We’re releasing Gemma 4 quantization-aware training checkpoints, reducing memory requirements and improving on-device performance.
We’re releasing Gemma 4 quantization-aware training checkpoints, reducing memory requirements and improving on-device performance.
Microsoft Threat Intelligence discovered that Anthropic’s Claude Code GitHub Action could expose CI/CD workflow secrets when AI agents process untrusted GitHub content, including issue bodies, pull request descriptions, and comments. We found that while Claude Code Action supported environment scrubbing for subprocess execution paths such as Bash, the Read tool was not subject to the same sandboxing model. It was eventually authorized to access /proc/self/environ, reading the workflow’s ANTHROPIC_API_KEY and potentially other credentials available to the runner.
Following our responsible disclosure, Anthropic mitigated this issue in Claude Code version 2.1.128 by blocking access to sensitive /proc files. Defenders should treat AI workflows that process untrusted GitHub content as high-risk when they also have access to secrets, file-read tools, or external communication channels.
We began this research after observing prompt injection attempts in public repositories using AI-assisted GitHub workflows across multiple vendors, where attacker-controlled issue or PR content is processed by the AI agent and could influence its tool use. For example:
The injection payload was placed inside an HTML comment (<!– –>), making it invisible when the issue is rendered in the browser but still visible to the AI model which reads the raw markdown:

The target repository – fork of a major open-source documentation project – used a highly permissive GitHub Actions workflow to automate issue resolution. We believe the actor is using a fork to test which payloads work before disclosing or exploiting them.
Whenever a user opened a new issue, an AI bot interpreted the request and was granted robust operational tools to resolve it:
This tool chain, operating without external oversight, provided an unauthorized user with the exact high-level primitives needed to plant malware without directly possessing write access.
Disguising the attack as a legitimate feature request for “diagnostic telemetry”, the payload provided the AI with a precise sequence of commands rather than a standard conversational prompt. It instructed the bot to search for a specific markdown heading, read the target file’s contents, append an exact block of malicious HTML, and immediately invoke the pull request tool to commit the newly poisoned file, effectively steering the AI step-by-step through a supply-chain compromise.
The attack vector successfully coerced the bot into locating the target documentation file and appending an invisible XSS image tag:
Had this PR been merged by a maintainer or by automated CI/CD automation, rendering the documentation site would execute JavaScript on visitors’ machines to silently exfiltrate their session tokens to the attacker’s endpoint.
This same trust boundary is what makes the Read tool vulnerability exploitable: once an attacker can influence the agent, they might be able to steer it toward sensitive files available inside the CI runner environment.
To understand the vulnerability described in this blog, it helps to first understand the environment in which they operate. GitHub Actions workflows were designed for deterministic automation—running tests, deploying builds, and enforcing policy. But as AI-powered tools like Claude Code Action have entered that environment, they’ve brought up a fundamentally different execution model: one where natural language can be treated as instruction. The sections below walk through how that model works, where the security boundaries are drawn, and critically, why those boundaries fail.
GitHub Actions is GitHub’s native automation and CI/CD platform. A workflow is a YAML configuration file that defines jobs to run when repository events occur, such as pull_request, issue_comment, scheduled runs, or manual dispatch.
When a workflow is triggered, GitHub executes its jobs on a runner: an ephemeral virtual machine, or in some cases a self-hosted environment. That runner is not just executing code in isolation. Depending on the workflow configuration, it may receive repository contents, issue and pull request metadata, environment variables, the GITHUB_TOKEN, cloud credentials, package publishing tokens, and third-party API keys.
GitHub workflows were built for deterministic automation: run tests, build artifacts, deploy code, label issues, or enforce repository policy. AI-powered workflows change that model. Instead of only executing predefined logic, they ingest repository context, interpret natural-language input, and decide which actions to take next.
A common example is AI-based pull request review. Tools such as Anthropic’s Claude Code GitHub Action can trigger on pull requests, read the diff, title, description, and comments, then post review feedback or security findings. In more advanced configurations, the same agent can modify files, create commits, or open follow-up pull requests from inside the CI runner.
Despite differences between vendors and implementations, the security pattern is consistent:
These integrations are not necessarily careless. Most include system prompts, filters, and policy logic intended to separate user content from control instructions. But when those boundaries fail, the workflow is no longer just automation. It becomes an AI agent embedded inside the repository, and its prompt construction, tool permissions, and runtime isolation become part of the security perimeter.
Claude Code Action is a GitHub action that runs Claude inside your CI runner. Under the hood, it’s a wrapper around the Claude Agent SDK (software development kit). The Claude Code Action handles GitHub-specific concerns (parsing the event, fetching issue/PR context, building the prompt, wiring up MCP (Model Context Protocol) servers, managing tracking comments) and then calls the SDK’s query function to drive Claude. Tool permissions, model selection, and most other runtime behavior are SDK options that the action is responsible for setting.

