The FAQ block text is the combined text of the questions and answers shown in a page’s FAQ section, where one exists. This is a useful content monitoring field because FAQ content often supports long-tail relevance, addresses user objections, and contributes important explanatory detail that may not appear elsewhere on the page. That makes it […]
First 500 chars of main content
The first 500 characters of main content is a normalised preview of the opening section of a page’s extracted main content. It is a practical monitoring field because it gives you a quick, human-readable view of how the page begins without needing to inspect the full body content every time. This is especially useful in […]
Content paragraph count
Content paragraph count measures how many paragraphs appear in a page’s extracted main content. It is a useful structural signal because it helps you spot changes in how the page’s core content is organised, not just how much text it contains. This can be helpful when monitoring editorial pages, landing pages, product pages, and guides, […]
Content word count
Content word count measures the number of words in a page’s extracted main content. It is a useful monitoring field because large changes in word count often point to meaningful edits, content removal, or rendering problems that affect what users and search engines actually see. This is especially helpful for spotting content thinning or accidental […]
Meta description
The meta description is the text set in a page’s meta description tag. It does not usually act as a direct ranking signal, but it is still an important search-facing element because it can influence how the page is presented in search results and how likely users are to click. That makes it a valuable […]
Title length
Title length measures the number of characters in a page’s <title> tag. On its own, this is not usually a core SEO signal, but it is a useful helper field because sudden length changes often reveal that the title text itself has been edited, truncated, templated differently, or replaced. That makes it a practical monitoring […]
Title tag
The title tag is the text shown in a page’s HTML <title> element. It is one of the most important on-page signals for both search engines and users because it helps describe what the page is about and often appears as the main clickable headline in search results. That makes it a high-value text field […]
Canonical conflict flag
The canonical conflict flag shows whether a page is sending mixed canonical signals across different sources, such as HTML canonicals, HTTP header canonicals, redirects, or internal references. This is a useful summary field because canonical problems are often not caused by one signal alone, but by disagreement between several. That disagreement matters because search engines […]
Canonical target indexability
The canonical target indexability check shows whether the URL named in a page’s canonical tag is itself indexable. This is a useful quality check because a canonical signal is much stronger when it points to a page that search engines can actually index. A canonical tag may look technically correct on the source page, but […]
Robots.txt allowed for images
The robots.txt allowed for images check shows whether the key images used by a page can be crawled under the site’s robots.txt rules. This is especially relevant on media-rich pages, where images play an important part in content quality, search visibility, and how the page is understood. This is not usually as critical as blocking […]
