Full GEO Report for https://jxqyom.com/test

Detailed Report:

GEO Assessment — jxqyom.com/test

(Score: 11%) — 06/22/26


Overview:

On 06/22/26 jxqyom.com/test scored 11% — **Poor** – Overall, the site doesn’t give AI-driven search much to confidently discover or understand right now.

Executive summary

Most of the issues show up early and repeatedly across discoverability, structured data, performance, and content structure because key pages couldn’t be accessed, so basic signals (like page details and on-page context) weren’t available to evaluate. On top of that, reputation signals like consistent brand identity, third-party reviews, press coverage, social profiles, and Wikidata presence appear thin, so the gaps are spread across multiple areas and the overall visibility picture is pretty limited.

Score Breakdown (High Level)

  • Discoverability: 25% - We weren't able to access the site or find any sitemaps because the domain name isn't resolving, which is a major blocker for any kind of discovery.
  • Structured Data: 0% - We weren't able to find any schema markup or author details because the site's content was inaccessible during our review.
  • AI Readiness: 17% - Overall, the site is missing key technical signals like sitemaps and brand context pages that help AI engines understand and crawl your content.
  • Performance: 0% - We weren't able to pull any performance data for the site because the analysis ran into an error.
  • Reputation: 23% - We weren't able to find enough offsite signals or brand recognition in the data to establish a strong digital reputation.
  • LLM-Ready Content: 0% - We weren't able to find any content to evaluate because the page was unreachable during the audit.

The big picture on visibility

What stands out most is that a lot of the core signals couldn’t be confirmed because the site content wasn’t reliably accessible, and several key discovery and context elements weren’t found. This doesn’t read like “small mistakes” as much as a general lack of clear, consistent signals that AI systems can use to understand and trust what the site represents. Below, we break down the specific areas where the evaluation came up empty—covering site access and discovery, structured context, content clarity, performance visibility, and offsite reputation signals. The good news is these are all understandable gaps, and the rest of the report will make it clear what’s being missed and where.

Detailed Report

Discoverability

❌ Homepage returns a successful status

What we saw

We couldn’t reach the site because the domain wasn’t resolving, so we weren’t able to load the homepage.

Why this matters for AI SEO

If crawlers can’t reliably access the site, they can’t discover, read, or understand the content you want surfaced in AI results.

Next step

Confirm the domain resolves correctly and that the homepage loads consistently.

❌ No noindex directive present on homepage

What we saw

Because the homepage HTML was inaccessible, we couldn’t verify whether any “don’t index this” directive is present.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When indexing directives are unclear, engines may avoid storing or surfacing the page, even if the content is valuable.

Next step

Check the homepage settings to ensure it’s allowed to be indexed.

❌ Core metadata present

What we saw

We couldn’t find basic page metadata (like the title and description) because the homepage HTML wasn’t available.

Why this matters for AI SEO

These page-level cues help engines quickly understand what the site is about and when to include it as a source.

Next step

Make sure the homepage includes a clear title and description that reflect what you do.

❌ Homepage title is not generic

What we saw

No homepage title could be detected because the homepage content wasn’t accessible.

Why this matters for AI SEO

A specific, descriptive title is a strong signal for what the brand and primary offering are, which helps with accurate matching in AI answers.

Next step

Add a clear, descriptive homepage title that reflects the brand and the main value proposition.

❌ XML sitemap exists

What we saw

A standard XML sitemap wasn’t found in the expected locations.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Sitemaps help engines efficiently find and revisit important pages, which supports broader and more consistent discovery.

Next step

Publish a standard XML sitemap that lists your key pages.

❌ Image or video sitemap exists

What we saw

We didn’t detect an image or video sitemap.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When media isn’t clearly mapped, it’s harder for engines to connect visual assets to the topics and pages they support.

Next step

If images or videos are important to your site, add a sitemap that helps engines find them.

Structured Data

❌ Schema markup present on homepage

What we saw

We weren’t able to detect structured data on the homepage because the homepage HTML was missing or empty.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Structured data helps engines validate key facts about your business and content, which improves confidence when summarizing or citing you.

Next step

Add structured data to the homepage that clearly describes the business and what the site represents.

❌ Organization-type schema present on homepage

What we saw

No organization-related schema type was found.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Without a clear organization signal, it’s harder for engines to connect your site to a stable brand entity.

Next step

Include organization-focused structured data that names the brand and core identity details.

