FRED-App

FRED-App – Your Executive Memory.

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Report generated on April 5, 2026

fred-app.ai
Screenshot of fred-app.ai

A note on how to read this

This report is ProdPoke's take on your site — think of it as a first impression from a very opinionated robot. We check real things (load times, broken links, accessibility patterns), but we also try to understand what your site is trying to do and whether the technical details support that goal. Some of our observations might not apply to your specific situation, and that's okay. We're getting sharper with every scan. If something feels off, tell us — it makes us better.

Key Insights for FRED-App

6 unlabeled interactive elements lock out screen reader users from evaluating your platform

Executives with visual impairments cannot assess FRED-App's decision management features or navigation, creating both a compliance risk and a lost sales opportunity in a market where accessibility is increasingly expected.

Missing GDPR cookie consent puts your EU executive audience at legal risk

FRED-App targets EU founders and decision-makers. Without cookie consent, you're non-compliant with GDPR—exposing both your company and visitors to regulatory liability if analytics or session tracking is active.

No canonical tags mean search engines can't determine which URL version represents your knowledge management platform

Executives searching for 'decision management tools' or 'information organization platforms' may see duplicate or lower-priority versions of your pages in results, diluting visibility and click-through rates.

Missing sitemap.xml prevents search engines from discovering all your platform pages

Without a sitemap, pricing pages, blog posts on decision documentation, and feature pages may not be indexed efficiently, reducing organic reach to founders actively searching for knowledge management solutions.

What ProdPoke understands about FRED-App

FRED-App is a structured knowledge management platform designed for executives and decision-makers to organize and retrieve critical information systematically. The product features a follow-up system that captures information and resurfaces it at the right time for decisions, a context-based structure for assigning entries to projects and people, and clear classification using six entry types (Task, Decision, Research, Idea, Reference, Note) with four priority levels. It offers three pricing tiers—Basic (€12/month), Professional (€24/month, marked as most popular), and Enterprise (custom pricing)—with features ranging from unlimited entries and keyboard shortcuts in Basic to AI document import, context mapping, and multi-workspace support in Professional. The blog content emphasizes helping founders and leaders avoid losing critical decisions and information through better documentation and follow-up practices.

Based on exploring 5 pages across the site

First Impression — How clear is your site?

85
Crystal clear

FRED-App is described as "the digital follow-up system for managers, executives, entrepreneurs and freelancers." According to the page, it "ensures that relevant information, decisions, and tasks are not lost – but become present again exactly when they are needed." The tagline is "Keep. Decide. Act."

This score measures how quickly a first-time visitor understands what your site does — based on visible headings, navigation, and visual hierarchy alone.

95/ 100

Overall Score

Strong foundation.

Performance

100/100
All clear — no issues found in this category.

SEO

94/100

No canonical URL specified

low

Without canonical tags, search engines may struggle to prioritize the correct URL versions of your knowledge management platform's pages, potentially diluting SEO value for executives searching for decision management and information organization tools.

No sitemap.xml found

low

Missing sitemap.xml prevents search engines from efficiently discovering and indexing all pages of your knowledge management platform, reducing visibility for founders and executives searching for information management solutions.

Accessibility

85/100

6 interactive element(s) without accessible names

high

Six interactive elements (likely buttons, navigation controls, or feature toggles in the app interface or landing page) lack accessible names. Decision-makers relying on screen readers cannot understand what these controls do, excluding them from fully evaluating your platform's usability and features.

Expected: All interactive elements have accessible names
Found: 6 missing: <a.flex>, <button[type=button].flex>, <input[type=text]#website>, <input[type=text]#newsletter-first-name.w-full>, <input[type=text]#newsletter-last-name.w-full>

Functional

100/100
All clear — no issues found in this category.

Compliance

92/100

No cookie consent mechanism detected

medium

No cookie consent mechanism detected. If your platform uses analytics, session tracking, or other cookies to monitor how executives use the knowledge management system, you are not compliant with GDPR requirements for EU visitors.

Key Metrics

Crawlability

Sitemap.xml
Robots.txt
Broken Links0

Standards

HTTPS
Mobile Responsive
Images Missing Alt0

Improvement Plan

FRED-App's positioning as a platform for executives and decision-makers creates a unique responsibility: accessibility and compliance issues directly exclude and legally expose your core audience. Start immediately with accessibility remediation. Those 6 unlabeled interactive elements—whether they're buttons in your landing page demo, navigation toggles, or feature selectors—need descriptive aria-labels or text labels. This is not just legal compliance; it's about trust. An executive evaluating your platform who encounters inaccessible controls may assume the entire product lacks polish, even if the actual app is fully accessible. This fix is quick and high-impact.

Second, implement GDPR-compliant cookie consent. If FRED-App uses Google Analytics, Hotjar, or similar tools (which most SaaS platforms do), you're currently non-compliant with GDPR for your EU audience—exactly where your founders and decision-makers are concentrated. Add a consent banner that allows users to accept or reject non-essential cookies before any tracking occurs. This simultaneously protects your business and shows visitors you respect their privacy, reinforcing your brand as trustworthy for sensitive business information.

Third, add canonical tags to your key pages (pricing, features, blog) and create a sitemap.xml. These are foundational SEO practices that take 1–2 hours to implement but prevent search engines from fragmenting your visibility. When a founder searches 'how to prevent losing important decisions' or 'executive decision documentation tool,' you want one authoritative version of your page to rank, not multiple diluted versions.

Prioritize in this order: accessibility fixes (trust and compliance), GDPR cookie consent (legal risk and trust), then canonical tags and sitemap (organic growth). Each layer reinforces your market position as a serious, compliant platform for high-stakes decision management.

Suggested priority order:

  1. 6 interactive element(s) without accessible names
  2. No cookie consent mechanism detected
  3. No canonical URL specified
  4. No sitemap.xml found

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Automated analysis generated on April 5, 2026. Not professional advice. Contact us to modify or remove this report.