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How to Use the BearAudit Dashboard After a Crawl

Get the most from your audit: read total pages, pages with issues, and non-200 count. Use Action Plan, Reports, and In Search, then filter by issue category and export CSV or JSON for your team.

Once BearAudit has finished crawling a property, the dashboard is where you see the big picture and decide what to fix first.

What you see at a glance

  • Total pages — How many URLs were crawled and stored.
  • Pages with issues — Count of pages that have at least one SEO verification issue (error, warning, or info).
  • Non-200 count — Pages that returned something other than HTTP 200. These can hurt indexing and UX.
  • Issue count by category — Breakdown into meta, open_graph, content, http, h1, canonical, jsonld, images, and so on. Tells you which problem is most common.

Use the first three numbers to judge overall health; use the category breakdown to prioritize (e.g. fix all missing meta descriptions before tweaking thin content).

Next steps from the dashboard

  • Action plan — Open Action plan from the sidebar to get an AI-generated, prioritised list of SEO tasks based on your crawl, analytics, and Search Console data. You can export it to Jira as a single issue or create issues per item.
  • Reports — Use Reports to see broken links, redirect chains, and duplicate content groups. Each tab (Broken links, Redirects, Duplicates) helps you fix technical and content issues at scale.
  • In Search — See which of your crawled URLs currently appear in search results (powered by live search). Useful to spot indexing gaps or prioritise pages that are already ranking.

Drilling into issues

Open the Verifications view for that property. You get a list of every page that has at least one issue. Filter by category (e.g. only “meta” or “images”) so you can fix one type of problem across the site. Each row shows the URL and the issues; click through to see full details.

Exporting for your team or clients

  • Verifications CSV — Export the list of pages and their issues to CSV. Handy for assigning tasks to devs or sharing with clients.
  • Dashboard summary JSON — Export the aggregate metrics (totals, issue counts, word counts, redirects, response times) to a JSON file. Use it for reporting or to track progress over time.

Run a crawl, check the dashboard, use the Action plan and Reports to prioritise, then re-crawl to confirm. BearAudit keeps your data local, so you can re-run as often as you like.

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