Internal linking is how I help Google (and readers) find my best pages. In this tag, I document simple, repeatable steps: pick a hub page, add 2–4 links from new posts back to the hub, use clear anchor text, and add 1–2 links forward to related posts. I show quick before/after notes from Search Console so you can see what changed—discovery, impressions, and position. If you want an easy win that compounds over time, copy the internal link patterns I test here.
I cleaned up the AT&T Business wireless plan structure on WirelessConsultant.net by creating a better hub page, fixing internal links, and separating broad plan content from detailed plan pages.
This update shows how I used Semrush position tracking data to make one practical SEO move on WirelessConsultant.net: adding internal links from a strong ranking page to related pages that need a push.
I’m building a simple SEO glossary for beginners—10 terms I keep seeing while fixing my WordPress sites (title tags, slugs, indexing, noindex, schema, redirects). Quick definitions, real examples, and a page I’ll keep updating as I learn.
Weekly log for my 90-day AI search visibility sprint: what I shipped, what changed, and a 7-day Google Search Console snapshot (top queries + top pages).
How long do SEO changes take? Most edits show movement in days or weeks, but stronger rankings usually take longer. Here is the realistic timeline and what my own site is showing right now.
For this experiment, I took one hot topic — the truth about “free phone” promotions from wireless carriers — and published it across three of my websites with different tones,…