We teach SEO auditing the way it works in real projects
Since 2015, we've helped thousands of students go from confused by crawl errors to confidently fixing technical issues, analyzing content gaps, and building solid site health reports.
Started from a gap nobody wanted to talk about
Back in 2015, the team behind Malthiosys noticed something odd: plenty of people were learning SEO basics, but almost nobody taught the audit side properly — the technical checks, the structured review process, the part that actually tells you what's broken and why.
So we built courses around exactly that. Not theory-heavy lectures, but practical, hands-on programs using real websites with real problems. The kind of skills you can apply the next day.
Today our programs cover crawl analysis, on-page evaluation, backlink profiling, Core Web Vitals, and structured data — all taught by practitioners who work with live client sites regularly.
What shapes how we teach
These aren't mission-statement words. They're the actual decisions we make when building every course module.
Practical over theoretical
Every concept is tied to a real audit scenario. You're not reading about crawl budgets — you're working through a site that has crawl budget issues.
Tested on live sites
Instructors regularly run audits for actual clients. What they find ends up in the curriculum. It stays current because the work stays current.
Clear step-by-step logic
An audit has a structure. We teach that structure — how to prioritize findings, what to check first, how to write recommendations that developers actually follow.
No fluff, no padding
We cut anything that doesn't directly help you do better audits. Short, dense, specific — lessons that respect your time.
Small group feedback
Our programs include review sessions where instructors look at your actual audit work and give specific, actionable notes on what to improve.
Content that stays updated
Search guidelines shift. Tool interfaces change. We revise modules when something meaningful changes, not just once a year on a schedule.
How our programs are actually structured
Most SEO courses bolt audit content onto the end as an afterthought. We built our curriculum the other way around — the audit process is the spine. Everything else connects to it.
Orientation and tool setup
Get your environment ready. Screaming Frog, Search Console, GA4, log analyzers — you learn how each one fits into the audit workflow before using them.
Crawl and indexation review
Start where search engines start. How is the site being crawled? What gets indexed and what doesn't, and why? You work through a real site with real crawl data.
On-page and content analysis
Title tags, heading structure, internal linking, duplicate content, thin pages — how to spot problems, how to measure severity, how to prioritize fixes.
Performance and Core Web Vitals
LCP, CLS, INP — not as abstract acronyms but as specific things you measure, diagnose, and report on with clear recommendations attached.
Reporting and communication
An audit is only useful if people act on it. Learn how to structure findings, write recommendations clearly, and present work to clients or internal teams.
What you walk away knowing how to do with an SEO audit
Not "familiar with" or "aware of" — actually able to execute. Here's what the skills look like in practice after finishing a Malthiosys program.
Technical audit in progress
Students complete a full audit on a real site as their final project — reviewed individually by an instructor.
Enroll nowRun a full crawl and read the output
Interpret crawl reports, spot redirect chains, find orphan pages, understand what the bot sees vs. what users see.
Diagnose performance issues by cause
Not just "slow" but why — render-blocking resources, large layout shifts, slow server response, third-party scripts.
Produce a structured audit report
A report with a clear severity scale, grouped findings, and specific recommendations that a developer can act on.
Read log files for crawl behavior
See exactly what Googlebot requested, when, how often — and use that to inform crawl budget decisions and fixes.