VibeCom User Guide
A practical, end-to-end guide to creating products, setting up channels, and using VibeCom's AI marketing agents.
VibeCom gives people and small teams an AI marketing team: agents that understand the product, keep marketing context organized, create reviewable assets, find SEO and GEO opportunities, watch competitors, and help publish work without turning marketing into another full-time job.
This guide walks through the full workflow from first setup to regular use. It is written for people using the web dashboard first. If you prefer working from a compatible MCP client such as Cursor, VS Code, Codex, Claude Code, Lovable, Bolt, or Base44, use the MCP notes in each section after you understand the dashboard workflow.

What You Will Set Up
Most VibeCom work flows through four pieces of context:
| Piece | What it does | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Product | Stores what you are growing, who it is for, and how it is positioned. | The agents need product context before they can produce useful marketing work. |
| Channels | Define where content should go: X, LinkedIn, blog, and connected publishing destinations. | Each channel has its own platform, audience, tone, language, and schedule. |
| Materials | Save launches, feature notes, metrics, customer quotes, market signals, and ideas. | Materials give the agents real inputs instead of generic prompts. |
| Review queue | Holds generated posts and assets until you approve, edit, schedule, publish, or reject them. | You stay in control. Nothing publishes before approval. |
The dashboard is the main place to manage this workflow. MCP is an integration path for users who already prefer working from an editor, terminal, or no-code builder.

Step 1: Sign In And Open The Growth Dashboard
Open , sign in, then go to /console/growth. If you are signed out, you will see the sign-in screen first.

You can use the free plan to create product context, manage manual channels, manage existing assets, and connect MCP. Paid agent work, such as product research, content generation, SEO, GEO, competitor radar, image generation, and auto-publishing, follows the plan limits shown on the pricing page.
Step 2: Create A Product
A product is the business, project, store, app, service, or content brand you want to grow. Start with one product before adding channels or asking the agent to generate work.
From the dashboard:
- Open
/console/growth. - Choose the product setup flow.
- Paste the product website URL.
- Click Create product or Create & Analyze, depending on your plan.
- Wait for product research when your plan includes AI marketing agent work.
The current dashboard is URL-first. VibeCom uses the website to create the product shell and, when access allows, research what the product does, who it serves, how it is positioned, and what competitors or marketing opportunities matter.
A good product URL should be public, current, and representative of what you want to market. Use your main website, landing page, store page, app homepage, or product documentation entry. Avoid private dashboards, temporary preview links, or pages that only show a login screen.
What Product Research Adds
When product research runs, VibeCom enriches the product with:
- Product category and market context.
- Target audience and buyer pains.
- Value proposition and differentiators.
- Competitor and alternative products.
- Suggested channels, content angles, and discoverability opportunities.
Research usually takes a few minutes. During that time, the product may show an onboarding or research state. Once it is active, you can review product settings, add channels, save materials, and generate marketing work.
How To Keep Product Context Useful
Product context is not a one-time setup form. Update it when your positioning changes, you launch a new feature, you shift audience, or your best customer segment becomes clearer.
Use the product settings page for durable facts: what the product is, who it is for, what value it delivers, and which stage it is in. Use materials for time-sensitive facts: launches, metrics, customer quotes, experiments, news, lessons learned, or market observations.
Step 3: Create Channels
Channels tell VibeCom where it should create and publish marketing work. A channel is not just a destination; it is a writing and publishing context.
Open your product, then go to Channels and click Add Channel.

