Automate content pipeline end-to-end with 4 AI agents that handle keyword research, drafting, scheduling, and social distribution for solo founders and lean teams.
If you want to automate content pipeline work without firing your taste, this is the team built for that. Most solo founders and 2-3 person SaaS marketing teams hit the same wall: keyword research lives in one tab, briefs in another, drafts in Google Docs, social posts in Buffer, and the calendar quietly drifts a week behind every month. You stop publishing. Rankings flatten. The team that was supposed to compound starts costing money. To automate content pipeline steps reliably you need real handoffs between specialist agents, not one giant prompt that tries to do everything in one shot.
CrewClaw deploys four agents that each own one job. Radar runs the SEO loop and feeds Orion a weekly calendar. Orion writes briefs, assigns work, and runs review. Echo drafts the long-form post against the brief. Buzz repurposes the published piece into Twitter threads, LinkedIn carousels, and a newsletter blurb. They share context through the OpenClaw runtime so each agent picks up where the last one left off, no copy-paste between tools. You wire it up with two Terminal commands, point it at your domain, and the team ships from Monday brief to Friday recap on its own. The result: indie hackers who automate content pipeline this way report 4-5 posts a week, traffic compounding month over month, and an editorial cost per post under $5 in API tokens.
Finds high-value keywords and audits existing content for gaps.
Writes SEO-optimized blog posts, landing pages, and articles.
Repurposes each blog into tweets, LinkedIn posts, and threads.
Coordinates the pipeline, tracks deadlines, and sends daily standups.
Radar pulls last week's GSC and Ahrefs data, then scores 30+ candidate keywords by traffic, difficulty, and buyer intent before locking the weekly calendar.
Orion converts each pick into a brief with target keyword, search intent, outline, internal links, and word count, then assigns it on a Monday standup.
Echo drafts a full long-form post (1,500-2,500 words) following the brief, citing real sources, adding a TL;DR, FAQ block, and on-page schema.
Orion runs a brief-vs-draft diff: flags missing sections, off-topic tangents, weak intros, and sends Echo a single revision pass with concrete edits.
You publish (or push to git for static sites). Echo writes the meta title, meta description, OG image alt text, and triggers a sitemap ping.
Buzz repurposes the post into a Twitter thread, a LinkedIn carousel, a short newsletter blurb, and 3 atomic tweets, scheduled across the week.
Radar tracks rankings daily for the past 90 days of posts, surfaces decay, and books refresh tasks back into next week's calendar so old content keeps earning.
Orion sends a Friday recap: posts shipped, social impressions, ranking deltas, and the 3 highest-leverage tasks for next week.
Monday 9 AM standup from Orion: - 3 blog posts scheduled this week (briefs locked) - Echo: 'AI Agent Security in 2026' 2,180-word draft ready for review (target: 'ai agent security', vol 1.4K, KD 18) - Radar: 'openclaw setup guide' moved #7 -> #2 on Google (week 4, +312 clicks WoW) - Buzz: Last week's tweets pulled 12.4K impressions, top thread 4.1K - Decay watch: 2 posts dropping past pos 12, refresh booked Wed
Zapier and n8n move data between tools, but they cannot write a 2,000-word draft, judge whether the intro matches the brief, or rewrite a hook that does not land. This pipeline is four reasoning agents (Radar, Orion, Echo, Buzz) running on Claude or GPT models, sharing context, and making editorial decisions. You can absolutely chain them with Zapier on the publishing side - push to WordPress, Ghost, or git - but the actual content work happens inside CrewClaw, not in a no-code workflow.
Yes, OpenClaw is the runtime that hosts the agents. It is open source and runs locally on your machine or any VPS. Once you buy the bundle from CrewClaw you get four pre-configured SOUL.md agent files plus an AGENTS.md that wires them together. You install OpenClaw (one Homebrew or npm command), drop the bundle into the project folder, and run npx openclaw start. There is no separate cloud subscription beyond your own API key with Anthropic or OpenAI.
It is model-agnostic. The default config targets Claude Sonnet 4.5 for Echo (long-form drafting) and Haiku for Radar and Buzz (faster, cheaper jobs like keyword scoring and tweet repurposing). You can swap to GPT-5, Gemini 2.5 Pro, or local models via Ollama by editing the model field in each agent's config. Most users keep Sonnet for the writer and Haiku for everything else - that lands editorial cost around $3-5 per published post in API spend.
Google's stated policy since 2023 is that they reward helpful content regardless of how it was produced, and penalize low-effort scaled content. The pipeline is built around that line: Radar picks topics with real search demand, Orion enforces briefs that include unique angles or original data, and you stay in the loop for the final review pass. Posts that just regurgitate other articles will get caught by core updates - that is a brief problem, not an AI problem. Add your own benchmarks, screenshots, or first-party data and the pipeline produces content that ranks.
Realistic timeline: weeks 1-4 you ship 16-20 posts and Google starts indexing them. Weeks 4-8 the lower-difficulty keywords (KD under 20) crack page 1. Weeks 8-16 compound interest kicks in and traffic doubles or triples on the tracked keyword set. This matches what we see across CrewClaw users running the pipeline on a domain with at least some existing authority. Brand new domains add 4-6 weeks to that timeline.
Yes, and we recommend it for the first month. Orion's review pass produces a brief-vs-draft diff that any editor can scan in under 5 minutes. You can configure Echo to post drafts to a Slack channel or Notion database for human approval before publish, instead of pushing straight to your CMS. Most teams keep the human gate on weeks 1-4, then loosen it once they trust the brief discipline.
Four agents (Radar, Echo, Buzz, Orion) as SOUL.md files, an AGENTS.md coordination file that defines who hands off to whom, sample briefs and content calendars, plus the model config defaults. One-time payment, yours forever. You can fork them, edit them, ship them on a client project. The only ongoing cost is the LLM API usage on your own key - typically $30-80 per month at the 4-5 posts per week pace.
Partially. Radar handles keyword research and on-page optimization checks (target keyword density, H2 coverage, internal links). It does not score against the top 10 SERP results the way Surfer does. If you already pay for Surfer or Clearscope, you can keep using them - drop the Surfer brief into Orion's input and Echo will follow it. Most solo founders cancel Surfer after a month because the agent-driven brief plus your own SERP read does the same job for free.
Get 4 AI agents working together — pre-configured, two Terminal commands to deploy.
7-day money-back guarantee · One-time payment, yours forever
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 competitor intelligence team that tracks pricing, feature launches, keyword rankings, and review sentiment so solo founders ship informed product calls each week.
AI social media management agents that plan, write, and schedule across X/Twitter, LinkedIn, and newsletters — built for solo creators and small B2B teams.