Findori has received a significant update. Seven new features, five of which are free for anyone who installs the plugin. Here's what's been added and why it matters.
Free: AI bot access check
This is one of the features I find most concrete. Findori now visits your homepage as ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude and Google, and checks whether they can actually get in. You see in one overview who is blocked, and there's an additional check whether your page shows readable text without JavaScript.
Why that last part matters: some AI crawlers don't render JavaScript. If your content depends entirely on scripts to load, that page simply doesn't exist for those crawlers. The check gives you that in black and white.
Free: image labels for AI
Images with an alt text are now added to your structured data as ImageObject. That sounds technical, but the effect is practical: AI assistants and visual search understand what's in your photos, and can reference your visuals when composing an answer. A product photo with a good alt text now counts in your page's structured data.
Free: list your brand elsewhere
You can now add your profiles and mentions on other platforms, from LinkedIn to review sites and your Google Business Profile. Findori adds those as sameAs links in your structured data. The result: an AI that encounters your name in multiple places recognizes you as an established source. That trust translates into a higher chance of being cited.
Free: three blocks AI loves to cite
Three new blocks in the Gutenberg editor: a direct answer with a short explanation below it, a comparison table, and a key figure with source. These are exactly the formats AI assistants draw from when making a recommendation or answering a question. You don't have to build the structure yourself anymore, you click it in.
Pro: preference signals in the citability check
The citability check now also looks at three additional signals: does your article contain a comparison table or list, does it cite concrete numbers, and is the text free of hollow marketing language. Those are the signals an AI uses to pick your page as the best answer to a question. The check now gives you a score on each of those points, with a concrete tip if something is missing.
Pro: AI vs. search traffic
Your classic Google clicks now sit next to your AI traffic in one view, with a trend that builds week by week. So you can see that a drop in search traffic isn't a loss if AI assistants are picking up the slack. Everything you see is measured, nothing is estimated.
Add-on: share of voice over time and your competitors
The AI Visibility Monitor has been expanded. You now see not just whether you're mentioned, but how your share of AI answers develops over the weeks, and which competitors keep showing up alongside or instead of you. That gives you a concrete benchmark for your content strategy.
What this means for the free plan
The free version of Findori now covers considerably more than at launch. You get llms.txt, IndexNow, AI schema, crawler management, the access check, image labels, sameAs markup and the three citability blocks, all for one site, no account required. That's a solid foundation to start with.
Pro adds the layers that determine whether you actually get cited: the content assistant, the expanded citability check and the dashboards that show how you're doing relative to your competitors.
The update is available via WordPress.org or through the Findori website.



