WholeReach audits your website the way the new AI readers do, then a department of role agents drafts your SEO, content, social, and email — and nothing ships without a human's yes. The audit is free, takes one URL, and asks for nothing in return.
The same loop a good marketing department runs — with software carrying the repetition and a person keeping the taste. It is the loop we run on our own network of ~280 sites, every night.
Enter a URL. The engine reads your site like the AI readers do and scores it 0–100 across SEO, content, social, and email.
Role agents draft the fixes — pages, schema, posts, newsletter — in your voice, from your real facts.
Everything lands in a queue: approve, edit, or reject. Nothing moves without you.
Approved work goes live, wired into your nav, sitemap, and the machine-readable surfaces AI search reads.
Scores re-run on a schedule. What moved, what didn't, what's next — in plain language.
Single-purpose AI tools hand you one more thing to manage. WholeReach is structured like the department you'd hire — each role with one job, all of them feeding one approval queue.
WholeReach isn't a promise — the machinery has been running on our own network first. These are the live properties; compare them feature-by-feature on the public chart.
$499 a month, founding rate, while capacity lasts. The software sees and scaffolds; a human does the last mile. No auto-publish claims, no invented metrics — and the free audit stays free, no signup, like a library card.
Why the marketing-tool pile failed the small business, what a department of role agents actually is, why the approval queue is the whole ballgame — and the working proof from a 280-site network that runs this loop nightly. The third volume in the Whole Hill series.