- Multi-billion-dollar brands
- Popular SaaS companies
- Top ecommerce stores
- Large affiliate sites
And everything in between...
Here are the 12 most common issues found:
This is one of the most important SEO posts you'll read this month (or even this year).
For that reason, I've called in @ViperChill.
- Started doing SEO 16 years ago
- Audited 1,000+ websites on video
- Creator of the SEO Blueprint course
- Founder of the Detailed SEO Extension
1. Image pages (@ViperChill)
Use WordPress? Every image you've ever uploaded may have its own page, which Google indexes.
I found this on 30% of WordPress sites I've audited...
Luckily, this is an easy fix.
WordPress plugins like Yoast have a built-in option to redirect attachment URLs to the image.
Why does it matter?
Your site needs to maintain a clean footprint to help with its overall 'quality score'.
I avoid indexing low-quality pages in Google that I wouldn't want searchers to find.
2. HTTP pages (@jakezward)
As you'll know, all pages on your site need to be secure (https).
But you'd be surprised how many sites still have pages ranking which aren't secure.
Use the 'site:domain -inurl:https' search command to find these non-secure pages.
This search command can also help you find other unusual pages that probably shouldn't be indexing.
3. Pages you don't even know about (@ViperChill)
Find pages you might not want to index (or even know existed).
Perform a site:domain search and use terms to discover these pages.
Example of terms to try:
- "Lorem ipsum"
- Portfolio
- Demo
- Index
- Error
- Test
Or perform a blank site:domain search and look for any odd titles that might be low-quality pages.
4. Matching intent (@jakezward)
"I'm not ranking for [keyword]" can mostly be answered by understanding the search intent.
Content type: Should it be a blog post or other?
Content format: Should it be a how-to or other?
Content angle: What audience should it be targeting?
To understand intent, Google your topic and read the results page.
5. Tags and categories (@ViperChill)
Another common source of thin content on a site is going overboard on tags and categories.
They're great in moderation.
But not when these pages:
- Are empty
- Only have one post/item
- Haven't been updated in years
This applies to ecommerce, forums, and any other sites with a blog.
I avoid having a significant number of categories, tags or collections with 0-2 items.
6. Title and H1 (@jakezward)
Updating dates in your blog title?
Make sure you don't just change your H1 but also the title that
shows in Google (or vice-versa).
Easily find and fix these pages with 'site:domain intitle:[previous year]'.
Then use @ViperChill's free Detailed SEO Extension () to quickly check the page's title. detailed.com/extension/
7. Old publish dates (@ViperChill)
Avoid older dates showing up against recently published or updated content.
This hurts your CTR and, from my experiments, your rankings.
Here's one way to find this problem using Google:
- Perform a site:domain search
- Select tools (on the right)
- Enter last year's date (or even further back)
8. Heading tags (@jakezward)
It may seem basic to some, but I still regularly see sites not using heading tags correctly.
Here are some basic rules I follow:
1. Include only 1 H1 per page 2. Use the same title for the H1 and the meta title 3. Don't over-optimise titles with keyword stuffing 4. Order H2-H6s properly, e.g. don't go from H2 to H4 without H3 in between 5. Make them incredibly skimmable
9. Redirected links (@ViperChill)
Ideally, key navigational links should not go through a redirect.
- http to https
- www to non-www
- trailing-slash to no trailing-slash
I hear you:
“A 301/308 redirect should pass all the ‘weight’, so it’s fine...”
Why do it if you don’t need to?
Here's why:
It’s an (albeit, slightly) slower experience for users and
increases the chance of creating redirect chains down the road.
10. Redirect chains (@jakezward)
Redirect chains occur when there's more than one redirect between the initial URL and the final URL.
For example:
Similar to Glen's previous point, ideally these 301s should be fixed and not go through a redirect chain.
They can impact:
- Crawl budget
- Page loading times
- General user experience
- 'Power' of your internal/backlinks
I find redirect chains using Screaming Frog.
11. Canonical interlinks (@ViperChill)
Avoid sending key internal links to pages you’re not trying to rank (e.g. they canonicalise elsewhere).
This is extremely common for ecommerce sites on Shopify.
Not the end of the world, but sometimes entire sites are built
this way which isn't ideal.
It's nothing a developer can't fix.
12. 404 pages with good backlinks (@jakezward)
Many site owners delete pages without redirecting them to
another page.
This can be ok, but you should first check to see if the page
has existing backlinks.
If it does, you can pass the 'power' of the backlinks to another page.
I use Screaming Frog to find these 404s:
1. Connect to Ahrefs' API 2. You'll see backlinks per URL 3. Find 404 pages with backlinks 4. 301 to a page you want to rank
Bonus: Superpixels (@ViperChill)
Once you’ve taken care of the fundamentals, add ‘Superpixels’ everywhere you can.
In my 1,000+ audits, the most common issue was this:
Sites were so… similar.
No personality. Just pushing out content for Big G.
Superpixels = In the standard things you put on your site, try to make them memorable. Personal.
Make visitors do a double take.
To me, this makes earning links, subscribers and sales much easier.
Before you go...
I've used @ViperChill's tool (Detailed SEO Extension) daily since it launched.
Download for free and get SEO insights at the click of a button here: detailed.com/extension/
@ViperChill That's a wrap!
If you enjoyed this thread:
1. Follow me @jakezward 2. Follow Glen @ViperChill 2. RT the tweet below to share it
Confession: I’m obsessed with tracking search trends.
7 AI trends I’ve found this week:
1. AI Girlfriend
People are turning to AI for connection. AI is filling real emotional gaps; companionship, validation, even intimacy. It’s weird, growing fast, and increasingly normalised.
What it means for you:
Founders: AI companionship is an emotional use case that’s outpacing productivity. Expect spin-offs: AI best friends, AI mentors, AI therapists.
Marketers: Even if you’re not in the AI space, this is a signal: emotional resonance matters. People aren’t just searching for tools, they’re searching for connection.
Creators: This is attention-worthy content. Think: “I spent 24 hours with an AI girlfriend.” Cultural commentary, humour, or deep dives will all perform well.
2. AI SEO
The blending of traditional SEO and LLM SEO (or LEO) to show up in AI-generated answers like Google’s AI Overviews, ChatGPT, and Perplexity responses.
It’s about optimising your brand and content to become the answer in LLM platforms like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, and now most crucially, Google’s AI Mode.
This isn’t just a new traffic source.
It’s a whole new search ecosystem.
We’re actively managing SEO for 30+ sites.
And we’re already seeing 5–15% of their monthly traffic coming from LLM platforms (and growing MoM).
Most of the traffic (around 95%) is from ChatGPT, with the rest from Perplexity, Claude, and others.
A SaaS company ranks #1 for “CRM for freelancers” by optimising its landing page and building backlinks from niche blogs.
What is AIO?
AI Optimisation is making your brand machine-readable and embedded in the AI’s foundational knowledge.
Think: “Will this help the model learn about me?”
How it works:
- Aim to be part of AI training data
- Optimise structured, machine-readable formats
- Ensure presence in sources LLMs learn from (e.g. Wikidata, GitHub, Reddit, Stack Overflow)
- Maintain consistent entity references and factual clarity
Example:
A software library becomes part of AI’s knowledge base via GitHub docs, developer forums, and structured Wikidata entries.