
Technical SEO
Traditionally, the phrase Technical SEO refers to optimizing your site for crawling and indexing, but can also include any technical process meant to improve search visibility.
Technical SEO is a broad and exciting field, covering everything from sitemaps, meta tags, JavaScript indexing, linking, keyword research, and more.
If you’re new to SEO, we recommend starting with the chapter on Technical SEO in our Beginner’s Guide. Below are the latest posts on technical SEO, and we’ve included a few top articles here.
On-Site SEO : What are the technical on-page factors that influence your rankings? Our free learning center will get you started in the right direction.
The Web Developer's SEO Cheat Sheet : This handy—and printable—cheat sheet is invaluable for anyone building websites. Contains several useful references that cover a ton of technical SEO best practices.
MozBar : This free Chrome extension is an advanced SEO toolbar that helps you to examine and diagnose several technical SEO issues.
The Technical SEO Renaissance : Is it true that technical SEO isn't necessary, because Google is smart enough to figure your website out? Mike King puts this rumor to rest, and shows you what to focus on.
Technical SEO: The One Hour Guide to SEO : Want a quick introduction to the basics of technical SEO? Our guru Rand has you covered—all in about 10 minutes.


SEO Finds In Your Server Log
As SEOs, we use all sorts of tools to glean insight into technical issues that may be hurting us: web analytics, crawl diagnostics, and Google and Bing Webmaster tools. All of these tools are useful, but there are undoubtedly holes in the data. There is only one true record of how search engines, such as Googlebot, process your website: your web server logs.
Learn About Robots.txt with Interactive Examples
There are many areas of online marketing that computers are designed to interpret. In today's post, Will Critchlow shares a training module on robots.txt to help you understand the value of robots.txt files in large sites, and gives tips on using the protocol on your own site!
Browser Caching to Improve Site Speed: How to Check and Implement It
The speed of your site is critical in furthering your business’ profitability or your website’s popularity.
10 .htaccess File Snippets You Should Have Handy
[htaccess SEO] In the Moz Q&A, there are often questions that are directly asked about, or answered with, a reference to the all-powerful .htaccess file. I've put together a few useful .htaccess snippets which are often helpful, but are generally underused by SEOs.

Getting The Most Out of Schema.org Microformats
Properly using microformats is the best thing since sliced bread for an enhanced search display. There are SEO murmurs that sites without microformats will soon be left in the dust in the SERP display. Both Google and Bing have both introduced new tools in the Webmaster repertoire that help monitor and troubleshoot issues the microformats. I am not going to delve into the all the individual...
How To: Advanced rel="canonical" HTTP Headers
Use of rel=canonical in an HTTP header is underutilized, and I believe that, now more than ever, SEOs should start leveraging and considering the power of this method for non-text/html content-types.
Common Technical SEO Problems and How to Solve Them
Running into the same site problems over and over again can be exasperating. In the years I've been doing SEO, I'm still surprised to see so many websites suffering from the same list of issues. In today's post, I share the most common problems (and solutions!) I've encountered through site audits, along with a few uncommon issues at the end.
Googlebot Crawl Issue Identification Through Server Logs
Sifting through server logs has made me infinitely better at my job as an SEO. If you're already using them as part of your analysis, congrats - if not, I encourage you to read this post. In this post we're going to: Briefly introduce a server log hit Understand common issues with Googlebot's crawl Use a server log to...
Can Google Really Access Content in JavaScript? Really?
But the question keeps coming up: can Google execute JavaScript and AJAX? Can they really?
Add Expires Headers? Why You Should Think Twice Before Using Them
This article explains what expires headers are and how they benefit SEO, explains the dangers of improper implementation, and offers some insight on preventing issues.