Let's talk features, yeah? It uses Azure AI to scan your images, generating relevant alt tags on the spot-whether for new uploads or digging into existing ones for improvements. You've got a straightforward dashboard to oversee everything, spotting vague tags that could tank your SEO or accessibility scores.
Editing is a breeze; review, tweak, or approve right there, no fuss. And unlimited processing? That's a relief-no hitting caps mid-project. I was surprised how well it handles everyday photos and graphics, though abstract stuff sometimes needs a manual nudge. This is perfect for Webflow designers, devs, and marketers juggling image-heavy sites.
Think agencies cranking out client portfolios, freelancers racing deadlines, or e-commerce teams optimizing product shots for better visibility. Use cases are straightforward: bulk-tagging shop photos to juice search rankings, ensuring ADA compliance for inclusive designs, or just auditing blog visuals during site launches.
In my experience, it cut tagging time by 70% on a recent e-com project-felt liberating, you know? What sets Tagify apart from generic AI describers or clunky plugins? It's Webflow-native, so integration is seamless, no exports or hacks required. Built by folks who actually use the platform, it gets the quirks right-unlike broader tools that feel bolted-on.
Sure, it's English-only for now, but multi-language support is coming, which excites me with global clients in mind. Look, no tool's perfect; beta means some features are still evolving, and it's useless outside Webflow. But the pros outweigh that easily. If alt tags bog you down, hit up their site, try the free tester, and join the waitlist-your workflow will thank you.