When Anthropic designed Claude Code Actions, they knew the risks. For the Bash tool, they support Bubblewrap (namespace-based Linux sandbox) with a scrubbed environment (enforced by CLAUDE_CODE_SUBPROCESS_ENV_SCRUB , auto enabled for actions that can be triggered by non-write users).
This is a solid defense. However, a gap exists: the Read tool is not subject to the same isolation.
Rather than routing Read operations through the same secure isolation boundary as Bash, these operations represent direct, in-process calls. They inherently bypass the Bubblewrap sandbox, operating with full access to the process’s environment variables.
To confirm the exploitability of this gap, we constructed a prompt injection payload. We tested this in a lab environment, specifically a non-write user enabled, which forces the CLAUDE_CODE_SUBPROCESS_ENV_SCRUB mitigation active.
We then injected this malicious prompt, the kind that naturally flows through issue bodies, PR comments, or other input:

This prompt defeats two distinct layers of defense:

In figure 4, the prompt injection succeeds; Claude confidently invokes the Read tool directly against /proc/self/environ (taken from the GitHub’s action logs).
The returned environ blob contains the unscrubbed ANTHROPIC_API_KEY. If Read ran inside the same Bubblewrap subprocess that Bash uses, it would not contain this key in the process’s environment variable.

From there, the attacker has their pick of exfiltration channels based on the target workflow configuration (which is publicly visible, since it’s stored in the repository under . github/workflows/). They can use an adversary-controlled domain via WebFetch or Bash, post it in an issue comment using GitHub MCP, or echo it to the Action log (if show_full_output is enabled in the target workflow). The attacker can then prepend “sk-ant-“ to the leaked string to reconstruct the full Anthropic API key.
May 5, 2026: Anthropic mitigated this issue in Claude Code 2.1.128. The mitigation strengthened the Read tool by unconditionally rejecting a number of files in /proc/ in order to protect those files from exfiltration.
April 29, 2026: reported to Anthropic via HackerOne.
The good news for defenders: controls already exist. Below is an actionable hardening guide:
Resource Development
Execution
Defense Evasion
Credential Access
Exfiltration
To conduct AI-driven black-box research on Claude Code Action, we built a GitHub workflow configured with the Bash tool and a system prompt designed to initiate a reverse shell. To bypass Sonnet’s refusal safety mechanisms, we obscured the shell payload behind a response from our controlled domain. We also enabled the workflow to be triggered by users with no “write” permissions to ensure Anthropic’s environment variables scrub mitigations were active during our tests.

Gaining an interactive foothold on the runner, we initially deployed a frontier AI model for automated, black-box research. When an hour of automated analysis produced no actionable findings, we pivoted.

