| Hi HN, I've launched a web application earlier this week called www.organizemysearch.com The idea is to let users organize things like used car searches, apartment rental searches, or other types of searches they do online. For example, if someone is looking for a used car, they will go to several different sites and look at various car ads. This website allows them to save all the ads found on different websites (automatically loading all the data). This way the user can more easily see all the ads he is considering and have everything in one place to sort and compare all his/her options. The problem is I can't figure out what keywords I should use that would actually represent what the application does accurately, which is "a tool for organizing your online searches" (eg. organize your used car searches, organize your apartment rental searches, organize your search for 'blueberry muffins',etc) I would like to optimize the site so people who are actually looking for such a tool will find it easier in search engines, but I'm not sure what approach I should take. I don't even know what category this web application falls into? Most searches about 'organize' on google are things about physically organizing your garage, home, garden or apartment. And anything with 'search' in it gives very generic or non related results in google searches. Example of some keywords I've tried: organize search [very generic, most google results are articles about seo and search engines]
organize car search [1 hit on google]
organize appartment rental search [no results]
organize shopping items [tons of articles about how to organize your groceries] Any ideas on how I can better market this web application, or optimize SEO for this website so I can attract people who are actually looking for such a tool? |
Drew Houston has talked about this in respect to Dropbox (http://www.justin.tv/startuplessonslearned/b/262672510) - who knew they needed Dropbox until they found out about it? USB sticks and email work just fine, right?
I have exactly the same issue with Synctus - VPNs and Terminal Services work just fine, right?
What you need to do is find a channel. People who are already in the business for whom your product is a value-add.
For example: for Synctus, I am reselling through IT professionals - the people who might recommend and install VPNs and Terminal Services for their customers.
In your case, you might see if you can approach specialist car search and real estate search sites - if you can work out something that you can give them which will add value to their service too.