Your page TITLE and DESCRIPTION are the first things people see in Google search.
I meet a lot of entrepreneurs online. Because I do SEO, I always check their websites. This small habit helps me find new ideas and improve my projects.
Many owners have good homepages with nice fonts, clean design, videos, and strong offers. Many also have blogs with dozens of articles.
But when I check their website traffic, it’s usually 0 or very low.
The common reason: they ignore page titles and descriptions or write them wrong.
The TITLE and DESCRIPTION of your page are the first things people see in search results. If they are bad, people won’t click. They click on the result that catches their attention.
If they are bad, people won’t click. They click on the result that catches their attention.
Your title and description should:
- include your main keyword - include one or more long-tail keywords - be relevant - be clickable - not be too long - Title around 55 characters - Description around 160 characters
If they are too long, Google cuts them and they lose impact.
A few tricks that work:
1. Use numbers
People like clear numbers.
Example: 15 Data Analysis Tools and When to Use Them
2. Use dates
Makes content look fresh.
Example: 12 Must-Have Data Analysis Tools for 2026
3. Use “Free” only if it’s true
If you say it’s free, show free tools.
Example: 15 Free Data Analysis Tools to Boost Productivity
If you lie, users leave in seconds. This is a bad signal for Google.
4. Use comparison titles
People search for alternatives.
Example: Is GoneDomains a Good Ahrefs Alternative in 2026?
This works well when comparing your project with a bigger brand.
SlideLab, a presentation editor, was the first product I ever worked on. I started building it back when I was running a web studio.
At some point, I realized the studio wasn’t working out. It wasn’t scalable, and it was draining. There were always cash flow problems, endless meetings, writing proposals, making prototypes, and being on call with clients all the time.
I gave all my time to the studio, but at the end of the month, after paying bills, taxes, and salaries, there was almost nothing left. Back then, with little experience, my team and I decided to build the presentation editor. We worked on it for two years without any marketing—just sitting in a cold coworking space on weekends and evenings, putting it together while still running the studio.
When the money ran out, the team left. I kept going alone because I was too stubborn to give up. Eventually, I decided to try selling it. People told me no one would buy it since it wasn’t making any money. But they were wrong.
At the end of 2024, I sold SlideLab. It wasn’t a huge amount, but it’s enough for me to live for a year in Thailand (plus some crypto savings). This sale feels like a big win for me and gives me motivation to keep going. Right now, I’m working on transferring the product to the new owner.
If you’re working on a project and open to selling it, don’t be afraid to share that. The more you talk about it, the better your chances of finding someone who sees its value and is willing to buy it.
Alex: SEO, Domains & Growth
Startup founders, boost your website’s SEO by submitting it to these high-authority sites for free:
1. Microlaunch
2. StartupRanking
3. LaunchingNext
4. Product Hunt
5. StartupBase
6. Startup Stash
7. AlternativeTo
8. StackShare
9. SaaSHub
10. TechPluto
11. Blogarama
12. Alltop
13. Hotfrog
14. Foursquare
15. Cybo
16. Brownbook
17. GitHub
18. DEVto
19. Stack Overflow
20. G2
21. Capterra
22. Trustpilot
23. SaaSworthy
24. AppSumo
25. Indie Hackers
26. Hacker News
27. Quora
28. Reddit
29. LinkedIn
30. TripAdvisor
31. F6S
32. Failory
33. Bizcommunity
34. Facebook Business Page
35. Nextdoor Business Page
The full list with links 👉 gone.domains/blog/35-websites-to-get-free-backlink…
17 hours ago | [YT] | 4
View 0 replies
Alex: SEO, Domains & Growth
I already have 1.2M domains in GoneDomains database and decided to launch a free tool.
Expired Soon Domains — a list of domains expiring tomorrow
👉 gone.domains/expired-domains
So you can start tracking interesting domains before others do.
#domains #expiredomain #dropdomain
6 days ago | [YT] | 3
View 0 replies
Alex: SEO, Domains & Growth
Check your or your competitors’ backlinks and see what helps them rank.
I’ve made a FREE Backlink Checker Tool to boost your SEO in a few clicks.
👉 gone.domains/tools/backlink-checker
4 weeks ago | [YT] | 2
View 0 replies
Alex: SEO, Domains & Growth
Your page TITLE and DESCRIPTION are the first things people see in Google search.
I meet a lot of entrepreneurs online. Because I do SEO, I always check their websites. This small habit helps me find new ideas and improve my projects.
