A crawl report full of unranked issues is just a long to-do list nobody trusts enough to act on. TechySEO scores every issue by the traffic and authority of the page it's actually sitting on, so a missing canonical on your best landing page surfaces above a hundred cosmetic issues on pages nobody visits.
Any halfway decent crawler can hand you a list of three hundred technical issues. That list, on its own, is close to useless, because a missing alt tag on a product page nobody visits and an accidental noindex tag on your highest-traffic landing page both just show up as "an issue" with no indication that one of them is a five-minute fix that matters enormously and the other barely registers.
Without something sorting that out, teams default to one of two bad habits: knock out the easy ones first, or knock out whichever category has the most line items. Neither one tracks with actual ranking impact. A few months of that and you've got a long list of "fixes" with no measurable traffic change to show for it, which is exactly the kind of outcome that makes it harder to get developer time approved next quarter.
The fix is weighting issues by what they're actually sitting on: issue severity, the traffic the affected page gets, and how much authority that page carries. Roll those into one score and "what do I work on today" stops being a debate.
Scoring is the start. What you actually need is a backlog someone can work from.
Run the audit and get a backlog already sorted by what's actually hurting rankings, not just what's easiest to fix.