Visibility Engine checks whether pages are ready to be found, shared, and published.

It brings SEO, indexing readiness, metadata review, social previews, spider-style link checks, accessibility basics, diagnostic colors, and publish quality into the same workflow as editing and dry-run publishing.

Visibility Review
Metadataready
Social previewchecked
Linkscrawled
Warningscolor-coded

What it helps you catch

Visibility Engine does not promise rankings. It helps reduce avoidable publishing mistakes before people or search engines see the page.

Search snippets

Review SEO title, meta description, canonical URL, slug quality, and whether the page has enough context to be understood.

Social sharing

Check Open Graph and Twitter/X card metadata so shared links have the right title, description, and image direction.

Indexing readiness

Review noindex signals, robots guidance, sitemap presence, canonical choices, and accidental privacy blockers.

Content structure

Look for heading structure, missing alt text, duplicate metadata, thin descriptions, freshness issues, and confusing page hierarchy.

Links and paths

Review internal links, external links, duplicate slugs, broken paths, and whether important pages are easy to reach.

Publish readiness

Summarize warnings into a practical readiness score before a page enters the final review or deployment workflow.

Redirect coverage

Check legacy paths, planned 301 redirects, canonical targets, and route changes before a page move ships.

Warnings need visual hierarchy.

Diagnostics are easier to act on when every warning shares the same severity language across public pages, the public app, and admin release reports.

SafeChecked, current, accessible, or ready.
ReviewNeeds a decision before publish.
WarningBroken link, missing alt text, duplicate metadata, or redirect gap.
BlockedPrivate route exposure, failed crawler check, or unsafe publish action.

Built into the publishing workflow.

Visibility checks work best when they happen before publishing, not after a page is already live. TraceLayer places visibility review beside editing, preview, dry-run output, and manual approval.

That keeps search visibility, social sharing, accessibility signals, and publishing quality from becoming a separate dashboard nobody remembers to check.

Plain-language goal

Help users answer: “Is this page ready to publish and easy to understand?”

Technical Details

The shared engine is designed around metadata validators, schema generation, sitemap helpers, spider-style link analysis, heading and alt-text checks, duplicate detection, redirect validation, freshness scoring, report generation, and platform adapters for TracePress and WordPress.

One engine, multiple publishing targets.

TraceLayer-native sites and WordPress sites can share the same visibility logic while each platform handles its own content and metadata storage.

TracePress adapter

Audits TracePress pages, posts, clean routes, canonical metadata, sitemap output, HTML content, and publish dry-run readiness.

WordPress adapter

Provides a companion plugin path for post/page SEO panels, metadata review, publish readiness, and future TraceLayer connection.

Local reports

Visibility reports are designed to work locally/self-hosted first, without requiring paid external APIs by default.

Future integrations

Search Console, Bing Webmaster, analytics, exports, and AI-assisted recommendations can be added later as optional providers.

Review-first, not ranking hype.

Visibility Engine is about readiness, clarity, and fewer missed issues. It does not claim to guarantee traffic or search rankings.

01

Edit

Create or update page content in TracePress, WordPress, or another connected workflow.

02

Audit

Run visibility checks for metadata, links, structure, social previews, and indexing signals.

03

Review

See clear warnings and recommendations before the page goes into publish review.

04

Publish safely

Use dry-runs and confirmation-gated publishing so visibility fixes do not bypass safety.