Final Verdict
0/100
A cinematic masterpiece of irony where a company claiming to offer 'Web Development' as a service fails to spell their own industry correctly in their meta title.
Impression
35
Your hero section claims 'Diero is a lifestyle applied to work,' which is exactly what people say when they're too 'artistic' to provide a clear value proposition. The minimalist aesthetic isn't 'prestige cinema'—it’s 'I spent the budget on the David di Donatello and couldn't afford a UI designer.'
Pretentious 'Lifestyle' Branding
Performance
40
You list 'Web Design and Web Development' as a service under your expertise, yet your own site feels like a static brochure that was 'directed' rather than 'engineered.' If your web dev is as 'de facto' as your executive production, I'll stick to Squarespace.
Hypocritical Service Offerings
SEO
12
Your meta title is literally 'Diero Film | Produzione e distribuziona cinematografica.' Spelling 'distribuzione' as 'distribuziona' in your primary SEO hook is the digital equivalent of leaving the lens cap on for a $10M feature film. It's a disaster.
Title Tag Spelling Error
Copywriting
15
The headline 'Diero is a lifestyle applied to work' is peak cinema-bro pretension. Your meta description is just a lazy copy-paste of your 'About' section starting with 'Diero srl is an independent production...'—it’s not a pitch, it’s a Wikipedia stub nobody asked for.
Vague Corporate Jargon
Trust
38
You won a David di Donatello for 'Inverno' in 2020, but your site looks like it's still waiting for its big break. Listing your VAT number (P.IVA: 02575800905) and a Sardinian address in the footer doesn't build trust when you can't even run a basic spellcheck on your homepage.
Identity Crisis