Site Readiness Scan

How ready is your site for AI?

Three things decide it. Whether AI can read your site and find you. Whether the site can drive its own SEO and content. And whether it could be a surface you build on, not a brochure you keep patching. Enter a URL and I'll read yours.

Free. One read per site. Reads the page you enter plus your sitemap, in about half a minute. The Read walks the whole site.

What the scan looks at

Four lenses, applied to your actual site.

  • Can AI read it? Whether the structure, the markup, and the meta tags make sense to a machine, and whether your real content is in the page or hidden behind code an agent never runs.
  • Can it drive its own SEO and content? Whether there's a real content layer underneath or just a brochure, and whether that content could be templated and extended instead of hand-built one page at a time.
  • Could it be a surface you build on? How much of the site is reusable parts versus one-off pages: whether you could spin up landing pages and variations fast, or whether everything is brittle and bespoke.
  • The opportunity. The one or two highest-leverage moves for your site, named in plain language. What's worth doing, not a forty-step plan.

What you get

A score for each lens and a short, specific read, written about your site, not a checklist anyone could run. This is what lands in your inbox:

Your Site Readiness Scan: yoursite.com — 72/100

Shane Gring <[email protected]>
to you
just now
Shane Gring Site Readiness Scan

Overall readiness of yoursite.com

72 /100

Can AI read it?

84

The basics are covered: one H1, clean heading order, full alt coverage, and a real llms.txt. Schema is thin — Organization only, nothing that names what you actually sell. AI agents can read the page; they just won't learn much from it.

Can it drive its own SEO and content?

41

Your sitemap lists 214 URLs, but the homepage surfaces almost none of them. The content exists — it's hidden. Nothing here earns a ranking on the search someone types before they know your name.

Where to start

Surface the content you already have

The pages exist; the homepage just never points at them. Internal links and one honest hub page would change what both search engines and AI agents can find.

Read the guide: Your site needs a content layer, not more blog posts →

An example. Yours is written about your site — all four lenses, scored, with the moves ranked. It renders here on the page too.

The scan is the first look. If the read points somewhere worth going, the detailed “here's what I'd actually do” is the next conversation, not the auto-scan.