Many owners have good homepages with nice fonts, clean design, videos, and strong offers. Many also have blogs with dozens of articles.
But when I check their website traffic, it’s usually 0 or very low.
The common reason: they ignore page titles and descriptions or write them wrong.
The TITLE and DESCRIPTION of your page are the first things people see in search results. If they are bad, people won’t click. They click on the result that catches their attention.
If they are bad, people won’t click. They click on the result that catches their attention.
Your title and description should:
- include your main keyword
- include one or more long-tail keywords
- be relevant
- be clickable
- not be too long
- Title around 55 characters
- Description around 160 characters
If they are too long, Google cuts them and they lose impact.
A few tricks that work:
1. Use numbers
People like clear numbers.
Example: 15 Data Analysis Tools and When to Use Them
2. Use dates
Makes content look fresh.
Example: 12 Must-Have Data Analysis Tools for 2026
3. Use “Free” only if it’s true
If you say it’s free, show free tools.
Example: 15 Free Data Analysis Tools to Boost Productivity
If you lie, users leave in seconds. This is a bad signal for Google.
4. Use comparison titles
People search for alternatives.
Example: Is GoneDomains a Good Ahrefs Alternative in 2026?
This works well when comparing your project with a bigger brand.
#seo #google #marketing #promotion #startup
1 month ago | [YT] | 2
View 0 replies
Alex: SEO, Domains & Growth
Over 600+ newly found Expired Domains just dropped on GoneDomains
Check today’s Free Daily Newsletter
👉 s3.gone.domains/email-daily-domain-reports/gone-do…
1 month ago | [YT] | 1
View 0 replies
Alex: SEO, Domains & Growth
Want backlinks from Harvard, Forbes, or maybe The Guardian?
Now you can.
A new feature on GoneDomains lets you filter backlinks by source.
Finding quality backlinks is now easier and more profitable.
Did you try Free DEMO?
gone.domains/
3 months ago (edited) | [YT] | 2
View 0 replies
Alex: SEO, Domains & Growth
Backlinks Finder is live on ProductHunt
Getting backlinks from BIG sites is hard.
But they still matter for SEO.
That’s why I built Backlinks Finder. Discover expired domains with backlinks from top sites across 200+ niches.
Try it FREE & show some support ♥️
Backlinks Finder: gone.domains/tools/backlink-finder
Support on ProductHunt: producthunt.com/products/gonedomains/launches/back…
6 months ago | [YT] | 3
View 0 replies
Alex: SEO, Domains & Growth
Keep making videos on your YouTube channel.
It brings traffic and new leads.
1. Upload a new video
2. Add your link in the description and first comment
3. You get STRONG BACKLINKS from YouTube
That helps your SEO
#YouTubeMarketing #SEOtips #BuildInPublic
7 months ago | [YT] | 2
View 1 reply
Alex: SEO, Domains & Growth
I sold one of my products! 🤑
SlideLab, a presentation editor, was the first product I ever worked on. I started building it back when I was running a web studio.
At some point, I realized the studio wasn’t working out. It wasn’t scalable, and it was draining. There were always cash flow problems, endless meetings, writing proposals, making prototypes, and being on call with clients all the time.
I gave all my time to the studio, but at the end of the month, after paying bills, taxes, and salaries, there was almost nothing left. Back then, with little experience, my team and I decided to build the presentation editor. We worked on it for two years without any marketing—just sitting in a cold coworking space on weekends and evenings, putting it together while still running the studio.
When the money ran out, the team left. I kept going alone because I was too stubborn to give up. Eventually, I decided to try selling it. People told me no one would buy it since it wasn’t making any money. But they were wrong.
At the end of 2024, I sold SlideLab. It wasn’t a huge amount, but it’s enough for me to live for a year in Thailand (plus some crypto savings). This sale feels like a big win for me and gives me motivation to keep going. Right now, I’m working on transferring the product to the new owner.
If you’re working on a project and open to selling it, don’t be afraid to share that. The more you talk about it, the better your chances of finding someone who sees its value and is willing to buy it.
10 months ago | [YT] | 3
View 0 replies
Alex: SEO, Domains & Growth
Focus on solving problems, not showcasing features.
Ask yourself:
– How does my product solve the user's problem?
– How does it boost their income or business?
– What's the end benefit for them?
Answer these from day one to launch.
#seo #DR #DomainRating #Ahrefs #startup
1 year ago | [YT] | 3
View 0 replies
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