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Technical SEO

You’ve been playing around with structured data, changing the speed of your site, and fixing crawl mistakes. But how do you know if it’s all working? Technical SEO can feel like a never-ending list of things to do, but there are clear signs that you’re on the right track. If you’re getting better at basic SEO, this blog will show you six signs.

1. Run and Understand SEO Audits

It starts to feel normal to do an SEO audit. You know what to look for when you open tools like Screaming Frog, Ahrefs, Sitebulb, or any comprehensive website audit tool. Broken links, thin material, and missing tags are easy to spot. When you fix, you don’t just guess.

You also know what’s most important. Mistakes that hurt results are high on your list of things to fix. You use everyday language instead of technical terms to talk about findings. People who work with you or clients start to trust your opinion more.

2. Optimize Site Speed and Core Web Vitals

Often, you assess speed on your own initiative. When you use Lighthouse, you assess the loading times of pages and modify files to improve speed. Lazy loading, picture compression, and script control are all things you know a lot about.

Core Web Vitals are no longer scary. It’s simple for you to keep track of CLS, LCP, and FID. You test, make changes, and test again until the pages look good.

3. Know How to Fix Crawl Errors and Redirects

Viewing a crawl mistake doesn’t bother you. You look at the mistake in Google Search Console, fix it quickly, and then check again. Now you know how to get bots back after they’ve been stopped or lost.

You no longer get confused by redirects. 301s are used correctly, loops are avoided, and old routes are cleaned up. It feels like every change is part of a bigger plan, not just a fix for no reason.

4. Mastered Structured Data and Schema Markup

What kinds of coding work best? These include FAQs, How-Tos, Product descriptions, and more. You use Google’s tester to look at rich results and change tags until they pass.

Pages begin to display stars, additional information, or highlighted spots. Nobody has to add more words to get more traffic. Don’t guess, but add structured facts to back up the meaning, not just rankings.

5. Understand Mobile-First Indexing

Mobile is the first thing you create and test, not desktop. You look at how pages load, look, and feel on phones. It resolves problems like tap targets, small fonts, or quick style changes.

The information stays the same on both phones and computers. You know Google ranks sites based on mobile, so you don’t hide important information.

6. Maintain a Clean, Logical Site Architecture

Before adding new pages, you plan how the site will be structured. Folders are used instead of long URLs. You use smart links to make sure that every page can be found without making people feel like they have to click on them.

Planning for navigation, breadcrumbs, and sitemaps is easy. Avoid leaving out pages or deep nesting.

Stay Ahead of the Algorithm 

If you can spot these signs, you’re making progress with advanced SEO. However, maintaining a competitive edge requires more than simply fulfilling checklist items. Maintaining your interest, continuously testing everything, and adapting quickly are essential.

Learn More About StudioHawk if you want to take your skills to the next level and really stay ahead of the system. Their team actively engages in technical SEO on a daily basis.