A couple months ago I launched findmybpm.com — a free tap tempo tool for
musicians. I wrote about the "why" in my last post here. This one's about
the "how" — specifically the SEO and growth side, since a few people asked.
Starting Point
Brand new domain. Zero backlinks. Zero rankings. Just a working tool and
a homepage.
What Actually Moved the Needle
Content first. I started publishing targeted blog posts — not generic
"what is BPM" filler, but specific angles: BPM for running, BPM for
workouts, BPM for DJs, BPM for hip hop. Each one targets a different
audience searching for the same core thing.
Technical cleanup. Compressed images, added a CDN, fixed page speed,
added proper meta descriptions and an author bio. Boring stuff, but it
matters.
Backlinks from real directories. SourceForge, Capterra, AlternativeTo —
not link farms, actual relevant tool directories. Each one took maybe 10
minutes to submit.
Forums where the actual audience hangs out. Posted on KVRAudio (music
software community) where genuine discussion about tempo tools already
happens. Way more valuable than generic directory links.
What Surprised Me
Search Console started showing impressions for "BPM running pace" and
"beats per minute when running" — queries I hadn't even targeted yet.
Turns out runners use BPM tools just as much as producers do. That
became its own content angle.
Where It Stands Now
Still early days, but I went from zero impressions to consistent daily
search visibility, a handful of real referring domains, and actual
organic clicks starting to trickle in.
Lessons for Anyone Doing This Solo
- Don't wait for "perfect" content — publish, then improve
- Directories and forums beat generic backlink farms every time
- Watch your Search Console queries closely — they tell you what your audience actually wants, even if it's not what you expected
If you're building something similar, happy to swap notes in the comments.
Tool's at findmybpm.com if you want to see where it landed.
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