seo-technical
Audit technical SEO across crawlability, indexability, security, URLs, mobile, Core Web Vitals, structured data, JavaScript rendering, and related platform signals like robots.txt and AI crawler access.
Best use case
seo-technical is best used when you need a repeatable AI agent workflow instead of a one-off prompt.
Audit technical SEO across crawlability, indexability, security, URLs, mobile, Core Web Vitals, structured data, JavaScript rendering, and related platform signals like robots.txt and AI crawler access.
Teams using seo-technical should expect a more consistent output, faster repeated execution, less prompt rewriting.
When to use this skill
- You want a reusable workflow that can be run more than once with consistent structure.
When not to use this skill
- You only need a quick one-off answer and do not need a reusable workflow.
- You cannot install or maintain the underlying files, dependencies, or repository context.
Installation
Claude Code / Cursor / Codex
Manual Installation
- Download SKILL.md from GitHub
- Place it in
.claude/skills/seo-technical/SKILL.mdinside your project - Restart your AI agent — it will auto-discover the skill
How seo-technical Compares
| Feature / Agent | seo-technical | Standard Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Platform Support | Not specified | Limited / Varies |
| Context Awareness | High | Baseline |
| Installation Complexity | Unknown | N/A |
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this skill do?
Audit technical SEO across crawlability, indexability, security, URLs, mobile, Core Web Vitals, structured data, JavaScript rendering, and related platform signals like robots.txt and AI crawler access.
Where can I find the source code?
You can find the source code on GitHub using the link provided at the top of the page.
SKILL.md Source
# Technical SEO Audit ## When to Use - Use when the user wants a technical SEO review focused on crawlability, indexability, performance, or rendering. - Use when auditing robots.txt, canonicalization, JavaScript SEO, Core Web Vitals, or AI crawler access. - Use when the task is infrastructure- and implementation-oriented rather than content-focused. ## Categories ### 1. Crawlability - robots.txt: exists, valid, not blocking important resources - XML sitemap: exists, referenced in robots.txt, valid format - Noindex tags: intentional vs accidental - Crawl depth: important pages within 3 clicks of homepage - JavaScript rendering: check if critical content requires JS execution - Crawl budget: for large sites (>10k pages), efficiency matters #### AI Crawler Management As of 2025-2026, AI companies actively crawl the web to train models and power AI search. Managing these crawlers via robots.txt is a critical technical SEO consideration. **Known AI crawlers:** | Crawler | Company | robots.txt token | Purpose | |---------|---------|-----------------|---------| | GPTBot | OpenAI | `GPTBot` | Model training | | ChatGPT-User | OpenAI | `ChatGPT-User` | Real-time browsing | | ClaudeBot | Anthropic | `ClaudeBot` | Model training | | PerplexityBot | Perplexity | `PerplexityBot` | Search index + training | | Bytespider | ByteDance | `Bytespider` | Model training | | Google-Extended | Google | `Google-Extended` | Gemini training (NOT search) | | CCBot | Common Crawl | `CCBot` | Open dataset | **Key distinctions:** - Blocking `Google-Extended` prevents Gemini training use but does NOT affect Google Search indexing or AI Overviews (those use `Googlebot`) - Blocking `GPTBot` prevents OpenAI training but does NOT prevent ChatGPT from citing your content via browsing (`ChatGPT-User`) - ~3-5% of websites now use AI-specific robots.txt rules **Example, selective AI crawler blocking:** ``` # Allow search indexing, block AI training crawlers User-agent: GPTBot Disallow: / User-agent: Google-Extended Disallow: / User-agent: Bytespider Disallow: / # Allow all other crawlers (including Googlebot for search) User-agent: * Allow: / ``` **Recommendation:** Consider your AI visibility strategy before blocking. Being cited by AI systems drives brand awareness and referral traffic. Cross-reference the `seo-geo` skill for full AI visibility optimization. ### 2. Indexability - Canonical tags: self-referencing, no conflicts with noindex - Duplicate content: near-duplicates, parameter URLs, www vs non-www - Thin content: pages below minimum word counts per type - Pagination: rel=next/prev or load-more pattern - Hreflang: correct for multi-language/multi-region sites - Index bloat: unnecessary pages consuming crawl budget ### 3. Security - HTTPS: enforced, valid SSL certificate, no mixed content - Security headers: - Content-Security-Policy (CSP) - Strict-Transport-Security (HSTS) - X-Frame-Options - X-Content-Type-Options - Referrer-Policy - HSTS preload: check preload list inclusion for high-security sites ### 4. URL Structure - Clean URLs: descriptive, hyphenated, no query parameters for content - Hierarchy: logical folder structure reflecting site architecture - Redirects: no chains (max 1 hop), 301 for permanent moves - URL length: flag >100 characters - Trailing slashes: consistent usage ### 5. Mobile Optimization - Responsive design: viewport meta tag, responsive CSS - Touch targets: minimum 48x48px with 8px spacing - Font size: minimum 16px base - No horizontal scroll - Mobile-first indexing: Google indexes mobile version. **Mobile-first indexing is 100% complete as of July 5, 2024.