BlogTap

Changelog

What we've been shipping at BlogTap. Newest first.

A help center that arrives where you’re stuck

Most product help centers feel bolted on. A generic widget, articles last updated two years ago, contact form that vanishes into a queue. BlogTap's lives inside the app, with the rule that help should arrive where you're stuck. Reachable from the side nav, the user menu, and from a small Info icon next to every feature header — click it and you land on the doc for that exact thing. Three sections cover getting started, concepts (north star, brand voice, memory, feedback, versioning), and how-to guides for everything you manage. Search across all of it. When the docs miss, the contact form is one click away, pre-fills your name and email, and replies come straight to your inbox. No tickets, no queues.

Curate the sources that ground your drafts

Every project now has a Memory tab. Paste in the URLs and notes you want your drafts leaning on, and each save gets summarized in the background and added to topic pages written in your voice, so the agent pulls from what you've curated instead of starting cold. Research grows it for you: when the agent runs research on a post, it surfaces the primary sources it found as opt-in candidates, with anything already saved flagged so you don't double-save. The agent also checks memory before hitting the web, so the longer you use BlogTap, the more it sounds like you and less like every other content tool.

The revision agent remembers your drafts

When you chat with the agent about a piece, it can now reach back into every prior revision of that post. Ask how the intro read two drafts ago, or what changed since the last version, and it'll pull the actual text instead of guessing. Less re-explaining your own work, more conversation about what should change next.

Teach the agent as it writes

You can now rate every revision the agent makes for you, with feedback prompts tuned to the draft in front of you. Each week, your reactions roll up into a feedback report with voice-drift recommendations, so when the agent starts wandering off your voice, you catch it early and tug it back. Your taste teaches the agent over time instead of staying locked inside your head.

Bring your team along

Content rarely gets made by one person. You can now invite teammates into any project, and a notifications hub in the global nav aggregates updates across every project you're in. Reviewers don't miss the post that's ready; writers don't miss the report that just landed.

Onboarding that ships you a real first post

The onboarding flow now walks you from account info to your first project, to a north star and three keywords, and on through to drafting your first post on the spot. After it generates, we pull back the curtain: which keywords were evaluated, which competing posts got analyzed, how your voice samples shaped the draft. The point is to feel the rigor early, not to take it on faith from a marketing page.

Manage content from your phone

BlogTap now has a real mobile shell. The logo, projects, and your profile sit up top; the project actions sit in a bottom tab bar like a native app, so reviewing a draft from the couch finally feels normal instead of a desktop site mashed onto a phone.

Take your content anywhere

Your published posts are no longer trapped in BlogTap. There's an API and an MCP server that hand back a paginated list of published posts, with a flag to render the body as markdown or plain HTML depending on what your publishing system wants. Token creation is gated to owners and admins, and tokens use Sanctum so you can revoke them when a teammate moves on.

Posts that get smarter the longer you run them

BlogTap now pulls weekly performance from GA4 and Search Console for every published post and feeds the results back into the agent that writes for you. Underperformers get diagnosed against a probable cause (weak headline, wrong keyword match, thin coverage), then rewritten against that hypothesis instead of starting from scratch. Each post gets its own performance view in the sidebar, with summary metrics up top and weekly history below.

A home base for your content

The old home view is gone, replaced with a project dashboard that surfaces what actually needs your attention: posts waiting on review, posts that need a retry, and which published pieces are pulling their weight. Up top, a north-star scene grows alongside your project, a mountain range or a garden that gets richer as your content does. You can share it on a branded page when you want to show off.

Posts ship with real images

You can now upload your own images to a post or pull from Unsplash without leaving the editor. The piece feels finished when it leaves BlogTap instead of needing a "find a hero image" step that no one ever does on time.

Brand interview, not a brand brief

Setting up a project used to mean filling out forms about your voice, your audience, your visual style. Now you sit down for an interview that draws all of it out, including writing samples, so the agent has something real to work from instead of a brand sheet that sounds like every other brand sheet. When your first post drafts, you also see what was considered behind the scenes: which keywords got evaluated, which competing posts got studied, which voice samples got matched against.