kicout.shop
Specialist in 12V, 4WD, Caravan, Camping and Outdoors | KickAss Products
1 failed · 7 warnings · 21 passed
Audited Wed, 15 Jul 2026 01:16:04 GMT · https://kicout.shop/
Meta & Head
18.1/25
Title, description, canonical, social tags — what search engines read first.
Title taghigh impactlow effort
<title> is "Specialist in 12V, 4WD, Caravan, Camping and Outdoors | KickAss Products" (72 characters)
Search engines truncate titles past roughly 60 characters and often rewrite very short or vague ones, so the message you wrote may never actually be shown. Rewrite the title to 30–60 characters that lead with the primary keyword and end with your brand, e.g. "Merge PDF Files Online Free | YourBrand". Front-load the important words, since truncation always cuts from the end. Don't pad a short title with repeated keywords just to hit the range — clarity wins clicks, not length.
Meta descriptionhigh impactlow effort
Meta description is "KickAss Products is the premier destination for heavy duty 12V, 4WD, caravan and camping equipment. Exclusive retailer of KickAss Products, designed for the Australian outback." (176 characters)
Search engines truncate descriptions past roughly 160 characters, and very short ones waste the snippet space that persuades searchers to pick your listing over the next one. Rewrite it to 70–160 characters: state what the page offers, work the primary keyword in naturally (matching words get bolded in results), and end with a benefit or call to action. Don't cram in keywords — the description influences clicks, not rankings, so write it for humans.
Canonical URLmedium impactlow effort
No <link rel="canonical"> found
When the same page is reachable at several URLs — tracking parameters, trailing-slash variants, http vs https — search engines may split ranking signals across the duplicates. A canonical tag names the one version that should get all the credit. Add <link rel="canonical" href="https://www.example.com/page/"> to the <head>, pointing at the page's preferred absolute URL. Double-check it's self-referencing on the primary version: a canonical that points at the wrong page can quietly de-index the right one.
Open Graph tagsmedium impactlow effort
Missing Open Graph tags: og:url
Your Open Graph markup is incomplete, so social platforms fall back to guessed text or drop the preview image entirely when this page is shared — a broken card gets far fewer clicks than a complete one. Add the missing og:url tag to <head>. For og:image, use an absolute https:// URL to an image around 1200x630 pixels; relative paths are the usual reason previews break. Re-check with a platform's sharing debugger afterwards, since preview cards are cached.
5 passing checks
- Viewport meta tagViewport is "width=device-width, initial-scale=1"
- Character encoding declaredCharacter encoding is declared
- FaviconA <link rel="icon"> is present
- Twitter card tagtwitter:card is "summary_large_image"
- Page allows indexingNo restrictive robots meta tag
Content & Structure
24.2/25
Headings, copy depth, images, structured data, internal linking.
Heading hierarchylow impactlow effort
Heading level jumps from h2 ("Level Up Your Wardrobe Today") to h4 ("Shop")
Headings form the page's outline; when levels jump (h2 straight to h4), search engines and screen readers get a broken table of contents and the relationship between sections turns ambiguous. Fix the jump by stepping down one level at a time — promote the deeper heading, or add the missing intermediate level. The usual cause is choosing heading tags for their default font size; set sizes in CSS instead and let the tags reflect actual document structure.
7 passing checks
- Single H1 heading1 h1 found: "Conquer The Outback In Style"
- Word count4148 words of visible text
- Image alt text17 of 17 images have alt text
- Structured data (JSON-LD)JSON-LD types found: WebSite
- HTML lang attribute<html lang="en">
- JavaScript-dependent contentvisible text ~1960 chars in the initial HTML
- Internal linking36 internal, 0 external links
Technical
19.9/25
HTTPS, redirects, robots, sitemap, speed, crawlability.
Fast time to first bytehigh impactmedium effort
1532 ms
Time to first byte is the floor under every other speed metric — the browser can't parse, render, or fetch anything until the first byte arrives, so a slow TTFB drags down all Core Web Vitals and tests crawlers' patience. Add caching in front of the origin: full-page caching at a CDN (Cloudflare, Fastly) helps most, followed by server-side caches (Redis, object caching) and indexes on slow database queries. Measure from locations near your actual users — tuning only your fastest region leaves distant visitors just as slow.
HTTP redirects to HTTPSmedium impactlow effort
http:// version serves content without redirecting
Your http:// URLs serve content instead of redirecting, so search engines can crawl and index two parallel copies of every page and split ranking signals between them. Add a permanent 301 redirect from http to https at the server or CDN level — in nginx, "return 301 https://$host$request_uri;" in the port-80 server block; in Apache, a RewriteRule in .htaccess; on Cloudflare, enable "Always Use HTTPS". Use a 301, not a 302 — temporary redirects don't consolidate ranking signals — and preserve the full path in the redirect target.
Response compression enabledlow impactlow effort
no content-encoding header
This HTML is served uncompressed, so every visitor downloads far more bytes than necessary — text compresses extremely well, and the savings directly speed up first render on slow connections. Enable Brotli or gzip on your server or CDN: in nginx it's "gzip on;" (or the brotli module), in Apache it's mod_deflate via .htaccess, and on most CDNs it's a single toggle. Make sure compression covers all text types (HTML, CSS, JS, JSON, SVG), but skip already-compressed images — recompressing them wastes CPU for no gain.
9 passing checks
- Served over HTTPSfinal URL uses https://
- No mixed content0 http:// subresource references
- Short redirect chainno redirects; URL resolves directly
- robots.txt present and permissiverobots.txt exists and allows crawling
- XML sitemap availablesitemap.xml exists and is valid XML
- Reasonable HTML size287.7 KB
- Missing pages return 404missing paths return HTTP 404/410
- www and non-www resolve consistentlywww and non-www converge on the same host
- HTML5 doctype<!DOCTYPE html> present
Performance
Core Web Vitals scoring via Google PageSpeed is coming soon.
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