"The first step in solving a problem is admitting there is a problem to be solved." — Pete Seeger
Software startups need content to build credibility, attract customers, and support developer marketing—but creating it consistently is hard. Limited time and resources, fuzzy topic selection, crowded feeds, and unclear measurement all get in the way. Naming these challenges is the first step toward addressing them. Here we outline four common challenges and point to practical ways to overcome them.
1. Lack of time and resources
Producing high-quality content regularly takes time: research, writing, review, and distribution. Many startups are stretched across product, sales, and support, so content slips or gets deprioritized. Content Marketing Institute's research consistently cites resource constraints as a top barrier. Practical responses include: focusing on a narrow set of content types that drive the most value, repurposing one piece into many (e.g. repurposing and improving existing content), and using a content calendar so publishing is planned rather than ad hoc. Outsourcing or partnering with a content creation agency can also extend capacity when in-house bandwidth is limited.
2. Difficulty identifying relevant topics
Without a clear process, it's hard to know what to write about. Topics may be too broad, too salesy, or disconnected from what your audience actually searches for and cares about. Keyword and topic research helps: use Google Keyword Planner, Ahrefs, or similar tools to find queries your audience uses, then align content to those topics. Resources like how to create better content for developers and creating engaging content for developers stress the importance of solving real problems and matching developer intent. A simple content strategy with pillars and a backlog of ideas reduces the "what do we write?" problem.
3. Difficulty creating content that stands out
There is a lot of content online; standing out requires clarity, depth, and a distinct angle. Generic listicles and surface-level posts rarely get shared or rank. HubSpot's content strategy guidance and Google's helpful content guidance emphasize originality and expertise. For developer audiences, that often means: specific examples, code or config when relevant, honest tradeoffs, and a voice that sounds like a knowledgeable peer. Investing in storytelling and knowing your audience can help your content feel different and worth reading.
4. Difficulty measuring the success of content
If you can't measure impact, it's hard to justify investment or improve. Content can influence awareness, consideration, and conversion over long periods, so attribution isn't always straightforward. Metrics to observe and how to measure developer marketing success outline funnel-aligned metrics: traffic, engagement, signups, trials, and revenue where possible. Use Google Analytics and Search Console to see which pages and topics contribute. Defining a small set of KPIs and reviewing them regularly turns content into a data-informed strategy rather than a guess.
Conclusion
Software startups often face four main content challenges: limited time and resources, unclear topic selection, difficulty standing out, and vague measurement. By prioritizing ruthlessly, using keyword and topic research, investing in depth and clarity, and tying content to measurable outcomes, you can turn content into a repeatable part of your growth strategy.
