Launched this week
Plexa helps businesses build better websites by identifying trust, security, SEO and compliance issues in one place. Instead of overwhelming you with technical jargon, Plexa provides clear, actionable recommendations to help you understand what's wrong, why it matters and how to fix it.



@mrpenetrator Bundling trust, security and SEO is interesting because right now I pay for three separate tools that barely talk to each other. From the buyer side the risk is a suite that does all three at 70 percent versus a best-in-class point tool. Which of the three would you say Plexa does better than the standalone incumbents?
@artem_fedorovich I’d say the biggest difference today is prioritisation rather than depth. Plexa is designed to connect security, SEO and trust into one actionable report instead of three separate specialist reports. As the platform evolves, verified website owners will also get much deeper authenticated scans.
@mrpenetrator That prioritisation framing is the right one, but security, SEO and trust land on three different desks here, so a single report only gets actioned if it's obvious who owns each line. Does Plexa route findings by function, or is it one list the owner triages themselves?
@artem_fedorovich Great question. Today, Plexa groups findings by category (Security, SEO, Accessibility, Compliance, etc.) rather than presenting one long list.
For larger teams, the Business plan includes Team Workspaces, so multiple people can collaborate on the same website. I’m continuing to expand those collaboration features, with even more workflow and ownership capabilities planned.
respect the rebrand story, shipping past the honest feedback instead of ignoring it is the harder path but the right one. question on the trust badge specifically: if a site fixes an issue right after a bad scan, does the public verification page update in near real time, or is there a lag where a visitor could see a stale "verified" badge on a site that currently has a live issue? that gap is the thing that would worry me most about any public trust score.
@galdayan Thanks, Gal! I really appreciate that—and the feedback during the rebrand genuinely helped shape Plexa.
Great question. The verification page isn’t a static “verified forever” badge. It always reflects the results of the latest scan, and the Last verified timestamp shows exactly when those results were generated. Scheduled scans keep that information up to date automatically.
There is naturally a window between scans, so the badge represents the most recent verified state rather than claiming continuous real-time monitoring. As Plexa evolves, reducing that gap is definitely something I’m exploring.
Thanks for raising it—that’s exactly the kind of question I’d expect people to ask.
@mrpenetrator 'reflects the latest scan, not continuous monitoring' is the honest framing to lead with, way better than letting people assume real-time and finding out otherwise. the timestamp being visible is what makes that honest instead of just a disclaimer buried in the FAQ. good luck closing that gap as it evolves.
@galdayan Transparency is important to me, which is why the verification timestamp is always visible.
The TrustScore updates immediately whenever a new scan completes, so the badge always reflects the latest scan results. Between scans, it represents the most recently verified state, and the timestamp makes that clear.
Thanks again
appreciate the straight answer, and the honesty about it being a rebrand-in-progress too. good luck closing that real-time gap as Plexa matures.
How does Plexa handle sites behind authentication or ones with heavy client-side rendering, and does the scan run on demand or on a recurring schedule?
@feyza1144590 Thanks, Feyza! Great question.
Today, Plexa performs external scans on demand and also supports scheduled recurring scans for continuous monitoring. For websites behind authentication or heavily client-side rendered applications, I'm actively building website ownership verification using DNS, TXT or meta tag verification. Once verified, Plexa will be able to perform much deeper authenticated scans that go beyond what's visible from a standard external crawl.
Thanks for the great question!
Curious how this differs from running something like Lighthouse or Ahrefs site audit, since those already flag a lot of trust and SEO issues. Is Plexa more about consolidating the noise into a single prioritized list, or does it actually catch things those tools miss?
@agulcicek61647 Thanks, Alper! That's a great question.
Consolidation is definitely part of it, but Plexa is also designed to connect findings across security, SEO, accessibility and compliance into a single TrustScore with clear prioritisation and plain-English explanations.
It also performs checks that many individual tools don't combine into a single workflow, such as security headers, SSL configuration, trust signals, privacy compliance and accessibility, all in one report.
My goal isn't to replace every specialist tool—it's to give businesses one place to understand, prioritise and improve their website's overall trust.
A scheduled scan option would be killer, so I can set it to run weekly and just get a digest email of any new trust or SEO regressions instead of remembering to check manually.
@tahirqj7z Thanks, Tahir! Good news—that’s actually already built. Although is a pro feature.
You can schedule automatic scans (powered by cron) and get notified whenever something changes, so you don’t have to remember to check manually.
I’m planning to keep expanding the monitoring and reporting too. Really appreciate the suggestion!
Finally tried Plexa on my portfolio site and it caught three SSL issues I had no idea about. The plain-language explanations actually make sense without needing a dev background.
@nermink6755 Thank you, Nermin! That means a lot to hear.
One of my biggest goals is making technical issues understandable for everyone, not just developers. If the explanations helped make those SSL issues clear, then that’s exactly what I was aiming for.
Really appreciate you giving Plexa a try!
Finally tried Plexa on our company site and was honestly surprised how plainly it explained the SSL chain issue we had been ignoring for months. The prioritized list of fixes made it easy to know what to tackle first without a developer.
@nerimanelifzkq Thank you so much, Neriman! That really means a lot.
One of the biggest goals with Plexa is to make technical issues understandable and actionable, even if you don't have a development background.
I'm really glad the prioritised recommendations helped you focus on what mattered most. Thanks for giving Plexa a try!