Building free tools is a not a viable long-term SEO strategy
8 points| lucgagan | 1 year ago
I thought that if I build a collection of the most polished tools that are pleasant to use, over time Google will start recommending them to more and more people. My goal was to invest upfront into developing domain reputation, so that when I launch my SaaS in the future, I am not starting from 0.
At first, it looked like this strategy is working. The first month I got roughly 1k unique visitors. Then it quickly grew to 4k uniques, and maxed out at 5k uniques after 5 months. But then (2023 November) some Google update launched and it was a downhill ride since. It wasn't all at once, but it slowly dwindled to about 800 uniques per month and seems to be stable at around that number. What's worse is that most users are direct users, i.e. coming from bookmarks. Increasingly, Google started to deprioritize results even for things that Rayrun was ranking #1.
I don't know what this means for long-term SEO strategy, but it was pretty devastating learning for me. I am not focused on building the product and don't invest much back into SEO play, but wanted to share this as a cautionary learning with others.
rchaud|1 year ago
Remember when SEO 101 involved having a site that's primarily easy for search bots to crawl? Today, that doesn't cause your site to rank better, but it does make it easy for Google to scrape your site's content to show as an "Instant Answer".
It's pay to play if you want your site to rank on search these days.
kevindamm|1 year ago
rogansage|1 year ago
I would question whether the 'ad-free' element of the strategy is potentially only a very small and ultimately insignificant weight in the perceived value of your tool vs others and might not be as impactful as you'd think -- if you deliver enough value for people not to care about having to ignore ads (which ppl are very, very good at these days) then they will confidently ignore the ads and find the value (e.g. academic referencing tools, wetransfer, {filetype}-to-{filetype} convertors)
paulcole|1 year ago
Why did you believe this?
bruce511|1 year ago
It is -really- hard to fight this myth because it "seems right" and because it is pervasive amongst the educator sector.
Unfortunately, as a reply to the original question, I'd say "you cannot build a business based on the goodwill of another unrelated party. Consider this a cheap life lesson, and modify your strategy appropriately."
greyzor7|1 year ago
altdataseller|1 year ago
Then eventually you start to convert those free tool leads to actual customers of your paid tool
auct|1 year ago
Imo google at least send email why.