Audits, Reporting & Analytics

Know Exactly What's Working, What's Not, and Where to Focus Next

Too many businesses spend money on marketing without knowing if it’s working. This service gives full transparency — comprehensive SEO audits that uncover hidden issues, clear monthly reporting tied to real outcomes, and analytics setup that tracks what actually matters to the business.

Audit Coverage

200+

Data points checked across every audit

Reporting

Monthly

Clear, jargon-free reports

Tracking

Real-Time

Rankings, traffic, conversions

The Visibility Gap

Most Businesses Have No Idea How Their Website Is Actually Performing

A business owner knows their website exists. They might even know roughly how much traffic it gets. But when asked specific questions — which pages drive the most leads? Are rankings going up or down? Where is the money being wasted? — most can’t answer.

This isn’t their fault. SEO data is scattered across multiple platforms, reports from agencies are often filled with jargon and vanity metrics, and the tools themselves are designed for specialists, not business owners.

The result? Decisions get made based on gut feeling instead of data. Money gets spent on marketing with no clear picture of ROI. And problems that could be fixed — pages not indexed, content that’s cannibalizing itself, technical issues silently killing rankings — go unnoticed for months or years.

This service solves that by providing a complete, transparent view of what’s happening — and exactly what to do about it.

"I don't know if SEO is actually working"

No clear connection between the money spent on marketing and the results the business is seeing.

"I get reports but don't understand them"

Reports full of technical metrics with no explanation of what they mean for the business.

"I don't know what's broken on my site"

Technical issues, missing pages, slow load times, and SEO errors going undetected and unfixed.

"We're guessing where to focus next"

No prioritized roadmap — just trying things and hoping something moves the needle.

"We're spending but can't prove ROI"

Marketing budget being allocated without any tracking to show what’s generating returns.

Three Connected Services

Audits, Reporting & Analytics — How They Work Together

Each component serves a different purpose, but together they form a complete system for understanding and improving the website’s performance.

SEO Audits

Find the Problems

A deep diagnostic that uncovers every technical, on-page, and content issue affecting the website’s search performance. The foundation for any improvement plan.

Monthly Reporting

Track the Progress

Clear, jargon-free monthly reports that show what changed, why it matters, and what’s planned next. Designed for business owners, not SEO specialists.

Analytics Setup

Measure What Matters

Proper tracking configuration so every important action — calls, form submissions, purchases, page views — is captured, attributed, and reportable.

Reporting That Makes Sense

What a Monthly SEO Report Actually Looks Like

Every report starts with an executive summary — a plain-language paragraph that tells the business owner exactly what happened, what it means, and what’s coming next. No jargon, no filler, no 30-page PDFs stuffed with charts nobody reads.

Below the summary, the report covers the metrics that actually matter — organic traffic trends, keyword ranking changes, which pages are driving results, conversion data, and a clear summary of the work completed that month.

Every metric is explained in context: not just “traffic went up 12%” but “traffic went up 12% because the blog post we published last month is now ranking on page 1 for [keyword] and driving 340 new visits.”

The report closes with next month’s priorities — what’s planned, why it was chosen, and what the expected impact is. So the client always knows what’s happening and why.

Organic Sessions

4,280

↑ 23% vs last month

Driven by new service page rankings and blog content

Keywords in Top 10

34

↑ 8 new this month

Including 3 service-area terms now on page 1

Leads from Organic

47

↑ 31% vs last month

Contact form submissions + tracked phone calls

Site Health Score

94/100

Stable — no new issues detected

All technical fixes from last month holding

The Process

How Auditing, Reporting & Analytics Setup Works

A structured approach that starts with understanding the full picture and builds a measurement system that runs continuously.

1

Comprehensive SEO Audit

The engagement starts with a full audit — a deep diagnostic covering every technical, on-page, content, and competitive factor affecting the site’s search performance. Nothing is assumed. Everything is verified.

2

Analytics & Tracking Setup

Before any optimization work begins, proper tracking is configured so every action — every form submission, phone call, purchase, and engagement signal — is captured and attributable.

3

Prioritized Action Plan

The audit findings are organized into a prioritized roadmap — categorized by impact and effort. Critical issues come first, followed by high-value opportunities, then incremental improvements.

4

Ongoing Reporting & Monitoring

Once the foundation is in place, monthly reporting begins — tracking progress, surfacing new issues, and keeping the strategy aligned with what the data says is working.

Frequently Asked

Questions About SEO Audits, Reporting & Analytics

Free SEO scans check a handful of surface-level metrics — page speed, meta tag presence, maybe a few broken links. A real audit crawls the entire site, analyzes hundreds of data points, cross-references multiple tools, and includes manual review by someone who understands how all the pieces connect. It covers technical health, on-page optimization, content quality, backlink profile, competitive positioning, and site architecture — then prioritizes everything by impact. Free scans tell you there’s a problem. A real audit tells you exactly what’s wrong, how much it matters, and what to do about it.

A comprehensive audit should be done at least once a year — or any time there’s a significant change to the website (redesign, migration, major content overhaul). For businesses actively investing in SEO, quarterly mini-audits focused on technical health and new issues are recommended alongside monthly reporting to catch problems early.

Every report includes an executive summary in plain language, organic traffic trends (month-over-month and year-over-year), keyword ranking movement, top-performing pages, conversion data (form submissions, calls, purchases), a summary of work completed, and next month’s priorities with reasoning. The format is consistent so trends are easy to spot over time.

Not necessarily. If Google Analytics is already in place, the first step is auditing the existing configuration to make sure it’s tracking correctly. If it’s not set up, or if the site is still on the older Universal Analytics (which has been sunset), full GA4 setup and configuration is included in the service. Proper tracking needs to be in place before meaningful reporting can begin.

Yes. Independent audits are a common project type — a business wants a second opinion on how their site is performing and whether their current provider is delivering results. The audit is objective, data-driven, and delivered directly to the business owner. It’s not about criticizing the existing agency — it’s about giving the client a clear, unbiased picture of where things stand.

The audit delivers a prioritized action plan — every issue categorized by impact and effort, with specific recommendations for how to fix each one. From there, the client can either implement the fixes in-house, work with their existing developer or agency, or engage Juls Web Solution to handle the implementation directly. The audit is useful regardless of who does the work.

Google Analytics shows raw data — sessions, page views, bounce rates. The reporting service interprets that data in the context of the business and the SEO strategy. It connects traffic changes to specific actions, explains why numbers moved, identifies patterns that raw data doesn’t reveal, and provides actionable next steps. It’s the difference between having a dashboard and having someone who explains what the dashboard means and what to do about it.

Both. A one-time audit is valuable on its own — it gives a complete snapshot of where the site stands and what needs fixing. Monthly reporting works best when paired with active SEO work (so there’s progress to report on), but it’s also useful for businesses managing SEO in-house who need a professional to interpret their data and keep them accountable. Analytics setup is a standalone project that benefits any business regardless of what other services they use.

Ready to See What's Really Happening With the Website?

Start with a free SEO audit — a clear, comprehensive look at the site’s technical health, search performance, and the specific opportunities that are being left on the table.

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