❌ Schema markup present on resource / blog page

What we saw

The resource/blog page we attempted to review was missing or empty, so no structured data could be confirmed there.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Structured data on articles helps engines interpret what a piece is, who wrote it, and how it should be trusted and cited.

Next step

Ensure blog/resource pages are accessible and include structured data appropriate for content pages.

❌ No major schema errors detected

What we saw

No schema was detected, so there was nothing to evaluate for errors.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When structured data is absent, engines lose a high-confidence layer of context they often rely on for entity and content understanding.

Next step

Implement structured data first, then validate it to ensure it’s formatted correctly.

❌ Resource / blog post has a clear, non-generic author

What we saw

No author could be identified because the resource page was inaccessible.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Clear authorship improves trust and makes it easier for AI systems to evaluate credibility and attribute information.

Next step

Add a visible author name on content pages and make sure it can be consistently detected.

❌ Author schema includes sameAs links

What we saw

No author schema was present, so we couldn’t confirm any sameAs links.

Why this matters for AI SEO

sameAs links help connect an author to their broader web presence, which supports identity confidence for attribution.

Next step

If you use author structured data, include sameAs links that point to the author’s official profiles.

AI Readiness

❌ XML sitemap exists

What we saw

A standard XML sitemap wasn’t found at the expected location.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Without a clear page map, AI-focused crawlers may miss important content or revisit it less reliably.

Next step

Create and publish a standard XML sitemap that includes your key URLs.

❌ XML sitemap contains lastmod data

What we saw

Because no valid sitemap was detected, we couldn’t confirm the presence of update dates (lastmod).

Why this matters for AI SEO

Update signals help engines understand what’s fresh, what’s maintained, and what should be reprocessed.

Next step

Include last-updated information in the sitemap entries where possible.

❌ About or brand context page exists

What we saw

We couldn’t confirm an “About” or brand context page because the homepage HTML was unavailable or didn’t surface links to it.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Generative engines look for clear brand context to understand who you are, what you do, and why you’re credible.

Next step

Publish an About/brand page that clearly explains the business and make it easy to find from primary navigation.

❌ Wikidata entity exists for brand

What we saw

No Wikidata entity ID was found for the brand.

Why this matters for AI SEO

A recognized entity entry can act as a strong reference point for consistent brand understanding across AI systems.

Next step

If appropriate for your brand, establish a Wikidata presence that matches your official identity.

Performance

❌ Homepage responsiveness data was unavailable

What we saw

We weren’t able to retrieve responsiveness measurements for the homepage because the data was null or unavailable.

Why this matters for AI SEO

If a page can’t be reliably measured or loaded, it’s often harder for engines to process it consistently and treat it as a dependable source.

Next step

Confirm the homepage can be loaded and measured consistently in standard page audits.

❌ Homepage loading speed data was unavailable

What we saw

Loading speed data for the homepage didn’t return, so we couldn’t evaluate it.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When pages don’t load predictably, crawlers may deprioritize them or capture incomplete information.

Next step

Make sure the homepage loads consistently enough for performance metrics to be collected.

❌ Homepage layout stability data was unavailable

What we saw

Layout stability data didn’t return for the homepage.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Unstable or inconsistently rendered pages can make it harder for engines to extract and trust the main content.

Next step

Validate that the homepage renders consistently so stability metrics can be captured.

❌ Homepage overall performance data was unavailable

What we saw

We couldn’t retrieve an overall performance result for the homepage because the score was null or unavailable.

Why this matters for AI SEO

If performance data can’t be collected, it’s usually a sign engines may also struggle to reliably access or process the page.

Next step

Resolve any access/loading issues that prevent the homepage from being evaluated.

Reputation

❌ Brand recognized by multiple LLMs

What we saw

The brand wasn’t consistently recognized across the systems reviewed.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When brand recognition is thin, AI results are less likely to confidently reference you as an entity or trusted source.

Next step

Strengthen your brand’s presence on well-known third-party sites where your business can be clearly identified.

❌ Brand identity consistent

What we saw

We couldn’t confirm a consistent official name and address across available sources.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Inconsistent or missing identity details make it harder for AI systems to tie mentions back to the right brand.

Next step

Standardize your official business name and address everywhere your brand appears online.

❌ Wikidata entity exists

What we saw

No matching Wikidata entry was found.

Why this matters for AI SEO

A Wikidata entity can help anchor brand identity and reduce confusion across AI-generated answers.

