| name | seo-headings-structure |
| description | Audit and propose fixes for a page's heading hierarchy and semantic outline — verify exactly one H1, logical H2-H6 nesting with no skipped levels, descriptive heading text, and HTML5 landmarks (article/section/nav/main/footer) — so the document outline is extractable. Module M7c. Feeds the Search SEO score (clean headings also support AI answer-block extraction, which is scored separately under M11). |
| allowed-tools | Read, Grep, Glob, WebFetch, Bash |
seo-headings-structure (M7c)
A clean, single-rooted heading tree and proper semantic landmarks make a page's outline machine-readable — the same structure that AI engines use to extract answer blocks and that search engines use to understand content scope. Schema/entity context: references/schema-tier1.md.
Audits
Working from the PageSnapshot (rendered_dom if present, else raw_html):
- Single H1: exactly one
<h1> per page. Zero H1s, or multiple H1s, are both findings.
- No skipped levels: nesting descends one level at a time (an
<h2> may be followed by <h3>, not directly by <h4>). Build the outline and flag any jump.
- Descriptive text: each heading names its section in human terms — flag empty headings, headings used purely for visual styling, and generic placeholders ("Section 1", "Welcome").
- Semantic landmarks: detect
<main>, <article>, <section>, <nav>, <header>, <footer>; flag when headings live inside non-semantic <div> soup or when more than one <main> exists.
- Outline ↔ landmark agreement: sectioning elements should carry their own heading; orphan landmarks and headings outside any landmark are findings.
Good heading structure feeds AI answer-block extraction: clear H2/H3 boundaries map to candidate quotable passages.
Fixes
- Heading-level restructuring — re-leveling H2-H6 to remove skips or to nest correctly (fixable: proposed). This alters the visual hierarchy, so it requires per-item accept; emit a
fix_preview diff, never an auto-write.
- Add a single missing H1 — when the page has no H1, propose one sourced from the populated
<title>/og:title or the obvious page-title element (fixable: proposed, per-item accept — adding a visible heading is editorial). Never fabricate H1 text from thin content; ask the user if the source is ambiguous.
- Wrap in semantic landmarks — recommending
<main>/<article> adoption is advisory (structural refactor the tool does not write).
Mark each finding's fixable field consistent with schema/finding.schema.json (auto / proposed / advisory). Never fabricate a heading's text or invent an H1 from thin content — ask the user or leave a clearly-marked TODO placeholder.
Verification
- Method:
dom_assert. Re-parse the snapshot, rebuild the outline, and assert the specific condition (one H1, no level skip, landmark present).
- Offline reproduce:
node ${CLAUDE_SKILL_DIR}/../../scripts/parse-html.mjs --url <u> (or --file <path>) — returns the headings block (counts per level, h1_count, and skipped_levels), which counts H1s and walks the H1-H6 tree for skipped levels.
- When the rendered DOM tier is required but unavailable (heading injected client-side and only
raw_html is present), status is needs_api, never a false pass.
Findings
Emit findings per schema/finding.schema.json. Examples:
M7c.h1.multiple — more than one <h1> on the page (status fail, severity 3, fixable: proposed, axis search, confidence established). evidence.observed quotes each H1's text and selector; verification.reproduce is the parse-html.mjs command above (inspect h1_count).
M7c.outline.skipped_level — an <h2> followed directly by an <h4> (status fail, severity 3, fixable: proposed, axis search, confidence directional). evidence.observed quotes the two adjacent headings and their levels.
M7c.landmark.no_main — no <main> element; primary content sits in <div>s (status warn, severity 3, fixable: advisory, axis search, confidence directional).
Each finding carries evidence.observed quoting the page verbatim and a runnable verification.reproduce; expected_impact is banded + confidence-tagged (no naked percentages).
Honesty
- Heading keyword stuffing does not buy ranking — write headings for the reader; clarity is the signal, not keyword density. Don't recommend cramming terms into H1/H2.
- Multiple H1s are valid HTML5 and modern parsers/AI tolerate them; the real cost is a muddied outline, so treat as severity 3
directional, not a critical failure. Skipped heading levels are primarily an accessibility/structure concern — frame impact honestly (directional) rather than promising a ranking lift.