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Guide · #655

Seoable for Lovable Founders: A Setup Guide

Step-by-step guide to set up Seoable with Lovable, generate SEO audits in 60 seconds, and fix AI-generated defaults for organic visibility.

Filed
April 27, 2026
Read
23 min
Author
The Seoable Team

Why Lovable Founders Need Seoable (Right Now)

You shipped. Your product works. Users love it. But Google doesn't know you exist.

This is the Lovable founder problem. You built a no-code SaaS in Lovable, deployed it, and now you're staring at zero organic traffic. You don't have an SEO budget. You don't have time to learn Ahrefs or hire an agency. You need visibility fast, and you need it cheap.

Seoable solves this in 60 seconds for $99. One payment. No subscriptions. No agency retainers. You get a domain audit, brand positioning, keyword roadmap, and 100 AI-generated blog posts—all tailored to your Lovable app.

But here's the catch: AI-generated content has defaults. Bad ones. Thin keyword targeting. Generic angles. Weak positioning. If you don't know how to fix them, you'll publish 100 posts that rank for nothing.

This guide walks you through setting up Seoable for your Lovable app, understanding what you get, and fixing the AI defaults so your content actually drives traffic.

Prerequisites: What You Need Before You Start

Before you run Seoable, have these ready:

Your domain and hosting. Lovable apps live on Vercel by default, but you should own a custom domain. Make sure your domain is already registered and pointing to your Lovable deployment. If you're unsure how to do this, check your Lovable docs—it's a standard DNS setup.

A Google Search Console account. You'll need this to submit your sitemap and monitor crawl health after Seoable generates content. If you haven't set this up yet, follow this step-by-step guide to Google Search Console in 10 minutes to get started.

Google Analytics 4. You'll want to track organic traffic from day one. Set up Google Analytics 4 for SEO tracking before you publish Seoable's content so you can measure impact.

A sitemap.xml. Lovable doesn't generate sitemaps by default for blog content. You'll need one after Seoable creates your posts. We'll cover this in the setup section, but know you'll need to either generate one manually or use a tool. Check out how to generate a sitemap.xml for your Lovable site for step-by-step instructions.

HTTPS enabled. Your Lovable app should already be on HTTPS via Vercel, but double-check. SSL certificates and HTTPS setup is non-negotiable for SEO.

Your product info handy. Seoable will ask for your value prop, target audience, and core features. Have a 2-3 sentence pitch ready. This is what Seoable uses to generate relevant content.

If you're missing any of these, stop here. Set them up first. SEO without the foundation is wasted effort.

Step 1: Navigate to Seoable and Create Your Account

Go to https://seoable.dev and click the "Get Started" button.

You'll land on a simple form. Enter your email and create a password. No credit card required yet—Seoable doesn't charge until you run your first audit.

Once you're logged in, you'll see your dashboard. It's sparse. That's intentional. You're about to add your first domain.

Click "New Domain" or "Add Domain." You'll see a form with fields for:

  • Domain name (e.g., mylovableapp.com)
  • Domain type (select "Lovable" if it's an option, or "Other")
  • Your value proposition (what your app does in one sentence)
  • Target audience (who uses it)
  • Core features (3-5 bullet points)

This is where most founders get lazy. They write generic nonsense. Don't. The quality of your AI-generated content depends entirely on how well you describe your product here.

Example: Instead of "We're a SaaS platform," write "We help indie hackers validate product ideas with AI-powered landing pages, no code required."

Be specific. Include your actual differentiator. Seoable's AI uses this to generate keyword angles and content hooks that actually match your product.

Step 2: Run Your Domain Audit

After you fill in your domain info, Seoable runs a full technical audit. This takes 30-45 seconds.

What you're seeing:

Domain Authority and backlink profile. Seoable checks how many referring domains point to you. If you're brand new, this will be zero. That's fine. You're not competing on links yet.

Technical SEO issues. Seoable crawls your site and flags problems:

  • Missing meta descriptions
  • Duplicate title tags
  • Broken internal links
  • Mobile usability issues
  • Page speed problems

For a Lovable app, most of these should be clean. Lovable's framework handles a lot of technical SEO by default. But check for:

  • Missing sitemap.xml. If Seoable flags this, you'll need to add one. Generate your sitemap before you publish content.
  • Robots.txt issues. Lovable generates a robots.txt automatically, but verify it's not blocking your blog folder.
  • Canonical tags. Make sure your domain is set to either www or non-www consistently. Read the guide on www vs. non-www to enforce this correctly.

