Measurement

How to run a GEO content audit

By Abhijay Tondak, Founder · Updated June 30, 2026 · 7 min read

The short answer

A GEO content audit is a systematic review of your existing pages that scores each one for citation-readiness — does it answer a real question, lead with a self-contained claim, use extractable structure, ground its claims in verifiable evidence, and stay fresh? The output is a prioritized list of fix, refresh, consolidate, or retire actions, so you improve the content you already have before writing anything new.

Key takeaways

  • Audit before you write — fixing an existing page that already has authority often beats a new one.
  • Score each page on five axes: answer clarity, structure, evidence, freshness, and intent match.
  • Group outcomes into four actions: fix, refresh, consolidate, or retire.
  • Thin and duplicate pages dilute authority — consolidating them can lift the whole cluster.
  • Re-audit on a cadence; content decays and engines move, so citation-readiness isn't permanent.

Why audit before creating

New content is expensive and starts from zero authority. Many of your existing pages already rank, already get crawled, and already have links — they just aren't built to be cited. Re-optimizing one of those for GEO is often higher-ROI than a brand-new page, because you're adding citability on top of authority you already earned. An audit tells you which pages those are.

It also surfaces the drag on your library: thin pages, near-duplicates, and stale content that pull down trust and split authority across competing URLs. Cleaning those up can lift the pages you keep.

Build the inventory

Start with a complete list of indexable URLs — from your sitemap, your CMS, and a crawl. For each, capture the target question, current organic and AI-referral signals, last-updated date, and word count. You don't need a fancy tool to start; a spreadsheet with one row per page is enough to see the shape of your library.

Score each page on five axes

Rate every page (a simple 0–2 is fine) on the things that decide citation:

  • Answer clarity: is there a direct, self-contained answer near the top?
  • Structure: descriptive headings, short paragraphs, lists/tables, an FAQ block?
  • Evidence: specific, verifiable, sourced claims — no fabricated stats?
  • Freshness: is time-sensitive information current?
  • Intent match: does it answer the exact question users ask, or just touch the topic?

Turn scores into four actions

Every page lands in one bucket:

  • Fix: good topic and authority, weak execution — add the answer-first lead, structure, schema.
  • Refresh: solid page that's gone stale — update facts, dates, and examples.
  • Consolidate: several thin or overlapping pages — merge into one strong page and redirect.
  • Retire: low-value, off-strategy, or unsalvageable — remove or noindex to stop diluting authority.

Prioritize and re-audit

Sequence the work by impact: pages close to being cited (high authority, weak execution) first, then high-intent commercial pages, then the cleanup. Don't try to fix everything at once. And put a re-audit on the calendar — quarterly for most libraries — because freshness decays and engines change what they reward. An audit is a habit, not a project. Pair it with citation tracking so you can see the audit move the needle.

Frequently asked questions

How is this different from auditing my AI visibility?

Visibility auditing looks outward — which engines cite you and for what. A content audit looks inward — scoring your pages for citation-readiness. They're complementary: visibility tells you the gaps, the content audit tells you which pages to fix to close them.

How often should I run a content audit?

Quarterly is a good default for an active library; at minimum, twice a year. Time-sensitive content (pricing, 'best of 2026', regulatory) needs more frequent freshness checks.

Will consolidating pages hurt my rankings?

Done right — merging thin/overlapping pages into one strong page and 301-redirecting the old URLs — it usually helps, because you concentrate authority and stop competing with yourself. Map redirects carefully so you don't lose equity.

Do I need a tool to run a GEO content audit?

No to start — a spreadsheet with one row per page and the five-axis score works. Tools help at scale (crawling, citation tracking, surfacing decay), but the judgment is the valuable part.

Put this into practice — free.

Get your free AI-visibility audit and see where engines find you today.

Free audit · public pages only · no credit card

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