Sometimes as a business owner learning SEO, you need to crawl your website to understand where your largest areas of improvement lie, how the search engines are accessing your site, or to identify gaps in your content by crawling a competitor’s site. While crawling and auditing your log files is just one of many tactics used by businesses and professional SEOs to understand their sites, it’s an important one that no good SEO program can go without.
To that end, we’ve compiled five great website crawling and auditing tools that you should investigate using to improve your website’s organic traffic from SEO.
ScreamingFrog
Screaming Frog is most likely the most popular SEO website crawling and auditing tool available online. Built by the team at Screaming Frog, an agency based in the UK, this SEO spider runs off your own machine and can be very powerful when used with custom filters. You can crawl as different user agents, exclude or include robots.txt, and so much more. In fact, SEER Interactive wrote a phenomenal guide to it. Other great writeups on it exist such as How To Run Screaming Frog on AWS by iPullRank and Screaming Frog Indexing Tips and Tricks over on Authority Labs.
Visit: http://www.screamingfrog.co.uk/seo-spider/
Botify
Botify is a relatively new tool on the market. Different from ScreamingFrog, it is a subscription based model that gets you access to their Saas (Software As A Service) tool that crawls your site from the cloud (aka not on your personal machine, so you can do other things as your crawl happens) and gives you indepth reports with clear actions to take next on your site.
Visit: https://www.botify.com/
DeepCrawl
DeepCrawl is our enterprise crawling tool of choice. While it is more expensive than the above two mentioned SEO crawling tools, DeepCrawl goes deep into your site and provides you the recommendations you need to help you prioritize your technical SEO fixes for your site. Pricing is based on the number of pages you crawl each month and can be dialed up and down as needed. I’ve used this on sites with 10 million+ pages and it worked a charm and took our site’s SEO to the next level. Highly recommended.
Visit: https://www.deepcrawl.com/
Splunk
Splunk is actually an IT and server admin tool, but it can be very powerful when applied to your log files for SEO. Using Splunk, you can identify how the search engines are actually crawling your website and make optimizations from that data. It’s not a cheap tool when used for the full power, though there is a free version that can get you started. If you are working on any level of enterprise website, though, it could be worth your money. A great post was written here on Moz about using it for Technical SEO.
Visit: http://www.splunk.com/
Moz
If you’re in the SEO world, you know Moz. They have the popular Moz blog and put on their annual Mozcon conference (one of the best conferences each year in the digital marketing world, in my opinion). Their Pro subscription allows you to set up not only rank tracking and other diagnostics for your site and some competitors, but it also gives you a weekly crawl of your site, delivered to your inbox, that shows you the issues they found on your site so you can prioritize the fixes.
Visit: https://moz.com/products/pro
These are the tools that we’ve used and recommend, but there are others such as OnPage.org and URL Profiler that could have been mentioned. What’s your tool of choice for crawling and auditing your website for SEO purposes?
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