Next step

If it fits your brand, create or claim a Wikidata entry that reflects your official identity.

❌ Wikidata identity anchors

What we saw

No official website or external identifiers were present in Wikidata for the brand.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Identity anchors help systems confirm they’re referencing the right entity, especially when names are similar.

Next step

Add strong identity anchors (like the official website and key identifiers) to the brand’s entity references.

❌ Third-party reviews exist

What we saw

We didn’t detect third-party customer reviews or feedback.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Independent review signals help AI systems gauge legitimacy and real-world customer experience.

Next step

Build a review footprint on credible third-party platforms that clearly tie back to your business.

❌ Review sources are concrete

What we saw

No specific review platforms were identified.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Concrete sources give engines something verifiable to reference, instead of vague or unlinked claims.

Next step

Make sure your reviews live on identifiable platforms that can be referenced consistently.

❌ LLM consensus on major social profiles

What we saw

No major social media profiles were found in the brand research data.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Official social profiles often act as easy-to-verify identity anchors and help confirm the brand is real and active.

Next step

Establish official social profiles (where relevant) and keep them consistently branded.

❌ Homepage links to major social profiles

What we saw

The homepage HTML was unavailable, so we couldn’t verify any outgoing links to official social profiles.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Clear outbound links help engines connect your website to your official brand properties.

Next step

Add visible homepage links to your official social profiles and confirm they load publicly.

❌ Independent press or coverage exists

What we saw

No independent media mentions or press coverage were detected.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Third-party coverage helps build authority signals that AI systems often lean on when choosing sources.

Next step

Develop a credible footprint of independent mentions that clearly reference your brand.

❌ Owned press or press releases exist

What we saw

We didn’t find company-owned press releases or a news section.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Owned announcements can provide a consistent source of “official” facts that engines can cite when summarizing the brand.

Next step

Create a simple news/press area where official brand updates can live in one place.

LLM-Ready Content (Blog Analysis)

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

Persona Targeting: It appears to be aimed at a broad audience rather than a clearly defined persona.

❌ Non-generic author present

What we saw

No HTML content was available on the page, so we couldn’t detect an author name.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Authorship helps AI systems evaluate trust and attribute information correctly when summarizing content.

Next step

Add a clear author byline to the article and ensure it loads in the page HTML.

❌ Publish or update date present

What we saw

No HTML content was available to detect a publish date or an updated date.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Date context helps engines judge freshness and decide whether the information should be treated as current.

Next step

Display a publish and/or last updated date in a consistent, crawlable way on the article.

❌ Updated within last 12 months

What we saw

No HTML content was available to confirm whether the content has been updated recently.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When recency can’t be determined, AI systems may be less confident using the page for time-sensitive queries.

Next step

Make the last updated date visible so freshness can be understood.

❌ Non-social outbound link present

What we saw

No HTML content was available to detect outbound links to external sources.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Outbound citations can help clarify sources and improve how trustworthy and grounded the content feels.

Next step

Include at least one relevant non-social external reference link that supports the content.

❌ Content chunked into readable sections

What we saw

No HTML content was available to evaluate sectioning or content chunking.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Clear sections make it easier for AI systems to extract, summarize, and quote the right parts of a page.

Next step

Structure the article into scannable sections that are easy to follow.

❌ HTML table present (bonus)

What we saw

No HTML content was available to detect table elements.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Tables can make key comparisons and definitions easier for AI systems to interpret accurately.

Next step

Where it fits the topic, add a simple table to present key information clearly.

❌ Descriptive subheadings

What we saw

No HTML content was available to evaluate whether headings were present and descriptive.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Descriptive headings act like signposts, helping AI systems understand the page outline and find direct answers.

Next step

Use clear, specific subheadings that reflect the questions and topics covered.

❌ Key answers appear early

What we saw

No HTML content was available to evaluate whether key takeaways appear near the top of the page.

Why this matters for AI SEO

When answers show up early, AI systems can more confidently extract concise summaries without guessing.

Next step

Make sure the article’s main takeaway is stated clearly near the beginning.

❌ Readability & cohesion

What we saw

No HTML content was available to evaluate clarity, flow, or whether acronyms and terms were explained.

Why this matters for AI SEO

Clear writing reduces misinterpretation and improves how accurately AI systems can summarize and reuse your information.

Next step

Review the article for clarity and make sure key terms are explained in plain language.

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.

Share This Report With Your Team

Enter email addresses to send this assessment report to colleagues