FusionScore.ai launches thought‑leadership tool

FusionScore.ai introduced a Thought Leadership solution that lets executives input a quote and topic to auto‑generate and publish articles on the B2B site TMCnet, streamlining narrative creation for fast news cycles. The announcement includes a short video demo and positions the tool for PR and executive communications teams. (x.com)

A chief executive can now type in a quote about a breaking story, add a topic, and have software turn it into a finished article on TMCnet instead of waiting for a ghostwriter and an approval chain. FusionScore.ai is pitching that shortcut as a new product for public relations and executive communications teams. (tmcnet.com, youtube.com) The timing is the whole pitch. In the video demo, FusionScore says companies lose openings in “fast-moving news cycles” because by the time an executive reacts, the story has already moved on. (youtube.com) FusionScore is not coming into this as a general writing app. On March 30, 2026, it launched FusionScore.ai as a platform built around one metric: how often and how prominently a company appears in answers from systems like ChatGPT, Claude, Grok, Gemini, and Microsoft Copilot. (tmcnet.com, fusionscore.ai) That matters because these systems do not show ten blue links the way old search engines did. FusionScore’s own launch material says buyers now ask an artificial intelligence assistant for “best” vendors in a category and often get only a handful of names back. (tmcnet.com) So the company’s bigger business is not just writing articles. It is trying to help business-to-business technology vendors place content on sites that artificial intelligence systems may treat as trusted sources, then measure whether that content changes who gets mentioned. (tmcnet.com, fusionscore.ai) TMCnet is central to that strategy. TMC says its websites and events serve niche communications and technology markets, and that buyers use those “content-driven marketplaces” to research products and make purchase decisions. (tmcnet.com) FusionScore’s authority page makes the relationship even plainer. It says customer content is placed on Insight.TMCnet.com and argues that publishing on a domain with high authority gives that content a better chance of being surfaced by artificial intelligence systems. (fusionscore.ai) The new thought-leadership tool is basically the fast lane version of that model. Instead of building a long editorial calendar, an executive gives the system a quote and a subject, and the product generates a bylined article designed to get published while the topic is still hot. (youtube.com) FusionScore calls the wider engine behind this FAME, short for FusionScore Autonomous Marketing Engine. In its launch announcement, FAME combines visibility measurement, automated content strategy, content creation, publishing, and authority building across outside domains. (tmcnet.com) This also shows how “thought leadership” is being repackaged in 2026. TMC’s own sales language says vendors use its editorial platforms, webinars, awards, and online advertising for branding, thought leadership, and lead generation, so FusionScore is turning that media access into a software workflow. (tmcnet.com, tmcnet.com) The bet underneath all of this is simple: if artificial intelligence answers are becoming the front door to business research, then the companies that can publish credible-looking commentary fastest may win mindshare before slower rivals even draft a statement. FusionScore is selling speed, placement, and measurement as one package instead of three separate jobs. (tmcnet.com, youtube.com)

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