ChatGPT: 바이브 코딩, 트렌딩 키워드, 트렌딩 유튜브 키워드 사이트 추천

 

ChatGPT said:

Here’s a breakdown of what I think are strong options + trade-offs for both your questions. Happy to dig deeper / tailor to your tech stack if you want.


1) Best “vibe coding” / AI-aided coding tools for building a fully commercial website

By “commercial website” I assume you mean something you own and can monetize, scale, maintain, with good performance, security, etc. So the tool should allow professional grade code, ownership (e.g. no lock-in), good integrations, etc.

Here are good candidates + my thoughts, plus a recommendation:

Strong Options

ToolWhat it does well / strengthsPossible drawbacks
GitHub CopilotExcellent for code completion, helps developers write faster, works in many IDEs. If you're coding manually (JS/React/Node, etc.), this is a major help. Qodo+1
QodoMore than just autocomplete: code generation, test generation, code review. Good for full dev lifecycle. Qodo+1
Replit (Agent / web-based dev)Quickly prototype, build small apps/websites, less friction in setup. Good for rapid iteration. Pieces+1
Wix ADIIf you prefer low-code or no-code, Wix’s ADI (AI design/website builder) gives a more visual approach, good for simpler sites or those needing less custom backend. DigitalOcean
UizardFor UI / prototyping; good with visual design, converting mockups to front-end. DigitalOcean
LovableEnables creating apps/websites from text descriptions (so less coding). If your requirements are simpler or you want to move fast, this is interesting. Wikipedia+1
Claude (Anthropic)The newer Claude models (Opus, Sonnet) have improved reasoning & coding capabilities. Also, the “Artifacts” feature recently added allows building/sharing interactive tools without APIs / coding in some cases. The Verge+1

What to watch out for

  • Ownership / portability: If the tool locks you into a certain platform or format, it may limit scaling, performance optimizations, or migrating later.

  • Performance / SEO / backend: If you’re doing high-traffic / commerce / security-sensitive site, you’ll want good control over hosting, caching, code quality, security best practices.

  • Costs: Some of these tools cost more at scale; training / running custom code, hosting, extra integrations may add up.

  • Support for frameworks / languages you want (React, Vue, etc.), as well as your ability to extend (e.g. custom backend, APIs, databases).

My Recommendation

If I had to pick one tool (or combo) to use as the best “vibe coding” tool for commercial web dev, I’d lean toward:

  • GitHub Copilot + custom stack: Use a modern web stack you’re comfortable with (e.g. Node/Express or Django or whatever), have your own repo / hosting / CI/CD, and use Copilot (or something like Qodo) to accelerate coding, testing, refactoring. You get the best of control + speed.

  • If you want more automation / less code: Lovable looks very promising, especially for faster MVPs or smaller sites. But for big scale commerce, you’d still want to check what you can and cannot do.

Depending on how technical you are / how much customization you need, the optimal solution might be a hybrid: strong AI assistants + custom code / self-hosting / modern frameworks.


2) Best platforms for gathering trending keywords in the business / world economy niche

You want tools that give you keyword trends, ideally globally or across many markets, in the “business / economy” space: what people are searching, what topics are rising, etc. Also, being able to see competitors, search volume, related queries, etc.

Here are good tools + features, and what I think are the best:

Strong Platforms / Tools

ToolWhat it gives youPros & cons
Google TrendsFree, gives you relative search interest over time, can filter by region, related queries/topics. Great starting point. Exploding Topics+1
SemrushDeep keyword research, global search volume, related terms, competition, trend data. Very strong for SEO & marketing.
AhrefsSimilar to Semrush — keyword explorer, trend and volume data, keyword difficulty, identifying rising searches.
BrightEdgeEnterprise level, more expensive, but gives you detailed keyword performance, share of voice, perhaps more precise search-engine result page (SERP) insights. BrightEdge
Keyword.comGood daily/weekly keyword ranking / tracking; can track from many locations; gives reports. Keyword.com
KWFinderMozAdvanced Web Ranking etc.More affordable tools, good for regional/local focus. Determ+1
Discovery Platform (StartUs Insights)More oriented to spotting emerging industry / tech trends, which may translate to keyword opportunities. StartUs Insights
Business intelligence / economic data sources (e.g. OECD, World Bank, Statista, etc.) + combining them with search dataFor macroeconomic keyword trends, looking at what people / media are searching / writing about, you may want to combine search keyword tools with economic data sources, news analytics, etc.

