The first time I stumbled upon the Search Atlas was in February 2024. 

Their bold “Cancel Ahrefs and Semrush” slogan caught my eye. Back then, I used their Community Edition plan for $29 a month, which they now seem to no longer offer.

Now, two years later, I upgraded to the Search Atlas Growth plan ($199/month) to test their toolkits and understand how the tool has evolved over this time. 

I’ve gone through practically every toolkit they offer, and I have a lot to say. 

This is the most comprehensive Search Atlas review you’ll find in 2026. I’m going to walk you through every Search Atlas toolkit I’ve tested, share my experience, and explain what works and what doesn’t.

What’s Search Atlas?

Search Atlas is an AI-powered SEO automation platform built for agencies.

To me, it feels like a budget-friendly blend of Semrush and Ahrefs, which makes sense, since its founder, Manick Bhan, was likely inspired by them. 

Some of the Search Atlas features even share the same names. For example, Search Atlas has its own Keyword Magic tool, which works just like Semrush’s tool. You type your seed keyword, and it’ll generate thousands of keyword ideas. 

If you’ve used Ahrefs before, you’ll probably notice that the reports and layout feel very similar, too. 

Overall, I see Search Atlas as a powerful and affordable AI SEO tool that provides a similar experience without the price tag. Now, let’s see how well it actually works.

Search Atlas SEO tool March 2026

My experience with Search Atlas

I tested the Search Atlas Growth plan ($199/month) in March 2026. My impression is that Search Atlas gives you a lot for the price.

It’s clearly trying to be an all-in-one marketing platform, not just an SEO tool. You can use it for SEO, AI visibility, local SEO, Google Ads, outreach, and more. There’s a lot packed into one platform, and it definitely feels like the team is working hard to ship new features and expand the product fast.

I also got the impression that the platform is growing so quickly that the overall user experience sometimes suffers because of it.

For example, the tool crashed multiple times while I was using it, and several reports took a while to load, sometimes a lot longer than they should. Honestly, I don’t think that’s acceptable when you’re paying $200/month. I really hope the team keeps improving the platform because users shouldn’t have to deal with that kind of frustration.

I’ll walk through each toolkit in more detail below, but overall, I can say this: there’s a lot to like here, especially if you want a broad marketing toolkit under one roof.

One feature I personally liked the most was the Local SEO toolkit.

Since I work with a lot of local businesses and often need to report on their visibility in specific locations, I found this part especially useful. The keyword heatmaps look great and make it much easier to visualize local performance for target keywords.

When it comes to organic traffic estimates, the numbers looked pretty similar to Semrush. But just like with most SEO tools, the estimates were still off compared to Google Search Console and Google Analytics. That’s not unique to Search Atlas, but it’s still worth keeping in mind.

I also spent time exploring the LLM Visibility toolkit. It tracks your overall brand performance across LLMs and Google AI search results, including brand mentions and citations. Personally, I prefer when tools separate brand mentions and content citations more clearly, because that gives a more accurate picture of what’s actually happening in AI search. But that’s just how I like to analyze this data.

A quick word on support:

Search Atlas says their chat support is available Monday to Friday 24/7 CST, and on weekends from 8 AM to 5 PM CST. But in my experience, whenever I had a question or needed help, I still had to wait for a support agent’s shift to start. That part was a little frustrating.

However, and this is important, every issue I raised was acknowledged, and the problems I flagged were eventually resolved. I genuinely appreciate that, because a lot of companies never follow up with users once something breaks.

So overall, I’d say this: Search Atlas is an ambitious tool with a lot of potential.

It already has some genuinely strong features, but it still needs polish in a few areas to fully justify the price.

Now, let me walk you through each toolkit in more detail.

Search Atlas Toolkits: A full review

Before we dive into how accurate Search Atlas is, let me quickly run through the features you’ll get.

When you start your 7-day free trial, you’ll land on the dashboard. On the right side, you’ll see a sidebar with different toolkits.

