Quick Wins • Cannibalization • Cluster Gaps
SEO Content Audit and Gap Analysis
This audit finds what to fix and what to ship next. We use Search Console data, crawl insights, and a simple playbook to recover wasted potential and build topical strength that compounds.
Why an SEO content audit is worth it
Most sites have content competing with itself, thin pages that attract the wrong clicks, and great pages that are hard to find. A focused content audit fixes those basics first. Then we find the cluster gaps that would help buyers and help search engines see your expertise.
We keep it practical. Actions are small and stackable. Each fix has a reason and a metric to track. If you like to check the source material, the links above open Google’s own documentation so you can verify the approach.
What you get from my SEO content audit
- Search Console query and page analysis with screenshots
- Page indexing and crawl patterns with notes
- Duplicate clusters and canonical suggestions
- Quick wins list for the next 30 days
- Merge, redirect, or refresh decisions with examples
- Internal link map that supports the next releases
- Three month content plan by cluster
- Schema options where useful
- Measurement plan for before and after
Quick wins we check first
Titles and intros that match intent
- Write a descriptive title that matches search intent
- Put short answers and definitions near the top
- Use clear anchors for long pages
Internal links that help people and crawlers
Use descriptive anchor text and link from high reach pages to important supporting pages. That helps readers discover more and helps search engines understand the relationships on your site.
Fixing cannibalization and duplicates
When multiple pages target the same idea, they compete. We pick a primary page, consolidate others, and signal the canonical clearly. Google’s documentation explains how it chooses a canonical URL and how to suggest your preference.
How we spot cannibalization
- Two or more URLs ranking for the same query
- Near duplicate content or thin variations
- URL parameters and sort filters creating copies
How we resolve it
- Merge content and set a preferred canonical
- 301 redirect weaker variants where sensible
- Use the URL Inspection tool to confirm Google’s canonical
Cluster gaps and topical strength
After we stop pages from fighting each other, we look for missing pieces. Clusters are simply groups of pages that help a person understand a topic and take the next step. We map hubs and supports, then write people first content with real examples and clean structure.
- Hub page that explains the topic and links to the best paths
- Supporting pages by use case, role, or industry
- Comparison pages when buyers need to evaluate choices
Technical hygiene that supports content
- Review Page indexing report for crawl and index status
- Submit clean sitemaps and fix parsing errors
- Remove stale URLs with the Removals tool when needed
- Check Crawl Stats for spikes and server response issues
- Watch average response time and download size
- Confirm that important pages are easy to discover
- Use descriptive, human readable URLs
- Avoid unnecessary parameters that create duplicates
- Link with clear anchors so people know what to expect
Measurement and prioritization
What we track in Search Console
- Queries, CTR, and position for key pages
- Impression changes after merges or redirects
- Core Web Vitals for experience improvements
Make the roadmap realistic
We assign effort and expected impact, then sequence the next eight weeks. Quick wins ship first. Cluster gaps follow. Anything that needs engineering gets a clear ticket.
Packages
| Package | Best for | What is included |
|---|---|---|
| Quick Wins | Fast lift | Search Console review, five fixes with steps, internal link plan, two redirects or merges |
| Canonicals and Clusters | Sites with overlap | Duplicate audit, canonical plan, three page merges, cluster map with content briefs |
| Full Audit | Growing sites | All of the above plus crawl analysis, sitemap cleanup, and a three month content plan |
FAQ
Will consolidating pages hurt traffic
Consolidation is designed to reduce competition between your own pages. When done with care and proper signals, it usually helps the right page win and improves relevance for readers.
How long until we see changes
Some quick wins show movement in days. Bigger changes like merges and new clusters take longer. We monitor week by week in Search Console and adjust.
Do we need structured data
Use structured data where it fits the content. For example Article, FAQ, HowTo, or Product. It helps search understand the page and can enable rich results in some cases.
Ready to book an SEO content audit
Send your domain, top three goals, and any problem pages. I will reply with scope, a simple checklist, and the timeline to start.
