How it works
The goal is to make the first result feel useful immediately, without overwhelming you with a full dashboard.
Step 1
Enter the page you want to review
Use a live URL for a landing page, pricing page, feature page, blog post, or documentation page.
Step 2
Scan the first result summary
The mock result surfaces the score, the most important issues, and the fastest ways to improve the page.
Step 3
Decide whether the page needs deeper work
If the quick audit shows weak clarity, structure, or trust signals, you can continue into a fuller workflow.
What this audit checks
Evaluamos la página desde la perspectiva de lectura de AI: si puede entender con claridad quién es usted, qué ofrece, para quién es relevante y por qué merece ser recomendada.
- How clearly the page explains its purpose in the opening screen.
- Whether the main sections are easy to scan and prioritize.
- How well headings, supporting copy, and calls to action align with the page intent.
- Whether structural signals such as titles, descriptions, and content hierarchy look strong enough to trust.
- Si la información importante está escondida en imágenes, animaciones o componentes difíciles de leer
- Si señales básicas como title, description, canonical y schema están completas
How to read the result
You do not need a perfect score to get value from the audit. The useful part is knowing where the page breaks down first.
- The score is a quick signal, not a final verdict. It helps you sort pages by urgency.
- Top issues show the problems most likely to reduce clarity, trust, or discoverability.
- Quick wins help you fix the page faster before you invest in a larger rewrite or audit pass.
En qué se enfoca esta vista previa de auditoría
A fast audit is most useful when it connects each check to a real page outcome.
| Check | Why it matters | What it might surface |
|---|---|---|
| Page framing | The first screen should explain what the page is about without extra interpretation. | Generic hero copy, weak headline, delayed value proposition |
| Section hierarchy | Strong hierarchy helps readers and models identify what matters first. | Competing sections, unclear headings, weak scanning flow |
| Trust and proof | Pages convert better when claims are supported early and clearly. | Missing examples, testimonials, numbers, or source cues |
| Structural signals | Metadata and heading structure influence how pages are interpreted and surfaced. | Loose title tags, missing descriptions, shallow heading structure |
Common issues this tool can surface
Many weak pages are not broken technically. They simply fail to communicate the right things in the right order.
- Vague headlines that do not state the offer clearly.
- Long opening sections that delay the key message.
- Missing proof, examples, or trust signals near the top of the page.
- Sections that are hard to distinguish because they use similar structure and weight.
- Metadata or heading hierarchy that does not reinforce the main page intent.
What makes a page easier for AI systems and users to understand
The strongest pages are usually the easiest to parse, summarize, and act on.
- A clear page promise in the first screen.
- Specific headings that describe the value of each section.
- Hay respaldo creíble cerca de las conclusiones clave, como casos, reseñas, datos y fuentes.
- A clean structure that separates overview, details, proof, and action.