willengineer.online
Will Engineer — Technical Advisory, Product Development & AI Systems
0 failed · 6 warnings · 23 passed
Audited Tue, 14 Jul 2026 04:00:49 GMT · https://willengineer.online/
Meta & Head
19.4/25
Title, description, canonical, social tags — what search engines read first.
Title taghigh impactlow effort
<title> is "Will Engineer — Technical Advisory, Product Development & AI Systems" (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 "Technical partner for companies building, evolving, and scaling digital products. Software architecture, AI integration, code review, loop engineering, and production-ready solutions." (183 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
Canonical href is "https://willengineer.dev" (host willengineer.dev does not match page host willengineer.online)
This canonical tells search engines that another host owns the content, so they will typically index that URL and drop this one from results entirely. Unless this is deliberate syndication, update the href to this page's own URL on its own host — and make sure www vs non-www matches your preferred domain. The usual cause is a template copied between environments, so check that a staging or legacy domain isn't hard-coded in the site layout.
6 passing checks
- 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 indexingrobots: index, follow
Content & Structure
25/25
Headings, copy depth, images, structured data, internal linking.
Everything we check in this category passed.
Technical
22.2/25
HTTPS, redirects, robots, sitemap, speed, crawlability.
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.
XML sitemap availablemedium impactlow effort
no sitemap.xml found
Without an XML sitemap, search engines discover pages only by following links, so new, deep, or weakly linked pages get found slowly or not at all. Generate one at /sitemap.xml — most frameworks and CMSs have a generator built in or as a plugin — listing every canonical, indexable URL, then add "Sitemap: https://www.example.com/sitemap.xml" to robots.txt and submit it in Google Search Console. Keep it clean: listing redirected, noindexed, or 404 URLs erodes crawler trust in the whole file.
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://
- HTTP redirects to HTTPShttp:// redirects to https://
- No mixed content0 http:// subresource references
- Short redirect chainno redirects; URL resolves directly
- Fast time to first byte370 ms
- Reasonable HTML size70.1 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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