SEO strategy is picking a goal and a simple plan you can stick to. In this tag, I keep it practical: choose one primary KPI (clicks or leads), pick 2–3 high-leverage actions (titles, internal links, content refreshes), and ship on a steady weekly cadence. I map each post to a small content cluster, add links back to a hub, and log before/after notes in Search Console. These short entries show exactly what I planned, what I published, and what changed—so you can copy a strategy that’s easy to run as a solo operator.
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).
Quick progress update from Project SEOlutions. I’ve been cleaning up messy tags, fixing key pages, and tightening my site structure across all my sites. Here’s what I changed, what moved the needle, and what I’m doing next.
I’m not an SEO guru—I’m a wireless consultant learning SEO in public. After reading a data-backed article on “5 SEO truths” in the AI era, I rewrote the ideas in plain English and mapped out how I’ll use them across my sites.
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,…
Google suspended my business profile — and my website shot up to #2 for “ATT wireless consultant.” Here’s what I learned about SEO from the surprise boost.
Many people hesitate to click links in emails, even from trusted businesses. Instead of fighting this trend, I’m encouraging prospects to search for “AT&T wireless consultant” and find my website organically. This not only builds trust and security—it also gives my SEO a boost. In this post, I share how this simple shift in strategy can turn email caution into a powerful ranking advantage.