Agencies that make technical SEO audits part of their service model don't just deliver better results — they become indispensable to their clients. At Harper Media Group, we partner with agencies to handle the complex technical layer, so your team stays focused on growth while your clients stay focused on you.
Here's what a technical SEO audit consistently uncovers across client portfolios, and why every agency needs to make it a priority.
Crawlability Errors: When Search Engines Can't Access What You've Built
A technically sound website begins with one non-negotiable requirement: search engines must be able to find and access every page that matters. When they can't, rankings stall regardless of how strong the content strategy is.
Crawlability issues often arise from misconfigured robots.txt files that block important sections, noindex directives left active after development, and orphaned pages without internal links that stay invisible to crawlers. These problems are especially easy to miss — and costly to ignore — when managing multiple client sites.
With the rise of AI-powered search, technical health has expanded beyond traditional ranking considerations. Sites with clean, crawlable architecture are better positioned to appear in AI Overviews and generative search results — a competitive advantage that is only growing in importance.
Pro tip: Establish a crawl audit as a standard onboarding step for every new client. Catching accessibility issues before launching a campaign prevents months of misdirected effort.
Page Speed: The Silent Campaign Killer
Slow-loading pages don't announce themselves. They simply cost your clients users, conversions, and rankings — quietly and consistently. More than half of users abandon a site that takes longer than three seconds to load, and the impact compounds across paid and organic campaigns alike.
Root causes identified in audits are usually predictable: uncompressed images, render-blocking JavaScript, insufficient server response times, and missing browser caching configurations. What makes page speed particularly critical for agency work is that it affects every other service you offer. A slow site undermines content marketing, paid media performance, and conversion rate optimisation simultaneously.
Pro tip: Mobile speed takes priority. Google's Mobile-First Indexing means the mobile version of a client's site determines ranking authority — not the desktop version your team typically reviews first.
Mobile Usability: A Non-Negotiable for Every Client Portfolio
Nearly 60% of global web traffic now originates from mobile devices. Any client site failing mobile usability standards is operating at a structural disadvantage that no campaign strategy can compensate for.
Common mobile issues flagged during audits include text rendered too small to read without zooming, interactive elements placed too close together for reliable tapping, content that overflows screen boundaries, and intrusive interstitials that violate Google's mobile experience guidelines. Each of these contributes to higher bounce rates, lower dwell time, and reduced ranking potential.
Pro tip: Build a mobile usability review into every quarterly client report. Presenting these findings positions your agency as proactive rather than reactive — and gives clients a clear reason to maintain the relationship long-term.
Broken Links: How Neglected Sites Lose Authority
Broken links are the digital equivalent of handing a client a map with missing roads. They frustrate users who hit dead ends, and signal to search engines that a site is poorly maintained — a perception that erodes domain trust over time.
In agency work, broken links multiply quickly during site migrations, CMS updates, and content consolidation. A technical SEO audit identifies every internal and external broken link, along with all 404 error pages, giving agencies a clear view of where authority is leaking and where user journeys are being disrupted.
Pro tip: Every removed page should have a 301 redirect in place before it goes offline. A well-configured custom 404 page also recovers a portion of users who land on broken URLs, keeping them within the client's site rather than returning to search results.
Duplicate Content: The Hidden Traffic Drain
When multiple pages on a site carry substantially similar content, search engines are forced to choose which version to rank — and frequently rank none of them effectively. The result is a dilution of ranking signals that prevents otherwise strong pages from performing at their potential.
Duplicate content is one of the most consistent findings across e-commerce and large informational sites. Product filter parameters, pagination structures, and tag archives routinely generate hundreds or thousands of near-identical URLs without any deliberate decision being made. Identifying and consolidating these is frequently the highest-impact fix available in the early stages of an SEO engagement.
Pro tip: Canonical tags are the standard solution for duplicate URL variations — but they require ongoing monitoring. Site migrations and platform updates frequently reset or override canonical configurations without warning.
XML Sitemap Issues: Giving Search Engines the Wrong Directions
An XML sitemap functions as a direct communication to search engines about which pages exist, which matter most, and how they relate to one another. When sitemaps are outdated, bloated with error pages, or never submitted to Google Search Console, that communication breaks down.
For agencies onboarding new clients, sitemap audits frequently reveal pages returning non-200 status codes still listed as active, important pages excluded entirely, and sitemaps that have never been verified through Search Console. Each of these conditions reduces crawl efficiency and limits indexing accuracy. For agencies managing hundreds of pages, manual sitemap maintenance is technical liability — automation and monthly monitoring are the solution.
Pro tip: Sitemap hygiene is a five-minute monthly task that prevents significant indexing problems. Build it into your standard client maintenance workflow and document it in every reporting cycle.
Internal Linking: The Architecture That Search Engines Actually Read
Internal linking is the structural layer that communicates hierarchy, priority, and relevance to search engines. When it's inconsistent or underdeveloped, pages that deserve to rank receive insufficient authority signals regardless of their content quality.
Audits consistently identify orphaned pages receiving no internal links, anchor text that defaults to generic phrases rather than descriptive keywords, and uneven distribution of link equity that concentrates authority on already-strong pages while leaving high-potential pages underserved.
Pro tip: Every new piece of content published on a client's site should be connected to at least three existing pages through contextually relevant internal links. Anchor text should reflect the target keyword of the destination page — not just a call to action.
From Audit to Action
A technical SEO audit is not a deliverable — it is a diagnostic process. The value lies not in producing a list of errors but in understanding which issues are suppressing performance most significantly and addressing them in the right sequence.
A technical SEO audit isn't a luxury; it's a diagnostic necessity. At Harper Media Group, we don't just hand agencies a list of errors — we provide a prioritised roadmap to recovery that your team can act on immediately. Don't let technical errors diminish your creativity or hinder your clients' results.
Related Resources
Frequently Asked Questions
Crawl errors, slow page speed, mobile usability failures, broken links, duplicate content, XML sitemap problems, and weak internal linking. In practice, duplicate content and crawlability errors appear most consistently across client portfolios — and are among the fastest to remediate when found early.
Crawl budget affects how often search engines visit and index your pages, which directly impacts rankings and visibility. For large sites, budget wasted on low-value URLs means high-priority pages are crawled less frequently — slowing indexing and suppressing rankings even for pages with strong content.
Slow pages increase bounce rate and reduce conversions — more than half of users leave after three seconds. It also directly affects Core Web Vitals scores, which are confirmed ranking factors. For agencies, it's especially important because it undermines every other service simultaneously: content, paid media, and CRO all depend on a fast foundation.
URL parameters, pagination structures, and faceted navigation filters create similar pages that split ranking signals. Tag and category archives, session ID parameters, and legacy CMS migrations are also frequent sources. The fix is canonical tags — but they require monitoring, as platform updates often override them silently.
Internal linking improves site structure, distributes authority across pages, and helps search engines find and rank key content. Pages with strong internal link coverage get crawled more frequently and receive clearer topical authority signals — both of which directly contribute to ranking performance.
Pam Harper
Founder of Harper Media Group. 20+ years of web development, 12+ years of technical SEO. Specializing in technical SEO, structured data, and AI optimization — delivered white-label for agencies.
About Pam Harper