The word "audit" gets used loosely in SEO. For a yoga studio, a meaningful audit isn't a single report from a tool — it's a structured review of three interconnected layers: technical health, content relevance, and local search visibility.
Each layer can independently block your rankings, even if the other two are strong. A technically clean site with thin class pages won't rank for competitive terms. A well-written site with GBP errors won't show in the map pack. Understanding which layer has the biggest gap is the core output of a good audit.
Layer 1: Technical Health
This covers everything that affects how Google crawls, indexes, and loads your site. Common problems in yoga studio sites include:
- Pages that load slowly on mobile (where most class searches happen)
- Broken internal links between class pages, schedule pages, and teacher bios
- Pages accidentally blocked from Google via robots.txt or noindex tags
- Missing or duplicate title tags and meta descriptions
- No SSL certificate (though rare now, still worth confirming)
Layer 2: Content Relevance
This covers whether your site has pages that match what potential students are actually searching for. Many yoga studio sites have a homepage, a schedule, and a contact page — and that's it. That's not enough surface area to rank for the range of terms your prospective students use.
Layer 3: Local Visibility
This covers your presence in Google's local ecosystem: your Google Business Profile, directory citations (MindBody, ClassPass, Yelp, local wellness directories), and review volume and recency. These signals are weighted heavily for "yoga near me" and neighborhood-level searches, and they operate largely independently of your website's technical or content quality.
A complete audit touches all three layers. Skipping any one of them produces an incomplete picture — and often misdirects your effort toward lower-impact fixes.