Technical SEO Audit Service for New Zealand Service Businesses
Find technical issues early and improve search visibility with evidence, not guesswork.
Technical SEO audit service reviews the site issues that stop your pages from being properly crawled, indexed, ranked and measured. For a New Zealand service business, that means checking page speed, mobile usability, indexing rules, redirects, metadata, internal links and tracking setup so you can see why visibility stalls. A good audit should lead to clear fixes, not jargon. Servadra's Managed SEO Service supports this with knowledge-based content, daily Search Console tracking and monthly reporting.
Why technical SEO problems hold back service businesses
A slow service page with broken internal links and blocked resources can lose rankings even when the offer is strong. Many New Zealand service businesses invest in website design or occasional blog posts, but technical faults underneath the site still limit search performance. Pages may not be indexed properly, location pages may compete against each other, and redirects from old URLs can dilute relevance. Small issues also stack up: missing canonicals, duplicate metadata, weak mobile performance and inconsistent schema can all reduce visibility. The result is confusing. You may see impressions rise without enquiries improving, or rankings move for the wrong pages. A technical SEO audit service is meant to uncover those barriers before more time and budget are spent on content alone.
What a good technical SEO audit service should include
Good technical SEO work starts with evidence, not assumptions. A proper audit should review crawlability, indexation, page speed, mobile usability, URL structure, redirects, canonicals, internal linking, structured data, XML sitemaps and analytics accuracy. For a service business, it should also check whether core service pages are the pages Google actually surfaces for target searches. That matters because rankings are less useful if traffic lands on thin or outdated pages. A useful audit then turns findings into priorities: what must be fixed first, what can wait, and what should be monitored over time. You also need reporting that shows whether fixes improved impressions, positions and page visibility. Without ongoing measurement, even a well-run audit becomes a one-off document that quickly loses value.
How Servadra's Managed SEO Service supports technical SEO
Servadra's Managed SEO Service connects technical SEO discipline with content that is grounded in the client's real expertise. Instead of publishing generic AI pages, Servadra creates content from the business's Archon Book knowledge base, so each page reflects actual products, services and know-how. That makes supporting pages more accurate and harder for competitors to replicate. On the measurement side, Google Search Console data is pulled daily, with rank positions tracked automatically. This gives businesses a clearer view of which pages are gaining visibility and which keywords are improving. Each monthly rank report shows what moved, where impressions increased and what changed across tracked terms. For New Zealand service businesses, that combination matters: technically sound pages need credible content and consistent tracking to produce useful SEO decisions.
What to do next and what to expect from the service
Start by identifying the pages that matter most to revenue: core services, priority locations and any pages already receiving search impressions. From there, choose a package that matches your pace and market reach. Solo is £100 per month for 1 SEO page, 4 tracked keywords and 1 market. Starter is £399 for 4 pages and 15 keywords. Growth is £649 for 10 pages and 35 keywords across up to 3 markets. Authority is £1,099 for 25 pages and 70+ keywords in multiple markets. Servadra requires a minimum 3-month commitment and does not guarantee rankings. What is guaranteed is the process, the page output and the monthly reporting, giving New Zealand businesses a structured way to improve SEO with clear visibility into progress.