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SEO analysis / How to read your SEO report

How to read your WordCount AI SEO report

This short guide shows you how to turn your WordCount AI report into a small edit plan that helps low‑ranking or low‑converting pages perform better.

Start with the goal of the page

Before you look at scores or warnings, remind yourself what this page is supposed to do:

  • Is it meant to rank for a specific keyword and bring in more qualified traffic
  • Is the main job to drive signups, demo requests, or product clicks
  • Is this a primary revenue page, a content hub, or a supporting article

Your report is there to support that goal. Use it to find friction, not to chase a perfect score just for the sake of it.

1. At a glance summary
A quick snapshot of how this page is doing and where attention should go first.

The summary section tells you, in plain language, what is strong about the page and what seems to be holding it back. Look for:

  • A simple view of overall SEO and readability strength, not just a number out of 100
  • A short list of the key issues the tool thinks you should handle first
  • Any red flags around missing metadata, weak headings, or unclear focus

Use this as your compass. The rest of the report explains the details so you can decide which changes are most likely to move traffic, signups, or revenue on this specific page.

2. Priority fixes to handle first
The highest impact changes you can make to improve search and clarity.

This section turns your report into a short action list. These are issues that are both important and fixable in a focused editing session.

  • Missing or weak title and meta description
  • No clear focus keyword or scattered topics on the page
  • Headings that do not match what people actually search for
  • Long blocks of text that hurt readability and time on page

Aim to pick 3 to 5 priority fixes, make them, then rerun the report instead of trying to change everything at once. This keeps your workflow realistic while still moving key metrics.

3. Keyword focus and search intent
Check if the page speaks clearly to one main topic and the right search intent.

In this part of the report you will see which keyword the tool thinks you are targeting and how well your content supports it.

  • Confirm that the main keyword matches what you had in mind when you wrote the page
  • Look at suggested related terms and check whether they appear in headings and body copy
  • Watch for signs that the page mixes different intents, for example information and hard selling on the same screen

If the target keyword does not feel right, adjust your copy and headings, then run the report again until the page and your goal match.

4. Readability and structure
Make sure real people can skim, understand, and act on your content.

Here the report looks at sentence length, paragraph size, headings, and overall flow. Strong SEO content is easy to skim and does not tire the reader.

  • Shorter paragraphs with clear headings that make sense without reading the full text
  • Sentences that are easy to read out loud without running out of breath
  • Lists and subheadings that break complex ideas into simple steps

Fix readability first on pages that already get traffic. Better flow often lifts time on page and conversions without any extra backlinks.

5. On page and technical basics
Quick checks that stop simple SEO mistakes from hurting a strong page.

This part surfaces issues that do not always show in the copy itself but matter to search engines and user experience.

  • Title tag and meta description length and clarity
  • Missing or weak H1, H2, and internal linking
  • Broken links inside the content
  • Basic technical checks that hint when you may need a deeper audit, for example repeated issues across several reports

If you see the same technical issue appear across many pages, flag it as a site wide task for your dev or web team.

Turn the report into one simple plan

The goal is not to fix everything at once. Use each report to create a small, focused edit plan for that page.

  1. Pick 1 high‑value page that already gets some traffic or supports signups or leads
  2. Run an SEO report and read the summary plus priority fixes
  3. Choose 3 to 5 changes you can ship this week
  4. Update your page and publish the new version
  5. Rerun the report to compare before and after

When you repeat this cycle across your key pages, your site becomes clearer, easier to rank, and better at turning visits into signups over time.

Ready to practice with a real report? Start with the example, then run WordCount AI on your main offer page to spot quick wins.