Technical SEO

Example SEO Audit Priority Map

A practical example of how to turn technical, content, local, authority, and AI citation findings into a focused SEO action plan.

This is a fictional example audit for a service business with one main website, several city pages, a blog, and a Google Business Profile. It shows how NavSEO thinks about prioritization.

The point is not to create the longest issue list. The point is to identify the constraint most likely to change visibility, leads, and execution focus.

Site snapshot

Area Example Context
Business type Regional professional services company
Main goal More qualified leads from organic search and local discovery
Site shape Homepage, service pages, 18 city pages, 60 blog posts, resource downloads
Main symptoms Traffic is flat, city pages rarely rank, blog posts get impressions but few leads
Team capacity One marketer, part-time developer, occasional subject matter expert input

Executive summary

The main constraint is not one isolated technical bug. The site has three compounding issues:

  1. Important commercial and city pages are under-supported by internal links.
  2. Local and service pages are too similar to prove market relevance.
  3. The site has useful expertise, but weak evidence and entity clarity make it harder to trust or cite.

Technical cleanup still matters, but the first month should focus on indexable priority pages, internal links, local proof, and better content evidence.

Priority map

Priority Finding Category Evidence Score First Action
Do now City pages are indexable but thin and near-duplicate. Local SEO 14 of 18 city pages use the same structure and differ mostly by city name. 18 Rewrite the top 5 markets with local proof, service detail, FAQs, and internal links.
Do now Service pages receive weak internal support from guides and blog posts. Internal linking High-impression articles link mostly to other informational pages, not commercial pages. 17 Add contextual links from 15 relevant guides into core service pages.
Do now Author, company, and review trust signals are scattered. AI citation readiness Articles lack author context; service pages do not clearly connect expertise, reviews, and business identity. 17 Add author blocks, organization context, review snippets where appropriate, and structured data alignment.
Plan next XML sitemap includes low-value archive URLs. Crawlability Sitemap contains tag pages and old posts with little search value. 15 Remove low-value URLs from sitemap and confirm priority pages remain included.
Plan next Blog cluster is not mapped to buying-stage pages. Topical authority Articles answer useful questions but do not form a clear topical path toward services. 15 Define three clusters and assign each article a support role, update, merge, or prune decision.
Monitor or batch Several title tags are longer than ideal. On-page SEO Some titles truncate in preview, but primary pages still describe intent clearly. 11 Batch title rewrites after higher-impact page and linking work ships.
Defer Minor mobile layout shifts on low-traffic blog pages. Performance Lab testing shows small layout shifts, but affected templates have little current demand. 9 Recheck after core template and priority page work.

What gets fixed first

1. Strengthen the city page set

Thin local pages are a bigger problem than their word count. The issue is that each page does not prove why the business is relevant in that market.

The first pass should improve the five highest-value markets:

  • Add specific service details for that city or service area.
  • Include real local proof where available, such as projects, reviews, team coverage, or service constraints.
  • Add internal links from relevant service and guide pages.
  • Avoid doorway-style copy where only the city name changes.
  • Make the Google Business Profile and site identity consistent.

Do not rewrite all 18 city pages at once. Improve the highest-value pages first, then compare indexing, impressions, local actions, and lead quality.

The blog has informational reach, but it is not guiding visitors or search systems toward the pages that matter commercially.

The useful next step is a link map:

Source Type Link Target Anchor Shape
Problem guide Relevant service page Natural service wording
Comparison article Primary solution page Decision-focused wording
Local guide City or service-area page Local service wording
Template or checklist Audit/service page Action-oriented wording

This is not about forcing exact-match anchors. It is about making the site architecture match how buyers move from problem to solution.

3. Make expertise and evidence easier to verify

AI answer engines, search systems, and human buyers all benefit when a site is easier to understand and verify.

For this example site, the next improvements are:

  • Add visible author or reviewer context to expert guides.
  • Clarify who the company serves, where it operates, and what it is qualified to do.
  • Add organization and article structured data where templates support it.
  • Support important claims with examples, methodology, dates, or cited sources.
  • Build one original asset worth referencing, such as a local market benchmark or service cost study.

This is not a shortcut to AI citations. It is the groundwork that makes the site a more trustworthy source.

What not to prioritize yet

Good audits also say what can wait.

For this site, these are not first-month priorities:

  • Rewriting every title tag before the page strategy is clear.
  • Publishing more blog posts without a topical map.
  • Buying links to compensate for weak service pages.
  • Adding advanced schema before visible entity and author information is fixed.
  • Chasing AI visibility prompts or “GEO” tricks instead of improving source quality.

Deferring work is not ignoring it. It keeps the team focused on fixes with a better chance of changing outcomes.

First 30-day action plan

Week Focus Work
1 Evidence and mapping Confirm priority pages, export internal links, review city page similarity, document GBP and citation consistency.
2 Local page upgrades Rewrite the top 5 city pages with local proof, stronger structure, and clearer internal links.
3 Internal link pass Add links from high-impression guides and relevant articles into service, city, and audit pages.
4 Trust and entity clarity Add author/reviewer context, organization clarity, article schema, and a plan for one original authority asset.

How to measure progress

Track signals that match the work:

  • Priority page indexing and crawlability.
  • Impressions and clicks for service and city pages.
  • Internal links into commercial pages.
  • Google Business Profile actions and local landing page sessions.
  • Qualified form submissions, not just total traffic.
  • Mentions, links, or citations earned by original assets.

Expect early movement in crawl, indexing, internal links, and impressions before leads change. Revenue-facing SEO work often improves in layers.

Use this example

If you are reviewing your own site, copy the priority map structure and fill in the evidence before scoring. The score matters less than the discipline of connecting each recommendation to a visible business or search constraint.

For a deeper version, use the SEO Audit Prioritization Template or start with the SEO Audit Checklist.

If you want NavSEO to build the map for your site, request a focused SEO audit.