New comment by gurchik in "Ask HN: Who is hiring? (May 2024)"

Propel | Full-time | Senior Platform/DevOps Engineer | Fully remote | $150k-$230k

Propel is on a mission to empower low-income Americans by simplifying access to government benefits with modern technology. All of our users deserve first-class experiences in their daily interactions with the social safety net and financial services. We’re a passionate team of 100 Propellers – all working to help our users get through the month, every month. We’re looking for a self-motivated Platform Engineer to join our Infrastructure Team within the engineering org at Propel.

You will own our fundamental cloud services that our engineering team builds upon, our application platform (based on Kubernetes) that we run our applications on, and own our developer experience and tools.

Tech stack: AWS, Kubernetes, Jenkins, Terraform, Datadog

This position is fully remote, but offices are available in Brooklyn, San Francisco, or Salt Lake City if desired. Location does not affect compensation, but unfortunately we are only accepting applications from US residents at this time.

https://boards.greenhouse.io/propel/jobs/7445950002

New comment by xpekeler in "Ask HN: Who is hiring? (March 2024)"

Red Sky | Senior TypeScript Engineer | Full-time | Onsite Berlin

We: Support agrifood exporters with trade execution software and embedded trade finance. Office in Prenzlauer Berg. Mission-driven.

You: Like to collaborate in-person, proactive pair programmer, full-stack SPA experience including DB and ops, want to use Svelte, prefer simplicity, not a resume-driven developer, good communicator.

Interested? Send your CV to engineering@redsky.io.

New comment by ApolloRising in "Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (January 2024)"

Location: Los Angeles, Orange County, Remote

Remote: Remote or Onsite

Willing to Relocate: Yes (US Only), Austin, New York City, Redmond, Bay Area, San Diego

Technologies: Product Director (Product Management) with 15+ years of experience in E-Commerce and SASS applications. I specialize in UX UI and conversion optimization for e-commerce and generating growth for startups.

Open to consulting work as well. I have done work with Salesforce Commerce Cloud, Shopify Plus, and Magento. I have an interest in generative ai and open to any connections on LinkedIn.

I am looking to join a great team that enjoys working together and building something great.

LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/al-shaikh-3473031/

Resume: Send a message on LinkedIn

Spine AI (YC S23) Is Hiring a Founding ML Engineer

Article URL: https://www.ycombinator.com/companies/spine-ai/jobs/Z1hz3BZ-founding-ml-engineer-scientist

Comments URL: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=38232044

Points: 0

# Comments: 0

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New comment by csaba-boros in "Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (August 2023)"

Remote: Yes (US time zones) Willing to relocate: No Technologies: C# .NET, Azure DevOps, Circle CI, AWS, Docker, Blazor, Kubernetes, Rabbit MQ etc. Résumé/CV: https://www.boroscsaba.com/ Email: boros.csaba94@gmail.com Github: https://github.com/boros-csaba Toptal: https://www.toptal.com/resume/boros-csaba Available for part-time or full-time contract work, preferably on a long-term basis, but I’m also available for smaller projects. I am very flexible with … Continue reading New comment by csaba-boros in "Ask HN: Who wants to be hired? (August 2023)"

Overtime – Episode #440: Trump Feuds, Leftist Dems, Sleaze

Bill and his guests – Russell Brand, Olivia Nuzzi, Steve Schmidt, and former Rep. Harold Ford, Jr. – answer viewer questions after the show. (Originally aired 10/6/17)

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The post Overtime – Episode #440: Trump Feuds, Leftist Dems, Sleaze appeared first on Buy It At A Bargain – Deals And Reviews.

Dolphins rally from 17-point deficit to make it a wild-card battle in Buffalo

The heavy-underdog Dolphins rallied to tie the Bills just before halftime, and took a lead early in the second half.

The post Dolphins rally from 17-point deficit to make it a wild-card battle in Buffalo appeared first on Buy It At A Bargain – Deals And Reviews.

The post Dolphins rally from 17-point deficit to make it a wild-card battle in Buffalo appeared first on Buy It At A Bargain – Deals And Reviews.

American soccer journalist Grant Wahl dies while covering FIFA World Cup in Qatar

Famed American soccer journalist Grant Wahl died while covering the FIFA World Cup in Qatar. He was 48. Wahl reportedly collapsed while covering the Argentina-Netherlands quarterfinal. After paramedics performed CPR for several minutes at the scene, he was taken to a hospital. Wahl’s brother, Eric, announced his death on Instagram and made an emotional plea … Continue reading American soccer journalist Grant Wahl dies while covering FIFA World Cup in Qatar

How to Run a Content Audit (2022 Update)

Have you lost track of all the content you’ve created? It’s easy to do.

