Track Content Changes Across Any Website

Blog posts get updated, knowledge base articles are rewritten, and web content changes without notice. PageCrawl monitors the content that matters to you and alerts you when something is different.

No credit card required. 6 monitors free forever.

Trusted by 5,000+ teams including Microsoft, NYT, Deloitte, and more

47%
of web content changes monthly
60%
of content updates happen without notification
Seconds
from content change to alert

Why Teams Choose PageCrawl

Detect Any Content Change

Monitor blog posts, knowledge bases, help centers, and editorial pages. Get alerted when content is added, modified, or removed.

AI Explains What Changed

Every detected change comes with an AI summary highlighting the key differences. Understand the substance of an update without re-reading the entire page.

Filter Noise with Importance Scoring

Changes are scored on a 0-100 scale. Minor typo fixes score low, while major content rewrites score high. Set your threshold to control alert volume.

Full Version History

Every version of a page is stored with timestamps. Review how content has evolved over time and compare any two versions side by side.

Team Review Workflows

Route content change alerts to your team via Slack, Teams, or email. Use review boards to track which changes have been reviewed and addressed.

Auto-Discover Content Pages

Point PageCrawl at a domain and auto-discover blog posts, knowledge base articles, and content pages worth monitoring.

Content Briefings for Editorial, Documentation, and Agency Teams

Blog posts get rewritten without redirects. Knowledge base articles drift from the product. A competitor publishes a teardown of your latest feature on Substack and nobody on the team sees it for a week. Content moves constantly, but nobody can read every blog, newsletter, and help center daily. PageCrawl groups your tracked content into briefings tuned to who needs to see what: editorial gets the competitor and industry weekly, documentation owners see drift on docs they own, and agencies get client-site change reports they can forward without redaction.

Industry Editorial Roundup · Weekly · May 13 to May 20
5 industry pieces worth a response
AI OverviewStyle: Patterns
The Information ran two subscriber-only stories this week that frame our category as consolidating around three players, including us. TechCrunch published a feature comparison piece that omitted us in favor of two younger competitors, the kind of correction we usually request via the reporter. The Verge has been quiet on the category for six straight weeks which is itself a pattern worth a pitch.
90
The Information published a deep dive arguing that the category is rapidly consolidating around three players, with our company explicitly named as one of the three. The framing is generally favorable but anchored in revenue numbers from a leaked deck that we should verify. Worth a soft check-in with the reporter to clarify any numbers before the inevitable follow-up piece.
theinformation.com/articles/category-consolidation·May 19·View diff
73
TechCrunch published a feature comparison roundup of seven products in our space and omitted us entirely, instead featuring two Series A startups with smaller customer bases. The reporter is junior and the piece reads like it was sourced from a single Twitter thread. Send a polite "happy to brief you for the next one" note rather than a correction request.
techcrunch.com/feature-comparison-roundup·May 17·View diff
56
Ben Thompson's Monday Stratechery covered our sector's strategic positioning and named us once in passing as "the more disciplined operator." Brief mention but high-leverage audience. Worth amplifying internally and in the next investor update; not worth a public response.
stratechery.com/article/our-sector-thesis·May 15·View diff
19
The Verge tech landing page refreshed with new editorial selections; nothing in our category for the sixth straight week. Tracked because the absence is itself a signal worth flagging to comms for outreach planning.
theverge.com/tech·May 18·View diff
Scope: Domain: techcrunch.com, theverge.com, theinformation.com · Sent to editorial@company.com, content-strategy@company.com
Documentation Drift Report · Weekly · May 13 to May 20
4 doc drift items vs. shipped product
AI OverviewStyle: Changelog
Updated this week
API authentication guide rewritten by docs team to reflect the new key format shipped last sprint
Webhook payload reference page revised with the v2 fields
Drift detected
Quickstart still shows the old dashboard screenshot from before the March redesign
A community-maintained Medium tutorial linked from our help hub still uses deprecated /v1/ endpoints
84
Community-maintained Medium tutorial that we link from our help center still uses /v1/ API endpoints that are scheduled for deprecation in 60 days. The author is responsive and has updated their tutorial in the past when nudged. Send a friendly note with the v2 migration link and offer to review the update before they publish.
medium.com/@community-author/our-product-tutorial·May 18·View diff
61
Our own quickstart guide still embeds the pre-March dashboard screenshot. New users following the guide arrive at a UI that does not match the screenshot, which is a small but compounding source of support tickets. Replace with the post-redesign screenshot and update the two callouts that reference the old left-nav layout.
docs.our-product.com/quickstart·May 16·View diff
38
Our own customer newsletter Substack page had a small footer copy update and the unsubscribe link layout shifted. No content drift relative to product. Listed for documentation completeness only.
substack.com/our-product-newsletter·May 17·View diff
8
Webhook reference page was revised by the docs team to reflect the v2 payload fields, matching the shipped product. Drift closed. Tracked here so the documentation owner can mark the audit item complete.
docs.our-product.com/api/webhooks·May 19·View diff
Scope: Folder: /our-docs · Sent to docs@company.com, support-leads@company.com
AI-written briefings, 8 stylesPick the style each audience prefers: headline, patterns, action briefing, detailed, bullets, changelog, risk assessment, or brief.
Group by tag, folder, or domainOne report for competitor pricing, another for compliance pages, another for product launches.
Daily, weekly, or monthly cadenceEach audience picks the rhythm that fits. Marketing on Mondays, legal on the first of the month.
Deliver to anyoneEmail digests to stakeholders, clients, or execs. No PageCrawl account required for recipients.
Print-ready briefingsEvery digest is print-optimized. Open it, hit print, and you have a clean briefing for board decks or quarterly reviews.
PDF and Excel exportExport any digest as PDF or Excel for archives, audits, or pasting straight into a deck.
Comments and feedback inlineStakeholders can flag noise, ask questions, or escalate items without leaving the digest.
Instant escalation channelsHigh-priority changes still hit Slack, Teams, email, Discord, Telegram, and webhooks the moment they happen.

