🏷️ CTR Optimizer

Find out why your page isn't getting clicks. Analyze title strength, Open Graph tags, Twitter Cards and get a full SEO score with prioritized fixes.

SEO Score
Title Score
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TagValue

How to use CTR Optimizer

  1. Enter any URL — the tool fetches the page server-side and reads raw HTML, exactly as Google's crawler sees it.
  2. Read the SEO Score — a combined score (0–100) weighted across title strength, meta description quality, Open Graph completeness and technical signals.
  3. Fix Critical issues first — red items have the highest impact on rankings and click-through rate.
  4. Work through Opportunities — yellow items are quick wins that improve CTR without requiring developer time.
  5. Use AI Title Suggestions — generate 3 CTR-optimized alternatives powered by Llama 3.3 70B via Groq.
  6. Check social previews — verify how your page looks when shared on Facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter/X.

What affects your SEO Score?

Title tag (30%) — the single most important CTR element. We score it on length, power words, numbers/year, structure, emotional triggers, and uniqueness. A weak title costs you 2–6% CTR even if you rank on page 1.

Meta description (20%) — not a direct ranking factor, but a major CTR lever. Google rewrites descriptions that are too short, too long, or lack relevance to the query. We check length, call-to-action presence, and specificity.

Open Graph tags (20%) — og:title, og:description, og:image control how your page appears on every social platform and messaging app. Missing og:image alone can reduce social shares by 30–50%.

Technical signals (30%) — canonical URL (prevents duplicate content), H1 tag (primary on-page keyword signal), viewport meta (mobile-friendliness indicator), and robots directive (noindex = invisible to Google).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a good SEO Score?

80–100 is excellent. 60–79 is good with room to improve. 40–59 has significant gaps affecting CTR. Below 40 indicates critical missing elements that are hurting both rankings and click-through rate. Most pages we analyze score between 45–70, meaning there's almost always a quick win available.

Why is my og:image not showing on social media?

Three common causes: (1) The image URL is missing or incorrect. (2) The image is too small — Facebook requires 200×200px minimum, recommends 1200×630px. (3) The platform has a cached version. After fixing the tag, use Facebook's Sharing Debugger to force a re-scrape. LinkedIn and Slack have similar cache-clearing tools.

What is Title Score and how is it calculated?

Title Score (0–100) measures the CTR appeal of your title tag across 7 dimensions: character length (40–60 is optimal), presence of numbers or year, power words (Best, Guide, Ultimate, etc.), structural clarity (colon/dash), emotional triggers, uniqueness, and capitalization correctness. Research shows that titles with numbers get 36% more clicks, and titles with power words get 12–18% more clicks than generic alternatives.

Does meta description directly affect rankings?

No — Google confirmed meta descriptions are not a ranking signal. However, they are the primary CTR lever after the title. A compelling description with a clear value proposition and call-to-action can increase CTR by 2–5% at the same ranking position, which Google then interprets as a quality signal.

Why does the tool use server-side fetching?

Server-side fetching replicates what Googlebot sees on first crawl — the raw HTML before JavaScript runs. Many modern sites (React, Next.js, Vue) render meta tags via JavaScript, which means browser DevTools shows different data than what Google actually indexes. If your meta tags are JavaScript-rendered and not server-side rendered (SSR), Google may not see them at all.