketing, SEO, and content strategy. They discuss why founder-led marketing has shifted from being a "cheat code" to a requirement, the death of traditional attribution, and practical strategies for succeeding in this new landscape. Lars Lofgren has worked with Automattic, Dropbox, Crazy Egg, and Kissmetrics. Previously built a $7M annual revenue affiliate business. Justin Jackson is the co-founder of Transistor.fm, and the creator of Marketing for Developers Timestamps:0:00 - Introduction - Background on Lars's career and expertise in marketing and SEO0:50 - Why founder-led marketing is essential in this new era6:22 - What's a big ranking factor for LLMs and Google these days?8:05 - Lars's approach to LinkedIn: deeply personal, vulnerable, and real storytelling11:16 - The old SEO playbook doesn't work anymore14:54 - What matters now? Building presence across the entire web (Reddit, reviews, social) 19:09 - People are still looking for the same thing: "What's the best product for me?"20:53 - Founder-led marketing is what wins25:34 - Become the influencer or pay influencers26:30 - The state of paid advertising38:21 - [ Become a member at https://marketingfordevelopers.com to hear the rest of the episode ]39:18 - When everyone can build software... distribution becomes even harder41:17 - Maybe in the future, there will be no websites? Just API endpoints for LLMs to hit?42:09 - Right now, people want to connect with humans; they want to connect emotionally Key Takeaways: 1. Founder-led marketing is now mandatoryBuilding a personal brand and audience is no longer optional for B2B success 2. Entity footprints matter more than content qualityPresence across Reddit, reviews, social platforms, and other sites matters more than having the best blog content 3. Attribution is deadEmbrace faith-based marketing and focus on genuine engagement over trackable metrics 4. LLMs favor established categoriesPosition yourself in segments that LLMs already understand, not creative new categories 5. Turn your marketing team into influencersHave employees build personal brands on their own accounts, not just company channels The arbitrage opportunityMarketers willing to invest without perfect ROI tracking will have a massive advantage Connect with Lars LinkedInNewsletter

    47 min

About

A podcast for people building software products in the age of AI. Hosted by Justin Jackson.

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