Looks like you haven't written a new blog post since May 4th.
Looking at your source I have no idea what your most important keywords are, I think you really need to understand the key-phrases which people use to describe the kind of product you have made -- and then you need to optimize for them. 'Multiple revisions'? I think theres gotta be a better search phrase describing this product. Maybe 'mockup tool' or 'revision tool' (note: havent done google keyword search, just off top of head)
Are you actively engaging press? You need to write up a reviewers guide and ship it off to every tech writer with a decent designer audience that you can find. You need to personally email every author or blogger who says something good or bad about your competitors, are you doing this?
Do you comment on high-trafficked freelancer/designer blogs? Do you participate in freelancer/designer forums?
Are you collecting emails anywhere? Preferably on front page! Use MailChimp it's free for less than 1,000 subscribers. I would be far more likely to give you my email address then to signup. Once you have me on your email list you can have a time-based email campaign that introduces people to your program and offers discounts towards end of trial period.
I agree with the sentiment regarding the keywords. I tried for a few minutes to read your on-page copy and distill your products keywords but found it difficult. It could be that I'm not familiar enough with the space/problem that your service addresses. I'd be inclined to identify your competitors and the keywords for which they rank. If a set of keywords can be identified I'd then use Google Keyword Tool to determine a set of keywords to target (i.e. those that you have a shot at ranking well for).
Agreed...I have found this difficult too. I guess the issue I keep having is sure I want to appear in the search results for the keywords that my competitors appear in - but at the same time I want to differentiate myself.
I get the desire for differentiation, it's important otherwise why would someone choose your product over another. I think it's key though to better understand the words that your competitors are using to describe the problem/space coupled with the words that consumers are using to describe the problem/space. Understanding this word-scape will help you to better craft your on-page copy along with identifying the words that best describe your unique value proposition.
I'd also consider studying/contacting the twitter followers of your competitors. That would be a direct method of identifying solid potential leads.
Who are your competitors? Can you give me links to at least 3 of them?
The good news is that based on those competitors websites you posted, no one knows what the hell to call themselves. No one has any meaningful Meta description -- or title really.
It looks like people all see this as a needed product but don't know what to call it (read: they don't know what their potential customers call it and are googling for).
Play around with Google Keyword Tool and with Google Trends and see if you can find it.
Looks like you haven't written a new blog post since May 4th.
Looking at your source I have no idea what your most important keywords are, I think you really need to understand the key-phrases which people use to describe the kind of product you have made -- and then you need to optimize for them. 'Multiple revisions'? I think theres gotta be a better search phrase describing this product. Maybe 'mockup tool' or 'revision tool' (note: havent done google keyword search, just off top of head)
Are you actively engaging press? You need to write up a reviewers guide and ship it off to every tech writer with a decent designer audience that you can find. You need to personally email every author or blogger who says something good or bad about your competitors, are you doing this?
Do you comment on high-trafficked freelancer/designer blogs? Do you participate in freelancer/designer forums?
Are you collecting emails anywhere? Preferably on front page! Use MailChimp it's free for less than 1,000 subscribers. I would be far more likely to give you my email address then to signup. Once you have me on your email list you can have a time-based email campaign that introduces people to your program and offers discounts towards end of trial period.
Just my .02