Technical SEO Services

Strengthen search visibility with solid Technical SEO

Technical SEO is the foundation that decides if your pages get crawled, indexed, and ranked properly. Even great content can stall if your site is slow, your URL structure is messy, or Google is getting mixed signals. 

Strengthen Your Website With Solid Technical SEO

I strengthen the foundations that allow your website to scale, from faster page speed and cleaner architecture to crawl behaviour and the signals that help search engines understand each page.

Technical SEO services focus on removing the hidden issues that stop good pages performing. That can include slow templates, redirect chains, duplicate URLs, weak internal linking, confusing canonical signals, and key pages sitting too deep to be crawled properly.

I start with crawl and index health, then prioritise fixes that reduce wasted crawl and index bloat. From there, I tighten speed and mobile stability using Core Web Vitals as a guide, then improve structure and supporting signals so the site is easier to grow without things getting messy.

Boost your visibility with a site built for speed, stability, and search clarity.

Technical SEO Services

Why work with me for technical SEO

Working with me means your website gets technical attention based on what your site is actually doing, not a recycled checklist. I explain problems in plain English, show you what matters most first, and focus on changes that improve crawlability, indexation, and user experience.

You get a practical plan you can hand to a developer, or I can support implementation with clear tickets and checks. Every recommendation is tied to an outcome, like faster page loads, cleaner indexing, stronger internal paths, or fewer wasted crawls.

I analyse how search engines crawl your site, including what they can reach and what they cannot. This highlights blocked paths in robots.txt, XML sitemap gaps, wasted crawl activity, and important pages that are not getting indexed properly.

You get a clear view of what is holding visibility back and which fixes will make the biggest difference first.

I review how your content is organised and how pages connect, so the site feels logical to both users and search engines. This includes navigation, internal links, and how your key pages sit within the wider structure, plus URL structure where it affects discovery.

The goal is clear pathways that make it obvious what matters most, without burying priority pages.

I tidy up conflicting URLs, duplicated variants, and unclear canonical signals so search engines can see one clean version of each page. This includes common causes like parameters, tracking tags, trailing slash or case variants, and mixed protocol or hostname issues.

This stops ranking signals from being split across multiple addresses and reduces index bloat.

I fix broken links, dead ends, redirect chains, and unnecessary 302s that waste authority and frustrate users. For site changes, I create redirect plans and URL mapping that protect rankings and reduce crawl waste.

The result is a smoother journey and a site that search engines can crawl without hitting avoidable roadblocks.

I find duplicated or near-identical pages caused by templates, parameters, repeated copy, pagination, or overlapping topics. Then I recommend clear fixes, like consolidation, rewrites, canonical changes, or noindex controls, so each page has a distinct purpose.

This improves clarity for search engines and makes it easier for the right page to rank.

I map and add the right schema so search engines understand your content more clearly. This can support rich results and rich snippets, like FAQs, reviews, products, and business details, when it fits the page type.

I also validate the markup and keep it consistent, so it supports your content rather than creating errors or mixed signals.

I review what is being indexed, what should not be indexed, and what is missing, so you regain control over what appears in search. This often includes cleaning up low-value pages, thin variants, tag pages, and filters that slip into the index.

The aim is a smaller, cleaner index made up of pages that deserve to rank.

I identify weak internal linking and missed opportunities where important pages are not receiving enough support. Then I improve linking pathways so key services, categories, and priority content are easier to reach within a few clicks.

This helps search engines understand page relationships and helps users find the next relevant step.

I pinpoint where search engines waste time crawling low-value, duplicated, or endlessly generated URLs. Then I refine site signals, linking, and technical controls so crawlers spend more time on pages that matter.

On larger sites, I can also use log file analysis to confirm how Googlebot is spending its time, so fixes are based on real crawl behaviour.

If your site relies heavily on JavaScript, search engines can struggle to render pages properly or see key content consistently. I check how your pages render for crawlers, what content loads late, and if important links or templates are hard to discover.