We adopted a white-box approach, feeding the AI model the Claude Code Actions codebase and the obfuscated @anthropic-ai/claude-agent-sdk. Through this human-AI collaboration, where we actively directed the model, analyzed its findings, and tested variations, we uncovered the necessary exploit chains and responsibly disclosed them to Anthropic.
The integration of AI into GitHub Actions isn’t just a productivity improvement, it is a fundamental rewrite of the CI/CD security model. Right now, development is moving faster than defense.
Even when AI agents are deployed with safety prompts, permission scopes, and platform-level defenses (such as the secret scanner we reviewed), a determined attacker can potentially bypass these controls. We are entering an era where natural language is executable code, and untrusted inputs like GitHub issues must be treated as hostile by default. A single, carefully crafted comment combined with a misunderstood trust boundary is all it takes to walk away with production credentials.
We encourage maintainers to stay alert, keep up with the latest security updates, and implement the safeguards outlined in our mitigation guide to protect their repositories against this emerging class of attack.
For the latest security research from the Microsoft Threat Intelligence community, check out the Microsoft Threat Intelligence Blog.
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To hear stories and insights from the Microsoft Threat Intelligence community about the ever-evolving threat landscape, listen to the Microsoft Threat Intelligence podcast.
Review our documentation to learn more about our real-time protection capabilities and see how to enable them within your organization.
The post Securing CI/CD in an agentic world: Claude Code Github action case appeared first on Microsoft Security Blog.
Ryan, Kevin, and Travis recap Microsoft Build 2026 (June 2–3 in San Francisco), describing it as Microsoft’s “coming out party” as an independent AI platform spanning models, custom silicon, an “agent OS,” a new assistant (Scout), and a full developer stack positioning Windows and Azure as the home base for the agentic era. Key announcements include a developer-optimized Windows with built-in Linux containers and two local Windows AI models (Aon 1.0 Instruct and AI 1.0 Plan), Nvidia ARM-based Surface RTX Spark Dev Box and Surface Laptop Ultra capable of running ~120B-parameter models locally, Project Solara for agent devices (including an AI-enabled badge concept), seven in-house MAI models, Scout as a proactive M365 assistant, execution containers for sandboxed agents, Majorana 2 quantum chip updates, Foundry as an end-to-end agent platform with “IQ” data tooling, GitHub Copilot app, open governance frameworks (Assert), and Microsoft M-Dash for agentic threat hunting.
00:00 Welcome to Build 2026
01:19 Big Picture Recap
02:46 Reactions and Takeaways
05:48 Windows Goes Developer First
07:42 Local Models and Control
11:11 AI Data Center at Every Desk
14:04 Surface RTX Spark Dev Box
18:25 Unmetered Intelligence and Token Costs
22:03 Project Solara Agent Devices
26:55 Jarvis Everywhere Vision
31:19 Privacy Walled Gardens and Trust
38:23 Solaris Three Pillars
39:33 Agents Everywhere Future
40:12 Seven New MAI Models
42:05 Frontier Tuning Explained
47:21 Satya Vision Ecosystem
52:26 Scout Autopilot Assistant
01:01:12 Execution Containers Security
01:02:39 Majorana 2 Quantum Leap
01:06:54 Day Two Foundry IQ
01:11:23 Governance And Mdash
01:15:17 Wrap Up And Takeaways
Someone on r/vibecoding posted something last week that I've been thinking a lot about. His post is titled: "vibe coded for 6 months. my codebase is a disaster."

Interestingly, he was able to build a functioning SaaS with paying customers, but he encountered endless problems whenever he tried to modify the app in any way.
So he tried to onboard a developer to help him. The dev opened the repo, went quiet for two minutes, and said: "what is this."
Six months of prompting led to a Frankenstein's monster of a codebase that is such a tangled mess, he's probably better off starting over from scratch. In his words, "nobody was thinking about structure. the AI just kept adding. new file here, duplicate function there, 3 different ways to handle the same thing across the codebase."
As the creator and maintainer of Open SaaS, I get a lot of people asking for help when building a SaaS with AI. And they get stuck for the same handful of reasons. Usually one of two ways: the first 70% comes together almost too easily and the last 30% becomes next to impossible, or you ship something that works, but you lack any understanding of what you built (like the redditor above), and therefore don't understand what you need to do to modify, extend, or improve your app.
So, with that in mind, let's look at some of my favorite ways you can avoid these problems, build something you understand, and stay in control.
📺 Prefer to watch? I walk through all five of these workflow tips with live demos in this video.
The way out of a tangled, vibe-coded SaaS isn't to throw it all away and start over, rather it's a process that allows you to stay in control. AI is a great builder but you need to stay in charge of the decision making and understand the implementation process to avoid bigger problems down the line. Here are five tips that help you stay the architect:
llms.txt) via memory and skill files.I won't oversell it. These five tips don't magically make your agent perform better for you without you having to put in some work.
The bad news is: it's still hard work.
The good news is: it's a lot easier than it used to be (and you don't need to know how to code to launch a SaaS this way).
If you're willing to understand some core concepts, and be patient and persistent, you'll definitely be able to build your idea, overcome issues, and get it launched.
So let's get into it.
Here's the one mistake underneath all the others. "Nobody was thinking about structure. The AI just kept adding."
AI can be an incredible builder and a terrible architect at the same time. It optimizes for "make this work right now," not "keep this coherent over months." And it's so good at the building part that it's easy to get lazy and quietly hand over the architect role, or in some cases not think deeply about the architecture planning to begin with. Don't do this.
Your job is to be the architect and stay the architect. To do this, you need to work with your agent to plan every step of the process and implement things in a methodical manner. Everything below is a concrete way to make that happen.
When you're building software, there are a million ways to achieve the same thing. Rather than letting your agent guess at every turn, give it a predetermined path to follow.
The simplest way is to start on a solid boilerplate. A SaaS starter has the generic pieces (auth, payments, emails, jobs) already decided and wired up, so you just add your unique feature set. It also gives the agent patterns to imitate: it can look at how payments were wired up and slot your new feature in the same way, instead of inventing a third way to do it.
There are great options out there. ShipFast and SuperStarter are popular paid ones (around $300 each). Open SaaS is free and open source, has had people contributing to and hardening it for years, and is the most popular SaaS starter on GitHub with 14,500+ stars. Whichever you pick, you can't really go wrong as they all give your agent good code rails to work within.

