The positioning as a “link management hub” is interesting. Many marketers still see shorteners as utilities, not platforms. Curious how you plan to differentiate Cutly in that space — especially with giants like Bitly and Linktree around.
Thanks, that’s a great question.
You’re right - most shorteners are still seen as utilities, but we’ve been building Cuttly as more of a link management platform that connects analytics, branding, and engagement tools.
Bitly focuses on enterprise scale and Linktree on social bios. Cuttly sits somewhere in between - combining branded links, dynamic QR codes, link-in-bio pages, short surveys, and aggregated campaign analytics under one roof.
The goal is to make it a flexible hub for teams and creators who want to measure and manage, not just shorten.
The positioning as a “link management hub” is interesting. Many marketers still see shorteners as utilities, not platforms. Curious how you plan to differentiate Cutly in that space — especially with giants like Bitly and Linktree around.
Thanks, that’s a great question. You’re right - most shorteners are still seen as utilities, but we’ve been building Cuttly as more of a link management platform that connects analytics, branding, and engagement tools.
Bitly focuses on enterprise scale and Linktree on social bios. Cuttly sits somewhere in between - combining branded links, dynamic QR codes, link-in-bio pages, short surveys, and aggregated campaign analytics under one roof.
The goal is to make it a flexible hub for teams and creators who want to measure and manage, not just shorten.
Link shorteners are kinda dead nowadays. 10-15 years ago, this would make sense.