Start with a whole-site scan, not just SEO
Most audits begin and end with SEO, which misses half the picture. Run a scan that scores the whole site — SEO, performance, accessibility, security and AI readiness — so you see every category at once. WebAnalizer does this in seconds and gives you a score out of 100 plus a ranked list of issues, which is the fastest way to know where to even start.
The goal of this first pass is triage: find the biggest, most damaging problems before you sink time into small ones.
Fix anything that blocks indexing or breaks trust first
Some issues are score-cappers: a page that isn't indexable, a missing HTTPS certificate, or a broken canonical undermines everything else. Handle these before cosmetic SEO tweaks — there's no point optimizing a title tag on a page Google can't index.
Check indexability, HTTPS and security headers, and any critical accessibility blockers first. These are usually quick, high-impact fixes.
Then work performance and on-page SEO
With the blockers cleared, move to speed and on-page SEO. For performance, the usual wins are compressing images, removing render-blocking scripts and enabling caching. For SEO, confirm your titles, meta descriptions, headings and structured data are present and sensible.
These are the changes that most directly affect rankings and user experience, so they're worth doing carefully.
Don't forget AI readiness
A modern audit checks whether AI answer engines can read and cite your site — increasingly where discovery happens. Make sure your content is in server-rendered HTML, add structured data, and allow the AI search crawlers. WebAnalizer scores this as its GEO dimension, so it's part of the same free report.
Finish by re-running the scan to confirm your fixes moved the score. Auditing is a loop, not a one-off: measure, fix the biggest issues, re-check.