@OsmnShkh - thanks for the clarification! I totally "lazyweb'd" that. :)
@dharmesh - I like your first-person, personal about page and +1 on the price tier names (rookie, sleuth, super spy).
When clicking the "get email updates on [site name]," it prompts me to sign in with LinkedIn. Why LI rather than ask for the user's email address? The former introduces more friction and limits your potential audience to LI users, but I'm sure you have a good reason for it.
@dharmesh - that was my assumption. Not sure if you've seen StackLead yet but that may be useful for gathering similar user data based on the email address they enter. cc'ing one of the founders, @gwintrob.
Thanks for checking it out folks. Wasn't quite ready for all this attention from super-smart folks, but appreciate the feedback.
@OssmnShkh: You're right, the "Marketing Grade" does come from our other free tool (Grader.com). It's a composite score of a bunch of things related to a site's marketing (traffic, social reach, blogging, etc.) I should probably take it out for now, because though *I* find it useful, others will likely be confused by it too.
@rhoover: The motivation for the LinkedIn login experiment is that I wanted to get a sense for what market the app appeals to.
But, the plan is to support both LinkedIn and regular email/password signup (should be out tomorrow). You're right that the friction is much higher with LinkedIn signup (but the data is valuable).
@OsmnShkh Yes, the product is currently part of HubSpot Labs. So, similar to Signals (http://GetSignals.com). We like to test new ideas separately from the core HubSpot product. Gives us more freedom to be bold.
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