Launching today
ContentRankr
The only rank tracker fast enough for Google's UGC churn.
2 followers
The only rank tracker fast enough for Google's UGC churn.
2 followers
Standard trackers update weekly. We track live. Discover how we found out that 56% of Reddit URLs vanish from Page 1 within 48 hours, and monitor your own volatile SERPs daily.







Hi Product Hunt! 👋 I'm the maker of ContentRankr.
Everyone in SEO right now is talking about Reddit and Quora completely taking over the SERPs. But when I tried to monitor this using standard rank trackers, the data made no sense. They update too slowly.
So, I built a daily tracker and ran an experiment on 800 commercial UGC URLs. The results were wild: over 56% of them completely dropped off Page 1 within 48 hours. Google is just using them as volatile test spots.
I built ContentRankr specifically for this high-volatility era. You paste your URLs, and we track the live SERP daily so you know exactly when your parasite SEO drops off a cliff.
A quick note on pricing: We have a 7-day free trial to let you test the daily tracking. It does require a card upfront to prevent abuse of the scraping resources, but it’s completely frictionless to cancel within the app with one click before the 7 days are up.
I've included the raw data from the 800-URL study on the site. I'll be hanging out here all day, so I'd love to hear your feedback or answer any questions about the data.
All the best for today!! Is the volatility mostly on Reddit, or are you seeing it across other domains too?
@educs Thanks so much! Really appreciate the support. 🙌
Great question. Reddit is definitely the most extreme right now – Google seems to treat it as a revolving door for testing user engagement. But we are absolutely seeing the same 'rapid rotation' pattern across other major UGC platforms too, especially Quora and LinkedIn Pulse.
The 56% drop-off within 48h that we tracked included a mix of these, though Reddit is the biggest culprit.
Are you running any parasite/UGC campaigns yourself right now, or just watching the SERPs go crazy from the sidelines?