Toolkit What it does
1. AI SEO Toolkit Home of OTTO SEO, Search Atlas’s flagship automation feature. This is a technical SEO auditing and fix-deployment tool, not an AI visibility tracker.
2. Site Metrics Your website performance hub. Connects to GSC and GA4, tracks rankings, competitor data, backlinks, and includes a basic LLM visibility score for your domain.
3. Local SEO Toolkit Manage your Google Business Profile, schedule posts, and track local rankings using heatmaps across a defined geographic radius.
4. Content Toolkit AI-assisted content creation, on-page SEO auditing, topic cluster planning, and content rewriting. Useful for auditing, but the AI output quality is average.
5. Keywords Toolkit Keyword research, a Keyword Magic Tool for bulk ideation, Keyword Gap analysis against competitors, and a Rank Tracker.
6. Report Builder Pulls data from GSC, GA4, Google Ads, OTTO, and GBP into customizable, automated client-ready reports. 
7. Authority Building Outreach and link-building tool with a publisher directory, bulk campaign management, and QUEST LLM Visibility for creating AI-informed outreach content.
8. Smart Ads AI-powered Google Ads campaign creation tool. Useful for getting campaigns off the ground quickly. It’s not a replacement for Google Ads Manager.
9. Social Toolkit Social media scheduler supporting Facebook, Instagram, and X. 
10. Website Studio AI-powered website and landing page builder. Generates layouts and components you can adapt for your existing site or CMS.
Atlas Brain Conversational AI assistant that executes SEO tasks across the platform. You can ask it to build strategies, run audits, or generate reports in plain language.

1. AI SEO Toolkit (aka OTTO SEO Automation)

In my opinion, the “AI SEO Toolkit” label sounds like it should include AI visibility tracking, like monitoring your brand performance in LLMs and Google’s AI Mode. But that’s not what this is. This toolkit is really about OTTO SEO, Search Atlas’s flagship technical SEO automation tool.

Here’s how OTTO works: you install a small OTTO pixel on your website (usually via Google Tag Manager or directly in your header), and OTTO scans your site for technical issues. It finds issues with meta tags, headings, alt text, internal links, canonical URLs, schema markup, and more. Once you review the suggestions in your dashboard and approve them, OTTO applies the fixes directly to your site.

I tested this on my own website. The issues OTTO identified ranged from genuinely useful fixes, like meta title improvements and empty alt tags, to fairly minor nice-to-haves, like meta keywords. One thing I noticed right away: OTTO doesn’t prioritize issues by severity. For an experienced SEO, that’s fine. For beginners, it’s a bit overwhelming to stare at a long list of flagged items with no sense of what to tackle first.

My honest take on OTTO is that I’d be cautious about letting it make changes to your site automatically without reviewing each fix carefully. I’ve read enough Reddit stories about things breaking post-OTTO to keep my hand on the manual override at all times.

Also worth noting: if you’re shopping for an AI visibility tool, the AI SEO Toolkit label will mislead you. LLM visibility lives somewhere else entirely (more on that below).

OTTO SEO feature Search Atlas March 2026

I don’t recommend letting AI make changes to your website’s code or content!

OTTO SEO can work on your website’s technical issues, but there’s no guarantee it won’t break anything that might need a developer’s quick help.

I’ve read some stories like the following one on Reddit. Most Search Atlas reviews are good, but those experiences made me avoid turning on OTTO SEO automation. Instead, I prefer the old-school way—fixing things myself or passing them to my developer.

OTTO SEO review on Reddit

2. Site Metrics

Site Metrics is essentially your command center for tracking how your own website is performing, and it’s one of the more useful parts of Search Atlas in my experience.

You can connect your Google Search Console and Google Analytics 4 accounts, which then feeds the dashboard with real click, impression, and ranking data. The visual presentation is cleaner than looking at GSC directly, and you can track keyword position changes daily, spot top-performing pages, monitor competitor domains, and keep an eye on new or lost backlinks.

You can also analyze any other domain here, not just your own. Pop in a competitor’s URL, and you’ll get an overview of their organic performance, top keywords, traffic estimates, and backlink profile.

Now, there’s an LLM Visibility report inside Site Metrics, and this is where things get interesting for anyone focused on generative AI search optimization.

The LLM Visibility report gives you an overall brand performance score showing how your site appears across LLMs and AI Mode (this is not the same as AI Overviews). 

Keep it in mind that Search Atlas rolls all mentions and citations into one aggregate score. If you want to understand which specific pages are being cited by LLMs, or which content is getting pulled into AI-generated answers, you can’t get that granularity here. It’s a single visibility number, which is fine for a high-level pulse check but not enough for actionable optimization work.

Another limitation: you can only add two domains to the LLM Visibility report. If you need to track brand performance for client sites, you’ll hit that ceiling fast.

If you want to check LLM visibility for any other domain outside your two tracked ones, you can only find surface-level data in the Site Explorer report, like the total number of AI Overviews and a general LLM visibility score. No deep dive available.