When creating a channel, fill in:
| Field | How to think about it |
|---|---|
| Platform | Choose X, LinkedIn, or Blog. Facebook and Instagram may appear as prepared or coming-soon surfaces depending on the product state. |
| Channel name | Use a clear internal name, such as VibeCom LinkedIn, Product Blog, or Founder X. |
| Description | Explain the audience and content focus for this channel. This is the most important field. |
| Writing style | Describe the voice: direct, practical, analytical, warm, playful, technical, executive, educational, or any mix that fits. |
| Language | Choose the language the agent should write in for this channel. |
Good channel descriptions are specific about the audience and job of the channel:
Weak channel descriptions are too vague:
Choose Channels Based On Buyer Behavior
Do not add every platform just because it exists. Pick channels based on where your audience already pays attention.
Use LinkedIn when trust, professional context, founder stories, B2B education, or thought leadership matter. Use X when fast product updates, build-in-public lessons, sharp opinions, and short-form conversation matter. Use a blog when search demand, tutorials, comparisons, documentation, launch notes, and long-lived content matter.
For Reddit and community discovery, VibeCom creates manual reply recommendations through the GEO workflow. It does not auto-publish Reddit replies for you.
Manual Publishing And Connected Publishing
New channels can start as manual publishing channels. Manual channels are still useful: the agent writes drafts and keeps review history, while you copy or post manually.
Connected channels can publish approved scheduled posts through platform APIs when the integration is available and authorized. Even then, approval is still required before a post can publish.
Step 4: Add Materials
Materials are the raw ingredients the Growth Agent uses. They prevent generic output by giving the agent real facts to work from.
Add materials when you have:
- A new feature or launch.
- A product update or changelog.
- A customer quote, support insight, testimonial, or objection.
- A metric, milestone, benchmark, or result.
- A market signal, competitor move, community thread, or news item.
- A founder note, lesson learned, opinion, or story.
Write materials as factual notes, not polished posts. The agent will turn them into channel-native assets later.
Good material:
Weak material:
You can also ask a compatible MCP client to save materials when useful. For example:
Step 5: Generate Marketing Work
Once a product has context, at least one useful channel, and enough material, ask VibeCom to create marketing work.
Good requests give the agent a goal and enough context:
Avoid prompts that ask for generic content without product grounding:
VibeCom should create reviewable drafts, not publish automatically. Generated work appears in the dashboard for review.
Step 6: Review, Edit, Schedule, And Publish
The review queue is where you stay in control. Open the Posts or Approvals view to inspect generated work.

For each draft, decide what should happen next:
| Action | Use it when |
|---|---|
| Approve or schedule | The draft is good enough to publish at the next available slot. |
| Edit | The angle is right but the wording, CTA, title, media, or schedule needs adjustment. |
| Reject | The draft is off-strategy, stale, duplicated, or not worth saving. |
| Publish now | You want an already approved scheduled post to go out immediately through a connected channel. |
| Mark as published | You posted it manually and want VibeCom history to stay accurate. |
The best review habit is short and consistent. Scan the queue, approve strong drafts, edit only what needs judgment, and reject the rest. The agent improves when your product context, materials, channels, and review history stay coherent.
Core Feature Guide
Product Context
Product context is the agent's understanding of what you sell, who it helps, and why anyone should care. Use it for stable facts. If VibeCom output sounds generic, the first thing to check is whether the product context is too thin, outdated, or overly broad.
Strong product context includes:
- A plain-language product description.
- Target audience and buying situation.
- Current stage: idea, pre-launch, launched, or growing.
- Value proposition and differentiation.
- Product features that actually matter to users.
- Category and ICP context when research has populated them.
Channels
Channels control platform-native output. The same material should not become the same post everywhere. A launch can become a concise X update, a more reflective LinkedIn post, and a structured blog article because each channel has a different audience and format.
Review channel settings when:
- Drafts sound too formal, too casual, or too generic.
- The agent keeps choosing the wrong angle for a platform.
- You change the audience for a channel.
- You add or remove a publishing integration.
- The channel's posting schedule no longer matches your cadence.
Materials
Materials are where your real marketing inputs live. A strong materials library gives the agent facts, stories, and proof. It also lets VibeCom reuse important updates without making you rewrite them from scratch each time.
Use priorities when available. High-priority materials are important inputs for near-term content. Lower-priority materials are useful background or future ideas.
Posts
Posts are generated or manually added pieces of content attached to channels. Use the Posts page to review pending drafts, scheduled posts, published posts, and failed publishing attempts.
When editing a post, keep the channel in mind. A blog title, LinkedIn hook, and X opening line should not be optimized the same way.
Competitor Radar
Competitor Radar watches competitor and market signals, then turns them into summaries and opportunities. It is useful when you need to understand how competitors position themselves, what they launched, where pricing or messaging changed, and what customers are complaining about.