This is especially useful on modern CMS builds and front-end frameworks, where rendering and page delivery can affect indexing and rankings.

Is This Service Right For You?​

Your site is slow, and it’s costing you enquiries

Pages take too long to load on mobile, people bounce, and Google has less reason to keep you high up the results.

Google is missing important pages

Key services or locations are not getting indexed properly, so they never get a fair chance to rank.

Errors keep piling up in the background

Broken links, redirect chains, 404s, and messy internal links quietly drag performance down over time.

Your site structure is working against you

If URLs, navigation, and internal linking are unclear, Google struggles to understand what matters most.

A redesign or migration has knocked your rankings

Traffic drops after changes, and you need a clear plan to spot what broke and fix it fast.

Your content is fine, but the foundations are not

You can write great pages, but technical problems stop them from being crawled, trusted, and ranked consistently.

Technical SEO packages that fit your site

Working with me means you get technical support shaped around your website, not a generic package or an agency template. You get clear explanations, honest recommendations and data-led technical fixes that help your site improve step by step.

Essential package

Perfect for small or simple sites. A focused technical SEO audit and priority plan.
£ 750
  • Core technical health check
  • Crawl and indexation review
  • Sitemap and canonical signal cleanup
  • Basic site structure overview
  • Key template checks
  • Priority recommendations list

Advanced Package

A full technical SEO audit with deeper structure, internal linking, and duplication review.
£ 1,800
  • Full technical audit
  • Architecture and internal linking analysis
  • Duplicate content and URL structure review
  • Image optimisation
  • Canonical, redirect and signal mapping
  • Action plan with prioritised fixes
Popular

Complete Package

Full technical crawl and technical SEO audit for large or complex sites, with follow-up support.
£ 2,500+
  • Full technical crawl
  • Structure, signals and advanced indexation checks
  • Schema and structured data recommendations
  • Redirect mapping and legacy clean-up
  • Canonical and duplication consolidation
  • Full report with follow-up support

What you get with my technical SEO service

Technical SEO is the part that makes everything else work properly. If your site is difficult to crawl, sends mixed signals, or produces lots of duplicate URLs, it becomes harder for key pages to rank and stay stable. Even strong content can struggle if the foundations are messy, especially when page speed and Core Web Vitals fall short.

My technical SEO service focuses on finding the blockers, then fixing them in a clear order. You get a technical SEO audit, a prioritised action plan, and support getting changes implemented properly.

I run a technical SEO audit that checks the rules, setup, and technical signals that guide crawling and indexing. This is where hidden configuration issues tend to sit, including CMS settings, inconsistent templates, and page types that behave differently from one another.

What I check here

  • Technical health and configuration across key templates

  • Robots.txt rules, XML sitemap coverage, and indexation controls

  • Canonical and noindex signals, plus conflicts across duplicated URLs

  • Protocol and host consistency (HTTP/HTTPS, www/non-www)

  • Parameter handling and URL rules that can cause index bloat

  • Basic server settings that affect delivery, such as caching behaviour

What you get
A clear list of issues, what they affect, and what to fix first, with practical notes a developer can act on.

This is about how search engines discover your pages, how often they return, and what they choose to index. If Google is spending time on low-value URLs, or missing key services, rankings often stay unstable.

What I check here

  • Crawlability and discovery paths to important pages

  • Index coverage, missing pages, and pages indexed that should not be

  • Crawl waste, crawl budget pressure, and duplicate URL patterns

  • Redirect chains and dead ends that interrupt crawling

  • Internal linking support for pages that should rank

What you get
A plan to improve crawl behaviour and clean up indexation so the right pages are being seen consistently.

Site architecture is how your content is organised, connected, and prioritised. A clear structure helps both users and search engines understand what matters most, and it usually improves internal link flow at the same time.

What I check here

  • Navigation clarity and how key pages sit in the hierarchy

  • Internal linking depth, orphaned pages, and weak pathways

  • URL structure consistency across categories, services, and blog content

  • Page clusters and topical groupings that need clearer separation

What you get
A mapped structure with clear routes to your priority pages, plus linking changes that support rankings.