The second set of rails is knowledge rails: always feed the agent the official, up-to-date docs of the tools you're using. Human docs are full of HTML and JavaScript fluff that eats your agent's context and buries the part that matters. That's why a lot of tools now publish an llms.txt which is a raw, AI-friendly version of their docs.
You don't want to paste those URLs in by hand every time, so put them where the agent will actually see them: memory files (AGENTS.md / CLAUDE.md) and skill files. Open SaaS ships with a short memory file that tells the agent where to find its llms.txt docs. For everything else, I keep a FetchDocs skill that holds the correct llms.txt URL for each tool, so the agent fetches the exact up-to-date guide it needs for the task at hand.
The biggest prompting mistake people make is starting a fresh session with "build me X." You're the architect, but you might not yet know exactly what you want or the best way to build it. The good news is that the agent probably knows strategies you've never touched.
So have a conversation. Think of it as talking to a really smart, really patient friend who knows everything about software engineering and product development.
Here are two prompt types that I use all the time and that do most of the heavy lifting for me:
The point is to stop, take a step back, and not command right away. By commanding, you create an app that's a complete, tangled mess like the one from the reddit post above, because the agent will perform whatever request you give it, and that request might be a bad one.
By having a conversation with your agent, it will help you decide what the best course of action is. And when you decide, you have a better understanding of what's going on, and where things go wrong when they do.
A SaaS is just a bunch of existing tools pieced together in a creative way to solve a problem. You don't need to read every line of code, but you do need to understand the things being pieced together, like what a database is, how your payments provider is pieced together, and how the other pieces generally work.
That understanding is what lets you debug and ask the right questions when something breaks, instead of flailing in the wrong direction. A great move you can use along with your SaaS boilerplate starter is to ask your agent e.g.: fetch the llms.txt docs from Stripe and explain at a high level how payments work in my current codebase. Using your SaaS starter code to explain the concepts is the best way to learn. You can even start at a very high level (e.g. "explain like I'm five") before going deeper.
If that whole learning curve feels overwhelming and you want your hand held through it, I'm building Open Vibe, a free, open-source curriculum that lives inside your agent, set up on top of Open SaaS, and tutors you on the fundamentals while you build.
This is probably my favorite approach, and is the direct antidote to "the AI just kept adding." Instead of building half-finished layers, build thin, working slices that touch the whole stack, from the UI in the browser down to the database, so the feature actually does something at every step.

Say I want to make a generated schedule shareable in the planner app I'm building. I wouldn't say "make it shareable and build it." Instead, I'd ask the agent to design a feature plan with small milestones, one goal each, using a vertical slice approach.
As a result, we get a plan that we can get the agent to implement in small steps, and test that each small addition works before moving on, rather than implementing all the parts of a new feature in one shot and hoping that it works (or that we can debug it easily).
Such a plan for our sharing feature might look something like this:
/schedule/<id>, see the schedule. Testable on its own.Each milestone is testable, vertically sliced, and has exactly one goal. Again, the complexity builds up in steps you can verify instead of one big leap.
Once the agent designs a plan you're happy with, save the plan to a file (schedule-sharing-implementation-plan.md) so you can reference it later in the chat, e.g.: "reference @schedule-sharing-implementation-plan.md and build milestone two."

