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thecut.com

D

36/100

Ranked #41,995 of 46,880 sites

Media / Content / Publishing
D

thecut.com

36/100 · #41,995 of 46,880

homepagerankings.com

Media / Content / Publishing Benchmarks

How you compare to 6,908 Media / Content / Publishing sites

Overall
36-26 vs median
Product Clarity
33-10 vs median
CTA Effectiveness
42-15 vs median
ICP Targeting
15-23 vs median
First Impression
28

Gray line = Media / Content / Publishing median

Analysis

Thecut scores 36 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 Media / Content / Publishing, where the median is 62, Thecut lands 26 points below the industry average.

The hero text reads: "The Cut". Lacks action verbs. The hero does not describe what the product actually does, just makes a vague claim. The language is generic — a visitor can't tell what the product does from the headline alone.

The page has 8 CTAs, 5 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 "Contact" 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: Media / Content / Publishing. ICP clarity score: 15 (below the median of 35).

The biggest opportunities for Thecut: Audience targeting is weak — adding a "for [specific role/company type]" pattern would sharpen the positioning immediately. CTAs are causing decision paralysis — reduce to one primary action above the fold.

Fix These First

up to +60 pts

Ranked by estimated impact on your overall score

#1

Reduce CTAs above the fold to one primary action

5 competing buttons cause decision paralysis — visitors click none

+15 ptsCTA
#2

Add a pricing page

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

+15 ptsPricing
#3

Rewrite your hero headline

Generic language — visitors can't tell what you do from the headline alone

+10 ptsClarity
#4

Make your CTA more specific

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

+10 ptsCTA
#5

Sharpen your audience targeting

"For businesses" or "for teams" is too broad — name a role, industry, or company type

+10 ptsICP

First Impression

F (28/100)

A visitor would think this is a media / content / publishing for someone that offers something that ships.

What kind of company?vague

Media / Content / Publishing

Who is it for?missing

Unknown

What does it do?vague

Something that ships

What's the benefit?vague

Cost Savings / Money

What's the vibe?vague

Aspirational

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 description is vague. Visitors get a rough idea but no clear picture.
  • -Value proposition is weakly communicated. Benefits are implied, not stated.

Suggested Rewrites

Better copy based on your product signals — click to copy

Hero Headline

Current

The Cut

Your current headline is generic — these alternatives name what you do for whom

Primary CTA

Current

Contact

Tying your CTA to a specific outcome increases click-through

Meta Description

Current

The Cut is a New York Magazine site covering women’s lives and interests, from politics, feminism, work, money, relatio…

This is what shows in Google results — specificity drives higher click-through rates

A/B Test Ideas

Specific experiments to run, ranked by expected impact

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

5 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: "Contact" vs "Contact — Free"

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

medium

Test a hero headline that names your product category explicitly

Generic headlines force visitors to scroll to understand what you sell. Test naming the category in the first 5 words.

high

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

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: 5 competing CTAs above the fold

Total CTAs

8

Above Fold

5

Best CTA

Tier 3

Contact
T3 · 57/100
Subscribe to the Magazine
above foldT3 · 45/100
Buy Back Issues
above foldT3 · 45/100
Subscribe
above foldT3 · 45/100
Subscribe For Just $1 Per Week
above foldT3 · 45/100
Would You Buy Yerba Mate From Barron Trump?
T3 · 45/100

What Do You Sell?

D- (33/100)

In 5 words:

Sign out

Hero

generic

The Cut

Meta Description

generic

The Cut is a New York Magazine site covering women’s lives and interests, from politics, feminism, work, money, relationships, mental health, style, pop culture, parenting, and more.

3 function signals

ICP Clarity

F (15/100)

Detected audience

generic

Media / Content / Publishing

industryMedia / Content / Publishing

Pricing Page

F (0/100)

No pricing page detected.

How You Compare

vs. other Media / Content / Publishing sites in the index

Dimensionthecut.comkeap.comzight.cominfusionsoft.…managewp.com
Overall3687-5187-5187-5186-50
Clarity3359-26100-6759-26100-67
CTA4275-3360-1875-3375-33
ICP1546-3191-7646-3115
1st Impr.2860-3260-3260-3252-24
Pricing095-9580-8095-95100-100

What We Analyzed

Title

The Cut – Fashion, Beauty, Politics, Sex and Celebrity

Word count

2,305

Hero text

The Cut

Track Your Progress

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

thecut.com scored 36/100.

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

Work with us