This is the “mixed signals” layer. It covers canonicals, duplication, conflicting URLs, and the small technical details that split authority across multiple versions of the same page.

What I check here

  • Canonical setup and canonical conflicts

  • Duplicate content causes, including templates and parameters

  • Thin variants that clutter index coverage

  • Redirect logic that causes loops or unnecessary hops

  • Structured data consistency where it supports the page

What you get
A cleaner set of signals so Google sees one primary URL per page, with less confusion and less wasted indexing.

This is where page speed, mobile stability, and Core Web Vitals sit. If pages are slow or unstable on mobile, people leave earlier, and Google has less confidence in the experience.

What I check here

  • Core Web Vitals, including LCP, INP, and CLS

  • Page speed bottlenecks across templates, not just one page

  • Mobile usability problems that reduce stability

  • Image and asset delivery issues that slow load time

  • JavaScript-heavy pages where key content loads late or links are hard to find

What you get
Clear performance fixes, plus a practical order of work so improvements land where they will have the biggest impact.

You should always leave a technical SEO project knowing what changed, why it mattered, and what comes next. I keep reporting clear and focused on actions and outcomes.

What you get

  • Technical SEO audit summary with prioritised fixes

  • Issue list with context, impact, and recommended actions

  • Optional developer tickets or implementation notes

  • Checks after fixes go live to confirm results

  • A follow-up plan so the site stays clean as it grows

Start the conversation and begin improving how your site is found and understood.

Technical SEO consultant for faster, stronger websites

I help small businesses build sites that search engines can crawl, index, and understand without friction. That means fixing the technical issues that hold you back, improving page speed and Core Web Vitals, and making your structure and internal paths clearer so priority pages do not get buried.

I focus on practical changes that improve stability over time, not one-off tweaks that look good in a report but do not move rankings.

Indexing & Discovery

Ensure your important pages are actually being found and understood, with cleaner signals and stronger search visibility.

Better Crawl Behaviour

Improve how search engines travel through your site so no valuable content gets buried or ignored.

Structured Data Wins

Remove the silent issues that dilute rankings, from duplicate templates to conflicting signals or outdated configurations.

How I fix technical SEO issues, step by step

No two websites are built the same, so I don’t treat technical SEO like a one-size-fits-all checklist. Over the first few months, I get to know how your site is structured, what’s slowing it down, and what’s stopping it from being seen. The goal is simple: make your website easy to find, easy to use, and technically sound.

Here’s how it works:

Introductions & Getting Started​

First, I take a proper look under the bonnet.

I run a full technical audit to check how your site is built, how search engines are crawling it, and where things might be going wrong. I also check XML sitemaps, robots.txt rules, URL structure consistency, and Core Web Vitals, including LCP, INP, and CLS. That includes looking at site speed, mobile usability, indexing issues, structured data, broken links, and more.

From there, I’ll map out a clear technical plan. It’s practical, prioritised, and focused on what will actually improve your visibility and site performance.

Strengthening the Technical Foundation

Once I know what’s holding you back, I get to work fixing it.

That could mean improving your site’s internal linking, cleaning up unnecessary redirects, reducing bloat in your code, or helping you switch to a better hosting setup. If the site is JavaScript-heavy, I’ll also check rendering and how key content and links load for crawlers. It often involves working closely with your developer (or stepping in directly) to make sure changes are done right.

Every fix is made with your wider goals in mind. Better speed, better crawlability, better structure. No guesswork.

Tracking Results That Matter

Technical SEO isn’t just about ticking boxes. It’s about seeing real improvements in how your site performs.

Each month, I check the data to see what’s changed. You’ll get a clear, jargon-free report showing what’s working and where we’re focusing next.

Small technical fixes can make a big difference over time. The goal is to keep your site running smoothly so Google can find what it needs, and your visitors can too.

Services That Strengthen Technical Improvements

Technical optimisation creates the structural foundation for strong search performance. These related services help ensure technical improvements translate into measurable growth.

