Backlink portfolio worth 384 DA built in 12 weeks.
A Nordic developer-tools startup used SEOOrbit to ship technical content and earn editorial links across the JS ecosystem.
Where they started
Fjordstack came to us with the same problem most operators in devtools describe: content was getting produced sporadically, backlinks were happening only when someone remembered to ask, and the AI search engines weren't surfacing them at all. Inside the team, SEO ownership was diffused across three or four people who already had full-time jobs.
What we changed
We started with a deep crawl of every public page and a competitor map across the top eight overlapping domains. From that we built a 90-day plan focused on the keyword cluster with the highest commercial intent and the lowest current coverage. Daily article publishing turned on in week one, with the first batch routed to a human reviewer until the team was comfortable letting publishes flow straight to the CMS.
In parallel, an outreach engine started pitching original-research excerpts to publications in the space. The first editorial mention landed inside three weeks.
What the numbers looked like
By the end of the first quarter, organic visits had multiplied, the keyword portfolio had widened by orders of magnitude, and a meaningful number of monthly AI citations were now naming them — not their competitors — in answers to common buyer questions.
Headcount didn't change. One editor reviews the queue for thirty minutes a day; everything else runs on its own.
What they say
"We replaced a stitched-together stack with a single piece of software and stopped worrying about whether anything was actually getting shipped. Now content shows up every day and the numbers move every week."