Let's be honest. I've been doing this for 8 years at ClickMaking, looking at hundreds of websites. And I'd bet my lunch that 90% of them are technically a hot mess. Even the gorgeous ones that cost a fortune. They're just leaking traffic, annoying users, and honestly, leaving money on the table. It drives me up the wall.
A technical SEO audit checklist is basically a step-by-step health check for your website's engine room. We're looking at its technical guts to make sure Google can find, understand, and rank your pages. It covers everything from crawlability and site speed to security and mobile-friendliness, all to make sure you're not invisible in 2026.
TL;DR
Your website's backend health is more important than its looks. Technical errors kill your Google rankings.
Focus on the Core Four first: Crawlability, Site Speed (Core Web Vitals), Mobile Experience, and Security (HTTPS).
Advanced stuff like schema, log file analysis, and internal link architecture separates the top 1% from the rest.
Don't blindly chase a 100/100 PageSpeed score. Focus on real-world user experience and passing Core Web Vitals.
Run a technical audit at least twice a year. Things break. Algorithms change. Stay on top of it.
Quick Stats
Google has confirmed that Core Web Vitals are a ranking signal. (Source: Google)
According to Semrush, 43.7% of websites have broken internal links, a key technical SEO issue. (Source: Semrush State of Search 2025)
Websites that load in 1 second have a conversion rate 3x higher than sites that load in 5 seconds. (Source: Portent, 2022)
On this page
- Why Your Fancy Website Gets Zero Google Traffic
- The Core Four: Where My Team Always Starts
- Going Deeper: The Audit That Puts You on Top
- The Tools We Use: An Agency Showdown
- What Most Tech SEO Guides Get Wrong
- A Real Example: Fixing a Bodakdev Retailer’s Site
- Your 10-Point Audit Checklist. No Excuses.
Why Your Fancy Website Gets Zero Google Traffic
I see this constantly. A business owner from somewhere like Prahlad Nagar comes to us, totally frustrated. "Akshay, we spent lakhs on this beautiful website design, but we get no traffic!" It's a classic problem. Your site might look stunning, but if the foundation is cracked, nobody's going to stick around.
Technical SEO is that foundation. It's the plumbing. It’s what makes sure Google's bots can actually find, crawl (read), and index (file away) your pages. Without a solid technical setup, all your awesome content and expensive PPC ads are basically just shouting into a black hole.
Think about an app like Zomato. It's fast. It works even on a weak signal. It's secure. That didn't happen by accident, bhai. That's a relentless focus on technical performance. You might not be Zomato, but the same rules apply.
The Core Four: Where My Team Always Starts
Look, before you get overwhelmed with a million little things, just focus on these four pillars. If you get these right, you're already doing better than most of the competition. Every single audit we do at ClickMaking starts right here.
Crawlability & Indexability: Can Google Even See You?
This is ground zero. Seriously. If Googlebot can't crawl your website, you're invisible. You don't exist. So the first thing is to check what's blocking it.
Pop open your robots.txt file. This little file tells search engines what they can and can't look at. Quick story: I once onboarded a client whose file had Disallow: / in it. They were literally telling Google to ignore their entire website. A simple fix that changed their entire business overnight.
Next up, your XML sitemap. Is it current? Any errors? You need to submit it to Google Search Console and check its status. Also, hunt for "noindex" tags on your important pages. A developer can easily forget to remove one after a site launch, making your main service page invisible. It happens more than you'd believe.
Site Speed & Core Web Vitals: Stop Making People Wait
Nobody has patience anymore. If your site takes longer than three seconds to load, people are gone. Google knows it, too, which is why they made Core Web Vitals (CWV) a ranking factor. These metrics just measure what a user feels: how fast it loads (LCP), how quickly you can interact with it (FID/INP), and if stuff jumps around on the screen (CLS).
Go use Google's PageSpeed Insights tool. But here's my advice — don't obsess over a perfect 100/100 score. It's a waste of time and money. Your target is to get in the "Green" for the three Core Web Vitals. Just focus on compressing images, using browser caching, and maybe getting a better hosting plan. Those three things fix most speed problems.
Mobile-First... Duh. But Are You Really Mobile-First?
