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Content hubs often look healthy from the outside while hiding weak indexation signals, duplicate support pages, and thin archive templates.
A content library usually includes listing pages, tag pages, author pages, and article detail pages. These page types support each other, but they should not all be judged by exactly the same quality expectations.
A useful score should capture whether a page is crawlable, indexable, sufficiently differentiated, and properly connected into the larger content structure.
Archive and listing pages often drive discovery but can also become thin or duplicative quickly. Monitoring should highlight when those pages stop adding navigational value and start looking like low-quality indexation clutter.
Indexation quality scoring gives editorial teams a way to think beyond individual articles. It helps them understand whether the entire library structure is helping or hurting search performance.