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When did you last actually read every page of your website?

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Not edit it, not skim it — read it like a visitor would.

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If the answer is "I can't remember" or "never" —

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this episode is for you.

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This is SEO fucking what?

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I'm Nikki, and I've been doing SEO for over 30 years —

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before it was even called SEO.

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In the last episode, we talked about keywords and phrases —

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about thinking like the person searching rather than the business owner trying to rank.

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If you haven't listened to it, go back and have a listen — because what we're doing today builds directly on it.

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Today we're talking about content auditing, which sounds boring as fuck.

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I know, but stay with me — because this is where the gold is.

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This is where you find the stuff that's holding your website back,

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and the stuff that's doing better than you realised.

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And unlike most SEO tasks, you can do this one for nothing except your time.

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Right. Let's start with the awkward question. How many pages does your website actually have?

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The main navigation pages — all of them — including every blog post you've ever written since 2019,

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including the service page you created for a package you no longer offer,

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including the landing page from a campaign you ran three years ago that's just kind of sitting there.

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Most website owners genuinely have no idea, and that's a problem —

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because Google doesn't just look at your homepage or your service pages.

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Google crawls everything. Every page counts.

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And not all of those pages are helping you. Some of them will be actively working against you.

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Thin pages with barely any content. Out-of-date blog posts

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with broken links or stats from 2017.

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Pages that say almost exactly the same thing as another page.

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Blog posts written for you, not your potential clients. You know the ones —

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"A message from our CEO." "Exciting news about our rebrand."

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Nobody's searching for that. We speak to business owners all the time who wonder why their website isn't ranking.

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And when I dig in, half the problem is the website is full of content that Google doesn't like —

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not because of some technical mystery, but because it's genuinely not very useful.

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The content audit is how you find that stuff. And it's also how you find the good stuff —

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the pages already performing in the background that you could do more with.

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And I'm not gonna make this complicated. You don't need a fancy tool to start.

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Open a blank spreadsheet. Go through your website, page by page, and list every URL

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and the title of every page. That's it for step one.

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Now for most of you, your website will have a fairly obvious structure — your main navigation pages:

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home, about, services, contact. There may be some sub-pages under services,

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and then your blog posts. Work through them. Copy and paste — it doesn't have to be pretty.

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The act of doing this manually is actually the point, because you will find pages you forgot existed.

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I can pretty much guarantee it.

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Once you've got that list, add one more column: intent.

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What is this page actually for? Is it an information page? A sales page?

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A bit of both? Is the blog post for potential clients to help them understand something?

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To answer a question they're likely to have? Or is it for existing clients?

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Or is it, well... what is it for? Be honest. Some pages won't have a clear answer.

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And that in itself tells you something.

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If you've got a huge website — I'm talking hundreds of pages — or you run an e-commerce site,

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there are tools that can help. Screaming Frog is one I've used for years.

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It crawls your site and gives you a list of every URL. It also does a lot more than that.

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Don't get distracted by all the other shit it gives you. Right now, all you want

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is your URL list and the name of your pages.

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There's also a tool called Crawley that does something similar online, without downloading anything.

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Both are fine. Both are free to a point.

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But even if you use a tool to get your URL list, I want you to do the intent column manually —

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because that means you have to actually look at each page. And that's the bit that matters.

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Once you've got your list, you're gonna go back through it and ask some questions.

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I want you to ask these questions about every single page.

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First of all — is it helpful? This is the biggie.

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Does this page actually help the person who lands on it?

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Does it answer a question? Does it walk someone through something?

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Does it give them the information they came for, or does it just exist?

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Does it talk around a subject without really saying anything?

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Is it full of corporate bollocks that tells a potential client absolutely nothing?

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You know the stuff — "We're passionate about delivery and exceptional solutions."

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Helpful content educates. It informs. It answers the actual question

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the person was asking when they found it. It's written for a real person, not for Google.

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It doesn't just repeat what every other website says on the same topic. It adds something.

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And I want you to be brutally honest with yourself here —

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because most people, when they read their own website, see what they intended to write

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rather than what they actually wrote. Get someone else to read it if you can.

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Secondly — is it current? Google's trying to get rid of out-of-date content from its results.

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Not always successfully, but it's a direction of travel. If you've got a blog post from 2020

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that references research from 2018 and links to a tool that no longer exists — that's not a great look.

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Now, there's an important caveat here. Don't just go and change the date on old posts.

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Google isn't stupid. Re-dating something doesn't make it current. If the content itself is out of date, update the fucking content.

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If you can fix something quickly, fix it. Don't just slap a new date on it and hope for the best.

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Third — did AI write it? I'm gonna say this once, clearly.

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If you've been using AI to generate blog posts and pages, and you've not edited them properly —

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not just a quick skim, actually edited them — those pages

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are probably hurting you more than they're helping you.

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AI-generated content is not inherently evil, but AI lies. It makes things up.

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It uses phrasing that is instantly recognisable as machine-generated.

