Get customers from Google and AI search
Fonzy writes and publishes expert articles to your site, so new customers find you on Google and ChatGPT, no SEO skills needed.
Find what your customers are asking
Fonzy uncovers the real questions and topics driving demand in your market, the searches your future customers are already typing.
Create content that answers it
Each opportunity becomes an expert article, written in your brand voice and published straight to your site.
Get found wherever people search
Your business earns visibility across Google and every major AI engine, ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude.
3 steps to get started
From your domain to published, ranking content, in minutes, not months.
1. Add your website
Enter your domain. Fonzy learns your site in minutes.
2. Get content
Fresh, on-brand articles, researched and written for you.
3. Publish & grow traffic
Rank on Google and AI search, on autopilot.
The work of an entire SEO content team, automated
Research, writing, publishing and ranking, all handled for you.
Writes in your brand voice
Every article sounds like you wrote it yourself, researched, structured, and SEO-ready.
Finds your keywords
Spots exactly what your customers search for.
Knows your customers
Learns your niche, audience and intent.
Publishes on autopilot
Fresh content goes live every day.
Grows your traffic
Ranks on Google and AI, and keeps climbing.

Publishes straight to your site
Connect once, Fonzy publishes wherever your content lives. WordPress, Webflow, Shopify, Sanity, Framer, or your own webhook.
Supports 50+ languages
Expand your audience with globally-optimized articles.
One tool to do it all
Replace your agency and your DIY toolkit.
FonzyContent that ranks on Google, and gets quoted on Forbes
Real articles Fonzy wrote and published. Pick one and read it for yourself.

A deeply researched breakdown of the NFL's ownership structure, cited in high-profile Forbes articles by prestigious academics.
The NFL doesn't have a single owner or a traditional corporate ownership structure. Instead, it functions as a member organization where each of the 32 franchise owners owns an equal one-thirty-second share of the league. These owners collectively own and operate the NFL through a cooperative business model that has made professional football the most profitable sports league in North America.
At the league level, major decisions require approval from team owners through voting. Most significant matters need a three-quarter majority (24 of 32 votes), while certain constitutional changes need unanimous consent. This means no single owner can dictate league-wide policy, creating a system of checks and balances across the ownership group.
The league office, headquartered in New York City, manages operations that benefit all teams collectively: negotiating broadcasting contracts, managing league-wide sponsorships, enforcing rules, and overseeing competitive-balance initiatives. Revenue from these collective efforts is distributed among the 32 franchises according to the league's revenue-sharing formula.
Each franchise operates as an independent business owned by a principal owner or ownership group. Owners keep autonomy over day-to-day operations, hiring, and local business matters, but must comply with league bylaws and collective bargaining agreements. That balance between franchise autonomy and collective league interests defines the NFL's distinctive structure.
Breaking down the 32-team structure
The NFL comprises 32 teams, each with distinct ownership arrangements ranging from individual billionaires to family trusts and corporate entities.
- Individual majority owners control most franchises, typically owning at least 30% of their team, Jerry Jones (Cowboys), Robert Kraft (Patriots), and Arthur Blank (Falcons) each hold controlling interests.
- Family ownership keeps stakes across generations with one controlling owner: the Rooneys (Steelers), Maras (Giants), and Fords (Lions) exemplify this multigenerational approach.
- Limited partnerships and corporate structures let owners distribute minority stakes while keeping control, Stan Kroenke owns the Rams through Kroenke Sports & Entertainment, and Shahid Khan controls the Jaguars.
- Trust arrangements manage transition after a founder passes: the McCaskey family controls the Bears through a trust established by George Halas.
The roster changes through sales, inheritance, or restructuring, but the 32-owner collective stays constant, each holding equal voting power regardless of market size or franchise valuation.
A member-owned organization
The NFL's structure as a member-owned organization sets it apart from other major leagues and most large businesses. Until 2015 it operated as a 501(c)(6) tax-exempt organization, which it voluntarily gave up. Even without that status, the cooperative ownership model is fundamentally unchanged.
That means the NFL doesn't issue stock, has no external shareholders, and pays no dividends. The league exists to serve its member teams, generating revenue through collective bargaining and media rights far beyond what individual franchises could achieve alone. The 32 owners are simultaneously the league's ownership group and its primary beneficiaries.
The member-owned model creates powerful incentives for collective success. When the NFL negotiates a $110 billion media-rights deal across networks and streaming platforms, all 32 owners benefit proportionally through revenue sharing, aligning incentives so owners grow the overall pie rather than only competing for individual advantage.
Hi! I’m the founder behind Fonzy
For years, ranking #1 on Google was reserved for companies with large content teams, expensive agencies, and budgets most small businesses could never justify.
Not anymore.
AI changed the economics.
That’s why we built Fonzy. It reclaims your visibility, turning your expertise into answers for the exact questions your customers are asking, so the algorithms find your business and put it in front of the people who need it.
You don’t have to be an SEO expert. And you don’t have to overpay for reports that never move the needle.
They switched to Fonzy.
Here's what happened.
Set up in three minutes. First article went live the next morning.
I run a small shop and never find time to blog. Now it just happens every week. I approve, Fonzy posts. Three weeks in and I'm finally showing up on Google.
Easy as anything, and I'm really not a tech person.
I've tried a few SEO tools and always ended up doing the work myself. Fonzy is the first that genuinely runs on its own. It picks the keywords, writes the article, adds the images and publishes straight to my site. A month in we're ranking for terms our old agency never touched, and we've even started getting mentioned in ChatGPT answers. For $49 a month it isn't close.
So far so good. The articles are genuinely well written.
Best money we spend on marketing. More traffic in two months than our agency got us in a year, at a fraction of the price.
Connected it to WordPress in ten minutes, no fuss.
Was skeptical about AI content, honestly. But these actually rank, and they sound like us. We let our freelancer go.
I'm about as non-technical as it gets, so I was nervous. Took maybe ten minutes to connect my site, and the team answered my (many) questions within minutes. It's been quietly publishing ever since, and the posts are better than what I'd write myself.
Questions you're probably asking.
Everything you need to know about Fonzy. Can't find the answer? Reach out.
Fonzy scans your market, analyzes competitors, and builds a data-driven keyword strategy tailored to your business. Then it writes, optimizes, and publishes up to 30 SEO articles per month directly to your website, on autopilot. Every article is internally linked, properly structured, and optimized for both Google and AI search engines.
Most businesses see initial rankings within 3 to 4 weeks as Google indexes your new content. Significant traffic growth typically happens within 3 to 6 months as your site's authority builds. SEO is a compounding investment, the longer you publish consistently, the faster results accelerate.
Fonzy uses a multi-step research process, not a single prompt. Each article goes through keyword research, competitor analysis, outline creation, writing, optimization, and quality scoring as separate steps. The system researches unique data points, statistics, and industry context for every piece. The result reads like expert content, not generic AI filler.
Not at all. Setup takes about 3 minutes. You enter your domain, connect your CMS in a few clicks (WordPress, Shopify, or Webflow), and Fonzy handles the rest. No code, no plugins to configure, no technical skills required.
Yes. On the monthly plan you can cancel from your dashboard in one click, anytime. Quarterly and yearly plans are billed upfront for the full period, so they run until the end of what you paid for and simply will not renew after you cancel. Your published content stays on your site either way.
Ready when you are
Start growing.
Stop guessing.
30 articles a month, published to your site. Get found on Google and recommended by ChatGPT.
3-day free trial, cancel anytime
