What SEOJuice Does Automatically vs. What You Do
SEOJuice automates the repetitive, technical side of SEO. But some tasks — especially strategic ones — still require your expertise.
What SEOJuice Handles Automatically
These are applied without manual intervention (depending on your optimization settings):
| Task | What SEOJuice Does |
|---|---|
| Internal links | Identifies relevant pages and creates contextual links using AI-powered semantic matching |
| Image alt text | Generates descriptive alt text for images missing it, using page context and keywords |
| Meta descriptions | Suggests or auto-generates meta descriptions based on page content |
| Accessibility | Injects ARIA labels, focus management, skip navigation, and other WCAG 2.1 fixes |
| Structured data | Generates and maintains JSON-LD schema markup |
| Open Graph tags | Fills in missing OG title, description, and image tags for social sharing |
| Crawling & monitoring | Re-crawls your site every 24–72 hours to detect changes |
| Audit reports | Generates technical SEO audits with scores and prioritized issues |
What Requires Your Action
SEOJuice flags these issues in your audit report, but you need to fix them in your CMS or hosting:
| Task | Why It Needs You |
|---|---|
| Content creation | Writing blog posts, product descriptions, and landing pages requires human creativity and domain expertise |
| Keyword strategy | Choosing which topics to target is a business decision SEOJuice can’t make for you |
| URL structure | Changing slugs, redirects, or site architecture requires CMS changes |
| robots.txt edits | This file lives on your server — SEOJuice can flag issues but can’t modify it |
| Server configuration | SSL certificates, redirects, page speed optimization at the server level |
| Duplicate content | Consolidating or removing duplicate pages requires editorial decisions |
| Broken external links | Replacing or removing links to external sites that no longer work |
Platform Limitations
Some CMS platforms restrict what can be changed:
- Squarespace — Cannot edit robots.txt or add custom structured data directly. SEOJuice will flag robots.txt issues, but you may need to use Squarespace’s built-in SEO settings instead.
- Wix — Limited control over page headers and meta tags. SEOJuice handles what it can via JavaScript injection.
- Shopify — Theme-level changes (like heading hierarchy) require theme editing.
When SEOJuice flags an issue you can’t fix due to platform limitations, you can safely ignore it — focus on the issues you can control.
The Bottom Line
Think of SEOJuice as your automated SEO assistant. It handles the tedious, repetitive work (linking, tagging, accessibility) so you can focus on strategy and content. You don’t need to fix every issue in the audit report — SEOJuice is already addressing the ones it can.