Most websites accumulate content the way attics accumulate boxes. Pages get published, campaigns end, products change, and nobody goes back to evaluate what is still working. The result is a sprawling collection of outdated blog posts, duplicate landing pages, thin product descriptions, and orphan pages that no one can find.
A content audit fixes this. It is a systematic review of every piece of content on your site, evaluating each page against clear criteria and deciding what to keep, improve, consolidate, or remove. Done well, a content audit surfaces your highest-leverage opportunities and gives you a prioritized roadmap for improving site quality.
This guide walks through the complete process, from building your inventory to acting on the results.
When to Run a Content Audit
Not every situation calls for a full audit, but several common triggers make the investment worthwhile:
- Traffic is declining and you suspect content quality or relevance is a factor.
- You are planning a redesign or migration and need to decide what moves to the new site.
- Your site has grown past the point where anyone has a complete picture of what exists.
- Multiple teams publish content and consistency has drifted over time.
- You want to improve SEO performance by consolidating thin pages and strengthening topical authority.
If any of these apply, a content audit will pay for itself many times over.
Step 1: Build Your Content Inventory
Before you can evaluate content, you need a complete list of what you have. This is your content inventory, a database of every URL on your site along with key metadata.
What to Capture
For each page, collect:
- URL and page title
- Content type (blog post, product page, landing page, support article, etc.)
- Word count
- Last modified date
- Meta description (present or missing)
- H1 tag (present, missing, or duplicate)
- Internal links in and out (how connected is the page)
- Organic traffic (sessions over the last 90 days from GA4)
- Search impressions and clicks (from Google Search Console)
- Bounce rate or engagement rate
How to Build It
Manually compiling this data from a sitemap XML is tedious and error-prone. A site crawl is the most reliable method. Crawling tools visit every page, follow every link, and capture metadata automatically. The best ones let you overlay analytics data so you can see performance alongside structural information.
The goal is a single source of truth: one row per URL with both content attributes and performance metrics side by side.
Step 2: Define Your Scoring Criteria
Raw data is not actionable on its own. You need a scoring framework that translates page attributes into a quality assessment.
The Four-Dimension Framework
Score each page across four dimensions on a simple scale (1 to 5 or pass/fail):
- Relevance: Does this content still align with your business goals and audience needs? Has the topic, product, or offering it describes changed?
- Quality: Is the writing clear, accurate, and thorough? Does it meet current editorial standards? Is it well-formatted with headings, lists, and visuals?
- Performance: Is the page generating traffic, engagement, or conversions? What does the analytics data show?
- SEO Health: Does the page have proper metadata, a unique H1, sufficient internal links, and no technical issues like broken images or slow load times?
Weighted Scoring
Not all dimensions matter equally for every site. An e-commerce site might weight performance and SEO health higher. A B2B SaaS company might prioritize relevance and quality. Define your weights before you start scoring so the results reflect your actual priorities.
Automated vs. Manual Scoring
Some criteria can be scored automatically. Word count, metadata presence, traffic data, and link counts are all objective and measurable. Quality and relevance typically require human judgment, but you can speed up the process by flagging pages that fail automated checks for manual review first.
Step 3: Categorize Every Page
Once scored, assign each page to one of four action categories:
Keep
The page is performing well, the content is current, and it meets quality standards. No action needed beyond periodic review.
Improve
The page has value but needs work. Common improvements include:
- Updating outdated statistics, screenshots, or references
- Expanding thin content to be more comprehensive
- Adding internal links to and from related pages
- Fixing missing or poor metadata
- Improving readability with better formatting
Consolidate
Multiple pages cover the same topic or target the same keywords. Consolidation means merging them into a single, stronger page and redirecting the old URLs. This is one of the highest-impact actions in a content audit because it eliminates keyword cannibalization and concentrates link equity.
Remove
The page is irrelevant, outdated beyond repair, or so low-quality that improving it is not worth the effort. Remove it from the site and set up a redirect to the most relevant remaining page (or return a 410 if no relevant page exists).
Step 4: Prioritize Your Actions
You will almost certainly end up with more improvement tasks than you can tackle at once. Prioritize using an impact-effort matrix:
- High impact, low effort: Fix metadata, add internal links, update dates and statistics. Do these first.
- High impact, high effort: Rewrite major pages, consolidate content clusters, create new cornerstone content. Schedule these as projects.
- Low impact, low effort: Minor formatting fixes, image optimization. Batch these for a maintenance sprint.
- Low impact, high effort: Deprioritize or skip entirely.
Quick Wins to Look For
- Pages ranking on page two of Google that could reach page one with modest improvements
- High-traffic pages with no internal links to related content (missed conversion opportunities)
- Pages with strong backlink profiles but outdated content (update to recapture value)
- Near-duplicate pages that can be consolidated to eliminate cannibalization
Step 5: Execute and Track
A content audit is only as valuable as the actions it produces. Turn your prioritized list into a project plan with owners, deadlines, and success metrics.
Track Changes
For every page you modify, record:
- What changed and when
- The page's baseline metrics before the change
- A review date to measure impact (typically 30 to 90 days post-change)
Measure Results
After executing your improvement plan, compare before-and-after metrics:
- Organic traffic: Did sessions increase for improved pages?
- Search rankings: Did consolidated pages gain position?
- Engagement: Did bounce rate decrease or time on page increase?
- Crawl efficiency: Did removing low-value pages improve crawl budget allocation?
- Conversions: Did improved content drive more goal completions?
Making Content Audits Repeatable
A one-time audit delivers results, but the real value comes from making it a recurring practice. Sites that audit quarterly catch problems early, maintain content quality standards, and make better decisions about what to publish next.
Build a Sustainable Cadence
- Monthly: Review newly published content against scoring criteria before it goes live.
- Quarterly: Run a lightweight audit focused on performance changes, new orphan pages, and content freshness.
- Annually: Conduct a full audit with complete rescoring and strategic planning.
Reduce the Manual Work
The biggest barrier to regular audits is the time they take. Automating the inventory and scoring steps, crawling the site, pulling analytics data, and flagging pages that fail objective criteria, cuts the effort dramatically. Your team can then focus their time on the judgment calls that actually require human expertise.
Get a Clear Picture of Your Content
The hardest part of any content audit is assembling the data. When your content inventory lives in one spreadsheet, your analytics in another, and your crawl data in a third, just getting to the starting line takes days.
Evergreen collapses that setup into a single step. Crawl your site to build a complete content inventory, then layer in your GA4 and Google Search Console data to see performance alongside every page's metadata and structural position. Score pages, spot orphans, identify consolidation opportunities, and track improvements over time, all from one dashboard.
If your site has outgrown anyone's ability to keep track of what is on it, start with a crawl and let the data show you where the biggest opportunities are hiding.