That file is also a great context-management trick. Remember, agents don't have memory, only the context of the current session, and performance degrades as that context fills up. So I treat each milestone as a fresh session and /clear or /compact the conversation before moving on to the next milestone.
After clearing or starting a new session, I point the agent back at the implementation plan, and move on to the next milestone with a clean slate.
Vertical slices are only worth it if you actually test each one. It's better to surface small issues now, instead of six months from now like our poor protagonist in this story.
You can do it the "manual way", which is when something fails, copy the error, paste it into your agent with a bit of context, and let it fix it. Agents are surprisingly good at this. But hopping between terminal windows gets tedious, and some bugs are stubborn.
So hand the loop to the agent. One great tool is Claude Code's run-skill-generator. It's a skill that comes with Claude and it learns how to start your specific app within a running session and saves it as a custom reusable skill (e.g. /run-mysaasapp). You (or your agent) can run this skill and it essentially gives the agent "eyes" to see your client and server code, along with their respective logs.
With this run skill in hand, you can just say something like run my saas app and fix the issue. It will start the app with your /run-mysaasapp skill, read the server logs, drive the browser like a human would, find the error, fix it, and confirm it's running, completely hands-off.
By staying the architect, and providing your agent with good structure and process, you can avoid most of the problems that plague builders trying to create their SaaS idea with AI.
I walk through all five of these with live demos (e.g. fetching llms.txt docs, the clarify-and-brainstorm prompts, the vertical-slice plan, and the agent fixing its own startup error) in the video:
▶️ How To Build A SaaS with AI. Without Getting Stuck.
And if you want the rails to start on:
Editorial note: I originally posted this over on Hit Subscribe. It’s the first in a series there I’m calling “The Agency Path” which is going to be aimed at freelancers and small agencies, often in SEO/marketing, but with some broadly applicable topics. So I’m back to writing about freelancing for freelancers, which is a lot more fun. If you’re an aspiring indie or an indie, stay tuned, because I’ll cross-post those here as well.
I’ve had a fun week this week. I’ve found myself somewhat buried in requests for intent maps after doing a webinar whose call to action was “Do you want us to do an intent map for you?”
The fun part here for me isn’t “Hey, that was a successful marketing event from a lead gen perspective,” though that’s obviously welcome. Rather, the fun is from dusting off my engineering skillset and building out tooling that draws reactions of, “Oh, wow, you can do what?”
In this particular case, we’re talking about a comprehensive LLM visibility whitepaper for enterprise sites with maybe fifteen minutes of me reviewing deliverables furnished by my (for no particular reason, British) intent mapping agent, Rosetta. But more broadly, it’s a powerful tool chest of search visibility capabilities that are easy enough for me to leverage, either for others or to hand off.

That tool chest has led me, and Hit Subscribe, to an interesting moment of opportunity for diversification. We’ve always delivered services, but I’ve lately found myself on market research calls with SEO agency owners and freelancers, discussing the idea of Osiris subscriptions for them, perhaps in some kind of unbundled or modified fashion.
In other words, we’re now strongly considering getting into the business of selling into a market that we would historically have competed with, whom I’d never previously contemplated as potential buyers.
Getting back to the theme of fun, the thought of marketing to and creating content for freelancers and small agencies in the SEO or general marketing space struck me as profoundly fun. After all, I built a following of thousands of people by writing to software engineers about being a software engineer. And then grew it to tens of thousands as I wrote for indie software engineer consultants about being an indie software engineer consultant.
For the last seven years or so, however, content marketing has been a slog of performative nonsense and obligatory topical authority stuff in search of an audience. The reason for this? Hit Subscribe historically (and developer marketing in general) had incoherent ‘positioning’ of “We make content for anyone that wants angle brackets in their content for any reason.”
How do you market to that demographic with content?
Well, badly. The market is so indeterminate that the only thing it has in common is the angle bracket content, which forces you into writing prosaic dreck (no offense, me-seven-years-ago), like “Here’s a taxonomy of blog post types.”
But now, with a potential audience of freelancers and small agency owners?
That’s a very specific audience that I can easily relate to. And I can also easily offer endless opinions, some of them even non-stupid, as well as hard-won experiences, tips, tricks, suggestions, and war stories. I can engage in rewarding, column-style audience building the way I’ve done twice in the past (maybe three or four, if you count YouTube channels).
So, that’s what I’m going to do. I’m going back to writing columns, and I’m writing them with a specific audience in mind, rather than the historical “developer marketing” buyer committee that’s so large it’s in no danger of sharing any sort of common interest whatsoever.
And this, after a really long, meandering hook, is the first entry in that column.
In my last post here about how developer marketing seems to be dying, I made the statement that “Early-stage dev tools companies (or similar) tend to make pretty bad fit clients for SEO and, these days, GEO, services.”
Since the thesis of that post was that developer tools, as a category, is dying for an unexpected reason, I didn’t want to indulge a lengthy diversion into why I make this claim.
But today, I want to indulge that diversion. And the reason I want to do it is that I think there are a lot of lessons to be picked from that carcass by freelancers and small agency owners who, remember, are now my audience, by decree.

