SEO AuditTechnical SEOSite HealthPrioritization•SEO + Technical SEO
Site Audit 101: What’s in an Audit and What to Do With It
A useful site audit isn’t a pile of tool warnings—it’s a clear diagnosis and a prioritized plan. Here’s what a real
audit includes (crawl/indexing, structure, on-page, performance, content, schema) and how to turn findings into
fixes that actually move the needle.
Tags: SEO Audit, Technical SEO, Site Health, SEO Strategy, WordPress
What a site audit is (and what it isn’t)
A site audit should answer one question clearly: what’s limiting performance right now, and what should be fixed first?
The best audits are diagnostic, prioritized, and actionable—not a massive list of warnings.
A good audit is
Diagnostic: identifies the real constraints
Prioritized: separates urgent issues from noise
Actionable: turns findings into specific fixes
A site audit is not
A list of every possible SEO rule violation
A deck of screenshots from tools
A one-time “fix everything” checklist
A guarantee of rankings
Goal: clarity and direction—so you stop guessing and start improving the right things.
When you actually need a site audit
Audits are most valuable when:
Organic traffic or rankings have plateaued or declined
You’re planning a redesign, rebuild, or migration
The site has grown without a clear structure
Conversions are low despite solid traffic
Multiple vendors have touched the site over time
You “did SEO” before but can’t point to lasting gains
If nothing feels obviously broken—but performance isn’t improving—an audit usually reveals why.
The core sections of a high-quality site audit
A real audit looks across the full system: crawlability, structure, content, performance, and SEO hygiene.
Here’s what’s typically included.
1
Crawl & indexation review
Confirms search engines can find and index the right pages (and not the wrong ones).
Search Console coverage, indexing status
XML sitemaps, robots.txt, canonicals
Redirect chains, duplicates, orphaned pages
2
Architecture & internal linking
Evaluates navigation, topic grouping, click depth, and whether important pages are supported by internal links.
Hierarchy, hubs, and supporting content
Underlinked pages and link distribution
Content silos and crawl paths
3
On-page fundamentals
Reviews titles, headings, intent alignment, and content quality to reduce cannibalization and improve relevance.
Title tags, meta descriptions, heading structure
Thin/duplicate content and intent mismatch
Keyword cannibalization patterns
4
Performance & Core Web Vitals
Uses real-user signals (where available) and key page testing to identify what’s slowing the site down.
LCP, CLS, INP on mobile
Render path issues, heavy media, script bloat
Third-party tools and layout instability
5
Content quality & gaps
Identifies missing pages, weak coverage, outdated content, and consolidation opportunities.
Topic coverage vs competitors
Content pruning and consolidation
Support content for services and campaigns
6
Schema & structured data
Checks whether structured data is valid, consistent, and aligned to page templates.
Organization/LocalBusiness, Article, Breadcrumbs, Service
Validation errors and conflicting markup
Opportunities for richer SERP appearance
7
SEO hygiene & risk factors
Finds issues that quietly drag performance or can trigger sudden drops.
Broken links, 404s, redirect hygiene
HTTPS/security misconfigurations
Index bloat and crawl traps
WordPress note: audits often uncover index bloat from archives/tags, parameter URLs, and duplicated templates—especially on older sites.
Turning an audit into an action plan
An audit is only useful if it produces a prioritized plan. The output should translate findings into:
fix now / fix soon / monitor—with an impact vs effort lens.
Broken/missing redirects (especially after changes)
Mobile performance on top traffic pages (LCP/INP/CLS)
Cannibalization (multiple pages competing for the same intent)
Orphaned high-value pages (no internal links)
Why this order works: it removes constraints and prevents wasted effort before you invest in new content.
How often should you audit?
Light audit: quarterly (sanity check)
Full audit: annually or before major changes
Focused audit: before redesigns, migrations, or SEO pushes
Audits aren’t one-and-done—they’re checkpoints that keep the site healthy as it evolves.
DIY vs professional audits
DIY tools are good for
Surfacing symptoms
Monitoring trends
Catching obvious issues
Professional audits add value by
Interpreting signals correctly
Prioritizing fixes based on business context
Understanding WordPress-specific edge cases
Turning data into an execution plan
Tools can find issues. Experience decides what matters and what comes first.
Quick self-audit questions
If you can’t confidently answer these, an audit is warranted:
Do we know which pages drive organic conversions?
Are the right pages indexed (and the wrong ones excluded)?
Are Core Web Vitals solid on mobile for key pages?
Do we have clear topic ownership (service hubs + support content)?
Could we rebuild tomorrow without losing rankings?
Want an audit that turns into real fixes?
A practical audit should give you a prioritized roadmap—not a pile of warnings. If you want a clear plan for what to
fix now, what to schedule next, and what to ignore, I can audit your WordPress site and translate findings into a
realistic execution plan.