After the audit, you'll see a report. Screenshot it or download it. You'll use this later to prioritize fixes.

Step 3: Review Your Brand Positioning

Seoable analyzes your domain and generates a brand positioning statement. This is the angle Seoable will use to generate all 100 blog posts.

Example positioning for a Lovable-built product:

"The fastest way for indie hackers to launch validated SaaS ideas without writing code. No Webflow. No Bubble. No 6-month dev cycle."

This positioning should feel accurate to you. If it doesn't, edit it. Click "Edit Positioning" and rewrite it to match your actual value prop.

Why? Because Seoable's AI generates content around this positioning. If the positioning is generic, your content will be too. If it's sharp, your content will have a real angle.

Bad positioning: "We're a software company."

Good positioning: "We're the only no-code SaaS builder that ships with built-in SEO defaults for indie hackers."

Spend 5 minutes getting this right. It compounds across 100 posts.

Step 4: Review Your Keyword Roadmap

Seoable generates a keyword roadmap—a prioritized list of 50-100 keywords you should target across your 100 posts.

This is where AI defaults show up. Seoable's AI looks at your positioning and generates keywords it thinks are relevant. But it doesn't know your actual market as well as you do.

You'll see keywords organized by:

  • Search volume (monthly searches)
  • Difficulty (how hard it is to rank)
  • Relevance (how well it matches your product)

Here's what to do:

Kill keywords that don't match your product. If Seoable suggests "how to build a SaaS in Python" but you only support no-code, delete it. Your content will waste time targeting the wrong audience.

Add keywords you know work. You probably have conversations with users. What problems do they mention? What phrases do they use? Add those keywords. Seoable's AI is good, but it's not in your customer calls.

Reorder by relevance, not just difficulty. Seoable ranks keywords by difficulty (easier to harder). But a "hard" keyword that perfectly describes your product is worth more than an "easy" keyword that attracts the wrong audience.

For a Lovable founder, good keywords might include:

  • "No-code SaaS builder"
  • "How to validate a SaaS idea without coding"
  • "Fastest way to launch a SaaS"
  • "No-code app builder for startups"
  • "AI-powered landing page builder"

Bad keywords might include:

  • "How to learn Python" (wrong audience)
  • "Best programming languages" (you don't teach coding)
  • "Enterprise software solutions" (you target indie hackers, not enterprises)

Don't just accept Seoable's defaults. Spend 15 minutes editing your keyword roadmap. This directly impacts whether your 100 posts drive traffic.

Step 5: Generate Your 100 AI Blog Posts

Once you've reviewed your positioning and keyword roadmap, click "Generate Posts."

Seoable's AI then generates 100 blog posts in real time. You'll see a progress bar. It takes 30-60 seconds.

What you're getting:

  • 100 unique blog posts (1,500-2,500 words each)
  • Keyword-targeted outlines (each post targets one keyword from your roadmap)
  • Meta descriptions (already written for you)
  • Internal linking suggestions (Seoable recommends which posts link to each other)
  • Markdown formatting (ready to copy into your Lovable blog)

Once generation completes, you'll see a list of all 100 posts. Each post has:

  • Title
  • Keyword target
  • Word count
  • Status (ready to publish or draft)

Don't publish them all at once. That's the biggest mistake Lovable founders make.

Step 6: Audit and Edit the AI-Generated Content

Here's where most founders fail. They generate 100 posts, publish them, and wonder why nothing ranks.

AI-generated content has predictable problems:

Thin keyword integration. The AI stuffs the keyword in the intro and outro but doesn't weave it naturally through the body. This looks spammy to Google.

Generic examples. The AI uses placeholder examples that don't match your product. A post about "no-code SaaS builders" might mention Webflow and Bubble but never mention your app.

Missing unique perspective. The AI generates content that could be published on 50 other websites. It doesn't have your founder perspective, your actual use cases, or your unique angle.

Weak CTAs. The AI's call-to-action is usually generic ("sign up today"). It doesn't tie to your actual product or value prop.

No internal linking strategy. Seoable suggests internal links, but the AI doesn't understand your site structure well enough to link them strategically.

Here's how to fix it:

Step 6.1: Pick your top 10 posts to edit first.

