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sfweekly.com

D

39/100

Ranked #38,858 of 46,880 sites

Developer Tools / InfrastructureEnterprise / Public
D

sfweekly.com

39/100 · #38,858 of 46,880

homepagerankings.com

Developer Tools / Infrastructure Benchmarks

How you compare to 6,886 Developer Tools / Infrastructure sites

Overall
39-21 vs median
Product Clarity
40+3 vs median
CTA Effectiveness
42-15 vs median
ICP Targeting
15-20 vs median
First Impression
12-16 vs median

Gray line = Developer Tools / Infrastructure median

Analysis

Sfweekly scores 39 out of 100 on homepage messaging, earning a D grade — below average — significant gaps in clarity or targeting. Across all 30,134 sites analyzed, that's well below the median of 59. Within Developer Tools / Infrastructure, where the median is 60, Sfweekly lands 21 points below the industry average.

No hero text found. Visitors see nothing above the fold that tells them what you do.

The page has 8 CTAs, 4 of them above the fold. That's enough to trigger decision paralysis — when too many buttons compete for attention, visitors often click none. The primary CTA "Sign Up" is generic — 'Learn more' and 'Get started' don't tell visitors what happens next. CTA effectiveness score: 42 (below the median of 57).

Audience targeting is unclear. Detected audience: B2B SaaS. ICP clarity score: 15 (below the median of 35).

Sfweekly fits the "Community / Movement" archetype with moderate confidence. This means the homepage is rallying users around a mission or identity, not just a product.

The biggest opportunities for Sfweekly: Audience targeting is weak — adding a "for [specific role/company type]" pattern would sharpen the positioning immediately. First impression clarity is below median — visitors can't quickly tell what category this product falls into. CTAs are causing decision paralysis — reduce to one primary action above the fold.

Fix These First

up to +65 pts

Ranked by estimated impact on your overall score

#1

Reduce CTAs above the fold to one primary action

4 competing buttons cause decision paralysis — visitors click none

+15 ptsCTA
#2

Close first-impression gaps

Visitors can't quickly tell who it's for and what it does — those signals should be above the fold

+15 ptsFirst Impression
#3

Add a pricing page

Hiding pricing creates friction — most buyers want to self-qualify before talking to sales

+15 ptsPricing
#4

Add a clear hero headline

No hero headline detected — the most important real estate on your page is empty

+10 ptsClarity
#5

Make your CTA more specific

"Get started" is generic — tie it to an outcome ("Start building" or "See your report")

+10 ptsCTA

First Impression

F (12/100)

A visitor would think this is a b2b saas for someone that offers something unclear.

What kind of company?vague

B2B SaaS

Who is it for?missing

Unknown

What does it do?missing

Unknown

What's the benefit?missing

None detected

What's the vibe?vague

Neutral

Gaps:

  • -Business category is implied but not clearly stated.
  • -No clear target audience defined. Could be for anyone, which means it resonates with no one.
  • -Product function unclear from above-fold copy. Visitors cannot tell what this does.
  • -No discernible value proposition. The page does not explain why someone should care.

Suggested Rewrites

Better copy based on your product signals — click to copy

Primary CTA

Current

Sign Up

Tying your CTA to a specific outcome increases click-through

A/B Test Ideas

Specific experiments to run, ranked by expected impact

Remove all secondary CTAs above the fold — keep only one primary action

4 competing CTAs detected. Single-CTA pages typically convert 20-30% better.

high

Test adding "free" or "no card required" to your primary CTA

Risk-reducing modifiers typically lift click-through 10-15%

medium

Test a "free" modifier on your CTA: "Sign Up" vs "Sign Up — Free"

"Free" is the highest-converting modifier across 27K+ homepages analyzed

medium

Test a "Built for [role/company type]" line under your hero

The "for X" pattern is the fastest way to sharpen positioning. Test it as a subheadline.

medium

Test adding a one-line product description directly under your hero

Visitors can't tell what you do from the above-fold content. A single explanatory line can fix this.

high

Messaging Clarity

Who is this for?15/100
What problem does this solve?15/100
What does this actually do?15/100
Why this over alternatives?15/100
CTA effectiveness57/100

CTA Analysis

D+ (42/100)
Decision paralysis detected: 4 competing CTAs above the fold

Total CTAs

8

Above Fold

4

Best CTA

Tier 3

Sign Up
above foldT3 · 57/100
Contact Us
above foldT3 · 57/100
Sign Up Today
above foldT3 · 54/100
Need a roommate in SF? Try a mixer
T3 · 52/100
Free exhibit showcases Recology’s resident artists
T3 · 48/100
Japanese Consul General joins Manga Exhibition launch at de Young
T3 · 45/100

What Do You Sell?

D+ (40/100)

In 5 words:

Dashboard to search search

Hero

absent

Meta Description

absent
4 function signalsDetected: dashboard

ICP Clarity

F (15/100)

Detected audience

generic

B2B SaaS

industryB2B SaaS

Positioning Archetype

60% confidence

Community / Movement

sfweekly.com

Confidence: 60%

Pricing Page

F (0/100)

No pricing page detected.

How You Compare

vs. other Developer Tools / Infrastructure sites in the index

Dimensionsfweekly.comchatwoot.comtapfiliate.comdelve.cohelpscout.com
Overall3989-5088-4987-4887-48
Clarity4062-22100-6072-32100-60
CTA4273-3170-2878-3670-28
ICP1545-3095-8095-8050-35
1st Impr.1252-4094-8266-5444-32
Pricing095-95100-10095-95100-100

What We Analyzed

Title

sfweekly.com

Word count

712

Track Your Progress

Last scanned 49 days ago. Time to check if your homepage has improved.

sfweekly.com scored 39/100.

We fix exactly this. Messaging, CTAs, positioning. Ready-to-ship, not a slide deck.

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