So for the rest of the post, I’m going to defend my thesis with experience in a series of sections, each of which is intended as a piece of advice about how to choose or disqualify prospects and clients for your book of business.
Thinking in these terms can help you refine and prioritize your current client roster and also optimize your discovery and sales process to weed out bad fits before they become an expensive headache for you.
Now, before I get into the details, let me briefly explain the idea of developer tools and what Hit Subscribe historically did. Developer tools is a category of businesses that creates software to make software developers more efficient at making software. These businesses are overrepresented in Silicon Valley and startup culture. And developer marketing is the… uh, craft, I guess, of marketing to the software developer users.
And what I’m saying is that startups founded by software developers making software for other software developers, in spite often prodigious budgets, usually make bad clients for SEO services.
So let’s have a few chuckles unpacking exactly why that is. Each section here will include a lesson generalizable beyond dev tools, as well as a discovery question for your sales process that will surface the wrong answer.
I’ll start with a bit of a softball. Silicon Valley math on investments, rule-of-thumb wise, is that you invest in ten companies, and a great outcome is that one unicorns, one zombies, and eight fail. So, culturally, that’s a lot of failure.

Now, it’s worth noting that “failures” don’t mean the whole thing was a total loss for all parties or anything like that. But it does mean that a substantial portion of these companies die, fizzle out, sell for pennies on the dollar, or generally just meet a fate other than “continue to pay an agency for marketing services.” And the earlier the stage you engage with, the more likely this fate.
Lesson: When talking to a prospect, make a realistic assessment of how likely they are to remain in a position to engage you.
Ask: “How long have you been in business, and how steady is the revenue or runway that would fund this program?”
Next up, let’s talk about holistic marketing strategy for the business. With developer tools companies, and especially ones in the early stages, seismic shifts in marketing strategy are not just possible but often expected. Generally in organizations employing software developers, those developers are not buyers, per se. They typically can’t make purchasing decisions about the tools that they use, creating a buyer committee and casting them as influencers of the buying decision.
So the marketing organization at a developer tools company faces an interesting existential choice: market to the VP, who is a purchaser but not a user (a “top-down” or “sales-led” motion)? Or market directly to the developer-user (a “bottom-up” or “growth-led” motion)? Ideally, the answer is “both,” but in practice it’s common to pick one and often build the entire marketing organization around that choice, especially early on.
But it’s also then common to say “oopsie-daisy” and fire everyone in the marketing organization when you realize you’re getting more traction with your traveling sales people in the enterprise than sending your dev rels to speak at conferences or whatever.
And if the game is that volatile for FTEs, what do you think it looks like for you, a freelancer or an agency of record with a flimsy contract you’re trying to wave at them?
Lesson: Have a realistic grasp of how likely the business is to wake up one day and decide “organic isn’t for us.”
Ask: “What other channels are you running right now, and how do you decide what gets cut when budget tightens?” (Reveals whether organic is core to their growth plan or an experiment.)
Over the years, when talking to seed- or A-round companies (early stage, if you’re not familiar with startup language) as prospects, we’re usually talking either to a founder or to a first marketing hire, who will eventually have a title like “VP marketing” or “CMO.” But as the company grows, that will, and should, obviously change. At some point between that sales conversation and a $500 billion valuation down the line, the founder of the business will find better things to do than brainstorm SEO posts for the company blog.
So founder makes the first marketing hire. And after a while, that first marketing hire, now the CMO, hires a head of product marketing. And then eventually the head of product marketing hires a dev rel, or a director of content, or whatever. What this means for the agency is a series of hand-offs down the org chart over the course of a few years.
Each of those handoffs can be an opportunity, but they can also be an engagement death sentence. Maybe you have something good humming along with the CMO, organic traffic is heading up and to the right, landing pages are becoming visible, and then, BOOM! They hire a director of content for whom this is just a day job until their Great American Novel takes off, and that person slams all content production to a halt until the entire website can be rewritten in iambic pentameter, at which point they will undertake their next great mission: red-penning every blog post until it would earn at least a B+ in a college rhetoric class…and stand no chance of ranking for anything.
That person will absolutely get fired in six to eighteen months. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve watched that unfold like a bad dream where you know exactly what’s coming and can’t prevent it. But in the meantime, the engagement peters out, the traffic starts moving down and to the right, and “SEO didn’t work” at the 10,000 foot view.
Lesson: During discovery, assess how likely it is that churn will happen with your primary contact. Be careful if the likelihood is high.
Ask: “Who owns SEO today, who do they report to, and how do you expect that to change over the next 12 months?”
I want to shift gears a little and talk about something more specific to developer tools as a category. And while I’m pretty sure this has calmed down a bit, it still persists. And I’m talking about making performative tooling choices.

