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I promised to report back on "free tools as my funnel." Here's the honest 5-week data: 1,650 impressions, 2 clicks.

A few weeks ago I posted here about growing my free poker trainer app using free web tools as the top of the funnel instead of paid ads, plus SEO articles. That thread got around 14 real comments. jones234 named the thing I was too shy to say out loud: the real asset isn't any single tool, it's the flywheel, where each free tool becomes a new entry point that feeds the others and compounds authority. tonywangcn warned me that web-to-mobile attribution leaks like a sieve. I promised to come back once I had real numbers instead of a thesis. So here it is.

The headline, no spin: 1,650 impressions, 2 clicks. Average position 47.3. CTR 0.1%.

I want to sit in that gap for a second. 1,650 people saw my stuff in search and basically nobody clicked. The site is about 5 weeks old (launched mid-May), 12 pages indexed, sitemap healthy, 213 distinct queries showing up. The demand signal is there. The clicks are not.

So why? It's not content quality. I dug into position by page and the pattern is brutal and clear. Most pages rank position 47 to 85. That's page 5 to 8. Nobody scrolls to page 5. The only pages that broke through are the low-competition ones. My "open limping" article sits at average position 7.1 and my "preflop mistakes" article at 7.7. Both page 1. The Range Visualizer tool is at 16.7, knocking on page 2.

The bottleneck is domain authority. I have almost no backlinks yet. Google is happy to rank a brand-new site for stuff nobody else targets, and it makes me wait in line for everything competitive. The newest content already ranks best, which actually validates the flywheel jones234 described. But it also proves the flywheel is slow when the wheel has no weight behind it. That's the part I undersold last time. Compounding is real. It just starts at almost zero and stays there for a while.

One detail that kept me honest about the audience: 78% of impressions come from the US, UK, and Canada, exactly my target English market (the US alone is 877). So the demand is the right demand. I just can't reach those people yet.

The realization I owe the thread: the tools are perfect link bait, and I built them and then did nothing to get them in front of anyone. They're free, no signup, genuinely useful.

Pot Odds Calculator: https://poker-reflex.com/tools/pot-odds-calculator
Range Visualizer (interactive 13x13 grid): https://poker-reflex.com/tools/range-visualizer
Equity Calculator (hand vs hand plus board): https://poker-reflex.com/tools/equity-calculator

The app they feed is free too, but that's a story for another post. This post is, frankly, part of the distribution I kept saying I'd do.

So, two honest questions. For a brand-new site with no authority, what actually moved the needle for you first: real backlink outreach, getting tools listed in directories and roundups, posting where your users already are, or just patience? And on tonywangcn's warning, how do you measure web-tool traffic that converts to a mobile install without lying to yourself about attribution?

on June 22, 2026
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    The 1,650 → 2 gap is the most honest SEO post I've read in a while. On your question about what moved first: directories and roundups beat cold outreach at this stage because the barrier to getting listed is lower and the links are topically relevant. Find 10 best poker tools articles and email the authors. One mention from a niche site outranks a hundred impressions on page 5.

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    Curious to know, what types of tools have you been using?

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    Thanks for posting real numbers — 1,650 → 2 is the classic "attention without intent" gap.

    Free tools often attract browsers, not buyers. What's worked when it moved: find people already asking for help with the problem your tool solves (Reddit, niche forums), reply there first — the tool becomes proof, not the opener.

    What does PokerReflex solve, and where did those 1,650 impressions come from?

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    One detail that didn't fit the post but says a lot: I actually rank way better in Indonesia, Vietnam and Malaysia (positions 12 to 14) than in the US (41.7), purely because nobody competes for poker terms there. Great positions, wrong audience.

    @jones234 your flywheel point held up, the newest content ranks first. @tonywangcn still chewing on your attribution warning. At this volume, how would you even measure tool-to-install honestly without fooling yourself?

    1. 2

      That detail actually made me pause more than the authority point.

      "Great positions, wrong audience" sounds like a very different explanation from "not enough authority," but I can also see how both could end up supporting the same next move.

      I'd be curious which one ends up earning more of your confidence over time.

      1. 1

        Good catch, and you're right to push on it. I think they're the same explanation wearing two outfits.

        My ranking on any term is really my authority versus how contested that term is. In Southeast Asia almost nobody competes for English poker queries, so my thin authority is already enough and I land around position 12. In the US that same thin authority runs into Upswing and PokerStars, so I sit on page 8. "Wrong audience" isn't a separate cause, it's what "low authority" looks like once you remove the competition. Those SE Asia positions are almost proof that the content is fine and authority is the real ceiling.

        Either way the next move is the same: earn links and try to win the contested market, because farming the markets where I already rank just brings the wrong buyers.

        What will actually earn my confidence is a falsifiable test. If my US positions climb as backlinks come in while SE Asia stays flat, authority was the lever. If US stays stuck even with links, I was wrong and it's something else.

        Given how thin the sample still is, what would you watch instead?

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          That's actually the part that would make me nervous.

          When two explanations continue recommending the same next move, they can sometimes become harder to distinguish rather than easier.

          At that point, progress can start looking like evidence for both.

          That's the part I'd probably keep an eye on.

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