SEO audit
An existing website's SEO almost always contains technical or on-page issues that keep Google from ranking it as high as it could. The goal of an SEO audit is to name these precisely — in order of importance, and so you get concrete, actionable steps.

Technical SEO review
We examine the things that determine whether Google sees the site at all: indexability, sitemap, robots.txt, canonical errors, duplication, wrong status codes, loading speed (Core Web Vitals), mobile-friendliness, structured data.
These errors often stem from a single wrong setting and can be fixed in a day — but they've held back the site's performance for years. This is usually where the fastest results come from.
On-page and content review
Page by page we look at keyword targeting, heading structure (H1–H3), meta descriptions, internal linking and content length. This doesn't mean rewriting the whole site — usually optimising 5–15 pages brings most of the traffic.
Alongside it we bring in Google Search Console data: which terms the site appears for, which get clicks and which don't — showing where a quick rewrite could put you on page one.
Competitor comparison
We pick 2–3 direct competitors and look at: what keywords they rank for, what content they have, and where they're stronger than you. This is often far more useful than generic 'best practice' advice — because you can see what concretely works in your market.
This is where the ideas come from that you can approach with organic growth, without rewriting everything you've done so far.
Result: a prioritised action list
At the end of the audit we don't give an 80-page PDF, but a concrete action list: which task, with what expected impact, at what estimated effort. Each comes with the 'why', so your own team or another developer can do it.
If you'd like, we'll handle the implementation too — either as part of an operations package, or as a one-off implementation.
Frequently asked questions
How long until results show?
Technical fixes (speed, indexability) show up in Search Console within 2–4 weeks. The effect of content rewrites is felt in 2–3 months — Google doesn't react instantly.
Do you guarantee a first-place ranking for a keyword?
No. Anyone who promises that either doesn't understand how SEO works or isn't telling the truth. What we promise: concrete, measurable improvement in the numbers in Search Console (impressions, clicks, position) — broken down by keyword group.
Does it need Google Analytics and Search Console access?
Search Console access is required (if you don't have it, we set it up). Analytics is good to have, but not a prerequisite for the audit.
How do the SEO audit and the UX audit relate?
The UX audit looks at user behaviour and conversion (what happens after someone lands on your site). The SEO audit looks at how they get there. Together they give a complete picture — which is why we often recommend them as a package.