If you’re anything like me, you’re so focused on coming up with ideas and creating new articles that you might lose track of what you’ve already created.

But the truth is the content you’ve already created is just as valuable as anything you’re yet to create, possibly more so. Optimizing it just a little bit could result in thousands of dollars more in revenue.

That’s why you need a content audit of existing pages. In this article, I’ll cover:

  • What a content audit is
  • Why you need an audit
  • Content audit tools at your disposal
  • How to run a content audit step by step

Ready to create an inventory of your assets? Then let’s begin.

What is a Content Audit?

A content audit is the process of creating an inventory of your website’s content assets and analyzing them against a set of criteria.

It’s a way of keeping track of the content you have created, seeing which assets need improving, and identifying which topics to tackle next.

A content audit can be as brief or as detailed as you want. You can audit your entire site, just your blog, or even just a category of your blog. They can all offer value and insight. I recommend doing a comprehensive audit, though. The time you spend on your audit now will pay off later.

Why Does My Website Need a Content Audit?

You should carve out the time to do a content audit to see where the gaps are and to start creating better content.

Why should you do a content audit? There are a number of reasons a content audit can help your website perform better.

A content audit offers a heap of benefits. These include:

  • Analyzing the performance of your content to help you make data-backed decisions about which pages to improve.
  • Highlighting pages on your site that aren’t optimized for SEO. Some pages may be missing metadata or have a poor heading structure, for instance.
  • Identifying SEO opportunities and content gaps that you can fill with new content.
  • Improving the quality of content on your site to upgrade the reader experience.
  • Identifying content you can repurpose.
  • Creating a complete inventory of content that makes managing your content strategy easier in the future.
  • Improving your content’s accessibility and inclusivity.

Whether or not you see value in running a content audit, there are certain points in the life of your website when running a content audit becomes essential. Consider running a content audit if:

  • Your website is a few years old and you’ve never run an audit.
  • There’s no clear strategy or you’ve inherited a content marketing strategy from another team.
  • You’re redesigning your website.
  • You think you’ve created content on every possible topic in your niche.

Determine Your Content Audit’s Purpose

How you approach a content audit will depend on your goals. While you can create a content audit that achieves all of the benefits I listed above, it will be much more effective if you pick one or two goals to focus on.

For instance, if you want to use a content audit to improve your SEO, then you’ll want to focus on identifying content gaps and pages with missing metadata. That means paying particular attention to the technical SEO of each page. 

Overview of SEO issues discovered on a web page.

Given you are reading a digital marketing blog, I’m going to write the rest of this guide as if you were running an SEO-driven content audit. You can still use this guide if you’re looking to improve your reader’s experience or make your content more inclusive and accessible, but just know some of the more technical aspects may not be relevant.

Content Audit Tools

Software tools are an essential part of the content audit process. Rather than go through your website manually, noting each issue in turn, you can use the following tools to automate much of the process.

Ubersuggest

If you’re running a content audit to improve your SEO, Ubersuggest is essential. Running a site audit is easy. Just enter your URL, click “Search,” and click “Site Audit” on the left. Think of this as a quick, free overall look at how your website is doing.

You’ll also get a snapshot of which SEO issues are most prevalent on your site and how critical they are.

Ubersuggest's homepage showing various SEO metrics.

Google Analytics

Do you want to compare the performance of your pages? Then use Google Analytics to find traffic data for each page.

Homepage of Google Analytics.

Note: Be aware that Google is sunsetting Universal Analytics on July 1, 2023, in favor of Google Analytics 4. If you haven’t already, you should make the switch to GA4 before completing your content audit. The faster you switch, the more historical data you’ll have and the easier it will be to reuse your content audit in the future.   

Broken Link Checkers

As you analyze your content, you’ll want to find and fix broken links. Integrity, Ahrefs, and Dead Link Checker can help you there.  

A broken link checker tool named Integrity.

Content Inventory

You could manually pull each content link associated with your website, but that could take far too long and you could risk overlooking some things. Instead, you may want to try a content inventory tool like Screaming Frog or DynoMapper.

A content inventory tool named Dynomapper.

Website Content Audit Steps

It may seem like there’s a lot of work involved with creating a content audit. But it’s easy when you break it down into manageable steps.