Don't edit all 100. That's a waste of time. Pick the 10 posts targeting your highest-priority keywords—the ones most likely to drive qualified traffic.

For a Lovable founder, this might be:

  1. "How to build a no-code SaaS in 2025"
  2. "No-code SaaS builder comparison"
  3. "Fastest way to validate a SaaS idea"
  4. "How to launch a SaaS without coding"
  5. "AI-powered landing page builders for startups"

And so on. These 10 posts will drive 80% of your traffic. Spend time on them.

Step 6.2: Rewrite the intro and hook.

The AI's intro is usually generic. Rewrite it to hook your actual audience.

AI version: "In today's digital landscape, no-code SaaS builders are becoming increasingly popular. Many entrepreneurs are turning to these tools to launch their ideas faster."

Better version: "You have a SaaS idea. You know it solves a real problem. But you can't code, and hiring a developer costs $50k+. Enter no-code SaaS builders. In the last 18 months, they've evolved from toys to legitimate business platforms. Here's how to pick the right one."

The second version is specific, has a clear problem statement, and sets up the post's value. It's what readers actually want to read.

Step 6.3: Add your own examples and case studies.

The AI uses generic examples. Replace them with your actual use cases.

AI version: "For example, a startup might use a no-code SaaS builder to launch a project management tool."

Better version: "We built our MVP in 48 hours using Lovable. No backend code. No database setup. Just a clear product idea and a no-code builder. Three months later, we had 500 paying customers."

Your examples are credible. The AI's are not.

Step 6.4: Strengthen the keyword integration.

The AI uses your target keyword once or twice. Add it naturally 3-5 more times throughout the post.

But don't keyword stuff. It should read naturally. If your keyword is "no-code SaaS builder," use variations like:

  • "no-code SaaS builders"
  • "building a SaaS without code"
  • "no-code approach to SaaS"
  • "SaaS builder (no-code)"

Google understands these variations. You don't need to repeat the exact keyword 50 times.

Step 6.5: Add a strong CTA.

The AI's CTA is weak. Make it specific to your product.

AI version: "Sign up today to get started."

Better version: "Ready to launch your SaaS idea without hiring a developer? Build your first prototype in Lovable for free. No credit card required."

The second version tells readers exactly what they'll get and removes friction.

Step 6.6: Strategically link to other posts.

Seoable suggests internal links, but you should add more. Link to related posts that:

  • Explain related concepts
  • Deepen the reader's understanding
  • Point toward your product

Example: In a post about "how to validate a SaaS idea," link to "fastest way to build a no-code MVP" or "how to launch a SaaS without coding."

These internal links keep readers on your site longer and tell Google your content is interconnected (which boosts rankings).

Step 7: Set Up Your Blog Infrastructure in Lovable

Seoable generates posts in Markdown. You need to get them into your Lovable app.

Lovable doesn't have a built-in blog by default, but you have options:

Option 1: Use a Markdown blog component.

If you're comfortable with code, add a simple blog component that reads Markdown files from your public folder. This is the cleanest approach.

Option 2: Use a headless CMS.

Connect your Lovable app to a headless CMS like Contentful, Sanity, or Strapi. Paste your Seoable posts there, and your Lovable app pulls them in automatically.

Option 3: Copy-paste into a rich text editor.

If your Lovable app has a rich text editor component, you can copy Seoable's Markdown and paste it in. It's not scalable for 100 posts, but it works for your first 10.

Regardless of which option you choose, make sure:

  • Each post has a unique URL (e.g., /blog/no-code-saas-builder)
  • Each post has a meta description (Seoable generates these)
  • Each post has a canonical tag pointing to itself
  • Your blog folder is crawlable (robots.txt allows it)

Once your blog is live, verify your domain in Google Search Console and submit your sitemap.

Step 8: Generate and Submit Your Sitemap

After your first 10 posts are live, generate a sitemap.xml that includes all your blog posts.

For a Lovable app, you'll likely need to generate this manually using a tool like XML-Sitemaps.com or Screaming Frog.

Here's the quick process:

  1. Go to XML-Sitemaps.com
  2. Enter your domain
  3. Click "Start"
  4. Download the sitemap.xml file
  5. Upload it to your public folder (usually /public/sitemap.xml)

Once your sitemap is live, submit it to Google Search Console:

  1. Go to Google Search Console
  2. Select your property
  3. Click "Sitemaps" in the left menu
  4. Paste your sitemap URL (e.g., https://yoursite.com/sitemap.xml)
  5. Click "Submit"

Google will crawl your sitemap and index your new blog posts within 24-48 hours.

