The Short-Form Playbook for SaaS Companies
SaaS marketing is drowning in the same blog posts and webinars. How software companies use short-form video to teach, demo and build a category.
Most SaaS marketing looks identical: the same blog posts, the same gated ebooks, the same webinars nobody re-watches. Meanwhile the channels where buyers actually spend their attention — short-form feeds — are wide open, because software companies assume “serious B2B buyers aren’t on TikTok.” They are. They’re just not seeing serious B2B content there, which is exactly the opening.
Short-form works for SaaS for the same reason it works everywhere: it meets people where their attention already is, in the format that holds it. The difference is that almost no SaaS companies are doing it well, so the bar to stand out is remarkably low.
The three content types that work for SaaS
Where the content comes from
SaaS companies are content factories that don’t know it. Every webinar, every customer call, every product walkthrough, every founder talk is raw material. You’re already producing hours of expert content — it’s just trapped in formats nobody consumes. Clipping liberates it.
| You already have | Clip it into |
|---|---|
| Webinars | A month of teaching clips |
| Demos & walkthroughs | Micro-demos |
| Customer calls | Real objections & wins |
| Founder talks | POV & authority clips |
Micro-demos are the secret weapon
Distribute everywhere, dub for global
The SaaS companies that win the next few years will be the ones who realized their content problem was a distribution problem. They were never short on expertise — they had webinars and docs and talks pouring out of them. They just kept locking it in formats buyers ignore. Short-form is how that expertise finally reaches the people deciding whether to buy.
Key takeaways
- SaaS short-form is wide open — buyers are there, content isn't.
- Teach the problem space, demo features, share founder POV.
- Your webinars, demos and calls are the raw material.
- Micro-demos — one feature, one problem — convert best.
- Distribute everywhere and dub to reach global markets.