What makes a platform “best”

To pick the best, consider:

  • Geographical coverage: Ability to get data from many countries / languages.

  • Timeliness: How fast you get trend data; can you see real-time or near real-time shifts?

  • Granularity: By region, city, by demographic, device, source.

  • Relatedness / semantic suggestions: Not just raw keywords / volume but related queries, topics, what’s rising fastest.

  • Export / API: To take data out, feed into your systems.

  • Cost vs scale: The best tools are often expensive at large scale; for testing / initial work, cheaper tools or free can be enough.

My Recommendation

If I were you, trying to stay ahead of business / economy keyword trends globally, here’s what I’d use:

  • Google Trends as a free base layer. Great for spotting rising interest, comparing terms, seeing related topics.

  • Semrush or Ahrefs for deeper keyword data: search volume, keyword difficulty, related terms, regional breakdowns. Probably get a paid plan for one of them.

  • For enterprise / large scale insight: BrightEdge or Discovery Platform for spotting what industries are moving, what technologies / business models are emerging.

  • Optionally, set up monitoring of news media, RSS / news API (e.g. Google News, Bloomberg, etc.) + social media (Twitter / X, LinkedIn) to pick up trending topics as they emerge → feed into keyword brainstorming.


If you like, I can pull current trending business / economy-keywords globally (e.g. top 50) for you, and we can see which tools would give that best. Do you want me to do that?



🔍 “Vibe coding” / AI-prompted website/app builders for non-coders

These are platforms/tools that try to let you build a website / app by describing what you want, or via minimal visual work rather than writing code line by line.

ToolWhat it does / how it worksGood for zero coders?Limitations / trade-offs
Vitara.AIYou describe your project in natural language; it generates front-end + back-end, handles UI, APIs, auth etc. “Vibe coding tool”. VitaraSeems quite strong for non-coders; you don’t need to configure much to get going.Might be some “code smell” or limits in customization; migrating or maintaining custom features may be harder. Also, “production-readiness” is sometimes uncertain in AI-generated stacks.
LovableAI-powered app/website builder. You give instructions/ideas; it builds UI + logic. Also integrates with tools like Supabase, Stripe, etc. Nocode Factory+1Very promising. Many people say Lovable makes it easier to make apps/sites without knowing how to code.As with others, when you need more complexity (custom logic, scaling, very fine design control), there might be bumps. Also you may have to learn some conventions.
CodeDesign.aiAI website maker + drag-and-drop React-based visual builder, with many templates, funnels, etc. Build landing pages, websites from prompts. CodeDesignPretty good for beginners; especially for landing pages / portfolios etc. It’s more visual.It might be less suitable for high-commerce or large scale apps. Features beyond templates may require more work or paid plans.
Base44You talk to it (natural language), it builds web or mobile app. No/low code. Recently acquired by Wix, so integration or support may improve. WikipediaLooks good for non-coders who want a quick app/website, maybe simple features.Being new, may have limitations. Also, because it’s “AI-generated code,” understanding what's under the hood or modifying heavy features might be difficult.
WordPress.com AI Site BuilderYou give business-details, color/style preferences etc; it builds website (layout + content + images) via AI prompts. Then you can refine. The VergeFor simple business / personal websites, this is probably one of the more accessible ones: you describe, it builds, you adjust visually.As of now, has limitations: not strong with complex integrations or big e-commerce features yet. Might need a pro plan. Also less control in the early phases.
Mobirise (AI Website Builder)Drag & drop website builder, with AI features, themes/templates, building bootstrap-based sites. WikipediaGood for simple sites, portfolios, maybe small businesses. Very low barrier.Probably less suitable for dynamic logic, complex backend, memberships, etc. More for static/less complex sites.