Developer marketing is a truly weird space, occupied by a mix of engineers that like to create content and marketers that are attracted to tech. That latter group perpetually has something to prove, especially given the common perception that “developers hate marketers.” This creates an odd incentive for marketers to performatively adopt developer tools themselves, and for things such as the brand’s CMS to act as unfortunate shibboleths in this strange and pointless dance.
The upshot is that developer tools companies uniquely tend to hand-build their websites. Now, that’s fine and good for an engineer. I was one for a long time, and left to my own devices, I’d happily create a static site instead of using WordPress or Webflow, both of which I lowkey hate in different ways. But as a business owner, I wouldn’t do that because I would want to hire marketers, and it makes sense to have tools that marketers use in the same way that it makes sense to use QuickBooks if I want to pay someone else to do my books.
When you hand build a website, you lose access to things that marketers might take for granted, like Yoast, automatically generated sitemaps, easy redirection schemes, and the fact that common CMS tend to handle table-stakes SEO hygiene. Build your website by hand, and suddenly a company engineer or a web development firm is in the critical path for SEO hygiene issues. And you know what happens in that situation? Those people don’t do the SEO hygiene stuff.
Lesson: Be wary of clients who insist on tooling that sandbags what you’re trying to do.
Ask: “What’s the site built on, and if we need a redirect or a schema change, who owns that?” (The worst answer here is “engineering.”)
When dealing with founders—especially first-time founders—you’ll often encounter someone with “smartest guy in the room” vibes. And typically, technical founders are pretty smart, so they often are the smartest guy in the room (depending on the room, Flight of the Conchords style). I don’t envy them this distinction. It sounds exhausting.
The problem with the smartest guy in the room as a client is that he (and this archetype is always a he) knows his domain better than you do. But he also obviously knows your domain better than you do. To him, SEO and marketing are “simple” and he’d do them himself, but he doesn’t have time. And frankly, they’re beneath him.
There are two problems with this:
Lesson: Screen your prospects for people that will defer appropriately to your expertise. Demands for accountability are fine; dictating tactics is not.
Ask: “When we disagree about an approach, which we probably will at some point, how do you want to resolve it?” (How they answer tells you instantly whether you’re an advisor or a pair of hands.)
It’s safe to say that a lot of people don’t like SEO, or at least the collateral internet damage that it leaves in its wake. We can all probably agree that recipe websites would be a little more usable without the tales of how you first churned butter with your grandma, formulaically engineered to create pseudo-engagement metrics.
But nobody hates SEO as much as everyone at a developer tools company.
Throw a few more roles at me, and I’ll tell you how they hate SEO, too.
If you want to understand how intense this dynamic is, consider that I wrote an actual book called “SEO for Non-Scumbags” to bridge the hatred gap in the space.
The effect here is to create what I think of as the “two-sale problem.”
If you have a prospect that comes to you and says, “My competitors are outranking me for all of our commercial keywords, please help,” then you have one sale to make. They’ve bought into the concept, and you just need to convince them you can solve their problem.
But in developer marketing land, you’re selling two things. First, you have to sell them on the idea of SEO in the first place. And then, once you’ve spent most of your relationship capital on that, you have to sell them on the idea that you can help.
Two-sale clients tend to be high churn and high maintenance. Given that they don’t really buy into what you do in the first place, they’re very quick to lose faith and pull the plug—which means their SEO endeavor doesn’t work, since it’s a channel that’s a long play.
Lesson: If you get a whiff from your clients that “SEO is stupid” or similar during sales calls, decline the business.
Ask: “On a scale of ‘I was volun-told to own this’ vs ‘I’m practically Brian Dean’ how much do you believe in SEO?” (Ask with a smile, give them permission to dog the channel honestly.)
A related, though more benign, failure pattern that I’ve seen a lot with SEO content over the years is something that we’ve long-since labeled “topic fishing.” For years, Hit Subscribe’s keyword research methodology has involved projecting rank and traffic based on a primary keyword’s difficulty and a target site domain authority. This results in a decent cross-section of keywords, especially on low-authority sites, projecting out to 0 traffic and limited visibility.

