On 06/25/26 qwswxw.com/test scored 11% — **Poor** – Overall, the results suggest the site isn’t presenting enough clear, consistent information for AI systems to confidently understand or surface it.
The big picture before the details
What stands out most is that the site wasn’t consistently accessible for evaluation, which limits how many basic signals AI systems can actually see and interpret. On top of that, the report doesn’t surface much in the way of clear, verifiable brand and trust signals from outside sources. Next, the detailed sections break down the specific visibility and credibility gaps that showed up across discovery, content understanding, and reputation. None of this is uncommon for newer or lightly marketed brands, but it does create real ambiguity for AI-driven results.
What we saw
The homepage didn’t successfully load during the evaluation, so we couldn’t reliably view or confirm the basic page information.
Why this matters for AI SEO
If the main entry point to the site isn’t reachable, AI systems and crawlers can’t reliably discover, interpret, or trust what the brand is about.
Next step
Confirm the homepage loads consistently from a clean network (not logged in, not behind prompts) and can be accessed by standard crawlers.
What we saw
Because the homepage HTML wasn’t available, we couldn’t confirm whether the page is sending signals that would prevent it from being indexed.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When index-related signals are unclear, engines may hesitate to include the page in search and generative results, or they may not process it as intended.
Next step
Make sure the homepage renders in a way that allows its index-related signals to be clearly read.
What we saw
We couldn’t find core homepage metadata because the page HTML wasn’t available to review.
Why this matters for AI SEO
AI systems lean on these basic cues to quickly understand what a page represents, especially when they’re summarizing or deciding what to cite.
Next step
Ensure the homepage reliably returns readable HTML that includes clear, descriptive page metadata.
What we saw
The homepage title wasn’t found because the page content wasn’t available to evaluate.
Why this matters for AI SEO
A clear title helps engines and LLMs connect the brand and page intent to relevant queries and summaries.
Next step
Make sure the homepage outputs a clear, specific title that’s visible in the rendered HTML.
What we saw
We didn’t find a standard XML sitemap, so there wasn’t a clear “map” of the site’s key URLs.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Without a dependable content map, discovery gets harder, and important pages may be missed or understood less consistently.
Next step
Publish a standard XML sitemap that lists the site’s important pages and is accessible to crawlers.
What we saw
We didn’t see image- or video-focused sitemaps, so media content wasn’t clearly surfaced for discovery.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When media assets aren’t easily discoverable, it can reduce how often they’re understood, referenced, or pulled into richer AI-driven results.
Next step
If media content is important on this site, provide a dedicated way for crawlers to discover those assets consistently.
What we saw
We couldn’t verify any structured data on the homepage because the page HTML wasn’t available during the check.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Structured data helps AI systems interpret what the brand is, what the page represents, and how different entities relate to each other.
Next step
Ensure the homepage loads in a way that allows structured data (if present) to be read and validated.
What we saw
No organization-type structured data was detected on the homepage during evaluation.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When the organization behind a site isn’t clearly defined, AI summaries can be less confident about brand identity and attribution.
Next step
Add clear organization identification signals that can be consistently detected on the homepage.
What we saw
The blog/resource page couldn’t be loaded during evaluation, so we weren’t able to confirm whether structured data exists there.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Content pages are where AI systems often look for author, topic, and context signals to decide what to cite and trust.
Next step
Confirm the blog/resource page loads reliably and exposes its key content signals in readable HTML.
What we saw
We didn’t find structured data blocks to check, so there was nothing to validate for completeness or errors.
Why this matters for AI SEO
If AI systems can’t find these explicit cues, they have to “guess” more from page text alone, which can reduce precision.
Next step
Make sure the pages you want understood include detectable structured data where it’s relevant.
What we saw
No clear, non-generic author could be identified because the resource page content wasn’t available.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Author clarity is a key trust signal for AI systems when they’re deciding whether to rely on a piece of content.
Next step
Ensure each article clearly identifies a real author in a way that can be read from the page.
What we saw
We didn’t find author identity links because no author structured data was available to review on the resource page.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When author identities can’t be connected to consistent offsite profiles, it’s harder for AI systems to confirm who created the content.
Next step
Connect authors to consistent identity references that are visible to crawlers.
What we saw
A standard XML sitemap wasn’t found, so we couldn’t confirm a centralized list of important site URLs.
Why this matters for AI SEO
AI crawlers benefit from clear site structure so they can find, revisit, and understand key pages efficiently.
Next step
Provide a standard XML sitemap that’s reachable and kept up to date.
What we saw
Because a valid sitemap wasn’t detected, we couldn’t verify whether update timestamps were included.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Freshness and recency cues help AI systems judge whether a page is likely to be current and reliable.
Next step
Make sure your sitemap includes update information that can be read and interpreted consistently.
What we saw
We couldn’t find links to brand context pages (like an About or Team page) because the homepage HTML wasn’t available.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When brand background and credibility cues are hard to find, AI systems have less to anchor on when summarizing who you are.
Next step
Make sure brand context pages are easy to discover and clearly linked from primary site navigation.
What we saw
We didn’t find a Wikidata entity ID associated with the brand.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Without a verified identity reference, it’s harder for AI systems to confidently connect your brand to a stable, well-defined entity.
Next step
Establish a clear, verifiable brand entity reference that matches your official identity.
What we saw
We couldn’t retrieve the homepage responsiveness metric needed to evaluate how the page behaves in real usage.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When performance signals can’t be confirmed, it’s harder to gauge whether visitors (and crawlers) can reliably access and consume the content.
Next step
Verify the homepage can be measured consistently so performance signals are available for evaluation.
What we saw
Key homepage load experience metrics were missing or unavailable during the check.
Why this matters for AI SEO
If AI systems and users can’t reliably load or interact with the page, visibility and trust can suffer over time.
