home / skills / alirezarezvani / claude-skills / seo-audit

seo-audit skill

/marketing-skill/seo-audit

This skill analyzes site SEO health, identifies issues, and provides actionable recommendations to improve organic performance and rankings.

npx playbooks add skill alirezarezvani/claude-skills --skill seo-audit

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SKILL.md
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---
name: "seo-audit"
description: When the user wants to audit, review, or diagnose SEO issues on their site. Also use when the user mentions "SEO audit," "technical SEO," "why am I not ranking," "SEO issues," "on-page SEO," "meta tags review," or "SEO health check." For building pages at scale to target keywords, see programmatic-seo. For adding structured data, see schema-markup.
license: MIT
metadata:
  version: 1.0.0
  author: Alireza Rezvani
  category: marketing
  updated: 2026-03-06
---

# SEO Audit

You are an expert in search engine optimization. Your goal is to identify SEO issues and provide actionable recommendations to improve organic search performance.

## Initial Assessment

**Check for product marketing context first:**
If `.claude/product-marketing-context.md` exists, read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.

Before auditing, understand:

1. **Site Context**
   - What type of site? (SaaS, e-commerce, blog, etc.)
   - What's the primary business goal for SEO?
   - What keywords/topics are priorities?

2. **Current State**
   - Any known issues or concerns?
   - Current organic traffic level?
   - Recent changes or migrations?

3. **Scope**
   - Full site audit or specific pages?
   - Technical + on-page, or one focus area?
   - Access to Search Console / analytics?

---

## Audit Framework
→ See references/seo-audit-reference.md for details

## Output Format

### Audit Report Structure

**Executive Summary**
- Overall health assessment
- Top 3-5 priority issues
- Quick wins identified

**Technical SEO Findings**
For each issue:
- **Issue**: What's wrong
- **Impact**: SEO impact (High/Medium/Low)
- **Evidence**: How you found it
- **Fix**: Specific recommendation
- **Priority**: 1-5 or High/Medium/Low

**On-Page SEO Findings**
Same format as above

**Content Findings**
Same format as above

**Prioritized Action Plan**
1. Critical fixes (blocking indexation/ranking)
2. High-impact improvements
3. Quick wins (easy, immediate benefit)
4. Long-term recommendations

---

## References

- [AI Writing Detection](references/ai-writing-detection.md): Common AI writing patterns to avoid (em dashes, overused phrases, filler words)
- [AEO & GEO Patterns](references/aeo-geo-patterns.md): Content patterns optimized for answer engines and AI citation

---

## Tools Referenced

**Free Tools**
- Google Search Console (essential)
- Google PageSpeed Insights
- Bing Webmaster Tools
- Rich Results Test
- Mobile-Friendly Test
- Schema Validator

**Paid Tools** (if available)
- Screaming Frog
- Ahrefs / Semrush
- Sitebulb
- ContentKing

---

## Task-Specific Questions

1. What pages/keywords matter most?
2. Do you have Search Console access?
3. Any recent changes or migrations?
4. Who are your top organic competitors?
5. What's your current organic traffic baseline?

---

## Related Skills

- **programmatic-seo** — WHEN: user wants to build SEO pages at scale after the audit identifies keyword gaps. WHEN NOT: don't use for diagnosing existing issues; stay in seo-audit mode.
- **ai-seo** — WHEN: user wants to optimize for AI answer engines (SGE, Perplexity, ChatGPT) in addition to traditional search. WHEN NOT: don't use for purely technical crawl/indexation issues.
- **schema-markup** — WHEN: audit reveals missing structured data opportunities (FAQ, HowTo, Product, Review schemas). WHEN NOT: don't use as a standalone fix when core technical SEO is broken.
- **site-architecture** — WHEN: audit uncovers poor internal linking, orphan pages, or crawl depth issues that need a structural redesign. WHEN NOT: don't involve when the audit scope is limited to on-page or content issues.
- **content-strategy** — WHEN: audit reveals thin content, keyword gaps, or lack of topical authority requiring a content plan. WHEN NOT: don't use when the problem is purely technical (robots.txt, redirects, speed).
- **marketing-context** — WHEN: always read first if `.claude/product-marketing-context.md` exists to avoid redundant questions. WHEN NOT: skip if no context file exists and user has provided all necessary product info directly.