Use competitor insights to:
- Create response posts when a market conversation shifts.
- Update positioning when competitors converge on the same claims.
- Spot comparison-page or SEO opportunities.
- Save competitor moves as materials for future content.
- Sharpen launch messaging around gaps competitors leave open.
SEO Agent
The SEO Agent helps with keyword demand, page inventory, Search Console performance, and page-level recommendations.

Use SEO when you want durable discovery from search. The workflow usually looks like this:
- Discover or refresh keyword opportunities.
- Map primary keywords to canonical pages.
- Review page and Search Console signals.
- Apply recommendations for titles, meta descriptions, H1s, content sections, internal links, or new pages.
- Re-check performance after enough time has passed.
Do not treat SEO recommendations as generic "write more content" advice. The value is in matching real demand to the right page and making specific improvements.
GEO Agent
The GEO Agent helps you earn visibility in AI answers and community-informed search surfaces. It works with Reddit discovery, thread inventory, manual reply recommendations, FAQ/page improvements, Q&A pages, and schema recommendations.

Use GEO when people are asking questions around your category and existing answers are thin, outdated, biased, or missing your angle. Fresh, under-answered threads are often good candidates for manual replies. Durable, high-demand questions are often good evidence for on-site FAQ or Q&A content.
Reports
Reports are saved outputs from research and intelligence workflows. Use them when you need to review product research, competitor context, or agent-generated analysis outside the daily queue.
Reports are useful for alignment: founders, marketers, agencies, or teammates can read the same product context and understand why the agent is making certain choices.
MCP Workflow
MCP is optional. It connects VibeCom to compatible editors, terminals, coding agents, and no-code builders. Use it when product updates, launch notes, code changes, or documents already live in that environment.
MCP is strongest for precise operational tasks:
Use the dashboard when you want to inspect context, edit channels, review posts visually, manage schedules, or connect publishing integrations.
A Practical Weekly Workflow
For most teams, VibeCom works best as a steady marketing loop:
- Add new materials whenever something meaningful happens.
- Review competitor, SEO, GEO, and market recommendations weekly.
- Generate a small batch from the best current materials.
- Approve or edit the queue.
- Let connected channels publish approved scheduled work.
- Update product and channel context when output quality suggests the agent is missing something.
This keeps marketing moving without forcing you to start from a blank page every day.
Troubleshooting
The agent output feels generic
Check product context first. Then check whether materials contain concrete facts, proof, examples, and audience-specific details. Generic inputs create generic output.
Drafts sound wrong for a channel
Edit the channel description and writing style. Say who reads the channel, what they care about, and what tone should be avoided.
The agent keeps using old information
Archive or lower-priority stale materials, update product context, and add a newer material with the current facts.
Nothing is publishing
Check whether the post is approved, the channel is active, the schedule has available slots, and the publishing integration is connected. Manual channels do not auto-publish.
Product research is missing important competitors or keywords
Update product category, ICP context, product description, and materials. Then re-run the relevant research or recommendation workflow when your plan allows it.
You are not sure what to do next
Start with the smallest useful loop: one product, one channel, three strong materials, and one generated batch for review. Once that loop works, add SEO, GEO, competitor radar, more channels, and publishing integrations.
Next Steps
- explains the setup path in a shorter checklist.
- explains supported publishing destinations.
- walks through generating and reviewing your first drafts.
- explains how to connect compatible MCP clients.
- explains which capabilities are available on each plan.