The word "audit" gets used loosely in SEO. For a personal injury law firm, a meaningful audit is not a single report from a crawl tool — it is a structured assessment across five distinct layers, each of which can independently suppress or accelerate your rankings.
The Five Audit Layers
- Technical SEO: Crawlability, indexation, Core Web Vitals, mobile performance, HTTPS, structured data markup (especially
LegalServiceschema), and duplicate content across practice area pages. - On-Page Content: Keyword targeting accuracy, E-E-A-T signals (attorney credentials, case experience, authorship), content depth on high-intent pages like "[City] car accident lawyer," and internal linking structure between practice area pages.
- Local SEO: Google Business Profile completeness and category selection, NAP (name, address, phone) consistency across directories, legal-specific citation presence on Avvo, FindLaw, Justia, and Super Lawyers, and review volume and recency.
- Authority and Off-Page Signals: Referring domain quality, local press mentions, bar association links, and the ratio of branded versus non-branded anchor text in your backlink profile.
- Competitive Gap Analysis: Where competitors outrank you, what content they have that you don't, and which keyword clusters have the lowest-authority firms currently ranking — representing your fastest entry points.
Most DIY audits stop at technical. Most agencies stop at on-page. A complete audit treats all five as interconnected: a technically clean site with weak E-E-A-T signals will still struggle to rank for competitive injury terms, and a site with strong content but citation errors will underperform in the Map Pack.
This guide walks you through each layer with a diagnostic lens, not a generic checklist. The goal is to exit the audit knowing exactly which three to five fixes will move the needle fastest in your market.