What does a robot see?
These days people ask an AI about you before they ever visit. So paste your address — Askari, our nosy little robot, reads the page the way a search engine or an answer engine would, and tells you plainly what a machine makes of you.
A person forgives a messy page. A machine doesn’t — it just reads what’s there, and quotes it.
More and more, the first thing that meets a new customer isn’t your homepage — it’s a sentence an AI wrote about you, or a search result it assembled. Both are built from what a crawler could actually extract: your title, your description, the structured data you did or didn’t label, the words it could read before giving up on your JavaScript.
This tool reads your page the same blunt way and shows you the result — no login, nothing stored, and nothing invented. Where it says a machine is guessing, that’s a sentence you could be writing instead. Building sites that answer clearly for people and for the robots reading over their shoulder is a good part of what we do.
We hold our own work to this test too: Askari reads this page and finds a title, a description we wrote, and labelled structured data — no guessing required. Want a site that reads this clearly? →