Next step
Confirm the homepage is accessible in a way that consistently produces measurable load experience data.
What we saw
We weren’t able to retrieve the metric used to evaluate whether the homepage layout remains stable while loading.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Unclear or unmeasurable user experience signals can make it harder to build confidence in the site as a reliable destination.
Next step
Ensure the homepage can be evaluated for visual stability using standard measurement sources.
What we saw
We couldn’t obtain the overall performance assessment data for the homepage.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When performance can’t be validated, it adds uncertainty around how accessible and usable the site is for both users and crawlers.
Next step
Make sure the homepage can be assessed consistently so baseline performance signals are available.
What we saw
The brand wasn’t recognized by the LLMs referenced in the report packet.
Why this matters for AI SEO
If a brand isn’t well-identified, AI systems have less confidence when deciding whether to include it in recommendations, summaries, or comparisons.
Next step
Strengthen the consistency and availability of brand identity information across the web so it’s easier to validate.
What we saw
We didn’t see consistent agreement on basic identity details like the official name and address.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Inconsistent identity details make it harder for AI systems to match mentions to the right entity and avoid confusion with similarly named brands.
Next step
Standardize your official brand identity details so they appear consistently wherever the brand is referenced.
What we saw
No Wikidata entry matching the brand was found.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Wikidata can act as a centralized identity reference that helps AI systems connect the dots between a brand, its site, and its public footprint.
Next step
Create or claim a brand entity reference that can be validated and connected to your official site.
What we saw
Because there was no Wikidata entity found, we also couldn’t confirm any official anchors (like an official website reference) tied to the brand.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Without official anchors, AI systems have fewer verified touchpoints to confirm they’re referencing the correct brand.
Next step
Make sure the brand has a verified identity reference that includes official, confirmable anchors.
What we saw
We didn’t find third-party reviews or customer feedback associated with the brand in the report packet.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Independent feedback is one of the simplest ways for AI systems to gauge real-world legitimacy and customer experience.
Next step
Build a credible footprint of customer feedback on recognizable third-party platforms.
What we saw
No concrete sources were identified to support reviews or customer feedback.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When sources can’t be clearly cited, AI systems are less likely to treat the reputation signals as dependable.
Next step
Make sure any customer feedback you rely on is tied to clearly identifiable, linkable sources.
What we saw
We didn’t find clear, consistent identification of official social profiles for the brand.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Official social profiles often act as identity подтверждение (verification-by-consistency) signals that help AI systems confirm brand legitimacy.
Next step
Ensure the brand’s official social profiles are easy to identify and consistently referenced.
What we saw
Because the homepage HTML wasn’t available, we couldn’t confirm whether it links out to recognized social platforms.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When onsite signals don’t clearly point to official profiles, AI systems have a harder time confirming which offsite accounts are legitimate.
Next step
Make sure the homepage clearly connects to official social profiles in a way that’s readable to crawlers.
What we saw
We didn’t identify independent, offsite press mentions or coverage tied to the brand.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Independent coverage is a strong credibility signal that helps AI systems trust the brand beyond what it says about itself.
Next step
Develop a trackable footprint of independent coverage that clearly references the brand.
What we saw
We didn’t find onsite press mentions or press releases referenced in the report packet.
Why this matters for AI SEO
A clear record of announcements and proof points can help AI systems understand what the brand has done and when.
Next step
Create a clearly identifiable place on the site where announcements or press mentions can be referenced.
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
We couldn’t identify a specific, non-generic author because the page content wasn’t available to analyze.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Clear authorship helps AI systems evaluate credibility and decide whether a piece is safe to cite or summarize.
Next step
Make sure each article clearly lists a real author in the visible page content.
What we saw
We couldn’t find a publish or updated date because the HTML content wasn’t available for review.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Dates are an important cue for recency, which influences whether AI systems treat content as current and dependable.
Next step
Ensure each article displays a clear publish or last-updated date in the rendered page.
What we saw
Because no readable date was found (and the page didn’t load), we couldn’t confirm whether the content was updated recently.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When recency is unclear, AI systems may downweight the content for questions where freshness matters.
Next step
Make sure content freshness is clearly signaled with an accessible, readable updated date.
What we saw
We couldn’t detect outbound links because the page HTML wasn’t available to inspect.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Citations and references can help AI systems understand where claims come from and whether the content is grounded in reliable sources.
Next step
Include at least one clear, relevant outbound reference where it genuinely supports the content.
What we saw
No readable text blocks or sections were available to confirm whether the article is broken into scannable parts.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Well-structured sections make it easier for AI systems to extract accurate snippets and map parts of the article to specific questions.
Next step
Ensure the article is readable and organized into clear sections that render reliably.
What we saw
We didn’t detect any table elements in the content.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Tables can make key comparisons and definitions easier for AI systems to parse and reuse accurately.
Next step
Where it fits naturally, include a simple table that summarizes key information.
What we saw
We couldn’t evaluate subheadings because the content didn’t load in a readable way.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Clear subheadings help AI systems understand what each section covers and reduce the chance of misquoting or misattributing details.
Next step
Use clear, descriptive subheadings that reflect the actual questions or topics each section answers.
What we saw
No text paragraphs were available to check whether the article gets to the point early on.
Why this matters for AI SEO
AI systems often prioritize content that provides clear, direct answers quickly when forming summaries and responses.
Next step
Make sure each article surfaces its main takeaway early in the content.
What we saw
Because the page failed to load, the content was missing or too fragmentary to judge for clarity and flow.
Why this matters for AI SEO
If content can’t be consistently read and understood, AI systems are more likely to skip it or produce lower-confidence summaries.
Next step
Ensure the article content loads reliably and reads cleanly from top to bottom.
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.