rode.com — AI Search Visibility Report
Overall score: 68/100
AI search visibility analysis for rode.com. LLMao scored rode.com 68/100 across 8 LLM-readiness categories including crawlability, semantic content, structured data, authority signals, and answer-engine clarity.
Analyzed URL
Category breakdown
- readability: 85/100 — High clarity and professional tone, though some technical jargon is undefined for general users.
- schema_markup: 65/100 — Valid Corporation schema present, but missing Product, Breadcrumb, and WebSite schemas.
- authority_trust: 75/100 — Strong corporate identity and contact info, but lacks visible publication dates and social proof schema.
- citation_sources: 40/100 — Lacks external citations or primary source attribution for technical performance claims.
- content_freshness: 20/100 — No visible dates or update signals found in the content or metadata.
- content_structure: 70/100 — Good use of semantic HTML but heading hierarchy is weak and lacks a clear H1 on the analyzed fragment.
- entity_definition: 75/100 — Excellent brand consistency and 'Corporation' schema, but lacks individual author identification.
- technical_accessibility: 95/100 — Excellent meta descriptions and social meta tags; content is highly accessible.
Top recommendations
- Add Visible Publication Dates (Content Freshness): Implement visible 'Last Updated' dates or publication dates on product pages and guides to signal content recency to LLMs.
- Implement Product Schema (Schema Markup): Expand JSON-LD to include Product and Offer schema on the homepage featured items to improve rich snippet extraction.
- Enhance Author Entities (Entity Definition): Create dedicated author bios for user guides and technical articles with Person schema to establish E-E-A-T.
- Improve Citation Quality (Citation & Source Quality): Include outbound links to technical standards (e.g., AES, USB-IF) or third-party reviews to verify technical claims.
- Fix Heading Hierarchy (Content Structure): Ensure a strict H1-H2-H3 hierarchy; currently, the homepage relies heavily on visual styling rather than semantic heading levels.