Fusionscore.ai launches publishing tool
Fusionscore.ai rolled out a Thought Leadership tool that helps executives generate and publish articles to high‑authority sites like TMCnet, with features for quote submission, AI revision and real‑time visibility. The product is pitched as a way for boutique firms and leaders to amplify their expertise quickly in a crowded advisory market. (x.com)
A new crop of marketing tools is selling a very specific promise: don’t just rank on Google, get named inside answers from ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and Perplexity. FusionScore.ai’s new publishing push is built around that shift, and it launched publicly on March 30, 2026 alongside its FusionScore Autonomous Marketing Engine. (tmcnet.com) The pitch starts with a simple problem: an executive can publish a smart article on a company blog and still stay invisible when a buyer asks an artificial intelligence assistant for “top cybersecurity companies” or “best managed information technology services providers.” FusionScore says its platform measures how often a company appears in those generated answers relative to competitors. (tmcnet.com) That is why the product is less about writing alone and more about placement. FusionScore’s own materials say the engine combines visibility scoring, content strategy, article creation, and publication on outside sites it considers trusted by artificial intelligence systems. (tmcnet.com, fusionscore.ai) The outside site at the center of the launch is TMCnet’s Insight section. FusionScore says articles placed there inherit the reputation of a technology media property with more than 25 years of history, 48,500-plus linking root domains, and a Moz Domain Authority score of 82 as of January 21, 2026. (fusionscore.ai) In plain English, the bet is that where an article lives now matters almost as much as what it says. FusionScore argues that a post on a company site with a Domain Authority of 25 will lose to a similar article on TMCnet with a Domain Authority of 82 when artificial intelligence systems decide what to cite. (fusionscore.ai) The company has already wrapped that logic into fixed packages. Its FAME plans list 50 articles a year for $1,000 a month, 100 for $1,500, 250 for $2,500, and 365 for $3,500, with publication on the premium Insight section of TMCnet included in each tier. (fusionscore.ai) FusionScore is aiming this first at business-to-business technology companies, not the whole internet. Its comparison page says the autonomous version is “best for B2B Tech,” takes just a website address as input, analyzes up to 20 topics automatically, and generates an editorial calendar without manual keyword work. (fusionscore.ai) That makes the launch a distribution story disguised as a writing story. The scarce thing is not the ability to generate 800 words with artificial intelligence in 2026; the scarce thing is getting those words published in a place that large language models already treat as structurally trustworthy. (fusionscore.ai, tmcnet.com) Rich Tehrani’s ecosystem sits on both sides of that trade. The launch was announced through TMCnet, and FusionScore’s materials repeatedly present Insight.TMCnet.com as the key publication channel that gives customers immediate access to that authority from day one. (tmcnet.com, fusionscore.ai) So the real product here is not “thought leadership” in the old ghostwriting sense. It is a bundled system for measuring whether artificial intelligence models mention you, finding the categories where you are weak, and then flooding those gaps with articles on a domain FusionScore believes those models are more likely to read and repeat. (fusionscore.ai, tmcnet.com)