Launching today

BoltSEO
Google traffic, without the content team.
12 followers
Google traffic, without the content team.
12 followers
BoltSEO reads your site, finds winnable keywords, writes SEO articles in your brand voice, and auto-publishes them to WordPress, Shopify or Webflow. Built for small businesses that can't afford a €1,500/mo agency. Free to start — 3 articles, no credit card.










Hey everyone, Hans here.
Quick honest backstory on why this exists. In my day job I'm a CEO, and a while back I tried to sort out SEO for our own site. The options were grim: an agency wanted €1,500 a month and told me to be patient for "six to twelve months," or I could go learn the whole thing myself, which I had zero time for. So we just paid...
Then I started asking around, and basically every small business owner I know had the same story. That a lot of people are quietly losing on Google because SEO is priced and packaged for companies with a marketing department.
But most of SEO honestly isn't magic. It's repetitive: figure out what people actually search, write something genuinely useful about it, and keep doing that. Which turns out to be exactly the kind of work AI is finally good at.
So that's BoltSEO. You point it at your website, it finds keywords you can realistically rank for, writes the articles in your own voice, and (if you connect it) publishes them straight to WordPress/Shopify/Webflow. You still review everything — it just takes the boring 90% off your plate.
And yeah, I know what some of you are thinking, because I thought it too: isn't AI content just spam Google hates? Short answer, no. Google ranks helpful stuff regardless of who or what wrote it, and it's always buried the lazy mass-produced junk. So I built this to make a few good articles, not 500 bad ones.
It's free to start (3 articles, no card) if you want to kick the tires. I'd genuinely love feedback — and honestly, push back if you think I'm wrong about any of this. Exciting!
@hdeloore Congrats for launch... really interesting
@vikramp7470 Thanks a lot, hope you like the product!
Huge congrats on the launch 🙌 @hdeloore does it generate meta titles and descriptions automatically or do we write those?
@priya_kushwaha1 Thanks so much! 🙌 Fully automatic — every article ships with an SEO-optimized meta title and description generated from the content and its target keyword, so you don't have to write them by hand.
That said, you can edit any title or description before it goes live (auto-publish is a setting, not a default). So it's "done for you, but yours to tweak."
@tehreem_fatima5 Appreciate this — you've named the exact problem we obsessed over. "Generic but grammatically fine" is the failure mode most AI content dies on.
The short answer: BoltSEO learns your voice from your own site before it writes a single word. It reads your About page, service descriptions and existing copy to model your actual tone — formal or casual, technical or plain, punchy or detailed — rather than defaulting to a house style. So a niche brand's quirks get picked up from real evidence, not guessed.
Then there's a dedicated voice-check step in the pipeline: after drafting, it evaluates the article against that captured voice and rewrites anything that drifts generic. We also tuned hard against the tells of AI writing — the samey intros, the staccato rhythm, the section endings that all sound the same — so it reads like a person, not a template.
@hdeloore Congrats on the launch, upvoted. Auto-publishing straight to WordPress, Shopify and Webflow is the part that would actually save time for small teams, most SEO tools stop at the draft and leave the boring part to you. Curious how it handles keeping voice consistent once a site has years of inconsistent content behind it.
@alex_iliescu Thanks - and that's the real edge case, not the easy version of it.
Two things: it doesn't treat all your content equally — it leans hardest on the pages where your intended voice lives (About, homepage, service/product pages), not a noisy 2021 blog post. And consistency gets enforced on the output side, not just inferred from the input: every draft is checked against one captured voice profile, so even messy source material converges on a single voice instead of mirroring the inconsistency back.
Honest limit: if a brand is genuinely split-personality, a human still has to pick which voice is "the one" — which is why review-before-publish and the free plan exist. Nice side effect: once you're publishing through it, those articles quietly become the consistent baseline the old content never had...