superfolio.bio
SUPERFOLIO: Put your whole self on one page
1 failed · 5 warnings · 21 passed
Audited Sun, 12 Jul 2026 04:16:01 GMT · https://www.superfolio.bio/
Meta & Head
23.6/25
Title, description, canonical, social tags — what search engines read first.
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.
8 passing checks
- Title tag<title> is "SUPERFOLIO: Put your whole self on one page" (43 characters)
- Meta descriptionMeta description is "Build a one-page portfolio, link hub, digital products page, booking page, or one page with everything you have and everything you are." (135 characters)
- Viewport meta tagViewport is "width=device-width, initial-scale=1"
- Character encoding declaredCharacter encoding is declared
- FaviconA <link rel="icon"> is present
- Open Graph tagsAll core Open Graph tags present (og:title, og:description, og:image, og:url)
- Twitter card tagtwitter:card is "summary_large_image"
- Page allows indexingNo restrictive robots meta tag
Content & Structure
23.4/25
Headings, copy depth, images, structured data, internal linking.
Structured data (JSON-LD)medium impactmedium effort
No JSON-LD structured data blocks found
Structured data makes your listing eligible for rich results — star ratings, FAQs, breadcrumbs, product prices — which occupy more space on the results page and draw more clicks than plain blue links. Add a <script type="application/ld+json"> block with a schema.org type that matches the page: Organization or WebSite for a homepage, Article for posts, Product for product pages. Only mark up content actually visible on the page — markup for invisible content violates Google's guidelines and can earn a manual action.
7 passing checks
- Single H1 heading1 h1 found: "Put your whole self on one page."
- Heading hierarchy19 headings in order without skipped levels
- Word count2876 words of visible text
- Image alt text5 of 5 images have alt text
- HTML lang attribute<html lang="en">
- JavaScript-dependent contentvisible text ~3407 chars in the initial HTML
- Internal linking19 internal, 0 external links
Technical
17.4/25
HTTPS, redirects, robots, sitemap, speed, crawlability.
Fast time to first bytehigh impactmedium effort
11621 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.
Short redirect chainmedium impactlow effort
https://superfolio.bio/ (308) → https://www.superfolio.bio/
Every redirect hop adds a round-trip before the visitor sees anything, each hop can leak a little link equity, and crawlers abandon long chains — which can leave the destination page undiscovered. Trace the chain above and point the first URL directly at the final destination in a single 301; commonly this means merging separate http-to-https and non-www-to-www rules into one combined redirect. Also update internal links to reference the final URL directly, so most visitors never enter the chain at all.
robots.txt present and permissivemedium impactlow effort
no robots.txt found
Without a robots.txt, crawlers assume everything is allowed — not fatal, but you lose the ability to keep them out of low-value areas (internal search results, carts, admin paths) and the standard place to advertise your sitemap. Create a plain-text robots.txt at the site root with at least a "User-agent: *" line and "Sitemap: https://www.example.com/sitemap.xml". Don't use it to hide sensitive URLs, though — the file is public, and disallowing a page doesn't remove it from the index; use noindex or authentication for that.
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.
6 passing checks
- Served over HTTPSfinal URL uses https://
- HTTP redirects to HTTPShttp:// redirects to https://
- No mixed content0 http:// subresource references
- Reasonable HTML size129.6 KB
- Missing pages return 404missing paths return HTTP 404/410
- HTML5 doctype<!DOCTYPE html> present
Performance
Core Web Vitals scoring via Google PageSpeed is coming soon.
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