The page nobody visits might be the one ChatGPT quotes.
Every content audit ever written deletes it. Zero clicks, no links, nobody cares. But engines quote pages, not rankings, and the moment you delete that page you leave the answer permanently. This one checks before it cuts.
No email. No signup. Rebrand it and use it with your own clients if you like.
Traffic is the fourth question, not the first. A cited page with zero clicks passes at step one and never reaches the part of the file that would have killed it.
Pruning advice was written for a web that no longer exists.
The rule everyone still uses: no traffic, no links, no rankings, delete it. It was good advice. It was written when the only way a page could help you was by being clicked, and that stopped being true about two years ago.
Engines quote pages, not rankings
Those pages look exactly like dead ones
So AI citation is checked first, and it wins
One row per URL. Four bands.
PAGE, PERFORMANCE, DISCOVERY, DECISION. Export the URL list from your sitemap rather than from memory, because the pages you forget you published are exactly the ones this is for. Most of the columns are the usual ones. These are not.
Three numbers that stop you.
The scorecard counts the usual things: pages, verdicts, clusters, index reduction. These three are different. They exist to catch you in the act, and they are the most useful part of the file.
And one that tells you whether it was worth doing
How to run it yourself.
The whole thing is on this page. If you want to do it yourself, this is everything you need.
Pull every indexable URL from the sitemap
Write the Cluster for every row before you look at anything else
Check AI Cited. Manually. Before any Verdict.
Read the Signal, then overrule it
Redirect, do not delete. Then read the three safety numbers.
Three ways people get this wrong.
Deleting instead of redirecting
Checking citation after deciding
Pruning because a blog post said to
FAQ
Is the content pruning template really free?
Why does AI citation override traffic?
How do I check whether a page is cited?
How many pages should I expect to remove?
Can I use it in Google Sheets?
How many pages does it handle?
The spreadsheet is the easy part.
The hard part is the argument about which page survives, and having it with someone who has no attachment to any of them. We have done this before and written it up: the content pruning case study is the honest version, including what it cost.

