On-Page SEO Services

On-page SEO that helps the right pages rank

On-page SEO improves how individual pages are understood, ranked, and chosen in search results. It covers structure, headings, internal links, metadata, and content relevance, so each page clearly matches search intent and performs the job it’s meant to do.

On-page SEO support that turns visits into actions

On-page SEO services are often the difference between a website that looks good and a website that gets found. Many sites underperform because pages target the wrong terms, headings lack structure, internal links don’t support priority pages, and metadata fails to earn the click. The result is weaker visibility, mismatched traffic, and visitors who leave without enquiring or buying.

My on-page SEO service fixes those issues on the pages that matter most. I align each page with search intent, improve structure and clarity, and strengthen the signals Google uses to judge relevance. That includes better page targets, cleaner headings, stronger internal linking, and content that answers what people need before they take the next step.

Onpage SEO Services

On-page work that supports rankings, clicks, and conversions

On-page work is the part of SEO that improves what people actually see and click. I use it to make your key pages clearer, more relevant, and easier for Google to understand. That includes the words on the page, the structure around them, and the details that influence click-through rate and conversions. The aim is simple, help the right page show up, earn the click, and turn that visit into an enquiry.

I run a structured keyword and intent mapping exercise so your key pages match how people actually search, and each one has a clear job to do. This covers core terms, close variants, and the language people use at decision time, so pages stop drifting into vague, catch-all territory.

Examples of what I map and review:

  • Search intent modifiers like “cost”, “price”, “near me”, “best”, “compare”, and “reviews”

  • Service and product phrasing people use in real queries, including problem-led searches

  • Page to keyword alignment so each priority page has a defined focus

  • Gaps where a needed page does not exist, such as missing service, category, or location coverage

  • Overlap and cannibalisation where multiple pages compete for the same searches

  • Internal linking routes so supporting pages feed authority into the pages that should rank

  • SERP patterns that show what Google expects for the query, like guides, service pages, or local results

Your meta titles and descriptions influence whether people click when your page appears in search results. I write and refine metadata that reflects page intent, uses target terms naturally, and gives users a clear reason to choose your result.

I also audit duplication across the site, as repeated or generic metadata can weaken performance and blur page purpose.

Examples of what I check:

  • Unique meta titles and descriptions across key pages

  • Primary keyword and close variants used naturally

  • Search intent match, so the snippet reflects the page purpose

  • Click clarity, so users know what they’ll get from the page

  • Length and truncation risks in search results

  • Duplicate metadata patterns caused by templates or CMS rules

  • Missing or auto-generated metadata on important pages

  • Title overlap that causes pages to compete in the SERP

Clear structure helps both users and search engines understand what a page is about. I tidy headings and layout so content is easy to scan and answers key questions quickly.

That includes improving H1, H2, and H3 structure, section order, and rewriting content that is vague, overly broad, or missing important detail. Where useful, I also plan topic clusters so key pages are supported by relevant, non-overlapping content.

Examples of what I check:

  • One clear H1 that matches the page intent

  • Logical H2 and H3 structure, with sections that read in a sensible order

  • Missing sections that stop the page answering common questions

  • Overlapping sections that dilute relevance or repeat the same point

  • Content that is too broad, too thin, or too similar to other pages

  • Internal links that help users and search engines find related pages

  • Topic cluster opportunities, so guides and FAQs support key services or categories

  • Cannibalisation risks, where multiple pages are trying to rank for the same thing

Google has long stated that internal links help search engines discover pages and understand which ones matter most. I build and refine internal linking so authority flows towards your key services, categories, or commercial pages.

This also improves navigation for users, helping them move naturally towards enquiry or purchase points without friction.

Examples of what I check:

  • Clear paths from top-level pages to priority services or categories

  • Links that support commercial pages, not just blogs or general content

  • Anchor text that reads naturally and matches page intent

  • Orphan pages that are hard for users and crawlers to reach

  • Over-linking and weak links that do not add context or value

  • Navigation and footer links that reflect what matters most

  • Supporting content that should link into key pages without overlap

  • Click depth, so important pages are not buried too far down the site

Some on-page issues are technical but page-specific, such as canonicals, index signals, duplicate content, thin pages, or messy URLs. I clean these up so Google indexes the right version of each page and understands its purpose.

For e-commerce sites, this often includes managing product variations, duplicate listings, filters, and parameter URLs that create near-duplicate pages.

Examples of what I check:

  • Canonical tags, so the preferred URL is clear

  • Noindex and index signals, so key pages are not blocked by mistake

  • Duplicate page sets caused by filters, parameters, or pagination

  • Thin pages that add little value and dilute topical focus

  • URL patterns that create overlap, like trailing slashes or mixed casing

  • Product variation handling, including size, colour, or compatibility pages

  • Category and filter pages that should rank versus ones that should not

  • Internal links and sitemaps pointing to the correct indexable URLs

Media can either support a page or slow it down. I review image file size, naming, alt text, and load impact so media improves usability without harming performance.

I also advise on structured data that fits your site, such as product, service, organisation, FAQ, and breadcrumb schema, helping search engines understand context more accurately.

Examples of what I check:

  • Image size and compression, so pages stay fast on mobile

  • Modern formats like WebP, plus lazy loading where it makes sense

  • Descriptive file names that reflect the page topic

  • Alt text that supports accessibility and describes the image properly

  • Missing width and height attributes that can cause layout shifts

  • Overuse of sliders, background video, or heavy embeds that slow pages down

  • Structured data options, including product, service, organisation, FAQ, and breadcrumbs

  • Schema validity and placement, so markup matches what’s on the page

Is This Service Right For You?​

You’re Getting Impressions, But Not Clicks

Your pages appear in search results, but titles and descriptions aren’t convincing users to choose you.

