WordPress SEO collects the quick fixes I actually use on this site: set a clean permalink, write focused titles, trim plugins, compress images, add internal links, and keep sitemaps/canonicals correct. I also note small theme tweaks that help mobile reading and how I use Yoast fields (title, meta, noindex when needed). Each post is short and shows what I changed and why, so you can repeat the same steps on your own WordPress install.
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.
I did not know WordPress or SEO when I started. My site went down during a migration, I panicked, and I used ChatGPT to help rebuild WirelessConsultant.net. After 16 months, Google Search Console is showing real progress.
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.
I spent the last few weeks cleaning up my WordPress categories and tags, writing real descriptions, and adding 301 redirects for anything I deleted or renamed. Here’s what I did, what I learned as a novice, and two short videos of me doing it.
Related: How long do SEO changes take to show up in Google? (Days to months + Search Console) Quick answer: Crawl optimization is making it easier for Google to find,…
On seolutions.com, I’m sharing what really works in SEO. This post breaks down how reviews can boost your rankings, what platforms like Google and Yelp get wrong, and why I now host reviews on my own site.