#1: Create a List of Your Content Assets

The first step of a website content audit is to make an inventory of your assets. Seeing all of them in one location makes it much easier to analyze content performance, highlight areas to improve, and update each asset methodically.

Screaming Frog’s SEO Spider Tool is the best way to extract content assets from your site. It’s free to use if your site has less than 500 pages. But you can also use any of the other content extractors I mentioned above.

Whichever tool you use, export your data into a spreadsheet, making sure relevant data points (word count, meta description, target keyword, no. of images, etc.) are included. You may also want to add traffic data from Google Analytics to each page so you can analyze content performance alongside technical SEO metrics.

Creating a list of content assets using Microsoft Excel.

Content Audit Templates

As I explained above, you will want to build a content audit spreadsheet so you can keep all the data in one place. You can build one from scratch, download one of the following templates, or use these as a launching point and customize your spreadsheet.

Keep in mind the goals we discussed earlier. There are lots of stats or data points you could pull alongside each content. However, some data is going to be more relevant to you than others.

If you are using this audit to improve your content marketing engagement, you will want to check information about clickthroughs, social media engagement, comments, and so on.

If your goal is associated with SEO, you may want to include warnings and recommendations you gather from Ubersuggest.

#2: Create a List of Content Issues to Identify

Now you have all your content assets in one place; it’s time to analyze them. Go through each piece of content one at a time to see how it’s performing, whether it’s missing metadata or there are any obvious ways it can be improved.

Here are a few things to look for, in particular:

  • Duplicate Content: Search engines prioritize fresh content. If you have a lot of duplicate content living on different pages or posts, you’ll want to remove or rewrite those pages. 
  • Outdated Content: People don’t want to read outdated content, and search engines overlook it too. Update it wherever possible.
  • Content Gaps: What’s missing in your content? Are there topics you haven’t addressed yet? Target markets you haven’t spoken to? Being able to look at everything at once can help you find the gaps and fill them in.  
  • Target Keyword: Does the content asset target a particular keyword and include it in the copy?
  • Metadata: Have you written metadata descriptions for all pages? This spreadsheet is going to help you see which ones need to be written and which ones are repetitive and should be updated.
  • Image Data: Does every image have a descriptive title and alt tag? This will ensure your images are SEO-optimized and accessibility-friendly.
  • Word Count: Do your pages and posts have enough words to optimize for SEO? Or are they too short? Check that word count to see if pages need to be updated or edited down.

Keep track of everything by creating a note next to each asset about why it needs improving. You can also color-code your spreadsheet based on the type of optimization required, but this can quickly become complicated if a single asset has multiple issues.

#3: Address Content Issues

You can’t do everything at once, so now it’s time to prioritize your content issues. One strategy is to work through each asset numerically, starting with those at the top of the spreadsheet. Another is to group each optimization issue together and tackle them in bulk. For instance, you could update the meta data on every page, then move on to fixing image issues and so on.

Alternatively, use Ubersuggest to prioritize content issues for you. When you run an SEO audit on Ubersuggest, you’ll receive recommendations based on an issue’s difficulty and SEO impact. 

Ranking content issues based on how difficult they are to fix and the impact of them.

Focusing on tasks with a high SEO impact and low difficulty will give you a series of quick wins. But you could also prioritize all of the easy tasks to get the ball rolling if you’re not that confident.

Content audits work best when they are tackled by several people, so don’t be afraid to ask for help and split up the work. Maybe you can take care of on-page issues while a colleague addresses the content gaps your audit has highlighted.

FAQs

What is a Content Audit?

A content audit is the process of creating an inventory of your website’s pages and analyzing their performance.  

Why Do I Need To Do a Content Audit on My Website?

Content audits help you identify topic gaps, problems, and areas for improvement on your website. Good content helps you rank better in Google and can earn you more traffic, conversions, and revenue.

What Are Some Tools I Can Use for Content Audits?

You can use tools like Ubersuggest, SEMrush, and Ahrefs to run a content audit.

Where Do I Start With a Content Audit?

You should start your content by compiling a list of all of your content assets. You can do this by pulling a report through tools like Screaming Frog and then analyzing the results in a spreadsheet.

Conclusion

A content audit may feel overwhelming at first glance. But don’t let that stop you.

Starting a website content audit is one of the best steps you can take to improve your content marketing strategy. Compiling all of your assets in one place makes it much easier to see what needs improving and which assets are missing. It also makes it easier to prioritize and fix issues.

Once you’ve run a content audit once, managing your assets in the future becomes a breeze. You’ll have no problem taking your content marketing efforts to the next level. 

What issues has your content audit identified?