Clear, practical writing on the parts of SEO you can actually control — and how SEODock's tools fit in.
Your title tag is the single most visible thing you control in search. Here's how to write one that earns the click without tripping truncation.
The meta description is your ad copy in organic search. It won't rank you, but it decides whether your ranking turns into a visit.
Schema markup is how you describe your page to search engines in a language they fully understand. Done right, it can unlock rich results.
Adding FAQ structured data can turn a single search listing into an expandable set of questions — more real estate, more reasons to click.
A sitemap is a map you hand to search engines. A good one speeds up discovery; a sloppy one sends crawlers down dead ends.
A single misplaced slash in robots.txt can hide an entire site from search. It's a powerful file that's easy to get dangerously wrong.
Site migrations live or die on their redirects. Map them carefully and you keep your rankings; rush them and you start over.
You can target the perfect keyword and still fail to rank if your page answers the wrong question. Intent is the missing piece.
Great content badly structured still loses readers. A clear hierarchy keeps people on the page and helps engines parse your meaning.
For a business with a physical presence, local search is where customers are. The fundamentals are unglamorous but they compound.