Run an online presence audit before you blame the homepage.
SavageAudit does more than inspect the page. It reads the public proof surface around your brand: social presence, owned profiles, review signals, footprint consistency, and the evidence that changes whether a visitor or machine trusts what they see. It is part online presence audit, part social proof audit, and part trust-layer diagnosis.
- Online presence audit
- Social proof
- Public evidence
A stylized public-proof console with footprint density, trust receipts, and supporting signal gaps.
Evidence board
- Consistent social handles
- Clear company identity pages
- Search-visible brand references
- Thin review depth
- Weak customer receipts
- Sparse supporting third-party mentions
The context around the site, not just the site itself.
A trust surface buyers and machines read before believing you.
Helps explain why one brand feels more legitimate than another.
What an online presence audit includes
An online presence audit page for the evidence layer that makes SavageAudit feel different: owned footprint, social proof, reviews, and public brand signals in one console.
A clean homepage cannot fully save a weak online presence.
If reviews are thin, profiles are inconsistent, or the brand barely exists in public signals, the page has to work harder just to be believed.
Visitors scan the internet around you, not just the page you sent them.
Social proof, profile depth, review signals, and public evidence shape whether the message feels earned or synthetic.
The evidence console makes the invisible trust layer visible.
It connects the site to the public footprint that either supports the sale or quietly undercuts it.
How an online presence audit differs from a social media audit
See where the brand is present and where it is thin.
Owned and semi-owned surfaces create a clearer map of how complete the brand feels across the public web.
Track the evidence that gives claims weight.
A strong page backed by better proof lands differently than the same page with no public support behind it.
Find what to strengthen outside the website too.
Sometimes the next trust fix is not another homepage paragraph. It is the public proof stack around the brand.
Social profiles, reviews, and public trust signals that shape the verdict
- 01
Detect the owned and public footprint
Map the brand surfaces that shape perceived legitimacy across search, social, reviews, and buyer research behavior.
- 02
Read proof density and consistency
Evaluate whether the surrounding evidence reinforces the message on the page or quietly contradicts it.
- 03
Turn the gap into action
Identify the proof surfaces that deserve attention first so the website stops carrying the whole trust load alone.
Why a website can feel weak even when the page looks fine
- Trust-sensitive brands
- Paid acquisition teams
- Competitive categories
- Owned profile breadth
- Proof consistency
- Review and public evidence posture
- Why does the site still feel weak?
- Where is the trust layer thin?
- What public proof should we strengthen next?
Answer the trust-layer questions before the homepage takes the blame
What is an online presence audit?
It is a review of the public proof surface around a brand: owned profiles, social signals, review density, and the evidence that shapes trust before or after a page visit.
How is this different from a social media audit?
A social media audit looks mostly at channel presence and content. This page also covers reviews, owned profiles, proof consistency, and the public brand signals that affect trust.
Why is this separate from the core page audit?
Because it is a different layer. The page can be strong while the public footprint is weak, or vice versa. SavageAudit brings both into the same decision frame.
Related audit pages and supporting product surfaces
Run an online presence audit before you rewrite another homepage section.
Run SavageAudit on a real URL and turn this page from theory into a verdict.