Do Your Docs
Actually Rank?
Paste your docs URL. See whether they rank for the error messages and “how do I…” queries developers actually search — or whether they're a client-rendered SPA crawlers and LLMs can't read. Graded for search-intent coverage, not vanity SEO.
By Daria Dovzhikova · Updated June 2026
No signup for the score. We check intent coverage, not vanity SEO.
Developers don't search the way your docs are organized
They paste the error message — ECONNREFUSED 127.0.0.1:5432— or type the task — “how to configure X with Prisma.” The docs that win have a page shaped exactly like that query, indexable by a crawler and parseable by an LLM. Most docs are reference-only, organized by API surface, rendered client-side, and invisible at the exact moment a developer is stuck and most likely to convert. This grades the four things that decide whether your docs show up then:
- Indexability (35%) — can a crawler actually read the page, or is it a JS-only shell?
- Search-intent coverage (35%) — do you have error-message and how-to pages, not just reference?
- Answer shape (15%) — does the page answer the query first, with clean headings?
- LLM parseability (15%) — llms.txt, structured data, semantic HTML answer engines can quote.
Built by GTM Labs — we ship llms.txt and answer-first docs because we measured what ranks, not what looks nice. The score is a directional read from a page sample, not a full audit.
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