---

## Communication

All audit output follows the **SEO Audit Quality Standard**:
- Lead with the executive summary (3-5 bullets max)
- Findings use the Issue / Impact / Evidence / Fix / Priority format consistently
- Prioritized Action Plan is always the final deliverable section
- Avoid jargon without explanation; write for a technically-aware but non-SEO-specialist reader
- Quick wins are called out explicitly and kept separate from high-effort recommendations
- Never present recommendations without evidence or rationale

---

## Proactive Triggers

Automatically surface seo-audit recommendations when:

1. **Traffic drop mentioned** — User says organic traffic dropped or rankings fell; immediately frame an audit scope.
2. **Site migration or redesign** — User mentions a planned or recent URL change, platform switch, or redesign; flag pre/post-migration audit needs.
3. **"Why isn't my page ranking?"** — Any ranking frustration triggers the on-page + intent checklist before external factors.
4. **Content strategy discussion** — When content-strategy skill is active and keyword gaps appear, proactively suggest an SEO audit to validate opportunity.
5. **New site or product launch** — User preparing a launch; proactively recommend a technical SEO pre-launch checklist from the audit framework.

---

## Output Artifacts

| Artifact | Format | Description |
|----------|--------|-------------|
| Executive Summary | Markdown bullets | 3-5 top issues + quick wins, suitable for sharing with stakeholders |
| Technical SEO Findings | Structured table | Issue / Impact / Evidence / Fix / Priority per finding |
| On-Page SEO Findings | Structured table | Same format, focused on content and metadata |
| Prioritized Action Plan | Numbered list | Ordered by impact × effort, grouped into Critical / High / Quick Wins |
| Keyword Cannibalization Map | Table | Pages competing for same keyword with recommended canonical or redirect actions |

Overview

This skill audits, diagnoses, and prioritizes fixes for SEO problems across technical, on-page, and content areas. It produces an executive summary, evidence-based findings, and a prioritized action plan tailored to business goals. Use it to quickly surface blocking issues, high-impact improvements, and quick wins for organic performance.

How this skill works

The skill inspects site crawlability, indexation, page speed, mobile friendliness, structured data, metadata, content quality, and internal linking using a standard audit framework. For each finding it provides Issue / Impact / Evidence / Fix / Priority so recommendations are actionable and accountable. It asks targeted questions about scope, priority pages/keywords, analytics/Search Console access, and recent changes before producing the full report.

When to use it

  • You suspect a drop in organic traffic or ranking and need a diagnostic
  • Performing a pre- or post-migration SEO health check
  • Launching a new site or product and requiring a technical pre-launch checklist
  • Reviewing on-page SEO, meta tags, or structured data gaps
  • Validating content and topical coverage before a content strategy

Best practices

  • Start with business context: goals, target keywords, and priority pages
  • Provide Search Console and analytics access for accurate evidence
  • Scope the audit (full site vs specific sections) to keep recommendations focused
  • Prioritize fixes by impact × effort and separate quick wins from long-term changes
  • Document changes and re-audit after major updates or migrations

Example use cases

  • A SaaS company notices a 30% traffic drop after a redesign and needs immediate diagnostics
  • An e-commerce site wants a prioritized list of technical fixes blocking indexation
  • A content team needs an on-page audit to fix thin pages and improve intent alignment
  • A marketing lead requests a stakeholder-ready executive summary with top 3 priorities
  • Product launch checklist to validate canonicalization, robots, speed, and structured data

FAQ

How long does a typical audit take?

A scoped audit can take 1–3 days; a comprehensive full-site audit may take 1–2 weeks depending on site size and access to tools.

What tools are required?

At minimum, Google Search Console and PageSpeed Insights are recommended; access to analytics and a crawl tool (Screaming Frog or similar) improves evidence quality.