For more details, check out how to generate a sitemap for your Lovable site.

Step 9: Monitor Crawl Health and Fix Issues

After you submit your sitemap, Google will start crawling your blog posts. But crawl errors happen.

In Google Search Console, go to "Coverage" and look for:

  • Excluded pages (pages Google found but didn't index)
  • Errors (pages that returned 404 or 500 errors)
  • Valid with warnings (pages that indexed but have issues)

Common issues for Lovable blogs:

Duplicate content. If you're serving the same blog post at multiple URLs (e.g., /blog/post and /blog/post/), Google will exclude one. Fix this by setting a canonical tag or using redirects.

Noindex tags. Check that your blog posts don't have <meta name="robots" content="noindex"> in their headers. This prevents indexing.

Slow page speed. If your blog posts load slowly, Google may crawl them less frequently. Check PageSpeed Insights and fix the top issues.

Redirect chains. If your domain redirects through multiple URLs before landing on the final post, Google sees this as a crawl waste. Use direct 301 redirects instead.

Fix these issues as they appear. They directly impact how quickly your posts rank.

Step 10: Publish the Rest of Your Posts (Gradually)

Once your first 10 posts are indexed and you're seeing some traffic, publish the next batch of 10-20 posts.

Don't publish all 100 at once. Here's why:

Google sees mass content creation as spam. Publishing 100 posts in one day looks like you're trying to game the algorithm. Spreading them over 8-12 weeks looks natural.

You'll have time to edit and improve. As your first posts rank, you'll learn what works. You can apply those lessons to your later posts.

You'll have time to build internal links. As you publish new posts, link them to your existing posts. This builds topical authority and keeps readers on your site.

You can monitor performance. With a gradual rollout, you can track which posts drive traffic and which don't. You can then improve your keyword roadmap for the next batch.

Ideal publishing schedule:

  • Week 1-2: Publish and edit your first 10 posts
  • Week 3-4: Publish 10 more posts
  • Week 5-6: Publish 10 more posts
  • Week 7-12: Publish the remaining 70 posts at 2-3 per week

This spreads your content out over 12 weeks and gives Google time to crawl and index each batch.

Step 11: Set Up Tracking and Monitor Results

You need to know which posts are driving traffic. Set up tracking before your posts start ranking.

If you haven't already, set up Google Analytics 4 for SEO tracking.

Once GA4 is live, create a custom report to track:

  • Organic traffic by page (which blog posts drive the most traffic)
  • Organic traffic by keyword (which keywords are driving visitors)
  • Conversion rate by post (which posts convert readers into customers)
  • Avg. session duration (which posts keep readers engaged)

Check this report every week. After 4-6 weeks, you should see patterns:

  • Some posts will drive traffic. These are your winners.
  • Some posts will get zero traffic. These need improvement.
  • Some posts will drive traffic but no conversions. These need stronger CTAs.

Use these insights to improve your later posts.

Fixing Common AI-Generated Content Defaults

Now that you understand the setup, let's talk about the AI defaults that kill rankings.

Default 1: Generic Keyword Targeting

The problem: Seoable's AI targets broad keywords like "no-code SaaS builder." Thousands of posts target this keyword. You won't rank.

The fix: Rewrite your posts to target long-tail variations:

  • Instead of "no-code SaaS builder," target "best no-code SaaS builder for indie hackers"
  • Instead of "how to build a SaaS," target "how to build a SaaS in 48 hours without coding"
  • Instead of "SaaS validation," target "how to validate a SaaS idea with a landing page"

These longer keywords have less competition and attract more qualified traffic.

Default 2: Thin Content Structure

The problem: Seoable's AI generates posts with weak structure. Introduction, three middle sections, conclusion. No depth.

The fix: Add more sections. Break up long paragraphs. Use subheadings. Add lists, tables, and code examples.

Example structure for a 2,500-word post:

  • Introduction (300 words)
  • Section 1: The Problem (400 words)
  • Section 2: Why Existing Solutions Fail (400 words)
  • Section 3: Your Solution (400 words)
  • Section 4: How to Implement (600 words with code examples)
  • Section 5: Common Mistakes (300 words)
  • Conclusion (200 words)

This structure is much more scannable and gives readers multiple reasons to keep reading.

