AI SEO automation team of 4 agents that handles keyword research, long-form drafting, and LinkedIn plus Twitter distribution for SaaS founders chasing compound organic growth.
AI SEO automation team is what you reach for when content marketing has stalled and hiring a team feels too heavy for where you are. Most SaaS founders try the same playbook: hire a freelance writer at $0.20/word, buy Ahrefs at $99/month, manually pick keywords, brief the writer, edit the draft, publish, share to LinkedIn once, forget about Twitter, and watch traffic plateau at 3K/month. The work is real but the loop never closes. An AI SEO automation team closes it. Four agents, each owning one job, sharing context through the OpenClaw runtime, running every week on your domain.
Radar handles the SEO brain - GSC pulls, keyword clustering, decay detection, weekly priorities. Echo drafts the long-form articles against tight briefs that include unique angles and first-party data, so Google's helpful content system has something to grade. Pulse rewrites each post into a LinkedIn carousel with a contrarian hook. Thread breaks the same article into a 7-10 tweet thread plus 3 atomic tweets for X's reply-chain algorithm. The four agents pass state automatically: Radar's brief feeds Echo, Echo's draft feeds Pulse and Thread, Radar's ranking data feeds next week's calendar. Solo founders who deploy this AI SEO automation team typically ship 4-5 posts per week, see top-10 rankings on most target keywords by week 8, and free up 15-20 hours per week previously lost to coordination overhead. Setup is two Terminal commands; the bundle is one-time pricing, not a subscription.
Runs keyword research, tracks rankings, and identifies content gaps.
Writes long-form SEO articles optimized for target keywords.
Turns blog posts into LinkedIn thought leadership posts.
Creates tweet threads and viral posts from published content.
Radar pulls Google Search Console data for the last 28 days, plus Ahrefs or Semrush exports if available, and clusters opportunities by intent: rising queries, position 5-15 (lift potential), and untapped commercial keywords.
Radar shortlists 10 high-volume, low-competition keywords for the week and writes a brief for each: target keyword, search intent, primary entities, internal links, and unique angle to clear the AI-content bar.
Echo drafts each article (1,500-2,500 words) following the brief, citing real sources, adding original commentary, screenshots, or first-party data so it does not read like generic AI slop.
Echo writes the meta title (under 60 chars), meta description with target keyword, and structured FAQ schema for the rich result.
Pulse repurposes each published article into a LinkedIn post or 8-slide carousel with a contrarian hook, scheduled across the week.
Thread breaks the same article into a 7-10 tweet thread plus 3 atomic standalone tweets, optimized for X's reply-chain algorithm.
Radar runs a daily ranking check on the past 90 days of posts, flags decay (anything that drops more than 3 positions or falls past page 1), and books refresh tasks back into next week.
A weekly report goes to Slack or email: clicks, impressions, position changes per cluster, social impressions, and the 3 highest-leverage actions for next week.
Weekly SEO report from Radar: - 5 articles published, total 11,400 words - 'how to build ai agent': pos 14 -> 3 (week 4, +287 clicks WoW) - 'ai seo automation': new entry pos 18 (impressions building) - LinkedIn: 12 posts scheduled (avg 2.1K impressions, top: 8.4K) - Twitter: 8 threads (avg 4.5K, top thread 14.2K, +120 followers) - Decay watch: 3 articles dropped past pos 12, refresh booked Wed
Jasper and Copy.ai are single-prompt content generators - you give them a topic, they spit out a draft. They do not pick keywords, track rankings, repurpose for LinkedIn and Twitter, or detect content decay. CrewClaw's AI SEO automation team is four specialist agents that share state and run a full weekly loop. Think of Jasper as a writer-for-hire and CrewClaw as a small SEO agency that happens to be made of agents.
Google rewards helpful content regardless of how it was written, and penalizes thin scaled content. The brief discipline matters: Radar requires a unique angle, original data, or expert commentary before Echo writes. If your briefs are generic, the output is generic. If your briefs include screenshots from your product, internal benchmark numbers, or a contrarian take, the output ranks. Multiple CrewClaw users grew from 2K to 30K monthly clicks during the March 2024 and August 2024 helpful content updates running this exact pipeline.
Strongly recommended for keyword volume and difficulty data, but not required. Radar can run on Google Search Console alone for tracking your existing rankings and finding 'almost ranking' opportunities (positions 5-15). For brand new sites with no GSC history, point Radar at a free keyword tool API or paste a list of seed keywords and it will cluster them and write briefs.
Echo defaults to Claude Sonnet 4.5 because long-form drafting needs reasoning depth - junior models produce flat, generic prose. Radar, Pulse, and Thread default to Haiku because they are doing classification, repurposing, and short-form work where speed and cost matter more than depth. You can swap any agent to GPT-5, Gemini 2.5 Pro, or local models. Most users keep Sonnet on Echo and Haiku on the others - that lands monthly API spend around $40-80 at the 5 posts/week pace.
Realistic timeline on a domain with some existing authority: weeks 1-4 you ship 16-20 posts and Google starts indexing. Weeks 4-8 lower-difficulty keywords (KD under 20) crack page 1. Weeks 8-12 traffic doubles or triples on the tracked set as articles age and pick up backlinks. Weeks 12-24 compound interest kicks in: traffic 4-5x baseline. Brand new domains add 6-8 weeks before the first wave of rankings.
Yes. Echo writes drafts in markdown by default, which all those CMSes accept. For WordPress, push via the REST API. For Ghost, the Admin API. For Next.js or Astro static sites, drop the markdown into your content directory and let your existing build pipeline handle deploy. The publishing step is the most customizable part of the pipeline - we ship sample integrations for the top 4 stacks.
Both. Pulse generates the carousel copy slide-by-slide (8-10 slides typical) plus design notes for the visual layout. You can pipe those notes to Canva, Figma's automation, or a tool like Postiz to render the actual images. Most users hand-design the first 3 carousels to lock the visual style, then automate the rest.
Buy the Starter Bundle ($19) which is Radar plus Echo plus a third agent of your choice. The full AI SEO automation team with Pulse and Thread is the Team Bundle ($29) - that is what you want if compound growth includes building a LinkedIn or X audience alongside organic search. Both are one-time payments, no subscription.
Get 4 AI agents working together โ pre-configured, two Terminal commands to deploy.
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