Skip to content
Subscribe

SEO Optimizer

Turn any URL into a ranked to-do list: exactly what to fix, copy-pasteable HTML for each fix, and an effort estimate per task.

Free · no signup · real data — provided by Keywords Everywhere, embedded live below.

Powered by Keywords Everywhere

What the SEO Optimizer does

Where an analyzer diagnoses, this tool prescribes: for any URL it produces a prioritized checklist of concrete fixes, each with ready-to-paste HTML and an effort estimate. It runs on the same engine as the SEO Analyzer but is built for the execution phase, not the diagnosis phase.

The effort estimates quietly change how you work: sorting fixes by impact-per-effort means a two-minute meta description rewrite happens before a two-day content restructure — which is the correct order and the opposite of how most people work through audits. For title-specific fixes it pairs naturally with the Title Length Checker.

How to use it

  1. Enter the URL you want to improve.
  2. Review the checklist — each item comes ranked, with a snippet and an effort estimate.
  3. Do the low-effort, high-impact items immediately; the snippets paste straight into your template or CMS.
  4. Schedule the heavy items honestly, and re-run the tool after shipping to verify.

SEO Optimizer FAQ

How is this different from the SEO Analyzer?

Same engine, different output. The Analyzer scores and explains across six categories; the Optimizer converts findings into an execution list — copy-pasteable HTML per fix plus an effort estimate, ordered so the cheap wins come first.

Can I use the HTML snippets directly?

Yes — that’s the point. Review each snippet before pasting (your CMS may handle some tags itself, and duplicated meta tags help nobody), but they’re written to drop into a template or page head as-is.

Which fixes typically matter most?

Usually: a title tag that matches search intent, a meta description that earns the click, one clear H1, image alt text, and internal links from your stronger pages. Boring, known, and still skipped on most of the web — which is why they keep working.