Optimize your content marketing. Calculate precise word counts, reading times, and extract keyword density metrics to avoid SEO penalties.
Execute advanced lexical analysis to ensure your content meets strict platform requirements.
The engine breaks the text into individual words, removes common 'stop words' (like 'the', 'and', 'a'), and counts the exact frequency of every noun and verb to reveal your true topical focus.
Modern UX design requires showing the user how much time an article demands. The tool uses a 250 WPM baseline algorithm to output precise minute and second estimations for UI implementation.
Pasting from Microsoft Word often imports invisible line breaks and double spaces. The analyzer aggressively normalizes the string before counting, ensuring you don't get artificially inflated character limits.
In the early days of Google, marketers would write the word "buy cheap shoes" 500 times at the bottom of a webpage to rank #1. This is called "Keyword Stuffing". Today, Google's algorithm uses advanced Natural Language Processing (NLP) to detect and penalize this behavior. If your keyword density is too high, your website will be blacklisted. To write safely, you must use an online text analyzer.
Keyword density is calculated as: (Number of times the keyword appears / Total words in the article) * 100.
Most SEO experts agree that the absolute safest, most optimal density is between 1% and 2%.
This means if you write a 1,000-word blog post about "Dog Training", the phrase "Dog Training" should only appear about 10 to 20 times. If the text analyzer shows your primary keyword hitting 5% density, you are waving a massive red flag to Google's spam filters and must rewrite the text using synonyms.
Why does the tool count characters with and without spaces?
When you write a Meta Description for Google (the small gray snippet of text under your blue link in the search results), you must adhere to strict pixel-width limits on the screen.
Generally, Google truncates meta descriptions at exactly 160 characters (including spaces). If your copywriter writes a beautiful 170-character marketing hook, Google will cut the sentence in half with an ugly "...". You must run the text through the analyzer to ensure it mathematically fits the platform's constraints.
Why do platforms like Medium prominently display "5 Min Read" at the top of every article?