Technical SEO Site Architecture Indexation Performance SEO + Technical SEO

Technical SEO 101: The Foundation You Can’t Skip

Technical SEO is what allows everything else to work. If search engines can’t crawl, understand, and trust your site, content and links won’t perform. This guide explains the core technical SEO fundamentals every marketing site needs—and where WordPress sites most often go wrong.

What Technical SEO Is Need a Technical Review?

What technical SEO is (and what it isn’t)

Technical SEO focuses on how search engines access, interpret, and evaluate your site’s structure. It’s about removing friction so content can perform as intended.

Technical SEO is

  • Ensuring search engines can crawl and index the right pages
  • Creating a clear, logical site structure
  • Maintaining performance and stability
  • Preventing avoidable SEO risks

Technical SEO is not

  • Keyword research or content writing
  • A one-time setup you never revisit
  • A substitute for relevance or quality

Bottom line: technical SEO makes good content possible—it doesn’t replace it.

Why technical SEO matters

Technical issues often don’t cause obvious failures—they quietly limit performance. Sites can look fine to users while search engines struggle underneath.

  • Pages fail to rank because they aren’t indexed correctly
  • Link equity is diluted across duplicate URLs
  • New content takes too long to appear in search
  • Performance issues hurt UX and conversions

Crawlability: can search engines access your site?

Crawlability determines whether search engines can discover and revisit your pages efficiently.

Key crawl elements

  • Robots.txt configuration
  • XML sitemaps
  • Internal links and crawl paths
  • Server response codes

Common WordPress issue: orphaned pages with no internal links.

Indexation: controlling what appears in search

Indexation is about telling search engines which pages matter—and which ones don’t.

  • Use canonicals to consolidate duplicates
  • Noindex thin, low-value pages
  • Control archives, tags, and filters
  • Monitor coverage in Search Console

Most WordPress sites suffer from index bloat rather than missing content.

Site architecture & internal linking

Architecture determines how authority and relevance flow through your site.

  • Clear hierarchy from top-level pages
  • Logical grouping by topic or service
  • Intentional internal linking
  • Reasonable click depth

Rule: important pages should be easy to reach without relying on search.

Performance & UX signals

Performance is part of technical SEO because it affects crawl efficiency, rankings, and conversions.

  • Core Web Vitals (LCP, CLS, INP)
  • Mobile-first performance
  • Script and asset management
  • Server response and caching

Technical hygiene

These issues rarely help—but they often hurt.

  • Broken links and redirect chains
  • 404 errors on important URLs
  • Mixed content or HTTPS issues
  • Duplicate metadata

What to fix first (almost always)

  1. Indexation mistakes (wrong pages indexed)
  2. Broken redirects and URL inconsistencies
  3. Internal linking gaps to key pages
  4. Mobile performance on high-traffic pages

Why this works: it removes constraints before you invest in content or links.

Technical SEO checklist

  • Crawl: clean robots.txt and XML sitemaps
  • Indexation: canonicals and noindex used correctly
  • Architecture: logical hierarchy and internal links
  • Performance: CWV monitored on mobile
  • Hygiene: errors and duplicates resolved

Want a strong technical SEO foundation?

Technical SEO issues are easiest to fix early—and hardest to diagnose later. If you want clarity on what’s helping or hurting your site, I can run a focused technical audit and map out what to fix now versus what can wait.

See Fix-First Priorities Review Indexation