Hey IndieHackers
I wanted to share how I hit 3,000 Google clicks in just 28 days—solo-building a site from scratch, using Reddit replies, low-competition SEO, and my own tool: SERPtag.com.
No paid ads. No hacks. Just organic growth that actually worked.
I didn’t try to go broad.
I picked a very specific niche where people were already searching for help—and I created content that answered those exact questions.
The content was designed to solve problems, not chase vanity traffic.
I jumped into relevant Reddit threads and started replying to questions in my niche.
That alone started driving targeted traffic from people already interested in what I had to say.
Instead of targeting high-competition keywords, I focused on:
Each blog post was:
This part was huge.
I used SERPtag (my own keyword tracker) to track every target keyword from day one.
It gave me motivation and insight.
I wasn’t flying blind; I had data, and it was mine.
After I hit 10+ posts, I started building:
This created a network of content and kept people on the site longer, while also helping search engines understand my structure.
I used:
New posts were being indexed within hours.
No more waiting days or weeks.
I wrote meta titles and descriptions for humans, not just bots.
Google impressions are one thing. Clicks are what matter.
After just 4 weeks:
Just content + distribution + tracking.
Here’s what I’m working on now:
If you're solo-building:
Hope this helps someone out there. Happy to share more details in the comments if anyone’s curious.
SEO is so underrated
100%! It’s the long game that keeps giving. While everyone’s chasing viral hacks, SEO quietly compounds month after month
I have been trying taming Google God for past two months and your results are stellar!
What niche did you choose for your blog ?
You mentioned using live sitemap and IndexNow. IndexNow is for Bing right? What did you use to submit URLs to Google?
The niche is around SEO and marketing tools very search-driven topics.
Yep, IndexNow is mainly for Bing. For Google, I rely on a live XML sitemap and also manually submitted a few key URLs via Google Search Console to speed things up.
really good post, taken a lot of notes from this
Thanks so much! Glad you found it useful, happy to hear it helped enough to take notes. Let me know if you ever want to dive deeper into anything I mentioned
How is SEO changing with AI integrated in searches? Will it change a lot? Did it already change? What are your thoughts on that?
Absolutely SEO is already changing with AI baked into search. You’re seeing it with AI Overviews showing up at the top and pulling answers straight from sites, which means fewer clicks going to actual pages. It’s definitely shifting how we think about content. I’ve noticed that more specific, helpful content tends to still win, especially if you’re targeting long-tail queries. I also think things like author credibility and structured data are becoming more important as Google tries to “understand” content better.
I have always had an issue with audience targeting my main niche is digital business start-ups and I don't know wether to focus on LinkedIn or on x
I’d test both LinkedIn is great for B2B and pro content, X is better for fast-paced, build-in-public style. Try both for a week and see what clicks.
Did you used any tool to find relevant reddit posts?
I didn’t use any tool at first just manual Reddit searches using keywords in my niche. Later on, I started saving good subreddits and used Reddit’s advanced search (with site:reddit.com) on Google to find older threads. Super effective
This is the perfect example of how to plug your solution without plugging your solution. 3000 clicks are impressive, my man!
Thanks 🙌 That means a lot. I really tried to focus on being helpful first once people see the value, the clicks follow naturally. Appreciate the support 🚀
Great Insights
Thanks so much! Appreciate you reading it 🙌 Let me know if you’ve got any questions I’m happy to share more
Informative post!!
be sure to check us out here serptag.com
It’ll be interesting to see how Gemini and AI-powered search change the landscape of SEO over the next year. The case for tools like SERPtag is strong, especially during this fluid phase where even a small edge in visibility can compound significantly.
Totally agree things are evolving fast, and visibility is only getting harder to earn. Having the right data (and tracking it early) can be a big edge while the landscape shifts. Appreciate the thoughtful comment! 🙌
In a similar vein to the comment above, I'd be curious to hear if you have any thoughts on how you can apply your tool's capabilities to LLM searches.
Really good post, I gained a lot from it
Thanks so much! Appreciate you reading it