On 04/19/26 swefoundation.com/ scored 50% — **Below Average** – Overall, the site has a workable foundation, but several key signals are either missing or unclear in ways that can limit how confidently AI systems describe it.
The main takeaway before details
The big picture is that the site has some solid foundations, but it’s missing a few key clarity signals that help AI systems confidently interpret the brand and its content. A lot of what’s showing up here isn’t “wrong,” it’s more that the information isn’t being expressed in a clear, confirmable way across content, identity, and supporting signals. Next, we’ll walk through the specific areas where things were missing or couldn’t be verified, organized by section. None of this is unusual—it’s a common set of gaps, and it’s very manageable once you can see it laid out.
What we saw
We didn’t find a standard homepage description that summarizes what the site is about in a way platforms typically reuse in previews and results.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When that summary is missing, generative systems often have to guess which parts of the page best represent the brand, which can lead to inconsistent or incomplete descriptions.
Next step
Add a clear, human-readable homepage description that explains what you do and who you serve.
What we saw
We didn’t see any dedicated discovery support for image or video content beyond the standard site discovery setup.
Why this matters for AI SEO
If visual assets aren’t easy to discover and categorize, they’re less likely to be surfaced or referenced when AI systems assemble answers that rely on images or videos.
Next step
Publish a dedicated discovery feed for important image and/or video assets so they’re easier to find and understand.
What we saw
We didn’t find any schema markup on the homepage in the formats typically used to describe organizations, pages, and key entities.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Without structured data, AI-driven search systems have a harder time confirming what the brand is, how the site is organized, and which details are “official.”
Next step
Add basic homepage schema markup that clearly describes the brand and the page.
What we saw
Because no homepage schema was present, we also couldn’t find an organization-type schema that clearly defines the entity behind the website.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Generative engines rely on clear entity signals to connect a site to a real-world brand, which affects trust and how confidently the brand is referenced.
Next step
Include an organization-type schema that matches your brand identity and core details.
What we saw
We weren’t able to review the resource/blog page content in this run, so we couldn’t confirm whether it includes schema markup.
Why this matters for AI SEO
If content pages don’t include clear structured signals, it’s harder for AI systems to reliably interpret authorship, topics, and reuse-ready snippets.
Next step
Make sure your resource/blog pages are accessible for review and include appropriate schema to describe the content.
What we saw
Since no structured data was found, we couldn’t validate whether the site’s schema is error-free or consistent.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When structured signals are absent (or can’t be verified), AI systems lose a high-confidence layer of understanding that helps prevent misinterpretation.
Next step
Once schema is in place, validate it for consistency so AI systems can trust what it’s being told.
What we saw
Because the resource/blog page data wasn’t provided, we couldn’t confirm whether the article has a clear, non-generic author.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Authorship is a big part of how AI systems gauge credibility, especially when summarizing or quoting informational content.
Next step
Ensure each resource/blog post clearly shows who wrote it, and make that page available for evaluation.
What we saw
We didn’t see author schema with external identity references, largely because author schema wasn’t present and the resource/blog page wasn’t available.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When author identity isn’t well connected, AI systems have less context to distinguish real expertise from anonymous or low-confidence content.
Next step
Add author schema that connects the author to their known profiles, and confirm it appears on content pages.
What we saw
The sitemap was found, but it didn’t include update timestamps that help indicate when pages change.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When AI systems don’t have clear freshness cues, it’s harder for them to prioritize the most current version of your pages and summaries.
Next step
Add update timestamps to the sitemap so content recency is easier to interpret.
What we saw
We didn’t find a clear homepage path to an “About” style page or brand context page.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Generative engines look for straightforward brand context to verify who you are, what you do, and what’s official.
Next step
Add a clear homepage link to a dedicated brand context page that explains the organization.
What we saw
We didn’t find a Wikidata item associated with the brand.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When an entity isn’t represented in common knowledge sources, AI systems have fewer high-confidence references to anchor your identity.
Next step
Create or claim a Wikidata entity for the brand and align it with official identity details.
What we saw
The homepage showed signs of sluggish interactivity, meaning it may feel slow to respond while loading.
Why this matters for AI SEO
If pages feel slow or heavy, they’re less reliable for crawlers and users alike, and that can reduce how confidently content gets surfaced and reused.
Next step
Reduce the scripts and page behaviors that delay interactivity on the homepage.
What we saw
The primary content on the homepage took longer than expected to fully load in view.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When key content appears late, AI systems may extract less context (or inconsistent context), which can weaken summaries and matching.
Next step
Prioritize the loading of the homepage’s primary content so it becomes visible sooner.
What we saw
In this run, we didn’t have the identity consistency fields needed to verify whether key brand details line up cleanly across sources.
Why this matters for AI SEO
If identity consistency can’t be validated, generative engines have less confidence when connecting the brand name, website, and real-world identifiers.
Next step
Confirm your core identity details are stated consistently across your official web presence, then re-check to validate consistency.
What we saw
No Wikidata entry was found that matches the brand.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Without that entity anchor, AI systems have a harder time tying your site to a single, verified profile—especially in competitive or ambiguous brand spaces.
Next step
Establish a Wikidata entry that matches the brand and references official information.
What we saw
We didn’t see official identity anchors present on Wikidata for the brand.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Official anchors help generative engines trust they’ve found the “right” entity, which improves how accurately the brand is described and cited.
Next step
Add official identity anchors to the brand’s Wikidata presence so it’s easier to verify.
What we saw
We didn’t have the consensus field needed to confirm whether AI systems agree on the brand’s primary social profiles.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When social identity isn’t consistently recognized, it can reduce confidence in brand legitimacy and make entity matching less stable.
Next step
Standardize the brand’s primary social profile references across your web presence and re-check for consistent recognition.
What we saw
We didn’t find outbound links from the homepage to major social platforms.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Clear links to official profiles help AI systems confirm which offsite properties are truly associated with the brand.
Next step
Add links from the homepage to the brand’s primary social profiles.
Heads up: this section looks at one article as a snapshot, so it’s a little more interpretive than the rest of the report and may shift slightly from run to run. Have questions? Just shoot us an email at hello@v9digital.com
What we saw
Many subheadings read like broad labels (for example, “What We Do” or “How It Works”) rather than describing the specific topic of that section.
Why this matters for AI SEO
AI systems lean heavily on headings to understand what each section is “about,” so generic labels make it harder to categorize and reuse the right parts of the page.
Next step
Rewrite subheadings so each one clearly states the specific question, topic, or takeaway for that section.
What we saw
A lot of sections start with short taglines or lists instead of opening with a substantial, explanatory paragraph that quickly sets context.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When answers and definitions don’t appear early, AI systems may miss the most important details or pull context from less-representative parts of the page.
Next step
Make sure each section starts with a short, complete paragraph that clearly explains the main point upfront.
Does Anything Seem Off?
Thanks for taking our free GEO Grader for a spin. When we started this journey, the tool had a fairly long processing time to check everything we wanted both onsite and offsite, so we made a few adjustments on the backend to speed things up. As a result, there are times when the grader may not get everything 100% right. If something feels off, we recommend running the tool a second time to confirm the results. From there, you’re always welcome to reach out to us to schedule a GEO consultation, or to have your SEO provider validate the findings with a more detailed crawl and manual review.