π Perspective Website Audit

Itβs divided into three core buckets:
1οΈβ£ User Perspective π€
I try to act as a user of the site β interacting with it as if I'm visiting for the first time.
Because users come with different:
- π― Motivations
- π§ Goals
- π Contexts
- π§ Experiences
- π§ββοΈ Behaviors
I intentionally act like a novice user, exploring the site for the first time.
π This helps uncover issues that often go unnoticed in traditional audits.
2οΈβ£ Search Engines Perspective π€
Itβs not just about:
- βοΈ Crawling & Indexing
- βοΈ Log File Analysis
It's about evaluating all possible signals that shape how search engines perceive your website.
This includes auditing:
- π΄ Topical authority
- π΄ Information architecture
- π΄ Information responsiveness
- π΄ Contextual bridges
- π΄ Contextual vectors
- π΄ Contextual flow
- π΄ Website technology
- π΄ Macro and micro semantics
- π΄ Knowledge base construction
- π΄ Competitive advantages
π The better you help search engines understand the purpose of every component of your website, the lower the cost of retrieval becomes.
β‘οΈ Lower ranking cost = Higher chances of rankings.
3οΈβ£ Business Goals Perspective πΌ
Every website has issues β but you can't solve everything at once.
β You need to define priorities β and these should be aligned with business goals and motives.
π― Focused auditing based on business objectives helps drive real results.
β¨ This multi-perspective approach has helped me grow websites from scratch to millions of dollars in revenue β without ever relying on a checklist.