Your Service Pages Feel Thin Or Unclear

Key pages are vague, short, or buried, making it hard for search engines and visitors to understand what you offer.

Your Headings And Structure Are All Over The Place

Poor structure makes pages harder to scan, trust, and rank consistently.

You’ve Got Pages Competing With Each Other

Multiple pages target the same searches, splitting relevance and weakening performance.

Your Internal Links Don’t Guide People Anywhere Useful

Important pages are hard to reach, and users drop off before taking action.

You Rank For The Wrong Search Intent

You get visits, but not from people ready to enquire or buy.

How your on-page SEO services gets planned and delivered

I find on-page SEO services work best when they follow a clear order. I focus on value-driving pages first, then build structure and support around them.

Pick the pages most likely to convert

I start by identifying the pages that should drive enquiries or sales, then review how they currently perform and where intent does not quite line up.

Set one clear search target per page

Priority pages get one main theme based on search intent, supported by close variants that belong on that page. Keeping relevance clear and avoids confusion.

Rewrite sections so the page reads better

I tighten headings and copy so pages answer questions quickly and guide visitors towards the next step, removing filler and adding missing clarity.

Link pages and plan supporting content

Key pages are connected through internal links, with supporting content planned only where it adds value and avoids overlap.

How on-page improvements stack up over time

Some improvements, such as better metadata and structure, can show results quickly. Stronger gains build as Google re-crawls pages, internal links settle, and pages become better matches for high-intent searches.

What to expect in the coming months

I start by reviewing your key pages, tracking what they currently rank for, and matching each page to a clear search intent. This usually surfaces the biggest blockers, like unclear page structure, thin or overlapping content, and duplicated titles and meta descriptions.

I also check the basics that affect discovery, like indexing, internal link paths, and obvious technical friction on priority pages. By the end of month one, you have a clear list of pages to focus on first, plus a practical plan for fixes and content updates.

Next, we improve the priority pages so they answer the search properly and support the action you want users to take. That normally includes tightening headings, adding missing sections, improving copy clarity, and making the page more useful than the competitors sitting above it.

In parallel, we strengthen internal links so Google can see the relationship between your main pages and the supporting pages around them. This is also where a supporting content plan is put into motion, so new or improved articles and guides feed authority into the pages that matter.

Once the priority pages are in a better place, we widen the work to cover secondary pages and reduce topic overlap across the site. This is where you often see “two pages competing for the same search” problems fixed through merging, refocusing, or reworking page purpose. We also tidy page-level technical issues that hold things back, like messy templates, inconsistent metadata patterns, and weak internal navigation.

The goal here is a site structure that is easier to crawl, easier to understand, and easier for users to move through, so more pages can perform without constant manual effort.

Supporting Services for Content Optimisation

Improving page relevance often works best when combined with technical and strategic improvements. These services help maximise the impact of on-page optimisation.

An audit helps identify which pages require optimisation and why. It provides insights into performance issues and structural improvements.

Consultancy provides strategic direction for ongoing content improvements. It helps guide keyword targeting and page structure decisions.

Technical SEO ensures pages are accessible, indexable and performant. This helps optimised content be properly discovered and evaluated by search engines.

If you want pages that rank and convert, start with on-page SEO.

Fix the on-page issues that hold pages back

When pages are clearly targeted, well structured, and supported internally, they tend to rank more consistently and convert more reliably.

Clear page targeting

Each priority page is built around one clear intent, so it ranks for the right searches and avoids overlap.

Stronger search snippets

Titles and descriptions are tightened to match intent and earn more qualified clicks from the results page.

Smarter internal linking

Links are structured to push relevance and authority towards the pages that drive enquiries or sales.

Businesses I’ve helped show up on Google

Every business is different, so I shape local SEO around what you do and who you need to reach. I’ve worked with shops, trades, local services, and firms that rely on being found nearby. My focus is simple: help you show up when it matters and get chosen by the people already looking.

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.

FAQs about on-page SEO

On-page SEO can sound simple, but the details matter. These FAQs cover the questions I hear most from businesses deciding if on-page work is the right next step.

What does your on-page SEO service include?

On-page SEO covers content refinement, heading structure, metadata, internal linking, and page-level technical elements such as canonicals and duplication control. The aim is clearer topical relevance, stronger search visibility, and pages structured to turn visitors into enquiries or sales.

Priority is given to pages that drive revenue or enquiries. I review current rankings, impression data, and search intent alignment to identify realistic gains. Pages already close to page one often provide the fastest commercial uplift, supported by related content that strengthens overall relevance.

Meta titles remain a direct relevance signal, while descriptions influence click-through behaviour. Clear, intent-matched metadata improves visibility and encourages more users to choose your result. Each page is given unique, purpose-driven metadata to avoid duplication and maintain clarity.

Internal linking helps search engines understand page hierarchy and priority. It also guides users through related topics and towards key conversion points. A structured internal link strategy strengthens performance across entire topic clusters, not just individual pages.

Improvements can appear quickly when pages suffer from weak structure, unclear intent, or duplicated signals. More competitive gains typically develop over several months as search engines reprocess content and internal relationships. The timeline depends on site condition, competition, and the scale of refinement required.

Let’s Get Your Pages Pulling Their Weight

Share your website and the pages you want to improve, like service pages, category pages, or key landing pages.