How Scheduled Reports work

Built For

Content & Marketing Teams

Monitor competitor blogs, industry publications, and your own content for unauthorized changes or updates that affect your strategy.

Documentation Teams

Track knowledge base and help center content across your organization. Ensure documentation stays accurate and up to date.

Agencies

Monitor client websites for content changes. Get alerted when client teams update pages without going through your approval process.

Compliance Teams

Watch published policies, disclaimers, and regulatory content for unauthorized modifications. Maintain an audit trail of content versions.

Frequently Asked Questions

How It Works

1

Add any URL — pages, prices, numbers, PDFs, login-walled portals

Paste a competitor page, a vendor DPA, a product listing, or a government docket. PageCrawl handles JavaScript-heavy pages, cookie banners, login walls, and PDFs out of the box. Track the whole page, a specific element, a price, a stock status, or a number — the choice is yours per monitor.

2

PageCrawl detects what changed and how much it matters

For text-heavy pages, an AI summary explains in plain English what shifted and assigns a 0 to 100 importance score. For numbers, prices, and stock counts, you get the raw value — no summary needed. Pick what makes sense per monitor; AI is on tap when you want it, off when you do not.

3

Instant alerts only when something is actually urgent

Time-sensitive changes (price drops, restocks, new filings) hit Slack, Teams, email, Discord, Telegram, or webhook the moment they are detected. Less urgent changes (terms updates, content drift) skip the ping and wait for the morning digest. You decide which folders and tags trigger which channels.

4

Roll the rest up into reports stakeholders actually read

Changes that do not need a same-minute alert flow into AI-written digests grouped by tag, folder, or domain. Daily for ops, weekly for marketing, monthly for compliance — each audience picks the cadence and report style (patterns, action briefing, risk assessment, or six others) that fits how they work.

Start monitoring for free

6 monitors, 220 checks/month, all integrations included. No credit card required.