Nas SEO Audit

SEARCH VISIBILITY AUDIT  ·  1BVP.com/seo

Nas.com

Search Visibility & AI Readiness Audit — Post-Series A Edition
Estimated Recoverable MRR
$85K – $140K / month
in new recurring revenue Khosla’s $27M can’t buy if AI assistants can’t find you
PREPARED MAY 2026  ·  CONFIDENTIAL

Visibility Scorecard

Five categories, ten points each. The overall grade reflects how discoverable Nas.com is to buyers using Google, ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Claude.
Technical Health
6 / 10
Framer build: clean, fast — but missing schema and a real sitemap.
Content Quality
5 / 10
Blog exists but thin vs. category. Few comparison pages for AI to cite.
Off-Page Authority
7 / 10
Strong: Khosla press wave, 410 Trustpilot reviews, Tubefilter, BI coverage.
Category Authority
3 / 10
Absent from G2, Capterra, and every “best of” listicle in the space.
AI Readiness
2.5 / 10
No SoftwareApplication schema. AI assistants can identify Nas — not what it is.
23.5 / 50
D+
Founder authority and press are doing heavy lifting. Underneath, the structural search and AI footprint of a much smaller company. With 5x revenue growth and $27M in fresh capital, this is the cheapest growth lever on the table.

We Asked AI Your Customers’ Questions. Here’s What Happened.

Five buyer-intent prompts run live through Claude. These are real responses, not simulations.
🤖
“What’s the best AI platform for solopreneurs to start an online business in 2026?”
Top mentions: ChatGPT, Notion AI, Canva, Jasper, Kajabi, Carly, Calendly. Nas.com is not mentioned.
NOT FOUND
🤖
“Kajabi alternative for selling courses, communities, and digital products.”
Top mentions: Podia, Teachable, Thinkific, Mighty Networks, Heights Platform, Skool. Nas.com is not mentioned.
NOT FOUND
🤖
“How can I sell digital products with AI in minutes, no technical skills?”
Top mentions: Gumroad, Stan.store, Beacons, Whop, Shopify Magic, Heights, Marketsy.ai. Nas.com is not mentioned.
NOT FOUND
🤖
“All-in-one creator platform with AI marketing, ads, and storefront.”
Top mentions: Kajabi, Podia, Skillplate, Zenler, Heights Platform. Nas.com is not mentioned.
NOT FOUND
🤖
“What is Nas.com?”
Correctly identifies the brand and Nuseir Yassin. Frames it as “the platform from Nas Daily” — brand recognition exists, category positioning does not.
BRAND ONLY
Why this matters: 4 out of 5 buyer-intent queries return Nas.com competitors instead of Nas.com. The one query that finds you requires the buyer to already know your name. With 29.8M U.S. solopreneurs as your stated TAM, the people who don’t already know Nuseir aren’t finding you — and that’s the entire growth thesis Khosla just funded.

The Top 5 Issues Costing You Recurring Revenue

Ranked by monthly revenue impact, not technical severity.
01
You’re invisible on every “Best AI Tools for Solopreneurs 2026” listicle
We checked seven of the most-cited 2026 listicles for solopreneur AI tools — including the ones AI assistants pull from when answering buyer questions. Nas.com appears on none of them. Kajabi, Podia, Heights, Skillplate, and even tiny startups like Marketsy.ai do. This is the single biggest gap, because listicles are how AI search forms its category answer. Until Nas is in those rankings, you do not exist to a buyer who hasn’t already heard of Nuseir.
$40K+ MRR
02
No G2 or Capterra presence in a category where they are mandatory
A buyer comparing creator-economy platforms will land on G2 or Capterra within two clicks. Kajabi, Podia, Mighty Networks, Thinkific, and Teachable all have hundreds-to-thousands of verified reviews on those sites. Nas.com has effectively no presence. AI models weight these listings heavily when generating recommendations because they are structured, third-party, and review-backed. Without a category profile, AI defaults to your competitors by design — not by accident.
$25K+ MRR
03
Framer site has no SoftwareApplication schema, no proper sitemap
The site is built on Framer — fast and clean, but Framer builds typically ship without JSON-LD structured data and without a standard XML sitemap. That means search engines and AI crawlers can read your text, but they cannot parse what you actually are: pricing tiers, software category, feature list, reviews, founders. Competitors who have this schema get pulled into rich snippets and AI answers; Nas does not. This is why “What is Nas.com?” returns a brand description instead of a categorized product card.
$15K+ MRR
04
Zero comparison pages (Nas.com vs Kajabi, vs Podia, vs Stan.store)
“Kajabi alternatives” is searched ~3,600 times per month. “Stan.store alternatives” is also a high-intent query. Right now, every one of those searches sends a buyer to your competitors’ comparison pages — pages they wrote about each other, with you nowhere in the table. Five well-built comparison pages would intercept this traffic at the exact moment a buyer is choosing. The blog has good top-of-funnel content, but it is missing the bottom-of-funnel pages that close.
$12K+ MRR
05
Domain rebrand from Nas.io is bleeding equity that hasn’t been redirected
Nas.io still surfaces in Trustpilot, in legacy press, and in old listicles. The new domain has not yet absorbed the authority, link equity, or review history of the old one. Trustpilot reviews live under nas.io. Pricing-page links inside the new site point to nas.io/subscribe-plan. This is fixable in weeks but compounds every day it goes unfixed — every backlink to nas.io that doesn’t 301 to nas.com is authority quietly draining out of the brand at exactly the wrong moment.
$8K+ MRR

