What do you use for SEO optimization of your website?
Sergul Sungur
55 replies
Replies
Kevin Chandra@kevinchandra
Typedream
I've had a great experience with Neil Patel's Ubersuggest. The most affordable so far if you're just starting out (sub 500 pages). I'd recommend moving out to SEMRush or ahrefs when you get bigger.
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@kevinchandra thanks for your reply. To be honest, I've heard but not looked into Neil Patel's Ubersuggest. It's also more cheaper, I'll give a try.
We use Semrush.
@dapeng_ni me, too. thanks for your reply.
@roberto_robles @maxwellcdavis thanks. I'll check it out.
I use a combination of on-page optimization, keyword research, and link building.
Zappi Ad Predictor
I've used Google's Mobile Friendly test as a SUPER rough and ready start!
@nik_hazell thanks for your respond. Google's solutions are very useful and beneficial.
So, just sold my SEO agency of 10 years and am getting back to building small projects. Experience is that most tools are terrible at a million things and great at one thing and aren't necessary for the average Producthunt maker.
SEMrush (for competitive keyword data) and Screaming Frog (for crawling) are the two that were irreplaceable. If I really want a public-facing app to rank it's easiest to code it on top of WordPress w/ Rank Math, Hummingbird, Smush, and Disable Blog to generate schema, sitemaps, manage large quantities of content, and still stay lightweight-ish.
@coreynorthcutt thanks for your reply. We're using SEMrush and f WordPress or coding website.
I've tried several, and I would say Semrush and Ahrefs are the most complete. Ahrefs is probably slightly better on some features, but also a bit expensive; Semrush is also good for the knowledge base and the courses offered on many topics (like backlinks building, etc.).
Recently I've also started to use ubersuggest (by Neil Patel), which is still basic and not as complete as the other two above, but it's still very useful for keywords, competitive analysis, domain SEO issues discovering, backlinks, content ideas etc.
Prelude Verify
Ahrefs, both for content and for technical optimization.
The weekly Ahrefs Audits help us identify new errors on our website and quickly fix them.
And the Ahrefs Wordpress Plugin pick for us the pending SEO opportunities by highlighting medium performing content that could perform much better by doing small fixes on it.
@paullouis_valat1 Ahrefs is highly recommended. I'll try it.
Depends on what type of website you're wanting to optimize and how big a part of your strategy SEO is. There's sort of the 80/20 (doing keyword research, running on cloud hosting, hiring good writers), and then the super in-depth more technical stuff.
For keyword research, we've used SEM rush and Ahrefs but honestly, we just love Ahrefs way more.
For technical SEO we use Jetpage.co to build our blog but I'm biased because I co-founded it haha. It's blog builder that already handles technical SEO for you, so if you're looking to do a blog focusing on SEO it's perfect. You can find out more about it here: https://jetpage.co/blog/best-web...
While on-page SEO (in terms of checklists like Yoast) isn't as important as technical and the quality of your content, it's still nice to use something like Surfer SEO.
There was a really helpful article on the product review update Google made a bit ago, that breaks down how to write a great quality article that Google will like. (When it comes to product reviews)
Here's that article: https://www.amsivedigital.com/in...
Content Quality Score(E-E-A-T)
I use semrush currently. Any other good choices?
@zhitao_yan me, too. many recommends have been given in the replies. the most ones were Semrush, Ahrefs and Screaming Frog. you might check them.
Hey! I use Leetbot!
"Content, SEO & Paid Ads Made Easy.
Improves every website, upskills anyone – great for product descriptions & search phrase match."
leebot.co.uk
@tanesha_austen thanks for your reply. I haven't heard it before. I'll check it out.
Many solutions exist! the other participants will share them. For my part, I worry a lot about the UX aspect and the vital web cores optimize the images and videos, here is the link to our solution twicpics.com
@fares_aktouf I agree with you and thanks for your recommendation.
Screaming Frog
@daniel_engels @sergul_sungur1 Excellent ! in addition there are several APIs that can help such as page speed insight
@daniel_engels I haven't used it before. thanks for your reply.
WorkHub
Our tools include several reputable sources of optimizers. We utilize the Google keywords tool, the Adwords Keyword planner, Yoast Seo, SEMrush and any other number of computer programs that help optimize our content for search engines.
@qudsia_ali thanks for your respond. I generally use google solutions as you mentioned and semrush.
WorkHub
@sergul_sungur1 Google and Semrush are the best tools available for SEO.
Hey! Yes, I use it often. More precisely, always. It is important to understand that competitors also use them, and as you know, if you are higher in the search, then it is more likely that your services will be used. Therefore, if they found your site, then they are interested in what you do. And the likelihood that they will become your customers is much higher than from contextual advertising.
I am using the services https://juicify.digital/guest_po... . Everything suits me
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@zeeshan121 I'm using semrush, too. and I'm agree with you, it's very useful.
NVSTly: Social Investing
Sergul, did you check out all these links? Were any of them free or DIY guides that you could reshare?
Thanks
NVSTly: Social Investing
@sergul_sungur1 Thanks for this
@richw yes, I checked all of them and they aren't free. some have just free trial. Only marketing miner has a limited free plan.
Yoast and Ahrefs can be beneficial. Yoast has also free online SEO lessons. I didn't see any DIY guides. But some products can have how to videos on their youtube channels like Screaming Frog, maybe you can look in details.