Indexing behaves inconsistently
If important URLs are missing from the index, the wrong version becomes canonical, or Search Console shows recurring coverage issues, the technical layer needs attention before more content can perform properly.
Updated
We fix indexing, speed, and structure so visibility can grow consistently.
Technical SEO is the foundation. If search engines cannot crawl and understand your pages properly, strong content still underperforms. We audit, fix critical issues, and tie the work to measurable outcomes.
Technical SEO becomes urgent when crawl access, templates, or performance are holding back growth even though the site already has content and the business is actively marketing the offer.
If important URLs are missing from the index, the wrong version becomes canonical, or Search Console shows recurring coverage issues, the technical layer needs attention before more content can perform properly.
Domain changes, URL restructuring, or CMS migrations often break redirects, canonicals, hreflang signals, and internal links. Preventing those issues before launch is far cheaper than recovering lost visibility afterward.
Faceted navigation, filter URLs, sort parameters, and product variants can create large volumes of weak duplicate pages. That wastes crawl attention and pulls authority away from the URLs that should rank.
If slow load and unstable layout show up across multiple pages, the issue is rarely a single image. It usually points to template logic, JavaScript weight, font strategy, caching, or render path decisions.
The goal is not simply to remove errors. The goal is to make key landing pages easier to crawl, easier to understand, and easier to scale.
A technical SEO audit is not a single crawl export. We review how the site behaves for search engines, browsers, and users together, because real visibility problems usually happen between those layers.
We review robots.txt, XML sitemaps, canonicals, pagination, hreflang, and redirects to confirm that the right URLs receive the right signals and weak duplicates are not stealing priority.
We inspect whether templates produce stable headings, metadata, schema markup, internal linking patterns, and semantic structure. One broken template can affect dozens or hundreds of URLs at once.
We identify which resources delay first render, where layout shifts happen, and which JavaScript or media assets are responsible. The target is not only a better score, but a faster experience on the page types that matter.
On larger websites, log analysis shows where bots actually spend time. That helps separate problems caused by internal linking, duplicate templates, URL strategy, or crawl waste.
We do not judge technical SEO by one ranking screenshot. The real question is whether the site becomes healthier, important templates gain stronger visibility, and the team gets more control over future releases.
We monitor whether important URLs are indexed more cleanly and whether issues such as redirect chains, 404s, canonical conflicts, and duplicate URL patterns decline over time.
We look at service pages, blog templates, category pages, and product pages separately. A single green test URL is not enough if the main template still performs poorly at scale.
After technical fixes, important landing pages should collect more stable impressions, cleaner crawl signals, and stronger support from internal linking and site architecture.
A good outcome also means the team leaves with a clean priority list, measurable checkpoints, and fewer repeated technical mistakes in future releases.
We map issues by impact and effort, then build a clear action plan.
We address indexing, URL logic, speed bottlenecks, and markup quality.
We verify outcomes in Search Console, crawl tests, and live pages.
We monitor 14–30 days and iterate where needed.
What you receive
Early signals such as indexing quality, crawl errors, and CWV trends often improve within 1–4 weeks. Durable growth comes when technical fixes align with content and internal linking.
Usually not. It builds a strong base, but growth also requires intent-matched content and structured internal links.
Yes. We can deliver a full audit with a prioritized backlog for your dev team, or implement the fixes with your team.
An audit gives diagnosis. Technical SEO service includes diagnosis, implementation, validation, and monitoring.