Default 3: Missing Author Credibility

The problem: Seoable's AI writes in a generic voice. It doesn't sound like a founder who actually built the product.

The fix: Add an author byline and a short bio. Share your personal story. Mention your experience.

Example:

"I built three SaaS products without code. Each time, I thought I needed a developer. Each time, I was wrong. Here's what I learned."

This immediately establishes credibility. Readers know they're learning from someone who's done it, not a generic AI.

Default 4: Weak Call-to-Action

The problem: Seoable's AI ends with "sign up today." This doesn't work.

The fix: Make your CTA specific, valuable, and easy to act on.

Bad CTA: "Sign up today."

Good CTA: "Build your first no-code SaaS prototype in Lovable. Free. No credit card required. Takes 15 minutes."

The good CTA tells readers exactly what they'll get, removes friction, and sets expectations.

Default 5: No Unique Angle

The problem: Seoable's AI generates posts that could be published anywhere. They don't reflect your unique perspective.

The fix: Add your unique angle to every post.

Example: If you're a Lovable founder writing about "how to validate a SaaS idea," your angle is "how to validate a SaaS idea without hiring a developer." That's your unique perspective.

Every post should have an angle that only you can write from.

Integrating Seoable with Your Broader SEO Strategy

Seoable gives you a content foundation. But it's not your entire SEO strategy.

After you publish your 100 Seoable posts, you should:

Set up your technical SEO foundation. Seoable's audit flags issues, but you need to fix them. Check your free SEO tool stack for founders to ensure you have monitoring in place.

Monitor your site's uptime. If your Lovable app goes down, Google can't crawl your blog posts. Set up uptime monitoring so you know immediately if there's an issue.

Build backlinks. Seoable's content is good, but it won't rank without some backlinks. Guest post on relevant blogs, get mentioned in industry publications, and build relationships with other founders.

Create a content calendar. After your 100 Seoable posts, plan new content. What questions are your users asking? What topics are trending in your space? Publish new posts every 2-4 weeks to keep your site fresh.

Optimize for featured snippets. Google shows featured snippets (the box at the top of search results) for many queries. Structure your posts to answer common questions directly. Use bullet lists and short paragraphs.

Pro Tips for Lovable Founders Using Seoable

Tip 1: Use Seoable's keyword roadmap as a content calendar.

Seoable generates 50-100 keywords. These become your content topics for the next 12 weeks. Publish them in order of priority (highest search volume and relevance first).

Tip 2: Link your blog posts to your product pages.

Seoable generates blog posts, but your product pages are where conversions happen. In every blog post, link to the relevant product page or feature.

Example: In a post about "how to validate a SaaS idea," link to your landing page builder feature.

Tip 3: Repurpose your Seoable content.

Your 100 blog posts can become:

  • Twitter threads
  • LinkedIn posts
  • Email newsletters
  • YouTube video scripts
  • Podcast episode outlines

One piece of content, multiple distribution channels.

Tip 4: Track which keywords drive conversions, not just traffic.

Some keywords drive lots of traffic but no customers. Other keywords drive fewer visitors but higher-quality leads. Focus on the latter.

Tip 5: Update your top posts every 3-6 months.

SEO is not "set it and forget it." Your top 10 posts should be updated regularly with new examples, updated data, and fresh perspectives. This keeps them ranking and improves their performance.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

Mistake 1: Publishing all 100 posts at once.

Don't do this. Google will see it as spam. Spread them over 8-12 weeks.

Mistake 2: Not editing the AI-generated content.

Seoable's AI is good, but it's not perfect. Spend time editing your top 10 posts. This is where your ROI comes from.

Mistake 3: Not linking internally.

Internal links are free SEO. Link your blog posts to each other and to your product pages. This boosts rankings and keeps readers on your site.

Mistake 4: Ignoring your Google Search Console data.

Google Search Console tells you exactly what's working. Check it weekly. Fix crawl errors immediately. Use the data to improve your later posts.

Mistake 5: Not building backlinks.

Seoable's content is good, but it won't rank without some external authority. Guest post, get mentioned in publications, build relationships. Even a few quality backlinks move the needle.

