Seo scan my site

What this page covers
Seo scan my site
Scan your site with Radar and turn every crawl into a clear story: screenshot, findings, fixes, rescan. See how your structure looks for search and AI, then decide what to improve next.
Use the same simple pattern across your team so everyone can read scan results the same way and act on them faster, without heavy reports or complex dashboards.
In brief
- Use Radar to turn a raw SEO scan into a simple narrative: screenshot of the issue, key findings, proposed fixes, then a follow-up rescan to confirm changes.
- Share these scan stories inside your team so product, content, and engineering can align on what was found, what was fixed, and what still needs attention.
- Repeat the same scan pattern over time to track how your site structure evolves for search and AI, instead of treating SEO checks as one-off events.
What to do
When you scan your site with Radar, you are not just collecting technical data. You are building a repeatable scan story: start from a screenshot of the affected area, capture the main findings, agree on a short list of fixes, and then rescan to see what changed. This keeps SEO work concrete and visible for everyone involved.
Radar focuses on site structure diagnostics for search and AI, helping you see how your pages connect and how that structure might be interpreted. It is not a ranking guarantee and it does not promise specific positions in search results. Instead, it gives you a clearer view of your current state so you can make better decisions about content, navigation, and internal links.
You can reuse the same scan story pattern across your organisation: screenshot, three findings, three fixes, rescan. This lightweight loop makes it easier to document what you learned from each scan, communicate it to stakeholders, and build a history of improvements over time, without drowning in long, one-off audit documents.
What to keep in mind
This page is for people who want to “SEO scan my site” and then actually act on the results, not just collect another audit file. Radar is designed around scan stories, where each scan leads to a small, documented improvement cycle: screenshot, findings, fixes, rescan.
There are clear limits to what Radar does. It is not a ranking guarantee and it cannot promise traffic or revenue outcomes. Radar does not scan sites that sit behind logins, paywalls, strict access controls, or aggressive bot protection. In those cases, when automated discovery is blocked, it can instead visualise a URL snapshot that you provide via JSON import.
Because of these boundaries, Radar fits best when you can crawl at least part of your public site and want to understand its structure for search and AI. If you need deep analysis of fully closed systems or a tool that guarantees positions in search results, this approach will not be the right match.
