Weak AI visibility with 8 of 22 criteria passing. Biggest gap: llms.txt file.
Verdict
spotlight.realty has a workable crawl foundation, but it is not AEO-ready yet at scale. The site is accessible (HTTPS enabled), AI crawlers are explicitly allowed in `robots.txt` (HTTP 200), and the homepage has extractable Q&A-style content with strong semantic basics (`main`, `section`, `nav`, `footer`). However, core machine-readable trust signals are missing: no `llms.txt`, no JSON-LD schema blocks, no canonical tags, no RSS/Atom feed, and no AI licensing policy. With an overall score of 38, the biggest gains now come from implementing structured metadata, entity authority signals, and freshness infrastructure.
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Guides for the criteria with the most room for improvement
Tidio has a 251-line llms.txt. Crisp has zero. The score gap: +29 points. This single file tells AI assistants exactly what your site does -and without it, they're guessing.
Tidio runs 4 JSON-LD schema types. Crisp runs zero. That's not a coincidence -it's the difference between a 63 and a 34. Structured data is the machine-readable layer AI trusts most.
Sitemaps tell crawlers what exists. RSS feeds tell them what changed. If you don't have one, your new content waits days -or weeks -to be discovered.
Same content, three URLs, zero canonical tags. Congratulations -you just split your authority three ways and gave AI crawlers a headache.
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