The infrastructure layer of SEO. Covers crawling, indexing, rendering, site architecture, and performance optimization. This category covers 20 entries in the Technical SEO track. Articles are grouped by depth — foundational definitions first, applied patterns next, and patent-derived deep dives at the end.
What Technical SEO covers
The infrastructure layer of SEO. Covers crawling, indexing, rendering, site architecture, and performance optimization.
Why Technical SEO matters in 2026
Modern search has shifted from keyword-matching toward semantic understanding, behavioral signals, and AI-mediated answer generation. Technical SEO sits inside this shift — every entry in the category connects to at least one ranking patent, one behavioral signal, or one AI-search surface. Practitioners who skip this track tend to optimize for the search engine of five years ago instead of the one shipping ranking updates today.
Technical SEO entries
- Crawl Demand Explained: SEO Impact, Crawl Budget & Site Indexing Efficiency
- What is Canonical Confusion Attack?
- robots.txt File Explained: SEO Control, Crawling Rules & Blocking Access
- Crawl Rate Explained: SEO Impact, Site Indexing & Crawl Budget Optimization
- Crawl Budget Explained: SEO Impact, Site Prioritization & Indexing Efficiency
- XML Sitemap Explained: SEO Benefits, Indexing & Search Engine Crawling
- Structured Data Explained: SEO Benefits, Schema Markup & Rich Snippets
- Mobile Page Speed Update (2018) Explained: Google’s Algorithm & SEO Impact
- What is a Canonical Query?
- Robots Meta Tag Explained: SEO Directives, Indexing & Crawl Control
- What is Canonical Search Intent?
- What is Client
- Page Speed Explained: SEO Impact, Optimization Tips & User Experience
- What are Core Web Vitals?
- Hreflang Attribute Explained: SEO, Multilingual Content & Global Targeting
- What is JavaScript SEO?
- What are Core Web Vitals?
How to read this category
Start with the foundational entries — they define the vocabulary you'll need to understand the rest. Then move to the applied patterns, which describe how the concept appears in real SEO workflows. End with the patent-derived deep dives, which trace each concept back to the original Google or Microsoft research that introduced it. Each entry links to the related concepts in neighboring categories so you can navigate the semantic graph rather than memorize isolated definitions.
Related tracks
Each encyclopedia entry links to the patents and signals it depends on. When an entry references a different category, those cross-links let you trace the dependency graph: a query-intent concept might point to a click-modeling patent, which in turn points to a behavioral-ranking signal. This category is one node in that graph — explore the others through any entry that catches your eye.