On 01/29/26 jhtdesign.com scored 61% — **Decent** – Overall, the site feels fairly solid for AI visibility, but there are a few clear clarity gaps that keep it from coming through as consistently as it could.
What’s holding back AI clarity
The big picture is that the site has a solid baseline, but some important clarity signals around content attribution, structure, and brand identity aren’t coming through consistently. These aren’t “mistakes” so much as missing context that can make it harder for AI systems to confidently describe the brand and reuse the content. The next section breaks down the specific areas where the evaluation couldn’t find what it needed, organized by category. None of this is unusual, and it’s all the kind of stuff that becomes straightforward once it’s clearly defined.
What we saw
We didn’t find a standard description on the homepage, so there isn’t a clear summary of what the site is about baked into the page.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Generative engines often rely on short, explicit summaries to quickly understand what a brand does and how to describe it accurately.
Next step
Add a clear, plain-English homepage description that summarizes what you do and who it’s for.
What we saw
We didn’t detect a dedicated way for search engines to discover image or video content separately from core pages.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When media content is easier to discover and classify, it’s more likely to be understood and surfaced correctly in AI-driven results.
Next step
Publish a dedicated image and/or video discovery file if images or videos are important parts of your content.
What we saw
We weren’t able to find usable structured information for the resource/blog page because the referenced resource page content was missing or empty.
Why this matters for AI SEO
If AI systems can’t reliably extract the basics of a content page, they have a harder time understanding what the piece is, how it should be cited, and when it should be trusted.
Next step
Confirm the resource/blog page is accessible and contains full content that can be read and understood.
What we saw
We didn’t see a specific, non-generic person credited as the author for the resource/blog content because the referenced resource page was missing or empty.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Authorship helps generative engines connect content to real expertise, which can improve how confidently they summarize or cite it.
Next step
Ensure each resource/blog post clearly credits an individual author (not just the organization).
What we saw
We couldn’t find author identity links that connect an author to verified profiles, because the referenced resource page was missing or empty.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Without identity connections, it’s harder for AI systems to confidently match an author to the same person across the web.
Next step
Add author identity links on resource/blog posts so the author can be consistently recognized across trusted profiles.
What we saw
No Wikidata item ID was detected for the brand, so there isn’t a clear public entity record tying the brand name to a single known identity.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Generative engines often use global knowledge sources to confirm that a brand is a distinct entity and to reduce confusion with similar names.
Next step
Create (or claim, if it already exists) a Wikidata entity that clearly represents the brand.
What we saw
The homepage’s main content took a long time to fully render on mobile (over 13 seconds was reported).
Why this matters for AI SEO
When key content loads slowly, it can reduce how reliably systems and users can access the core message of the page in a timely, consistent way.
Next step
Reduce the time it takes for the homepage’s primary content to become visible on mobile.
What we saw
We saw significant conflicts in the brand’s physical address across sources (Texas vs. Colorado vs. California).
Why this matters for AI SEO
Conflicting identity details make it harder for generative engines to confidently unify mentions into one clean brand profile.
Next step
Standardize the brand’s address information so it’s consistent wherever it appears online.
What we saw
No matching Wikidata entity was found for the brand, so there isn’t an official identity anchor on that platform.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Without a recognized entity anchor, AI systems have fewer reliable ways to confirm “this is the same brand” across different contexts.
Next step
Establish a Wikidata entity so the brand can be referenced consistently as a known entity.
What we saw
We didn’t see links on the homepage that point directly to major social media profiles.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When the site doesn’t “close the loop” to official profiles, it can be harder for generative engines to validate authority and connect the brand to its broader presence.
Next step
Add clear homepage links to the brand’s official 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
No visible or structured individual author was detected for the evaluated page, and the attribution appears to be organization-level only.
Why this matters for AI SEO
AI systems tend to trust and reuse content more confidently when they can tie it to a real person with identifiable expertise.
Next step
Add a clearly named author to the page so the content has an explicit human source.
What we saw
The content didn’t use clear section headings (like H2s), which made it hard to detect meaningful chunks and a clean hierarchy.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When content is clearly structured, generative engines can map the topics faster and pull cleaner summaries and excerpts.
Next step
Restructure the article so it’s organized into obvious sections with clear subtopics.
What we saw
No HTML table element was found within the page content.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Tables can make comparisons, definitions, and structured takeaways easier for AI systems to extract accurately.
Next step
Where it makes sense, include a simple table to summarize key comparisons or takeaways.
What we saw
Descriptive subheadings couldn’t be confirmed because the page lacked the heading structure needed to evaluate them.
Why this matters for AI SEO
Clear, descriptive subheadings help AI understand what each part of the article is about without guessing.
Next step
Add descriptive subheadings that clearly label what each section covers.
What we saw
This couldn’t be validated because the page lacked the heading structure needed to evaluate how quickly key answers show up within sections.
Why this matters for AI SEO
When core takeaways show up early and clearly, AI systems can extract the “point” of the content faster and with less ambiguity.
Next step
Make sure the most important takeaways are easy to find near the start of the relevant sections.
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.