For my own AI visibility tracking, I still rely on Semrush’s AI Visibility Toolkit, which offers more granularity and prompt-level data.

Search Atlas LLM Visibility report March 2026

3. Local SEO Toolkit

If you manage local businesses with a Google Business Profile, the Search Atlas’ Local SEO Toolkit is genuinely useful.

Search Atlas lets you manage all your GBP activity from one place: publishing posts, viewing insights, monitoring reviews, and keeping your listing optimized without constantly logging into Google.

The standout feature here is the Local SEO Heatmap. You define a target area and a set of local keywords, and the heatmap shows you visually where your business ranks across that geographic radius. For a local restaurant trying to figure out if they’re showing up in searches two miles away, this kind of visibility is incredibly useful.

One thing to keep in mind is the heatmap credits system. Each business you add and each keyword you track consumes credits from your monthly allocation. Credits are limited depending on your plan, so if you’re managing multiple locations with large keyword lists, you’ll need to monitor your usage carefully, or you’ll run out mid-month.

The platform also occasionally crashes and loads reports slowly. I noticed this across several toolkits, but it’s especially frustrating when you’re in the middle of pulling local ranking data. It’s a known issue based on what I’ve seen in user reviews across G2 and Capterra, so hopefully Search Atlas continues improving stability over time.

Search Atlas Local SEO Heatmap

4. Content Tooolkit

The Content Toolkit is Search Atlas’s SEO content writing tool, and the answer to tools like Surfer SEO and Jasper combined. It includes several tools:

  • On-Page Audit lets you audit any URL for on-page SEO issues. After running a quick audit, you’ll get a Content Score and a Technical Score for your target URL. The Content Score shows how well your page is optimized compared to top-performing pages for your target keyword. The Technical Score focuses on Core Web Vitals.
  • Content Planner helps you build topic clusters and editorial calendars. You input a seed topic, and it should generate a list of related keywords and content ideas, organized by search intent and priority. I say “should” because when I tested it in March 2026, it simply didn’t work. So I can’t really tell you much more than that.
  • Scholar is another on-page analysis tool, but this one looks at how a specific page performs for a single target keyword. Honestly, it feels like it should just be a feature inside the On-Page Audit rather than its own separate tool. The report I generated for one of my pages wasn’t particularly useful either.
  • Content Rewriter does exactly what it sounds like. You paste in existing content, and the AI paraphrases it. You can see the output from the Content Rewriter below. I’d say it can be used to paraphrase content, but since we have Claude and other LLMs, I don’t see much value in this tool. 
Search Atlas Content Rewriter March 2026

Now, if you actually want to generate content from scratch, Search Atlas has a dedicated tool for that called Content Genius Agent. It works like a chat interface where you give it instructions, and it writes for you. You can also launch it directly from an On-Page Audit report if you want help improving an existing piece.

It’s worth mentioning that, compared to Claude, the Content Genius Agent takes longer to process your requests and generate output. I provided the same content-writing instructions to Claude and Search Atlas, and Claude generated a blog post (the one you are reading now) in just a few seconds. I had to wait for around 30 mins for Search Atlas to process my content writing request, but I didn’t get the output. The tool got stuck.

I flagged this with their support team, and they mentioned a big bug fix was coming. Good to know, but it didn’t exactly leave me feeling confident about the tool.

I gave Content Genius Agent another try with the same instructions for content generation, but it still didn’t work for me. 

And from what other Search Atlas users have told me, even when the tool does work, the content quality is pretty average. At this point, I don’t see a strong reason to pay for a built-in content generator when Claude, trained on your own writing and connected to SEO data via the Semrush MCP, can do the job so much better. The output quality really comes down to how well you train the model, and that’s where I put my energy instead.

Below, you can see what the Content Genius Agent looks like and the article generation process, which it has never completed. 

Content Genius Agent March 2026

5. Keywords Toolkit

This toolkit is for keyword research and rank tracking. Here’s what you’ve got inside: 

  • Keyword Research Tool gives you detailed metrics for any keyword, including search volume by country, keyword difficulty, search intent, SERP overview, and related keywords. It’s comparable to Semrush’s Keyword Overview in terms of data depth.
  • Keyword Magic Tool works almost identically to Semrush’s version. You can enter a seed keyword, and it generates thousands of related keyword ideas, grouped by topic and filterable by volume, difficulty, and intent. If you’ve used Semrush’s Keyword Magic Tool, the learning curve here is essentially zero. I’ve done a deeper comparison of how these two tools stack up in my Search Atlas vs Semrush article.
  • Keyword Gap Analysis shows you keywords your competitors rank for that you don’t. Again, the concept is exactly what Semrush offers with their Keyword Gap tool. It works well for finding content opportunities you might be missing.

