A photography website is structurally different from a law firm's or a plumber's site. The content is predominantly visual. Pages are often built around galleries rather than text. The platforms photographers commonly use — Squarespace, Pixieset, Showit, SmugMug — each have specific technical characteristics that affect crawlability, page speed, and indexation in ways that a generic SEO audit won't catch.
This matters because Google's crawlers still rely heavily on text signals to understand what a page is about. A stunning gallery of wedding images tells a human viewer everything — and tells Google almost nothing without supporting text, structured data, and properly written alt attributes.
The second structural issue is volume. Photographers who blog consistently can accumulate hundreds of session posts. When those posts follow a near-identical template — venue name, a paragraph of sentimental copy, 40 images — Google often treats them as thin or near-duplicate content, which suppresses the entire domain's authority over time.
This audit framework is built around those photography-specific vulnerabilities. It's not a generic 100-point checklist. It's a focused diagnostic that helps you answer one question: why isn't my portfolio showing up when ideal clients search for photographers in my area and specialty?
Work through each section in order. The issues are roughly ranked by how often they're the primary cause of ranking problems — site speed and Core Web Vitals first, then content quality, then local signals.