Once technical barriers are resolved, on-page optimisation helps ensure pages clearly target relevant search queries.

Technical work often begins with identifying underlying issues. An audit helps uncover crawl problems, indexation errors and structural weaknesses.

Consultancy helps guide technical priorities and coordinate development improvements. It ensures technical work aligns with broader search strategy.

Site migrations involve structural changes that can affect search visibility. Technical planning helps ensure search engines process these changes smoothly.

Client Success Stories​

Here’s a look at the businesses I’ve worked with and the impact SEO has had on their visibility and customer growth. Each project is different, but the goal is always the same: clear, measurable improvements that make it easier for the right people to find and choose you.

These case studies show how a focused, practical approach to SEO delivers results that last.

Portable Blender Online Store

Grew a new portable blender site from near-zero visibility into a reliable sales channel through SEO fixes, supportive content, email, and quality links.

Photo Gifts and Prints Retailer

Built stronger non-brand visibility for a national photo print retailer, lifting rankings, orders, and revenue from organic search.

Motorhome and Caravan Retailer

Turned a touring retailer’s site into a stronger lead channel by cleaning indexation, refreshing content, and improving rankings.

Technical SEO Service FAQs

Here you’ll find clear, straightforward answers to the most common questions about technical SEO so you know exactly how it works, why it matters, and what it can do for your business.

What makes technical SEO different from other types of SEO?

Technical SEO focuses on how a website can be crawled, interpreted, and indexed. It covers site structure, URL control, rendering, performance, and the signals that help search engines trust what they find. Without solid technical foundations, content and links often underperform.

Common signs include pages failing to appear in search, unstable rankings, duplicate URL versions, crawl waste, broken internal links, and inconsistent template behaviour. Slow performance and mobile issues can also signal technical gaps. A technical review confirms what is happening and which issues are most limiting.

Small websites benefit from technical SEO because search engines still need to crawl, understand, and index content reliably. Larger sites often feel technical issues faster due to scale, but basic structure, index control, and performance matter on any site. Regular checks help prevent hidden issues building up as the site changes.

High-impact fixes often include correcting indexing and canonical signals, improving site structure and internal linking, resolving redirect problems, and fixing mobile usability. Speed improvements can also help, especially when performance is limiting conversion or crawl efficiency. The biggest wins depend on what is currently blocking crawling and indexing.

Technical SEO should be checked regularly because sites, plugins, templates, and platforms change over time. Quarterly reviews suit many small and mid-sized sites, while larger or faster-moving sites benefit from monthly checks. The aim is catching issues early, before rankings or revenue are affected.

Core Web Vitals measure real-user page experience, covering loading performance (LCP), responsiveness (INP), and visual stability (CLS). They are rarely the only reason a page ranks, but they can influence performance when competing pages are similar. Improving them often supports mobile usability and conversion rate as well.

Yes. JavaScript-heavy sites can delay content rendering, hide internal links, or cause search engines to process pages inconsistently. Technical SEO checks how Google renders and indexes the site, then improves discoverability through better rendering setup, clearer internal linking, and tighter URL signals. The goal is faster, more reliable crawling and indexing.

Both are available. You can book one-off technical help such as audits, fixes, or platform clean-up, or choose ongoing support to monitor changes and prevent issues returning. The scope is shaped around what your site needs rather than a fixed checklist.

Technical SEO work usually focuses on structure, signals, and performance rather than visual design. Some changes may affect templates if they cause duplication or rendering issues, but the goal is improving how the site functions and is understood. Any visible changes are discussed before implementation.

Yes. Indexing issues are often caused by canonical confusion, blocked resources, duplicate URLs, internal linking gaps, or low-value pages being crawled heavily. Technical SEO identifies the cause and corrects signals so the right pages are prioritised and indexed consistently.

Let’s Get Your Site Working Properly for Search

Share your website and any issues you’ve noticed, like slow pages, indexing problems, or messy structure. I’ll reply with how I can help and what the next step looks like.