Akshay runs marketing and editorial at theStacc. Before this, he was a Senior Marketing Specialist at ARKA 360, the solar-design SaaS used by installers across multiple continents. He spends most of his week on SEO strategy, the editorial calendar, and the quiet operational work that keeps a small team publishing every week. He writes about keyword research, content operations, and B2B SaaS marketing.
Biography
Akshay VR built his marketing career inside a B2B SaaS that had to win a niche audience in 50+ countries — most of his thinking about content strategy comes from that experience.
He joined ARKA 360 as part of the marketing team while the company was still scaling its solar-design platform across new markets. The job was less about flashy campaigns and more about operating the long-tail: writing for installers in markets with very different regulations, building topical authority around country-specific incentives, and keeping a content calendar moving when half the team was on the road talking to customers.
That work is where his point of view on content came from. SEO at a small SaaS doesn't look like SEO at a media company — there is no traffic team, no separate editorial team, no agency on retainer. Whoever runs marketing also runs the briefs, the review loop, the publishing checklist, and the metric dashboards. The companies that figure out how to make that small loop reliable are the ones that compound. The companies that hire a freelancer and hope for the best fall behind.
Akshay is now Marketing Head at theStacc, where he owns SEO strategy, content operations, and the editorial calendar. He partners with the founder on positioning and runs the day-to-day work of keeping the blog, the site, and the campaigns moving in the same direction. He writes here about keyword research, editorial workflows, and the B2B SaaS marketing tactics that survive contact with a real product team.
He works remotely from Malappuram, Kerala — and prefers it that way. The best editorial decisions, he'd argue, happen when you're not in a room full of other marketers.
How he reads the B2B SaaS content market right now
The short version: most SaaS blogs are publishing more than they're reading. They publish 12 articles a month, never re-read what they shipped six months ago, and lose authority because their own content is contradicting itself. The teams that are winning right now publish less, edit more, refresh every quarter, and treat their archive as a product. Akshay's editorial cadence is built around that view — fewer articles, tighter editing, planned refreshes, and a clear architecture so the archive doesn't decay.
The thesis behind the editorial work
Most of Akshay's writing here is downstream of one core argument: content marketing failed at most B2B SaaS companies in the 2020s because the work got handed to people who weren't operators. Freelancers wrote about products they'd never used. Agencies optimised for keyword density instead of customer comprehension. AI tools shipped first drafts that nobody bothered to edit. The result is the current state of the SaaS internet — a flood of generic content that nobody trusts and nothing ranks. The fix is to put editorial back in the hands of operators, run a real review loop, and treat every article as a piece of customer education rather than a keyword container. That's the editorial standard at theStacc. Most of his posts here work through one corner of that argument.
What he works on
The marketing surface he's spent his career on — SEO at the top of the funnel, editorial in the middle, and the operations stitching it together.
What he writes about
Practical pieces from inside a working SaaS marketing team — not framework theory.
SEO strategy
How to pick the right hill to climb when you only have time to publish 30 articles a month.
Keyword research
Practical research workflows that bridge volume, intent, and what your sales team is actually hearing.
Editorial workflows
Briefs, review loops, and the small process changes that move a content team from chaos to cadence.
Content operations
The unsexy work of running a calendar, assigning briefs, and keeping a team shipping every week.
Demand generation
Turning organic traffic into pipeline without bolting on five new tools per quarter.
B2B SaaS marketing
Positioning, lifecycle, and the specific channels that still work for early-stage SaaS in 2026.
Brand voice
Keeping a voice consistent across a long article, a sales email, and a social post — without making it boring.
Experience highlights
The verifiable record — roles, scope, and the kind of work he does day-to-day.
- Marketing Head at theStacc — runs SEO strategy, editorial calendar, and content operations across the site and the blog.
- Previously Senior Marketing Specialist at ARKA 360, the solar-design SaaS used by installers across multiple continents.
- Built content systems at ARKA 360 that scaled long-form publishing across multiple country-specific verticals (regulations, incentives, market data).
- Drives the editorial calendar at theStacc — keyword clusters, briefs, internal-linking maps, and the schedule that keeps articles shipping every week.
- Works directly with the founder on positioning, brand voice, and the tone the rest of the team writes in.
- Based in Malappuram, Kerala — runs the editorial side of theStacc remotely with the wider team.
- Covers SEO, demand gen, and content operations on the theStacc blog with a focus on what actually works at a small-team SaaS.
How he writes
Akshay edits with a heavier hand than he drafts. Every article on theStacc that goes through him gets read three times: once for argument, once for line-level voice, once for the small operational facts that age fastest. He thinks most B2B SaaS content fails not because the writers are bad, but because no one is checking whether the article actually helps the person reading it. Plain language. Real numbers. A clear takeaway you can act on. If a paragraph doesn't pass those three checks, it doesn't ship.
