SaaS marketing can feel like solving a Rubik’s Cube — so many moving parts, constant updates, and ever-growing competition. But some companies have cracked the code so well that their playbooks inspire startups and enterprises alike.
If you run a SaaS business or market one, this in-depth look at 15 stand-out SaaS content and product marketing examples will give you ideas worth stealing (ethically, of course). You’ll see how brands like HubSpot, Notion, Canva, and Slack win hearts, rank in search results, and turn readers into loyal users.
Grab a cup of coffee, bookmark this guide, and pick a few tactics to test this quarter.
Table of Contents
ToggleWhy SaaS Marketing Needs Great Content and Smart Product Tactics
Before we unpack the examples, let’s set the stage:
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Content marketing helps SaaS brands build trust long before a sale happens. Blog posts, videos, free tools, and webinars help answer questions, show expertise, and rank for high-intent keywords.
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Product marketing focuses on showing clear value, making onboarding frictionless, and driving user adoption and retention. When done well, it turns free sign-ups into paying users who stick around for years.
The best companies don’t pick one over the other — they blend both. This guide will show you how.
1. HubSpot — The King of Evergreen Content and Free Tools
If you search for almost anything related to marketing, sales, or CRM, chances are you’ll see HubSpot on the first page. How?
They’ve built an army of blogs, templates, courses, and free tools that attract visitors at every stage of the funnel.
Standout moves:
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Huge blog library: They cover every imaginable keyword, from beginner to advanced topics.
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Free tools: Their Website Grader, Email Signature Generator, and CRM attract thousands of backlinks and shares.
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Learning Academy: Free courses train marketers and sales reps, nurturing future paying customers.
What you can do:
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Create free calculators or checklists that solve common problems in your niche.
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Write blog posts targeting questions your buyers ask early in their journey.
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Build content clusters (pillar posts + supporting articles) to dominate topics.
2. Ahrefs — Turning SEO into a Content-Driven Brand
Ahrefs sells SEO software — so naturally, they need to prove they’re masters at ranking content.
Instead of pumping out shallow posts, they write some of the deepest, most actionable SEO tutorials on the web. Their YouTube channel doubles down, explaining SEO strategies with real data.
Standout moves:
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Long-form blog tutorials: Posts like “How to Do Keyword Research” often rank #1.
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Transparent data: They share results, mistakes, and insights openly, building trust.
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Active YouTube channel: High-quality videos pull in a new audience who prefer visual learning.
What you can do:
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Invest in quality over quantity. One great post can outperform ten average ones.
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Reuse blog content as video scripts or infographics.
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Be transparent — share real experiments and lessons learned.
3. Grammarly — Freemium Growth Meets Bite-Sized Content
Grammarly’s grammar checker is free to start — but the way they keep people coming back is genius.
They send weekly emails with fun writing stats and personalized tips. Their blog and social channels share writing advice, relatable memes, and grammar jokes people love to share.
Standout moves:
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Freemium tool: Free version hooks millions of users.
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Weekly usage reports: These emails make users feel smart and motivated.
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Social content: Short, relatable posts go viral, spreading word-of-mouth.
What you can do:
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Offer a useful free version or trial that showcases your core value.
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Send engaging usage reports or tips to keep people interested.
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Use humor and relatable posts to grow your social reach.
4. Slack — Simple Onboarding, Helpful Content
Slack made workplace chat cool. One reason for its success is how easy it is to get started — and stay productive.
They pair that with an active blog that explains new features, team productivity hacks, and real user stories.
Standout moves:
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Smooth onboarding: New teams can set up Slack in minutes.
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Content hub: Blog covers teamwork trends and user stories.
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Clear messaging: Every page explains benefits without jargon.
What you can do:
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Simplify your sign-up flow — less friction means faster adoption.
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Share real stories from your best customers.
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Write blogs that help users get more value from your product.
5. Mailchimp — Brand Personality Meets Customer Education
Mailchimp’s email marketing platform has a friendly, fun vibe that stands out in a sea of boring B2B tools.
Their content includes email templates, customer success stories, and marketing guides that speak in a human voice — not corporate jargon.
Standout moves:
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Unique branding: Quirky tone and visuals make them memorable.
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Educational resources: Guides help new marketers run campaigns.
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Customer stories: Show how real businesses succeed.
What you can do:
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Develop a brand voice that feels approachable.
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Create step-by-step guides for your core use cases.
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Highlight customer wins on your blog and social media.
6. Canva — Empowering Users with Templates and Design School
Canva’s mission is to make design easy for everyone. They back this up with endless templates and tutorials.
Their Design School offers free courses and how-tos that bring in new users and teach them to design better.
Standout moves:
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Free templates: Ready-made designs drive traffic and sign-ups.
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Tutorials and courses: Teach users to use Canva confidently.
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Community showcases: Inspire users by featuring their creations.
What you can do:
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Offer ready-made templates people can customize.
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Build a resource hub or mini-courses for new users.
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Feature your users’ work to build community pride.
7. Trello — Easy Onboarding, Endless Use Cases
Trello’s Kanban boards are simple, but their content shows endless ways to use them — for teams, families, students, and more.
They match this with an onboarding flow so clear that most people set up boards in minutes.
Standout moves:
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Inspiration hub: Blog covers workflows for marketing, sales, and personal tasks.
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Templates: Ready-made boards get people started fast.
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Clear onboarding: Tutorials and tooltips guide new users.
What you can do:
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Write blog posts highlighting creative ways to use your product.
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Provide templates or starter kits.
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Make sure your onboarding answers new users’ first questions.
8. Intercom — Conversational Content and Product Education
Intercom helps businesses chat with customers. Their marketing explains this “conversational approach” clearly.
Their blog, webinars, and guides show how live chat, bots, and emails work together to improve customer support and sales.
Standout moves:
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Practical guides: How-to articles for different industries.
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Webinars: Live sessions that demo new features.
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Case studies: Real examples of how businesses use Intercom.
What you can do:
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Publish detailed guides for each customer segment.
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Host webinars to show your product in action.
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Share short video clips from live sessions on social media.
9. Notion — Community Templates and User Love
Notion’s success is partly thanks to its community. Fans share custom templates for project tracking, habit building, and more.
Notion supports this with an active blog, how-to videos, and regular feature updates that keep users excited.
Standout moves:
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User-generated templates: Community shares endless new uses.
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Tutorials: Videos help people master advanced features.
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Engaged user base: Fans create content for them.
What you can do:
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Encourage your users to share how they use your tool.
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Highlight the best community-made resources.
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Keep your blog and product update pages fresh.