Everyone says mobile is important. We get it. But here's the thing people miss: Google doesn't just check if you have a mobile site. Google uses your mobile site to rank you (this is called mobile-first indexing). So if your mobile experience is a clunky, stripped-down afterthought... well, that's what Google thinks your whole site is like.
In Google's eyes, your mobile site is your main site. Period. So test it on a real phone, not some desktop simulator. Can you use the menu with your thumb? Are buttons big enough to tap without zooming? Can you read the text? That's the only test that matters.
Security (HTTPS) & Trust Signals
It's 2026. If your site isn't on HTTPS, you're basically telling everyone you don't care about their security. An SSL certificate is easy to get and often free. There is zero excuse. It's a small but direct ranking signal from Google.
Beyond that, look for mixed content errors. That's when a secure (HTTPS) page tries to load something insecure (HTTP), like an image. It throws up ugly warnings in browsers and kills trust. Sach mein, it just looks amateurish.
"A technical SEO audit isn't a one-time task. It's website hygiene. You wouldn't go a year without brushing your teeth; don't let your site's technical health rot away either." — Akshay Patel, Founder, ClickMaking
Framework breakdown — ClickMaking
Going Deeper: The Audit That Puts You on Top
Alright, you've handled the Core Four. Now for the stuff that'll get you into the big leagues. This is where my SEO and content team really proves their worth.
Advanced Schema Markup
Schema is just code that explains your content to Google. Most websites have the basic stuff, like Organization schema. That's not enough anymore. If you're selling stuff, you need Product schema with reviews and prices. If you're writing articles, use Article schema. Got an event? There's schema for that too.
This code is what gets you those fancy rich snippets in search results — the star ratings, FAQs, and prices. They make people click on your link instead of someone else's. I'd recommend keeping an eye on Search Engine Journal to see what new types are being supported.
Log File Analysis: Spying on Googlebot
Okay, this one is a bit nerdy, but it's gold. Your server logs track every single visit to your site, including every time Googlebot stops by. By looking at these logs, you see exactly what pages Google is crawling, how often, and if it's wasting time on junk pages (like old tag pages with no content).
Google only has so much time to spend on your site — we call this a "crawl budget." If it's wasting that budget on useless pages, it's not spending time on your important ones. Log analysis shows you where to clean up and guide Googlebot to the pages that actually make you money.
Internal Linking & Site Structure
How you link between your own pages is a huge, and hugely underrated, part of SEO. A smart internal linking plan helps users handle, sure, but it also tells Google which of your pages are the most important. Your most valuable pages should have the most internal links pointing their way.
Use a tool like Screaming Frog to get a map of your site. Is it a clean pyramid, or a messy spiderweb? Are your key product pages buried five clicks deep? You have to fix that.
A shallow, logical structure always wins. As the folks on the Moz Blog always say, any page should be reachable in 3-4 clicks from the homepage.
The Tools We Use: An Agency Showdown
You can't do a real tech audit by hand. Just can't. At ClickMaking, we use a few different tools because they're all good at different things. Here’s the rundown.
Tool
Best For
Price
Our Take
**Screaming Frog SEO Spider**
Deep, granular crawling & finding specific issues (broken links, redirects).
Freemium (~£199/year for Pro)
The industry standard for a reason. It's a powerful desktop crawler. Steep learning curve, but essential for any serious SEO.
**Semrush Site Audit**
All-in-one dashboard, tracking progress over time, Core Web Vitals checks.
Part of subscription (starts ~$130/month)
We use this daily at ClickMaking. It's brilliant for scheduled audits and showing clients a clear, prioritized list of issues. More user-friendly.
**Ahrefs Site Audit**
Visualizations, linking data integration, and clear explanations.
Part of subscription (starts ~$99/month)
Very similar to Semrush. Some of our team members prefer its UI. Its integration with their backlink data is a nice plus.
If you're just starting, Google Search Console is free and surprisingly powerful. It'll scream at you about indexing problems, mobile issues, and Core Web Vitals. Start there. It's non-negotiable.
Real implementation example — ClickMaking
What Most Tech SEO Guides Get Wrong
I read a lot of SEO blogs, and honestly, most of them just parrot the same old advice. Here are a few things our work at ClickMaking has taught me that goes against the grain.
