Feedback on the Open Graph data:
- The OG title is too long and reads like a promise-filled sales pitch rather than a crisp descriptor. When shared, long titles get truncated and lose impact. Aim for a tight, benefit-driven line that clearly communicates the core value in 60 characters or less. Example rewrite: “FlipAEO: The Strategic Content Engine to Dominate AI Search”.
- The OG description is dense and loaded with jargon (GEO, authority-building articles). OG copy should be easily digestible in social feeds and quickly convey what you offer and why it matters. Consider 1–2 short sentences that highlight the main outcome (visibility, trust, growth) and the tangible offer (e.g., 30 articles/month).
- The image used for OG should be social-optimized: ensure it’s branded, legible at small sizes, and communicates the value proposition at a glance. If the current image mirrors the hero, it may not render well in a thumbnail. Recommend a branded 1200x630 image with a bold headline and a visual cue for AI-driven content strategy.
- There are no visible notes about OG image dimensions, alt text, or Twitter cards in the provided data. Missing meta tags (og:type, og:url, og:image, og:image:width, og:image:height, twitter:card, twitter:title, twitter:description, twitter:image) hurt click-through. Add these to ensure consistent previews across platforms.
- Ensure the OG data mirrors the landing page messaging. The hero promises “Be the Source AI cites” and growth; the OG copy should reinforce authority, trust, and growth in a concise way, not just generic AI talk.