With the Search Atlas Growth plan, you get 2k credits, where one credit is one action. Keep in mind that refreshing data consumes one credit and it may take forever for the report to load. 

Search Atlas Keyword Overview tool March 2026

One thing I find a bit odd is that the Rank Tracker lives here in the Keywords Toolkit instead of in Site Metrics, where you’d expect it alongside all the other site performance data.

It doesn’t break anything, but it does make the navigation a little unintuitive. If you’re new to Search Atlas, you might spend a few minutes hunting for your rank tracking dashboard before realizing it’s under Keywords rather than your site-specific project.

The data accuracy also raises some questions for me. For keywords like “AI SEO Tools,” Semrush and Ubersuggest tell a completely different story. Semrush shows daily updates with significant ranking volatility, which makes sense given how frequently Google’s algorithm has been updating lately. Search Atlas, on the other hand, shows a number one position. Some of the other tracked keywords do align across tools, though.

Search Atlas Rank Tracking March 2026

6. Report Builder Toolkit

Honestly, this is one of my favorite Search Atlas features. 

It makes it super easy to create performance reports for your websites by pulling data from tools like Google Search Console, Google Analytics, Google Ads, OTTO SEO, your Google My Business profile, and more.

You can customize reports however you want and even get them sent to you automatically every week with the latest stats. 

There’s an AI feature that generates performance summary reports for your site, so you don’t have to do any work at all. 

Search Atlas Report Builder March 2026

7. Smart Ads Toolkit

This toolkit lets you manage your Google and Meta paid ad campaigns, review their performance and efficiency based on the Ad Group and Ad Copy. 

I don’t run paid ads on my site, so you won’t see any in my screenshot below. But if you do have paid campaigns, they’ll show up in this report.

OTTO and PPC

8. Authority Builder

The Authority Building Toolkit is, in plain English, an outreach and link-building tool. The name sounds fancier than it is.

You can use it to run bulk outreach campaigns, manage communication threads with site owners, and access a publisher directory to find relevant link opportunities for your niche. If you’re actively building backlinks as part of your SEO strategy, having the outreach workflow inside the same tool as your keyword research and rank tracking is a genuine convenience.

There’s also a feature called QUEST LLM Visibility, which is one of the more interesting newer additions. QUEST analyzes your target query, extracts insights from the relevant SERPs, and then crafts a set of targeted questions with expert-level answers designed for outreach campaigns. The idea is that your outreach pitches contain genuinely insightful, data-backed content that’s more likely to earn links.

It’s an interesting intersection of traditional link building and generative AI content, and it aligns with where the industry is heading: creating content that’s not just good enough for Google, but good enough to be cited by LLMs too.

One note of personal skepticism: I’m not a fan of features that make it easy to purchase links at scale. When everyone can buy a link from the same publisher directory, those links gradually lose their signal value. I’d use the outreach tools, but I’d focus on earning genuine placements rather than buying spots.

Search Atlas Authority builder

9. Social Toolkit

The Social Toolkit is an all-in-one social media scheduler built directly into Search Atlas.

You can plan, organize, and schedule content across your connected social accounts without leaving the platform.

Currently, Search Atlas supports Facebook, Instagram, and X (formerly Twitter) for automated posting.

If those are your primary channels, this works as a convenient add-on to your SEO workflow. But if you’re active on LinkedIn, Reddit, TikTok, or Pinterest, you’ll need to post there manually or use a dedicated scheduling tool like Buffer or Hootsuite alongside Search Atlas.

I post mostly on LinkedIn and Reddit, so this toolkit isn’t particularly useful for my workflow right now.

10. Website Studio

Website Studio is Search Atlas’s AI-powered website builder. You describe what you need, and the AI generates page layouts and components, from landing pages to blog templates.

I’d say it’s a great tool for design inspiration when you don’t exactly know what you want your website to look like, but you have some thoughts to share with AI. 

The practical question most people will have is: how does this integrate with WordPress or whatever CMS they’re already using? From what Search Atlas describes, Website Studio generates layouts and page content that you can use as a starting point and then publish or adapt for your existing site. 