** Google now crawls and indexes ALL websites exclusively with the mobile Googlebot user-agent. ### 6. Core Web Vitals - **LCP** (Largest Contentful Paint): target <2.5s - **INP** (Interaction to Next Paint): target <200ms - INP replaced FID on March 12, 2024. FID was fully removed from all Chrome tools (CrUX API, PageSpeed Insights, Lighthouse) on September 9, 2024. Do NOT reference FID anywhere. - **CLS** (Cumulative Layout Shift): target <0.1 - Evaluation uses 75th percentile of real user data - Use PageSpeed Insights API or CrUX data if MCP available ### 7. Structured Data - Detection: JSON-LD (preferred), Microdata, RDFa - Validation against Google's supported types - See seo-schema skill for full analysis ### 8. JavaScript Rendering - Check if content visible in initial HTML vs requires JS - Identify client-side rendered (CSR) vs server-side rendered (SSR) - Flag SPA frameworks (React, Vue, Angular) that may cause indexing issues - Verify dynamic rendering setup if applicable #### JavaScript SEO: Canonical & Indexing Guidance (December 2025) Google updated its JavaScript SEO documentation in December 2025 with critical clarifications: 1. **Canonical conflicts:** If a canonical tag in raw HTML differs from one injected by JavaScript, Google may use EITHER one. Ensure canonical tags are identical between server-rendered HTML and JS-rendered output. 2. **noindex with JavaScript:** If raw HTML contains `<meta name="robots" content="noindex">` but JavaScript removes it, Google MAY still honor the noindex from raw HTML. Serve correct robots directives in the initial HTML response. 3. **Non-200 status codes:** Google does NOT render JavaScript on pages returning non-200 HTTP status codes. Any content or meta tags injected via JS on error pages will be invisible to Googlebot. 4. **Structured data in JavaScript:** Product, Article, and other structured data injected via JS may face delayed processing. For time-sensitive structured data (especially e-commerce Product markup), include it in the initial server-rendered HTML. **Best practice:** Serve critical SEO elements (canonical, meta robots, structured data, title, meta description) in the initial server-rendered HTML rather than relying on JavaScript injection. ### 9. IndexNow Protocol - Check if site supports IndexNow for Bing, Yandex, Naver - Supported by search engines other than Google - Recommend implementation for faster indexing on non-Google engines ## Output ### Technical Score: XX/100 ### Category Breakdown | Category | Status | Score | |----------|--------|-------| | Crawlability | pass/warn/fail | XX/100 | | Indexability | pass/warn/fail | XX/100 | | Security | pass/warn/fail | XX/100 | | URL Structure | pass/warn/fail | XX/100 | | Mobile | pass/warn/fail | XX/100 | | Core Web Vitals | pass/warn/fail | XX/100 | | Structured Data | pass/warn/fail | XX/100 | | JS Rendering | pass/warn/fail | XX/100 | | IndexNow | pass/warn/fail | XX/100 | ### Critical Issues (fix immediately) ### High Priority (fix within 1 week) ### Medium Priority (fix within 1 month) ### Low Priority (backlog) ## DataForSEO Integration (Optional) If DataForSEO MCP tools are available, use `on_page_instant_pages` for real page analysis (status codes, page timing, broken links, on-page checks), `on_page_lighthouse` for Lighthouse audits (performance, accessibility, SEO scores), and `domain_analytics_technologies_domain_technologies` for technology stack detection. ## Error Handling | Scenario | Action | |----------|--------| | URL unreachable | Report connection error with status code. Suggest verifying URL, checking DNS resolution, and confirming the site is publicly accessible. | | robots.txt not found | Note that no robots.txt was detected at the root domain. Recommend creating one with appropriate directives. Continue audit on remaining categories. | | HTTPS not configured | Flag as a critical issue. Report whether HTTP is served without redirect, mixed content exists, or SSL certificate is missing/expired. | | Core Web Vitals data unavailable | Note that CrUX data is not available (common for low-traffic sites). Suggest using Lighthouse lab data as a proxy and recommend increasing traffic before re-testing. | ## Limitations - Use this skill only when the task clearly matches the scope described above. - Do not treat the output as a substitute for environment-specific validation, testing, or expert review. - Stop and ask for clarification if required inputs, permissions, safety boundaries, or success criteria are missing.
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