Deeper dives
What's in an AI Fix Report, how the rewrites are generated, how to use the priority levels, and how to apply fixes to your page.
Last updated May 10, 2026
After a roast, you can generate an AI Fix Report. The report contains:
These are not generic suggestions. They are generated from the specific problems PageScorch found on your page, using the copy and context from your actual roast.
The AI uses your roast result — the score, the identified problems, and the page content — as input. It generates copy that directly addresses the weaknesses found.
For example, if the roast found that your headline is too feature-focused and does not communicate the outcome, the headline rewrite will be outcome-focused copy for your specific product.
If the roast found that your CTA says "Submit" or "Click here," the CTA rewrite will replace it with action-oriented outcome copy.
The improvement list uses three priority levels:
High priority — Changes that will have the biggest impact on conversion. These typically address the most fundamental problems: unclear headline, missing CTA, absent social proof, or confusing offer.
Medium priority — Important improvements that build on a solid foundation. These include objection handling, copy structure, benefit articulation, and trust signal placement.
Low priority — Refinements that add marginal lift once the high and medium items are addressed. These are worth doing but should not be tackled before the higher-priority items.
Work through the list from top to bottom. Fixing low-priority items while high-priority problems remain unaddressed rarely moves the conversion needle.
AI Fix Reports give you ready-to-use copy. Here is how to apply it:
Headline and subheadline — Replace your current headline and subheadline with the rewrites. Run the new version past a colleague who has never seen your page to check that it is immediately clear.
CTA button — Update the button label in your page builder or CMS. If your CTA has conditional logic (e.g. changes based on plan), update each variant.
Improvement list — Go through each item in priority order. Treat each one as a specific task: open your page editor, find the element, apply the change.
After applying changes from your Fix Report, re-roast the page. PageScorch will compare the new result against the original and show you which problems were resolved and whether the score improved.
This creates a measurable feedback loop: roast → fix → re-roast → confirm improvement.
See Re-roast and diff comparison for how the comparison works.
Generating a Fix Report uses one fix credit. If you run a roast and then generate a fix, that is one roast credit and one fix credit.
Fix credits are included in all paid plans. If you need to generate multiple Fix Reports (e.g. after re-roasting), each generation uses one credit.
If you generate a Fix Report, leave the page, and come back, you will see the same Fix Report — not a new generation. PageScorch caches completed Fix Reports and returns the same result for the same roast. To get a fresh fix with updated rewrites, run a new roast first.
If you are auditing pages for clients, the Fix Report is a deliverable you can share directly. The headline, subheadline, CTA, and improvement list can be included in a client report or handed off to a developer for implementation.
See White-label reports and custom notes for how to customize reports before sharing them with clients.
Still stuck?
Email hello@pagescorch.com and we'll help you sort it out.
On this page