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It doesn't sound like you, and it definitely doesn't demonstrate E-E-A-T —

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Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness,

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Trustworthiness — which is what Google increasingly cares about.

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Use AI as a starting point, if you must, but put yourself into it.

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Your opinion. Your experience. The thing that surprised you about a project. The example from a client call last week.

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That's what makes content worth reading. That's what makes it worth ranking.

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Fourth — does it have a call to action? This is the one that SEOs will sometimes say isn't their job.

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And technically they're right — whether your page has a call to action isn't a ranking factor.

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But I'm not just interested in getting you traffic. I'm interested in getting you new clients.

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And a page with no call to action is traffic with nowhere to go.

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Look — the internet has made us stupid. We have no attention span.

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If you don't tell someone what to do next when they've finished reading your content — or in the middle of it —

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or at an appropriate point — they won't fucking do it.

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They'll just click back and go away to mindlessly scroll someone else's shit.

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Call to action. Every page should tell the visitor what to do next.

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Not necessarily "buy now" or "book a call." The call to action needs to match the intent of the page.

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An informational blog post might end with: "If this was useful, you might also want to read..."

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...and point to a related page. A services page should probably have a clearer next step.

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When you add a CTA with a link, use that link wisely. The text you make into the link matters for SEO.

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I'm gonna talk more about that later, but keep it in mind.

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So now you've got a spreadsheet full of honest assessments of your website content.

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Some of it's great, some of it's a bit shit,

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some of it you'd rather nobody ever found.

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In just a moment, I'm going to tell you exactly what to do with each category — what to keep, what to fix, what to kill,

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and what order to tackle it in.

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Don't go anywhere. If you're enjoying this but thinking: "Nikki, I don't wanna wait a week for the next episode, I just wanna know how to do it now" —

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I've got you.

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I've developed an on-page SEO course that shows you exactly how to get your pages ranking without hiring an SEO.

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It's all the stuff I actually do for clients, broken down so you can do it yourself.

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Video, audio, text — however you like to learn.

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It's £200 — no upsells, no monthly fees. Just the course.

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Go and have a look at nonwankyseo.com.

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Right. You've done your audit, you've been honest, you've got a spreadsheet.

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That's probably a bit depressing. Here's what to do with it.

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Pages that are genuinely helpful and current — leave them alone. Seriously. Right now. Don't touch them.

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I know you want to tinker. Don't. If something is working,

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the most dangerous thing you can do is fix it. Make a note of them,

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because later on I'm gonna talk about internal linking, and these are the pages you're gonna be pointing things at.

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Then you've got pages that are helpful but out of date. Update them.

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Prioritise the ones most relevant to your business right now — your main service pages, your most-visited blog posts.

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Work through them systematically. Update the stats. Fix the broken links. Add anything that's changed.

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It's not glamorous work, but it is effective work.

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Updating a genuinely good piece of content that's gone a bit stale

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is often faster and more impactful than writing something completely new.

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Then you've got pages that have potential but need rewriting. Rewrite them.

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These are the pages on the right topic but that don't quite deliver. Maybe you wrote them in a rush.

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Maybe you wrote them for Google rather than people. Maybe they're just a bit thin.

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Don't delete them — you might have links pointing to them, either internally or from other websites.

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Rewrite in place. Keep the URL, keep the general topic, improve everything else.

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Then you've got AI content that hasn't been properly edited. Edit it properly.

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Go through it. Add your voice. Add real examples. Add your opinion. Remove anything that sounds like it was written by a robot.

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If the whole thing is unsalvageable, rewrite it from scratch.

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And then you've got pages that serve no purpose and never will.

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And I want you to consider getting rid of them.

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I say "consider" because deleting pages isn't always straightforward,

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and I don't want you going on a rampage.

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If a page has backlinks from other websites pointing at it, or if it's getting any traffic at all, you need to tread carefully.

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I'm gonna talk about this when I talk about redirects.

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But if there's a page that has no traffic, no backlinks, no useful content, and no obvious purpose — it's not fucking helping you.

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A smaller, tighter website is often better than a sprawling one full of content that adds nothing.

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And here's your homework. And I mean it. Don't just listen and nod and go back to whatever you were doing

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before you started listening to this.

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This week, start your spreadsheet. Even if you only do your main navigation pages and your five most recent blog posts —

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that's a start.

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Add the URL, the title, the intent, and your honest assessment of whether it's helpful.

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And while you're reading through your pages, keep a note of any ideas that come up.

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New blog posts you should write. Questions you keep getting asked that you haven't answered.

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Gaps you can see. That's future content, right there.

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Next episode, we're gonna talk about your website structure — how your pages connect to each other,

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how Google navigates your site, and why getting this wrong means even your best content struggles to rank.

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If this episode made you want to go and look at your website with fresh eyes,

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make sure you're following SEO Fucking What wherever you're listening,

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so you don't miss what's coming next. And if you know someone who hasn't looked at their website

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properly in years, send them this. It might save them from a very unpleasant surprise.

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Until next time —

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get found. Make money. Go look at your content.