If you’re building fresh landing pages for SEO campaigns and don’t want to design from scratch, this can speed up your workflow. 

It’s a newer feature and still feels somewhat supplementary compared to the core SEO tools. Worth exploring if you need quick page generation, but don’t expect it to replace a dedicated CMS setup.

I had a pretty similar experience with Figma when I was designing my website, Behind Rankings. I shared what I wanted with their agent, and it created the user interface you can see now. More about this experience in my AI Marketing tools post. 

I wouldn’t call it an easy process, especially since designers usually need an editable file with UI kits to actually work with it.

Keep in mind that your Landing Page Credits are limited to 40 under the Search Atlas Growth plan. So, every time you request to make an update to your landing page, Search Atlas consumes credits. 

Search Atlas Website Studio March 2026

Atlas Brain

Atlas Brain is Search Atlas’s conversational AI assistant, and it’s one of the more genuinely impressive features on the platform.

Instead of navigating through menus and reports, you type a request in plain language and Atlas Brain executes it. I’d say, it’s similar to Writesonic’s Chatsonic AI Agent. 

You can ask it to build a 90-day SEO content strategy, generate a topical map for a target niche, compare your backlink profile to a competitor’s, run a site audit, or create a recurring reporting schedule.

What separates Atlas Brain from something like ChatGPT is that it’s connected directly to your Search Atlas data and can actually perform tasks, not just give advice. It’s not generating a generic response about what you should do. It’s pulling your actual site metrics, SERP data, and SEO context, and then acting on them.

What Users Say About Search Atlas

I collected real user perspectives from LinkedIn and across major review platforms, and the picture is pretty consistent.

The positives come through clearly: users love the automation, the time savings, and the fact that Search Atlas keeps shipping new features. The OTTO SEO feature gets mentioned constantly as a differentiator. People who’ve switched from Semrush or Ahrefs often say the onboarding was faster than expected.

The criticisms are just as consistent. Slow load times show up in nearly every critical review. The “spinning circle of death,” as one Capterra reviewer called it, is a real thing. Reports sometimes take two to five minutes to load, and occasional crashes mid-workflow are frustrating, especially when you’re pulling data for a client.

Bugs are a recurring theme too. The OTTO pixel detection issue I ran into myself (where the platform kept insisting the pixel wasn’t installed, even when it was) seems to be something multiple users have experienced. Customer support is primarily chat-based, and for urgent issues, the wait time for a video call with a human has been several days, which isn’t ideal when something critical is broken.

Here’s the honest summary: Search Atlas is a powerful platform that’s still maturing. The feature breadth is impressive. The execution consistency still has room to improve.

Here’s what Casey Cornell, the Founder of Pool Journals and Digital Consulting Owner, shared about Search Atlas:

Casey Cornell about Search Atlas

I’ve also got a very in-depth Search Atlas review from Sankit Javia, who’s head of SEO at OMG Marketing. Here’s what Sankit has shared with me on LinkedIn:

“Working at an agency, where I ran OTTO on 5–6 sites, here’s my honest take:

The core problem: JS pixel = architectural weakness.

OTTO doesn’t actually update your CMS. It injects changes at the DOM layer via JavaScript at runtime. This means:

  1. AI crawlers (GPTBot, ClaudeBot, PerplexityBot) never see the changes, they don’t execute JS
  2. Google Rich Results Test often fails to detect OTTO-injected schema
  3. Caching conflicts are real we had a CMS where all blocks stopped rendering on the frontend; both us and the CMS support team spent days debugging before we traced it back to the SearchAtls blunders.

Content quality? Mixed at best.

Out of ~150 AI-generated blogs (~30/month), only 3–4 drove meaningful traffic. Many targeted keywords have no real search volume. Eventually, the AI content started tanking and dragged the whole site down with it.

What actually works in Search Atlas:

  • GSC integration + meta title/description suggestions are genuinely useful
  • Google Business Profile auto-reply is a solid time-saver

My advice: Use OTTO’s suggestions, but inject changes manually into your CMS via API never let the JS pixel render them. And if that’s all you need, you can honestly build that workflow yourself with GSC data + any CMS API for a fraction of the cost.

Don’t give the autopilot full control, it’s going to hurt a lot.”

How accurate is Search Atlas’ data?

Let me take a closer look at Search Atlas, because data accuracy is crucial for marketers and SEOs when choosing SEO tools.

The main question is: Can we trust the data for decision-making?

