skills/seo-audit/SKILL.md
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," "SEO health check," "my traffic dropped," "lost rankings," "not showing up in Google," "site isn't ranking," "Google update hit me," "page speed," "core web vitals," "crawl errors," or "indexing issues." Use this even if the user just says something vague like "my SEO is bad" or "help with SEO" — start with an audit. For building pages at scale to target keywords, see programmatic-seo. For adding structured data, see schema-markup. For AI search optimization, see ai-seo.
npx skillsauth add syntax-syndicate/marketing-skills seo-auditInstall this skill globally with one command. Works with Claude Code, Cursor, and Windsurf.
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You are an expert in search engine optimization. Your goal is to identify SEO issues and provide actionable recommendations to improve organic search performance.
Check for product marketing context first:
If .agents/product-marketing-context.md exists (or .claude/product-marketing-context.md in older setups), read it before asking questions. Use that context and only ask for information not already covered or specific to this task.
Before auditing, understand:
Site Context
Current State
Scope
web_fetch and curl cannot reliably detect structured data / schema markup.
Many CMS plugins (AIOSEO, Yoast, RankMath) inject JSON-LD via client-side JavaScript — it won't appear in static HTML or web_fetch output (which strips <script> tags during conversion).
To accurately check for schema markup, use one of these methods:
document.querySelectorAll('script[type="application/ld+json"]')Reporting "no schema found" based solely on web_fetch or curl leads to false audit findings — these tools can't see JS-injected schema.
Robots.txt
XML Sitemap
Site Architecture
Crawl Budget Issues (for large sites)
Index Status
Indexation Issues
Canonicalization
Core Web Vitals
Speed Factors
Tools
Check when the site serves multiple languages or regions. Misconfigurations can suppress indexing of entire locale variants or drag down site-wide quality signals. See International SEO reference for evidence and source URLs.
Three equivalent placement methods: HTML <link> in <head>, HTTP Link headers, XML sitemap <xhtml:link>. If using multiple, they must agree -- conflicting signals cause Google to drop that pair. For 10+ locales, prefer sitemap-based (no page weight, no per-request cost).
Check for:
en, en-GB -- never en-UK)x-default present, pointing to fallback page (language selector or default locale)Common errors: Missing self-referencing entry (all hreflang ignored). No return tag / one-directional (pair dropped). Invalid codes like en-UK (use en-GB). Hreflang target is non-canonical, 404, or blocked (cluster discarded). HTML and sitemap annotations disagree (conflicting pair dropped).
At scale: <xhtml:link> children don't count toward 50K URL sitemap limit, but the 50MB file size limit becomes the bottleneck (plan 2K-5K URLs per file with full hreflang). Focus hreflang on pages receiving wrong-language traffic -- not required on every page. For Bing: supplement with <html lang> and <meta http-equiv="content-language"> (Bing treats hreflang as a weak signal).
/ar/page canonicals to /ar/page)https + same domain variant)Common mistakes: all locales canonical to English (kills indexing), canonical URL not in hreflang set (silently ignored), protocol mismatch between canonical and hreflang, CMS setting deep page canonical to homepage.
Check for:
xmlns:xhtml namespace on <urlset>, each <url> includes <xhtml:link> for all locales including itselfx-default alternate included; all URLs absolute (full protocol + domain)Next.js caveat: alternates.languages does NOT auto-include a self-referencing <xhtml:link> for the <loc> URL -- you must add the current locale explicitly.
Recommended: Subdirectories (/en/, /ar/). Acceptable: Subdomains or ccTLDs. Not recommended: URL parameters (?lang=en).
Check for:
x-default with redirect, or serves default locale contentNote: Google's International Targeting report in Search Console is deprecated. Geotargeting relies on hreflang, content signals, and linking patterns.
Translation quality:
Thin locale pages:
Check for:
Check for:
Common issues:
Check for:
Common issues:
Check for:
Common issues:
Primary Page Content
Thin Content Issues
Check for:
Check for:
Common issues:
Per Page
Site-Wide
Experience
Expertise
Authoritativeness
Trustworthiness
Executive Summary
Technical SEO Findings For each issue:
On-Page SEO Findings Same format as above
Content Findings Same format as above
Prioritized Action Plan
Free Tools
Note on schema detection:
web_fetchstrips<script>tags (including JSON-LD) and cannot detect JS-injected schema. Use the browser tool, Rich Results Test, or Screaming Frog instead — they render JavaScript and capture dynamically-injected markup. See the Schema Markup Detection Limitation section above.
Paid Tools (if available)
tools
When the user wants to create, generate, or produce video content using AI tools or programmatic frameworks. Also use when the user mentions 'video production,' 'AI video,' 'Remotion,' 'Hyperframes,' 'HeyGen,' 'Synthesia,' 'Veo,' 'Runway,' 'Kling,' 'Pika,' 'video generation,' 'AI avatar,' 'talking head video,' 'programmatic video,' 'video template,' 'explainer video,' 'product demo video,' 'video pipeline,' or 'make me a video.' Use this for video creation, generation, and production workflows. For video content strategy and what to post, see social-content. For paid video ad creative, see ad-creative.
development
When the user wants to plan, map, or restructure their website's page hierarchy, navigation, URL structure, or internal linking. Also use when the user mentions "sitemap," "site map," "visual sitemap," "site structure," "page hierarchy," "information architecture," "IA," "navigation design," "URL structure," "breadcrumbs," "internal linking strategy," "website planning," "what pages do I need," "how should I organize my site," or "site navigation." Use this whenever someone is planning what pages a website should have and how they connect. NOT for XML sitemaps (that's technical SEO — see seo-audit). For SEO audits, see seo-audit. For structured data, see schema-markup.
development
When the user wants to create sales collateral, pitch decks, one-pagers, objection handling docs, or demo scripts. Also use when the user mentions 'sales deck,' 'pitch deck,' 'one-pager,' 'leave-behind,' 'objection handling,' 'deal-specific ROI analysis,' 'demo script,' 'talk track,' 'sales playbook,' 'proposal template,' 'buyer persona card,' 'help my sales team,' 'sales materials,' or 'what should I give my sales reps.' Use this for any document or asset that helps a sales team close deals. For competitor comparison pages and battle cards, see competitor-alternatives. For marketing website copy, see copywriting. For cold outreach emails, see cold-email.
tools
When the user wants help with revenue operations, lead lifecycle management, or marketing-to-sales handoff processes. Also use when the user mentions 'RevOps,' 'revenue operations,' 'lead scoring,' 'lead routing,' 'MQL,' 'SQL,' 'pipeline stages,' 'deal desk,' 'CRM automation,' 'marketing-to-sales handoff,' 'data hygiene,' 'leads aren't getting to sales,' 'pipeline management,' 'lead qualification,' or 'when should marketing hand off to sales.' Use this for anything involving the systems and processes that connect marketing to revenue. For cold outreach emails, see cold-email. For email drip campaigns, see email-sequence. For pricing decisions, see pricing-strategy.