Website optimization is about making pages load fast and feel easy to use. Here I log the simple fixes I actually do: compress images, limit plugins, clean up CSS/JS, improve mobile spacing, and make buttons and headings clearer. I note what I changed and why, then check load time and basic engagement after. If you want quick, low-risk improvements that help both visitors and search engines, start with the most recent post and copy the steps.
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.
Owning domains is easy. Building the right ones is the hard part. I finally stepped back and reviewed my domain portfolio with a real business filter: what should I build…
Project SEOlutions • Log Entry Today I updated my WirelessConsultant.net contact page so the first screen does the qualifying — visitors now send better requests with less back-and-forth. What changed…
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).
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.