"Content marketing isn't a volume game anymore. It's a quality game played at volume. The teams that win are the ones who edit harder than they draft." — Akshay VR, Marketing Head, theStacc
Roles & focus
The short list — current focus and previous work. Full history on LinkedIn.
Marketing Head · theStacc
Owns SEO strategy, editorial calendar, brand voice, and content operations.
Sr. Marketing · ARKA 360
Previously Senior Marketing Specialist at the global solar-design SaaS.
Based in Kerala
Works remotely from Malappuram. Runs editorial async with the wider team.
B2B SaaS focus
Most of his marketing career has been inside B2B SaaS — that's the lens.
Press, podcasts & appearances
External coverage and conversations. Most of his public work happens through LinkedIn and the theStacc blog — but the list below covers off-platform appearances.
SaaS marketing podcasts
Occasional guest on B2B SaaS marketing podcasts. Topics: editorial workflows, content operations, SEO at small teams.
ARKA 360 marketing features
Quoted and credited in solar-industry marketing case studies from his ARKA 360 days — most still live on the company's news section.
theStacc editorial pieces
The bulk of his recent on-the-record work is the editorial side of the theStacc blog — long-form on SEO, content ops, and demand gen.
LinkedIn long-form
Posts opinion pieces and case writeups on LinkedIn around SaaS content operations. Send tips on missing items via the contact form.
Common questions
The questions that come up most after his posts.
What does Akshay actually own at theStacc?
SEO strategy, the editorial calendar, brand voice, and the operating cadence the rest of the marketing team works inside. Day-to-day that's keyword clusters, briefs, internal-linking maps, and the publishing schedule.
Does he write every article on the blog?
No. He edits most of them and writes the strategic pieces — positioning, content operations, brand voice. The technical posts come from Siddharth and the growth posts from Ritik. He's the editorial gatekeeper.
Is he on X / Twitter?
Not actively. LinkedIn is the right channel. He posts long-form there about content operations and SaaS marketing.
Can he review or audit a content strategy?
For theStacc customers, yes — that's part of onboarding. External audit requests go through the company contact form rather than DMs.
Get in touch
LinkedIn is the best way to reach Akshay. He posts long-form there about content operations and SaaS marketing.
What he's working on right now
A snapshot of the marketing work running in the background this quarter. Context for the kind of article you'll see published next.
- Editorial calendar rebuild. Re-clustering the keyword map for the blog so each cluster lands more topical authority per article and each article does more linking work for the cluster.
- Brief library v2. Tightening internal briefs so first-draft quality goes up and edit time goes down — without making the briefs unreadable.
- Customer-mentioned campaigns. Surfacing real customer stories inside the editorial calendar so the blog reflects what people actually use the product for.
- Brand voice doc refresh. Updating the voice and editorial standards as theStacc moves into more international and enterprise content over the next two quarters.
What you'll learn from his articles
The recurring themes across his posts. Worth a skim if you're deciding whether his POV maps to the work you're doing.
1. Editorial calendars that don't fall apart
Most content calendars are either too rigid (so no one follows them) or too loose (so nothing ships). The middle path — themes per quarter, briefs queued two weeks out, slots that flex — is what Akshay writes about and runs in production.
2. Keyword research that respects intent
Volume-first keyword research is a great way to publish 30 articles no one wants. The posts here cover the alternative: layering intent, journey stage, and what the sales team is hearing into the research, so the calendar earns its place inside the company.
3. Briefs that produce good first drafts
Every editorial team's quality problem starts at the brief. Akshay writes about brief templates that actually work — outline, angle, sources, tone, examples, and the small things that move first-draft quality from a 5/10 to a 7/10.
4. Brand voice that survives volume
Most SaaS blogs lose their voice after the first 20 articles. Maintaining a consistent voice across 30+ pieces a month is a process problem, not a writing problem. Several pieces here cover the editing layer that makes it possible.
5. SEO + brand without the religious war
SEO people and brand people on the same team usually argue. The articles here treat them as the same job — search visibility is one of the strongest brand signals a B2B SaaS has, and treating it as separate from brand work is a mistake.
How to work with him
The short version: LinkedIn first for editorial conversations, the contact form for everything else.
- Editorial collaboration. If you're a SaaS marketer pitching a guest piece, send the angle and outline on LinkedIn. He doesn't accept generic SEO content but does take operator stories with real numbers.
- Speaking & podcasts. Content operations, editorial workflows, SaaS marketing — these are the topics he'll speak on. Include the audience size, format, and date in the first message.
- Customer marketing. If you're a theStacc customer and want to be featured, ping the success team — they'll loop Akshay in if there's a story worth writing.
- Press & interviews. Route via the company contact form. He handles editorial spokesperson requests; product questions go to Siddharth.
- Job applicants in marketing. Use the careers page if it's live, otherwise send a one-paragraph note on LinkedIn about what you've shipped.