A full teardown, SEO, technical, speed, UX, with a clear plan to fix it.
A website audit is a structured teardown of a site across SEO, technical health, speed, and UX, ending in a prioritized list of what to fix first and why.
Before spending on growth, it's worth knowing exactly what's holding you back. A website audit is a full teardown, SEO, technical health, speed, and UX, that surfaces the issues quietly costing you traffic and conversions.
You don't just get a list of problems. You get them ranked by impact, with a clear, prioritized plan of what to fix first and why. The fastest way to see where the wins are.
Tell me about your projectYou cannot fix what you cannot see. An audit turns a vague sense that something is off into a short, ranked list of exactly what to do next.
We define what better means for this site: leads, sales, or visibility.
Technical, on-page SEO, content, and UX, judged against that goal.
You get a short, ordered list of what to fix first and why.
The problems that hurt most are rarely the obvious ones. A slow page or a missing meta tag is easy to spot; what quietly costs you is structural: pages that compete with each other for the same keyword, internal links that never reach your money pages, or crawl budget wasted on parameters and duplicates. A real audit reads the site the way Google does, then the way a customer does, and finds where those two views disagree.
I also look hard at what is already working, because pushing a page that sits on the edge of the top ten is often faster than fixing ten broken ones. The output is not a scary list; it is leverage, ranked, with the reasoning attached so you or your developer can act without guessing which fix actually matters.
Before diagnosing anything, I anchor on your goal, because better means different things for a lead-gen site and an online store. A finding only counts if it moves the number you care about, so the cheap, high-impact fixes go at the top. You leave with a plan you can run this month, not a report that makes you feel behind.
The audit also becomes a shared reference for everyone who touches the site. Instead of three people guessing what to fix, there is one prioritized document, so the developer, the writer, and you all pull in the same direction. That alignment is often worth as much as any single fix on the list.
Anyone about to spend on growth who wants to know what is holding them back first. If traffic or conversions stalled and you are not sure why, an audit finds the real reasons before you spend on fixes.