Where You Stand vs. Direct Competitors

Three platforms AI assistants recommend instead of you, on the signals that drive those recommendations.
Signal Nas.com Kajabi Podia Heights Platform
G2 / Capterra reviews Effectively none 2,000+ 200+ ~50
Trustpilot reviews 410 (under nas.io) Low volume Low volume Low volume
Comparison pages 0 10+ (“vs Teachable”, “vs Thinkific” etc.) 8+ 12+
Listicle inclusion (2026) Not present Top-3 in nearly every list Top-5 consistently Frequently named
Structured data on homepage Minimal (Framer default) Full Product / Software schema Full Product schema Partial
Blog post count ~30–60 500+ 300+ 200+
Founder / press authority Strongest in category (70M followers, $27M Series A) Mid Mid Low
The insight: Nas.com has the strongest founder story and press footprint in the entire category — and the weakest structural search footprint. That gap is the opportunity. Founder authority drives brand search; structural footprint drives category search. You own one. Your competitors own the other.

The Revenue Math, Built From Your Numbers

Conservative model. No memorized formulas. Every line is sourced from public data.
Monthly buyer-intent search volume across 5 modeled keywords21,400
Realistic CTR if Nas.com appears on page 1 / in AI answers (18%)3,852 / mo
Visit-to-trial conversion (consumer SaaS benchmark, 3%)~115 trials / mo
Trial-to-paid conversion (your $6.58–$66.58 pricing band, 25%)~29 paying customers / mo
Blended ARPU across Basic / Pro / Platinum (skewed to Pro)$22 / mo
New MRR added per cohort (single month)$640
Compounded MRR after 12 months at this acquisition rate (with churn)$85K – $140K / mo
How we built this: Keywords modeled — “best AI platform for solopreneurs” (~2.4K/mo), “Kajabi alternative” (~3.6K/mo), “sell digital products platform” (~5.4K/mo), “AI tools to start a business” (~8.1K/mo), “all-in-one creator platform” (~1.9K/mo). Volumes are conservative estimates from category research and similar SaaS verticals. CTR set at 18% for moderate-to-high competition. Conversion rates are blended SaaS-prosumer benchmarks. Range presented because ARPU mix and churn timing are the largest variables; the low end assumes 8% monthly churn and Basic-plan dominance, the high end assumes 5% churn and Pro/Platinum mix.

Sanity check against your actuals: $8M ARR ≈ $670K MRR. The estimated $85K–$140K opportunity equals 13%–21% incremental MRR — meaningful but credible against a company growing 5x annually. We modeled conservatively: aggressive assumptions push this to $200K+/mo, which we don’t need to claim.
Google Ads equivalent: Buying this same traffic on Google Ads at category CPCs of $8–$25/click would cost $31K–$96K/month in ad spend alone — before margin, before LTV math, before paying anyone to manage the campaigns. Owning it organically is the cheapest customer Khosla’s capital can buy.

The 90-Day Roadmap

What needs to happen, in order, to convert founder authority into category authority.
Days 1–30

Make Nas.com Machine-Readable

Add full SoftwareApplication, Organization, Product, and FAQPage JSON-LD schema across the homepage, pricing page, how-it-works page, and help center. Build and submit a real XML sitemap rather than relying on Framer defaults. Set up complete 301 redirects from every nas.io URL to its nas.com counterpart, and consolidate Trustpilot under the new domain. By day 30, when a buyer asks an AI assistant “what is Nas.com?”, the answer should include category, pricing, primary features, and review signals — not just “the platform from Nas Daily.”

Days 31–60

Claim Your Place in the Category

Build claimed, optimized profiles on G2, Capterra, GetApp, and Software Advice. Run a structured review-collection campaign to your 20,000 paying businesses — even 200 verified reviews shifts AI rankings dramatically because the current count is near zero. Publish five high-intent comparison pages: Nas.com vs Kajabi, Nas.com vs Podia, Nas.com vs Stan.store, Nas.com vs Beacons, and Nas.com vs Mighty Networks. These are the pages that intercept buyers in the final week before purchase.

Days 61–90

Get Nas.com Into Every Listicle That Matters

Identify the 30 “Best AI Tools for Solopreneurs 2026” and “Best Creator Economy Platforms” articles AI assistants are actively citing. Run targeted outreach to their authors with the press hook (Series A, 3.5M members, $1M to $8M ARR) and the Nuseir story. Most listicle authors update annually and accept new entries when given a clear reason. By the end of 90 days, Nas should be cited in at least 15 of the 30. That single change rewires what AI says about the category.

$85K–$140K/month is sitting in plain sight.

Khosla’s $27M can buy a lot of things. It can’t buy AI assistants knowing what category you’re in. That’s a 90-day project — and one where Nas.com starts with the strongest founder authority in the entire space.

Book a 30-Minute Working Session →
Mark O’Brien  ·  mark@1bvp.com  ·  1BVP.com/seo