⚠️ What “Zero Coding” Means in Practice & Caveats

Even with these “vibe code” / AI tools, having some familiarity with how websites work helps a lot. Things that often cause friction:

  • Understanding the limits: AI might generate things that look good but are hard to maintain, or have performance / security / SEO drawbacks.

  • Customization: If you want something specific (custom logic, precise appearance, integrations), you may need to tweak or ask for custom code, or use paid features.

  • Debugging / maintenance: When something breaks (design misaligns, layout on mobile is off, hosting issues, etc.), you might need help.

  • Ownership and portability: Being able to export your code or move your site if you want to switch platforms. Some tools generate “locked-in” code or use proprietary formats.


✅ What I’d Recommend If You Have Zero Coding Knowledge & Want to Monetize With Vibe Coding

If I were in your shoes, wanting to build something real, monetize it (maybe via ads, affiliate, digital products, or small commerce), but have no coding knowledge, I’d aim for:

  • A tool that generates both UI and content from your prompts or with very minimal setup.

  • Good templating + AI style suggestions so your site looks professional without design experience.

  • Built-in features you need for monetization: payments, subscriptions, SEO, custom domain, analytics.

  • Ability to export or own what’s built (so you aren’t locked into the platform).

  • A tool with active support / community, so you can ask for help when stuck.

Given that, I think Lovable or Vitara.AI are the strongest bets currently for “vibe coding” style creating + monetization potential, if they have the monetization features you need (which you’ll need to check).

Also WordPress.com’s AI builder is good for content/business sites.



ChatGPT said:

To find popular YouTube keywords in the wealth and finance niche, you’ll want to combine free toolspaid keyword research platforms, and competitive analysis. Here are the best approaches:


🔎 1. Free YouTube-Specific Tools

  • YouTube Search Bar (Autocomplete)

    • Type phrases like “how to make money”“investing in”“personal finance”“side hustle” and see what auto-completes.

    • These are real search queries people are actively typing.

  • YouTube Trending & Explore

    • Check trending videos in the Business & Finance category.

    • Look at recurring titles, thumbnails, and keyword patterns.

  • Google Trends (with YouTube filter)

    • Switch the filter to YouTube Search instead of Web Search.

    • Enter terms like stock market, crypto, passive income, budgeting, real estate to see what’s rising in popularity.


⚡ 2. Dedicated Keyword Research Tools

  • VidIQ (Chrome extension, free + paid)

    • Shows search volume, competition, and trending keywords directly inside YouTube.

    • Example: typing “wealth building” will give you keyword score and related terms.

  • TubeBuddy

    • Great for keyword score analysis (volume vs competition).

    • Helps identify long-tail keywords like “best ETFs for beginners 2025”.

  • Ahrefs / SEMrush (with YouTube filters)

    • Paid but powerful. They show YouTube-specific keyword volumes.


📊 3. Competitor & Market Analysis

  • Look at top channels in the niche (e.g., Graham Stephan, Andrei Jikh, Nate O’Brien, Minority Mindset).

  • Sort their videos by Most Popular → Extract repeated keywords in titles (e.g., “Passive Income,” “Millionaire Habits,” “Side Hustle,” “Investing for Beginners”).

  • Read through comments → People often ask questions that hint at untapped keyword opportunities.


💡 4. Common High-Traffic Keyword Themes in Wealth & Finance

  • Make Money Online → side hustle, passive income, freelancing, online business.

  • Investing → stock market, crypto, ETFs, index funds, real estate.

  • Personal Finance → budgeting, saving money, financial independence, FIRE movement.

  • Wealth Mindset → millionaire habits, money psychology, financial freedom.

  • Trends → AI side hustles, 2025 investing strategies, global economy outlook.


👉 If you want, I can generate a list of the top 50 trending YouTube keywords in wealth & finance right now (Sept 2025) using updated trend data. Would you like me to pull that for you?

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