Timeline: From Setup to First Rankings

Here's what to expect:

Day 1: Run Seoable audit. Review positioning and keyword roadmap. Cost: $99. Time: 1 hour.

Days 2-7: Edit your first 10 posts. Publish them to your blog. Set up your sitemap. Submit to Google Search Console. Time: 5-10 hours.

Days 8-14: Publish your next 10 posts. Monitor crawl health in GSC. Time: 5 hours.

Weeks 3-4: Continue publishing posts gradually. Start seeing crawl activity in GSC. Time: 5 hours per week.

Weeks 5-8: Your first posts start ranking for their target keywords. You'll see traffic in Google Analytics. Time: 3 hours per week (maintenance).

Weeks 9-12: More posts rank. You start seeing consistent organic traffic. Time: 3 hours per week.

Month 4+: Your 100 posts are live and ranking. You're seeing 100-500+ organic visitors per month (depending on your niche and competition). Time: 2-3 hours per week (updates and new content).

This timeline assumes you edit your posts and fix technical issues. If you publish without editing, rankings will be slower.

Seoable vs. Traditional Agencies: Why Seoable Wins for Lovable Founders

You might be wondering: why not just hire an SEO agency?

Cost: An agency charges $2,000-$10,000 per month. Seoable is $99 one-time. Over 12 months, you save $24,000-$120,000.

Speed: An agency takes 4-6 weeks to deliver a content strategy. Seoable delivers 100 posts in 60 seconds.

Control: An agency makes decisions for you. Seoable gives you the data and content. You decide what to publish.

Learning: Working with Seoable teaches you SEO. You understand your keyword roadmap, your positioning, your content gaps. You can maintain it yourself.

The trade-off: Seoable's AI is good, but it's not as good as a human SEO strategist. You need to edit and improve the content. But for a $99 investment, the ROI is exceptional.

Measuring Success: Key Metrics to Track

After you publish your Seoable content, track these metrics:

Organic traffic: How many visitors come from Google? This should grow from zero to 100-500+ per month over 3-6 months.

Keyword rankings: How many of your target keywords rank in the top 10? After 3 months, you should rank for 30-50% of your target keywords. After 6 months, 50-80%.

Click-through rate (CTR): What percentage of people click your result in Google? Better titles and meta descriptions improve CTR. Aim for 3-5% CTR.

Conversion rate: What percentage of organic visitors become customers? This varies by product, but 1-5% is typical for SaaS.

Cost per customer: Divide your Seoable investment ($99) by the number of customers you acquire from organic traffic. If you get 10 customers, your cost per customer is $9.90. That's exceptional.

Track these metrics in Google Analytics and Google Search Console. Review them monthly. Use the data to improve your strategy.

Next Steps: After Your 100 Posts Are Published

Once your Seoable content is live and ranking, you have options:

Option 1: Keep publishing new content.

Every 2-4 weeks, publish a new blog post. Use your keyword roadmap to identify gaps. Use Seoable's insights to inform new topics.

Option 2: Build backlinks.

Your content is good. Now get external validation. Guest post on relevant blogs. Get mentioned in industry publications. Build relationships with other founders.

Option 3: Optimize for conversions.

Your blog is driving traffic. Now optimize it for conversions. Improve your CTAs. Test different landing page designs. Track which blog posts drive the most customers.

Option 4: Expand to other channels.

Your blog content can become Twitter threads, LinkedIn posts, YouTube videos, and podcast episodes. Distribute your content across multiple channels.

Final Thoughts: Seoable Is Your SEO Foundation

Seoable solves the Lovable founder's biggest problem: you shipped a great product, but nobody knows about it.

For $99, you get a domain audit, brand positioning, keyword roadmap, and 100 AI-generated blog posts. This is your SEO foundation.

But Seoable is not magic. The AI-generated content has defaults. Generic keyword targeting. Thin structure. Weak positioning. You need to edit and improve it.

If you do that—if you spend 5-10 hours editing your top 10 posts, publishing gradually, monitoring your metrics, and building backlinks—you'll see results.

Within 3-6 months, you should have 100+ organic visitors per month. Within 12 months, 500+. These are qualified leads. People searching for exactly what you built.

That's the power of SEO. And with Seoable, it's now accessible to founders who can't afford agencies.

Go to https://seoable.dev. Run your audit. Edit your content. Publish gradually. Track your metrics.

Your organic visibility is waiting.

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