There is a non-trivial subset of clients in the developer marketing world that are skeptical of this. “What do you mean no one is searching for the keyword ‘reasons Acme Inc. has the best tech stack in the world’?! There must be some kind of mistake—check it again!”
In all seriousness, what happens here is that these client contacts, often technical founders, dev rels, or product marketers, approach traffic-earning blog campaign planning with the premise, “Here’s something I dreamed up to write about, now go sprinkle some SEO on it to make people read it.”
A less picky service provider might say, “Sure, whatever, Bob’s your uncle and here’s your article.” But we will generally come back with, “There doesn’t seem to be any search volume around ‘Here’s why agentic workflows are like a duck when you really think about it’.”
What tends to follow from here is a dance of us proposing general queries with some demonstrated interest behind them and clients volleying back with, “None of that is what I feel like talking about.” The problem here isn’t just that this is sort of annoying or destructively time consuming. The problem is that it demonstrates a fundamental misunderstanding of the mechanics of search as a channel.
Lesson: If a client ever says “We want SEO content that’s also thought leadership” or gives a whiff of that, run.
Ask: “Quick hypothetical: we have two topics, one with real search demand and one your gut says is the right one. We can only pick one. Which are we going with?”
The last aggregate war story that I’ll share here is the content review gauntlet. This is such a persistent problem that I wrote about it probably five or six years ago, in a post entitled “A Case Study: Choking the Life Out of Your Content Program, One Reviewer at a Time”.
My point here isn’t to necessarily rehash a data-driven study and arguments about how inefficient a content program becomes with multi-party review. If you accept it as axiomatic (or read that post), the point is this.
If your prospect wants content as part of your engagement, but they also want to empanel a group of people to review that content, you’re gonna have a bad time.
Search visibility for a piece of content is already somewhat of a needle to thread. With any content, and especially landing pages, brand voice is a reasonable demand. So you already have to balance search intent and searcher satisfaction with the editorial concern of your brand voice. Anything you add on top of that creates an insurmountable death by committee.
In the developer marketing world, it’s common to have (1) a content marketer review a post for editorial correctness, (2) a product marketer review it for positioning and brand voice, and (3) a developer review it for, let’s just say, “technical accuracy” (though this usually just devolves into two engineers having a pointless argument about arcane tradecraft opinions). And, if the company is big enough, legal might review it just for fun.
And what I’m telling you is this. All of those things are understandable in a vacuum. Any one of them is operationalizable (maybe two, if you’re efficient and sophisticated). More than that, and don’t bother trying to have a content program.
Lesson: If multiple people are going to review the content you’re producing, you’re not producing any content.
Ask: “Once a draft is written, who has to touch it before it publishes, and who has final say?”
If you look back at all of the lessons learned here, two things stand out:
What I’d suggest that you do with this information—my hard-earned battle scars—is feed it back into your discovery process. Think about the situations I’ve described and the lessons and ask what I’ve crystalized them into. And then think about working them comfortably into your own discovery process, in a way customized to suit you.
For instance, you can generalize and soften to some extent. Here’s a list of non-pointed questions that I’ll sometimes ask when I have no real reason to be skeptical about a prospect. These are mostly defanged of the sharp edges from some of the asks above.
That’s not an exhaustive list of the questions that I bring to a discovery call, myself. I actually have a HUGE list that I tend to curate ahead of each call, depending on the specific prospect and the situation that I glean from their site with a situation appraisal and an opportunity audit (which I generally do via automation ahead of any call).
I spent a lot of years in developer marketing before I realized that good SEO clients in that space were pretty few and far between. (But some do exist!) I spent a lot of years realizing that we’d been doing SEO on ultra-hard mode.
So my hope is that you read this, apply it to whatever slice of the internet you’re targeting, and use my folly to make your life easier.
I’m Erik, and I approved this rant…which was easy to do since I wrote it. If you happened to enjoy this, I’ve recently created a Substack where I curate all of the marketing related content I create on different sites.
Totally free, permanently non-monetized, and you’re welcome to sign up. Click here or fill out the form below:
The post Identifying Good Search Visibility (SEO/GEO) Clients appeared first on DaedTech.
2026-06-05
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