One Prompt That Runs a Full Enterprise SEO Audit

TL;DR: A prompt from Reddit assigns your AI 14 SEO specialist roles and runs a complete, prioritized website audit covering technical, semantic, on-page, schema, Core Web Vitals, E-E-A-T, and competitor gaps, all in one shot.

What’s the Prompt?

It starts by assembling an SEO task force inside your AI. We’re talking Senior Technical SEO Specialist, Core Web Vitals Engineer, E-E-A-T Analyst, JavaScript Rendering Expert, Competitor Intelligence Analyst, 14 roles operating in parallel on your site. Each role brings a specific frame to the analysis. The JavaScript Rendering Expert looks at your site from a bot’s perspective, checking whether Googlebot can even see your content the way a browser would. The Competitor Intelligence Analyst isn’t just listing rivals. It’s mapping where they rank, what content they’ve built, and where you have a real opening to take ground. The output: a full CSV audit with every issue flagged, severity scored, and exact fix included. Not a vague list of recommendations. Specific problems, specific pages, specific code you can act on the same day.

What It Audits

Ten areas, no shortcuts:

  • 🔍 Technical SEO: crawl depth, redirects, 404s, robots.txt, JS rendering, mobile usability
  • Semantic SEO: entity coverage, topical authority, search intent alignment, content gaps
  • On-page: title tags, heading structure, keyword cannibalization, content freshness
  • Schema markup: JSON-LD quality, rich result eligibility, missing structured data
  • ⚡ Core Web Vitals: LCP, CLS, INP, render-blocking resources, image optimization
  • E-E-A-T: expertise signals, author transparency, citation quality, trust indicators
  • Competitor analysis: 3-4 competitors, SERP strategies, content gaps, topic clusters
  • Prioritized fixes: severity ratings (Critical / High / Medium / Low) with exact code examples

A few of these are worth slowing down on. Semantic SEO is where most content teams leave the most points on the table. It’s not about keyword density anymore. It’s about whether your content covers a topic deeply enough that Google treats you as an authority on it. If your competitor has 40 pieces covering every angle of a subject and you have 3, you’re losing on topical authority before the page even loads. The E-E-A-T section catches things most crawlers ignore entirely. Does your author page exist? Do you cite sources? Is it clear who wrote the piece and why they’re qualified? These signals matter more than ever after Google’s Helpful Content updates, and they almost never get flagged by standard tools like Ahrefs or Semrush.

Why Role-Stacking Works

Generic SEO prompts get generic answers. This one doesn’t. Assigning 14 specialist roles forces the AI to switch lenses. The Technical Specialist catches crawl budget issues the Content Strategist would never notice. The E-E-A-T Analyst spots trust signal gaps the Performance Engineer would skip. Think about how this plays out in practice. If you ask “audit my site for SEO,” the AI gives you a checklist. The same checklist you’d find on any beginner SEO blog. But when you assign a Core Web Vitals Engineer specifically, the analysis shifts to render-blocking scripts, third-party tag load times, and whether your hero image is properly sized for mobile. That’s a fundamentally different output from a completely different angle. The more constrained and defined the role, the more the AI stays in that lane and goes deeper instead of staying surface-level. More specificity in, more useful output. That’s the whole principle.

Use Cases

Best for:

  • Founders who want an honest audit before hiring an agency
  • Marketers who need a baseline to track SEO progress over time
  • Content teams identifying topical gaps before planning new articles
  • Dev teams doing a technical health check before a site relaunch

The agency angle is worth expanding on. Most SEO agencies run this same kind of audit as part of their onboarding process, then charge you for the time. Running it yourself first doesn’t mean you don’t need an agency. It means you walk into that relationship knowing what the real issues are, so you can tell the difference between an agency that’s done their homework and one handing you a recycled slide deck. For content teams, the topical gap analysis alone is worth the setup time. Feed in your site plus two or three competitors, and you’ll get a clear picture of which subtopics they’re covering that you’re missing entirely. That’s an editorial calendar built from competitive data, not gut feel.

Prompt of the Day

The core instruction driving the audit:

“You are an elite enterprise-level SEO task force… Perform a complete enterprise-level SEO audit of the provided website by automatically crawling all accessible pages and generating a highly detailed, organized, actionable SEO audit in CSV spreadsheet format.”

One thing worth knowing: the AI can’t literally crawl your site. What it can do is analyze data you paste in. Pair this with a free Screaming Frog crawl (free tier covers 500 URLs), export the data, feed it into the prompt. That combination gets you close to real agency-level output without the invoice. If 500 URLs doesn’t cover your full site, prioritize your money pages and highest-traffic sections first. You can also pull in Google Search Console data. Export your top queries, your coverage report, and your Core Web Vitals report, then paste all of it alongside the Screaming Frog export. That gives the AI enough signal to do serious work.

Try It

Start with your 10 most important pages if you want quick wins. Run the full site if you want the real picture. The Critical and High severity issues it surfaces in the first pass are usually enough to justify the setup time. Fix those before touching anything Medium or Low. Most sites have two or three technical issues killing their rankings that never get flagged because nobody ran a proper audit in the first place. When you get the CSV output, sort by severity, pick the top five Critical items, and put them in a doc with assigned owners. That’s the move. Most SEO audits die in a spreadsheet because there’s no clear next step. Treat the CSV as a project backlog, not a report, and the work actually gets done.

Complete website SEO audit prompt
by u/govindkashyap01 in ChatGPTPromptGenius

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