Visibility report for vercel.com
https://vercel.com/
5 pages analyzed•Scanned Feb 26, 2026, 05:06 PM121d old — rescan
How each LLM sees your site
Score per AI product, 0–100Every LLM sees a partial version of your site
Reads raw HTML only — JavaScript-loaded content invisible. None of these crawlers execute JavaScript, so they all read the same raw HTML.
Visibility Breakdown
Top Issues
Bot protection wall detected — may block some crawlers
Your robots.txt may allow crawlers, but your bot protection layer sits in front of your server and can block them before they reach your site. Check your security provider's dashboard for bot management settings — even if robots.txt allows a crawler, the WAF can still block it.
7 links have no anchor text
Googlebot uses anchor text to understand what the linked page is about. Without it, the link passes no topical relevance and those pages lose a ranking signal. If the link wraps an image, the image's alt text serves as the anchor text — make sure it's descriptive.
Found 1 elements with hidden content
Googlebot can detect content hidden via CSS (display:none, visibility:hidden) and may devalue or completely ignore it. Google has historically penalized sites that hide text from users as a form of cloaking. If this content is important for rankings, make it visible to users. If it's legitimately hidden (e.g., mobile menus), ensure critical SEO content isn't trapped inside.
Page appears to use infinite scroll or lazy loading
Googlebot doesn't scroll your page — it only sees content present in the initial viewport and DOM. Everything below the infinite scroll trigger point is invisible to crawlers unless it's pre-rendered in the HTML. Implement paginated URLs (e.g., /page/2, /page/3) with proper links between them so Googlebot can discover all content.
2 links have no anchor text
Googlebot uses anchor text to understand what the linked page is about. Without it, the link passes no topical relevance and those pages lose a ranking signal. If the link wraps an image, the image's alt text serves as the anchor text — make sure it's descriptive.
SEO Recommendations25 tips — not affecting visibility score
33 of 41 images missing alt text
Googlebot cannot "see" images — it relies entirely on alt text to understand what an image shows. Without it, images won't appear in Google Image Search, and the page loses keyword context that crawlers use for ranking. AI systems also depend on alt text when describing page content. Add descriptive alt text to every meaningful image.
Page load time is very slow (5.6s)
Googlebot allocates a limited time budget per page. At over 5 seconds, content that hasn't loaded yet may never be indexed. Extremely slow pages also fail Core Web Vitals thresholds, which directly affect search rankings. Compress images, minify CSS/JS, and enable server-side caching.
23 of 25 images missing alt text
Googlebot cannot "see" images — it relies entirely on alt text to understand what an image shows. Without it, images won't appear in Google Image Search, and the page loses keyword context that crawlers use for ranking. AI systems also depend on alt text when describing page content. Add descriptive alt text to every meaningful image.
Page load time is very slow (5.3s)
Googlebot allocates a limited time budget per page. At over 5 seconds, content that hasn't loaded yet may never be indexed. Extremely slow pages also fail Core Web Vitals thresholds, which directly affect search rankings. Compress images, minify CSS/JS, and enable server-side caching.
Title is too long (67 characters)
Google truncates titles longer than ~60 characters in search results, replacing the end with an ellipsis. This can cut off important keywords and reduce click-through rates. Move your most important keywords to the front and keep the title under 60 characters.
Page has 2 H1 headings
Multiple H1s dilute the topical signal for crawlers. Googlebot uses heading hierarchy to understand content structure — when multiple H1s compete, it's unclear which represents the page's primary topic. Use a single H1 for the main topic and H2s for subtopics.
7 of 23 images missing alt text
Googlebot cannot "see" images — it relies entirely on alt text to understand what an image shows. Without it, images won't appear in Google Image Search, and the page loses keyword context that crawlers use for ranking. AI systems also depend on alt text when describing page content. Add descriptive alt text to every meaningful image.
Title is too long (67 characters)
Google truncates titles longer than ~60 characters in search results, replacing the end with an ellipsis. This can cut off important keywords and reduce click-through rates. Move your most important keywords to the front and keep the title under 60 characters.
Page has 2 H1 headings
Multiple H1s dilute the topical signal for crawlers. Googlebot uses heading hierarchy to understand content structure — when multiple H1s compete, it's unclear which represents the page's primary topic. Use a single H1 for the main topic and H2s for subtopics.
7 of 23 images missing alt text
Googlebot cannot "see" images — it relies entirely on alt text to understand what an image shows. Without it, images won't appear in Google Image Search, and the page loses keyword context that crawlers use for ranking. AI systems also depend on alt text when describing page content. Add descriptive alt text to every meaningful image.
Title is too short (20 characters)
Short titles waste valuable SERP real estate. Google displays up to ~60 characters — a longer, keyword-rich title gives crawlers more context about the page and improves click-through rates. Aim for 50–60 characters.
Page takes 5.6s to load, exceeding Google's 5s render budget
Google's Web Rendering Service allocates roughly 5 seconds per page. Content that appears after this cutoff may not be indexed. Move critical content (headings, main text, key links) earlier in the render process so Googlebot sees them within budget.
Title is too short (13 characters)
Short titles waste valuable SERP real estate. Google displays up to ~60 characters — a longer, keyword-rich title gives crawlers more context about the page and improves click-through rates. Aim for 50–60 characters.
Page has 2 H1 headings
Multiple H1s dilute the topical signal for crawlers. Googlebot uses heading hierarchy to understand content structure — when multiple H1s compete, it's unclear which represents the page's primary topic. Use a single H1 for the main topic and H2s for subtopics.
Page takes 5.3s to load, exceeding Google's 5s render budget
Google's Web Rendering Service allocates roughly 5 seconds per page. Content that appears after this cutoff may not be indexed. Move critical content (headings, main text, key links) earlier in the render process so Googlebot sees them within budget.
+ 10 more tips in the Issues tab.
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