Automatically track your competitors
them manually Import or add your project into
Site Audit When your crawl is complete, you’ll see the Overview report, which will show you a high-level overview of all technical and on-page issues Ahrefs found on your site. Overview report for Site Audit, after your crawl is done If your main goal is to keep your site in good technical health, then all you need to do is work on fixing the issues we found when crawling your site. To do that, head to the All issues report. The All Issues report in Site Audit, where you can see all your site’s technical and on page SEO issues You can prioritize by working on the red ones first, which represent errors. Then, work on the yellow ones (warnings) and the blue ones (notices). To see the affected URLs, click on the number in the
corresponding row: Click on the number in the
Crawled column to see affected URLs There’s more to Site Audit than maintaining your site’s technical health, though. Here are some more use cases (that are not technical SEO): 12. Find all affiliate links on a website Let’s say you own a recipe blog that mostly makes money from Amazon affiliate links. However, you recently joined a new affiliate program with higher payouts than Amazon. Now, you need
to swap out the Amazon links for your
affiliate ones. But rather than doing a sitewide change, you want to test the new affiliate links on a few pages to get a sample size for conversion rates. Here’s how you can do this with Site Audit (after running a crawl): Go to Page Explorer Hit Advanced filter Create a rule to find URLs that have an external link containing amzn.to (Amazon’s short link). Set an Organic traffic filter to show pages that get at least 1,000 monthly organic visits Setting up advanced filters to find Amazon affiliate links Hit ‘Apply,’ and you’ll see 51 pages that match these filters: 51 results matches the filter we set in Page Explorer You can
pick from these pages to replace the Amazon
links. 13. Find internal linking Maldives Email List opportunities The Internal Link Opportunities report shows you internal linking opportunities based on keywords your pages rank for. Specifically, it shows: The page we recommend you link from The keyword that’s mentioned on the source page (also the keyword that the target page ranks for) The page we recommend you link to The internal link opportunities report for Ahrefs For example, let’s say we want to add internal links to our blog post on keyword research. In the report, we can set a Target page filter and paste the URL to our keyword research guide. Searching for a
page to internally link to using the Target page filter
We now have over 200 potential pages we can link from. FURTHER READING Internal Links for SEO: An Actionable Guide Rank Tracker Rank Tracker lets you monitor your Google rankings over time. You can track rankings from any country, city, zip, or postal code. On top of that, you can segment your keywords using tags and track your performance against your competitors. In the Rank Tracker Overview, you can see charts that give you a nice visualization of various categories like share of voice, average position, traffic, SERP features, and positions. And these graphs are affected by the filters you set. Rank Tracker overview Below these groups is the data table where you’ll see ranking, keyword, and traffic data for each tracked keyword. Ranking position, search volume, traffic, keyword difficulty, SERP
features, and more for your tracked keywords
via Rank Tracker A cool Bark can be a useful tool for B2B lead generation feature in Rank Tracker is that we keep track of your competitors too: 14. ’ rankings Go to the Competitors overview report and you’ll see the same data, plus how your competitors are performing for every keyword. Competitors overview in Rank Tracker Even if you didn’t add any tracked competitors to your project, you can still get competitor insights by going to the Competitors traffic share report. Competitors traffic share report in Rank Tracker This report shows you all your organic search competitors for your tracked keywords. If you look at the Pages tab, you can see the exact pages you’re competing with in organic search. If you go to the