Run a full SEO audit. Give me a prioritized fix list.
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Run a full SEO audit on my store. Crawl every page, check meta titles and descriptions, alt text, structured data, internal links, page speed, and crawl issues. Surface a prioritized fix list.
- Crawls every page on your store.
- Checks 30+ on-page SEO factors.
- Prioritized fix list (critical / medium / minor).
- One-tap to apply most fixes via Fudge.
What you're trying to do
SEO audits from agencies cost $2k+ and take a week. Most surface the same problems: missing meta descriptions, generic page titles, broken canonical tags, weak internal linking. Fudge crawls your store, identifies the same issues, prioritizes them, and lets you fix most with one prompt.
Things to watch out for
- Crawl scope — Fudge respects robots.txt; you can scope to specific paths.
- Issue severity — Fudge handles this: critical issues (broken canonicals, missing titles) come first.
- Auto-fix — Fudge can fix most issues; some need your judgment.
- Re-audit — Fudge re-runs after fixes to confirm closure.
How Fudge does it
Fudge runs the audit against your live store — no changes made — and delivers a prioritized report with specific findings ranked by impact. Any fix can be applied in one tap: Fudge writes the change into a draft theme so your live store stays untouched until you preview, approve, and publish.
What a full SEO audit should actually deliver
Most SEO audits are checklists: meta descriptions present, alt text exists, schema markup found. Useful but incomplete. A real SEO audit goes deeper: which pages have weak title tags actively losing traffic, which pages target the wrong keyword for their content, which pages are broken in ways Google penalizes. The output should be a prioritized fix list, ranked by likely traffic impact.
When to run this audit
Run the full SEO audit if your organic traffic has plateaued, dropped, or never been rigorously assessed. Especially worth doing before major content investment (new collection launches, blog expansion) when SEO foundations need to be solid.
The audit pays for itself with even modest traffic recovery — Google traffic compounds over time as fixes get indexed and ranked.
What makes a great audit
- Full crawl — every page on the store, not just samples. Reveals hidden problems.
- Meta titles + descriptions — length, keyword targeting, brand consistency. Surface the worst offenders.
- Alt text audit — every product image, every collection. Missing alt text is a common conversion + accessibility hit.
- Structured data verification — schema markup that’s present but malformed silently fails.
- Internal linking — orphan pages, broken links, missing breadcrumbs.
- Page speed — Core Web Vitals across the surface. LCP, CLS, INP per page type.
- Crawl issues — robots.txt blocks, canonical conflicts, redirect chains.
- Prioritized fix list — each finding ranked by likely traffic impact.
Common mistakes to avoid
The biggest mistake is fixing without tracking. Apply the fixes, then re-audit in 6–8 weeks. Without the measurement loop, you don’t know which fixes drove the traffic recovery.
The second mistake is fixing too many things at once. Pick the highest-impact 10 fixes, ship them, measure. Then move to the next 10. Bulk-fix attempts make attribution impossible.
Pair this with AEO audit and core web vitals audit — three complementary audits covering Google ranking, AI search visibility, and performance.