1. Crawl Budget is NOT your problem. Seriously, unless you're running a massive e-comm site like Nykaa with millions of pages, stop worrying about "crawl budget." For 99% of businesses, if your site structure is clean and you have a good sitemap, Google will find your pages. Focus on making good pages, not on crawl efficiency.
2. Blindly disavowing links is a bad idea. A few years back, everyone was obsessed with disavowing "toxic" links. This is dumb now. Google's algorithm has gotten way smarter and is pretty good at just ignoring spammy links.
Unless you have an actual manual penalty from Google, don't touch the disavow tool. You're much more likely to hurt your site than help it. We've had to clean up messes from this.
3. PageSpeed scores are mostly for show. I said it before, and I'll say it again. Chasing a 100/100 score on PageSpeed Insights is a waste of your developer's time and your money. The returns get smaller and smaller.
Instead, obsess over the real user metrics: passing Core Web Vitals and making sure the site feels fast to a person on a normal 4G connection. That's what impacts sales and rankings.
A Real Example: Fixing a Bodakdev Retailer’s Site
Quick story. We took on a home decor client from Bodakdev in Ahmedabad late last year. Their Shopify site was beautiful, but their organic traffic was dead flat. All their sales were from Instagram ads, which is a scary place to be.
Our first technical audit revealed a total mess.
- The Problem: Google was indexing hundreds of thin, duplicate product variant pages. Their blog images were massive (2-3MB each!), which made the site crawl. And their mobile menu was impossible to use.
The Plan (Timeline: 4 weeks):
- Week 1: We put proper `canonical` tags on all product pages to fix the duplication. We also blocked certain navigation URLs in `robots.txt` so Google would stop wasting its time.
- Week 2: We ran all their existing images through an image compressor and installed an app to automatically shrink new uploads.
- Week 3: We had a developer totally redo the mobile nav. The goal was to make it easy to use with one thumb. This was a key part of their bigger [digital marketing strategy](/services/digital-marketing-strategy) shift.
- Week 4: Resubmitted the new sitemaps and just watched Google Search Console like a hawk.
The Cost: It was around ₹45,000 for the developer's time and our agency's work.
The Outcome: Eight weeks after we were done, their organic traffic shot up by 75%. Even better, their organic sales doubled because the people who did show up had a much better experience. They started ranking for their main keywords for the first time ever. You can see more stories like this when we talk about things like marketing for Gujarat Food D2C brands.
"Stop thinking of technical SEO as a cost. It's an investment with one of the highest ROIs in digital marketing. Fixing the foundation enables everything else to grow." — Akshay Patel, Founder, ClickMaking
Your 10-Point Audit Checklist. No Excuses.
Feeling like it's too much? It's not. Just start here. Do these ten things.
Open Google Search Console: Is your site indexed? Any nasty errors or manual actions? This is job one.
Check your
robots.txt: Make sure you're not telling Google to get lost.Test on Your Phone: Use your actual phone on a mobile network. Is it fast? Is it easy to use? Be honest.
Run a PageSpeed Insights Test: Are your Core Web Vitals green? If not, do what Google tells you to do first.
Confirm HTTPS Everywhere: Type in your domain. Does it redirect to
https? Is the little lock there?Crawl Your Site: Use Screaming Frog's free version (up to 500 pages) or Ahrefs Webmaster Tools to find broken links (404s). Fix them.
Hunt for 'noindex' Tags: Do a crawl. Make sure you haven't accidentally left a
noindextag on an important page.Test Your Schema: Use Google's Rich Results Test tool to make sure your structured data is actually working.
Analyze Your Sitemap: Is it clean, up-to-date, and submitted in Search Console?
Keep Learning: Read good blogs like the Semrush Blog or check out our other posts on stuff like the Best AI Tools for Digital Marketing to stay ahead.
Going through this tech SEO checklist isn't a one-and-done job. Your website is a living thing. Things break. Updates happen. Pages get added. We have our clients do a big audit twice a year and a quick checkup every quarter.
It's the only way to be sure your foundation is solid, so you can focus on growing your business without worrying the whole thing will collapse. If you're stuck or just want a second opinion, give us a shout at ClickMaking. We actually enjoy this stuff.
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Originally published at clickmaking.com — ClickMaking is a digital marketing agency in Ahmedabad helping Indian businesses rank on Google.
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