For me, I only trust a tool after testing it myself and checking its numbers against solid sources like Google Search Console and Google Analytics. That’s the best way to know if it’s reliable.

If you’re curious about how accurate Search Atlas is, I’ve done that comparison for you.

Just so you know, I focused on the key stats like organic traffic and didn’t include data from other marketing channels. 

Here’s a quick look at my website’s SEO metrics from  March 2026:

CategorySearch AtlasGoogle Search Console
Organic traffic15,5001,650
Top 3 pages based on organic trafficAI SEO tools, Ko-fi review, AI marketing tools, AI SEO tools, AI marketing tools, Ahrefs alternatives
Organic traffic estimate for the top-ranking page6,900327

Here’s a screenshot from my Google Search Console showing my organic website traffic from March 2026. It estimates a total of 1.65k clicks.

My site GSC report March 2026

And here’s what Search Atlas says about my site for the same period:

Search Atlas site explorer March 2026

Search Atlas isn’t perfectly precise, but neither is any other SEO tool. The numbers are directionally accurate, which is all you can really ask for.

If you want to know more about my experience, I’ve written about it in my post on Ahrefs alternatives.

I’ve also tried to find any information about Search Atlas’ data sources. I even asked ChatGPT for help. Then, I stumbled upon an interesting comment under one of Search Atlas’s Facebook ads that caught my attention:

“Search Atlas’s database pulls from a mix of trusted sources, including real-time interactions with Google’s systems and data from Google Search Console.”

Where Search Atlas gets its data from

As of March 2026, Search Atlas’ database comprises the following:

  • 100 trillion backlinks
  • 500 million indexed domains
  • 5 billion keywords
  • Coverage across 200 countries

That’s a pretty solid database! However, it’s still smaller than tools like Semrush. 

For example, Semrush has over 27 billion keywords and the biggest backlink database out there. This means Semrush can suggest more keyword ideas and detect more keywords and backlinks for any domain. 

But Search Atlas is improving fast and adding cool new features. I’d still rely on its suggestions, considering that its metrics more or less align with my Google Search Console numbers. 

If you want me to test anything else for this Search Atlas review, just drop your ideas in the comments! I’ll try it out and update the post.

Search Atlas pricing

Search Atlas offers four plans:

  • Starter Plan at $99/month covers 1 OTTO SEO project (one domain with full automation), 2 user seats, and unlimited keyword rank tracking. This is the plan I used, and for solo marketers or small website owners, it covers a lot of ground.
  • Growth Plan at $199/month adds support for multiple clients and includes the LLM visibility tracking features. If AI search visibility is part of your strategy, this is the minimum plan you need.
  • Pro Plan at $399/month is built for growing agencies managing multiple domains and larger teams.
  • Agency – $999/month
    It’s designed for big enterprises with demanding SEO needs and complex workflows.

Before committing, you can try Search Atlas with their 7-day free trial. Just a heads-up: you’ll need to add your credit card to activate it. You won’t get charged, but if you cancel early, you’ll lose access right away. So plan your trial wisely!

Search Atlas pricing March 2026

FAQ

Now, let’s go over some common questions users ask about Search Atlas on the web.

Search Atlas is an AI SEO automation tool to manage SEO campaigns of various complexities.  Here’s what it can do for you:

  1. Track your website’s keyword rankings
  2. Spy on competitors’ SEO strategies
  3. Find new keywords to target
  4. Analyze backlinks for your site and competitors 
  5. Monitor your website’s health and SEO issues
  6. Automate SEO reports for clients or yourself
  7. Discover content ideas based on what works in your niche
  8. Manage multiple projects or clients in one place
  9. Generate and optimize content 
  10. Analyze your website’s on-page optimization 

And more!

The CEO of Search Atlas is Manick Bhan. He’s an entrepreneur and the driving force behind this AI-powered SEO platform.

Before Search Atlas, he founded LinkGraph, which is an SEO agency. Manick is also known for his previous venture, Rukkus, a mobile ticketing app acquired by TickPick, StubHub, and SeatGeek in 2018.

When looking for alternatives to Search Atlas, I only recommend solid tools I’ve actually used myself. 

Semrush, SE Ranking, and Ahrefs are top choices if you want a full SEO suite with powerful features. I’ve published a detailed Semrush review if you want to learn more about this competitor tool. 

Now, if your main focus is content SEO tasks like writing and optimizing content, I’d suggest trying Writesonic. These tools cover different needs, so pick the one that fits your goals best!

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