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AI Summary

What is this glossary? A complete reference of 150+ SEO terms organized into 10 categories: General SEO, On-Page SEO, Technical SEO, Page Speed and Core Web Vitals, Off-Page SEO and Link Building, Content Strategy, Local SEO, AI and Emerging SEO, Analytics and Measurement, and Tools and Platforms. Every term is defined in plain language so business owners, marketers, and anyone working with an SEO provider can understand exactly what is being discussed.

Who this is for: Business owners learning SEO for the first time, marketing managers working with SEO agencies, content writers who need to understand the terminology their strategists use, and anyone who has ever sat through an SEO report and nodded along without understanding half the words in it.

How to use it: Bookmark this page. Use the table of contents to jump to any category. Each term links to a deeper guide where one exists on this site. This glossary is the starting point. The linked guides are where the operational detail lives.

Table of Contents

  1. General SEO
  2. On-Page SEO
  3. Technical SEO
  4. Page Speed and Core Web Vitals
  5. Off-Page SEO and Link Building
  6. Content Strategy
  7. Local SEO
  8. AI and Emerging SEO
  9. Analytics and Measurement
  10. Tools and Platforms

General Seo

SEO (Search Engine Optimization): The practice of improving a website to increase its visibility in organic search engine results.

SERP (Search Engine Results Page): The page displayed by a search engine in response to a query. Includes organic results, paid ads, featured snippets, and other features.

Organic Traffic: Visitors who arrive at your site through unpaid search results.

Organic Search: The natural, non-paid listings in search engine results, ranked by relevance and quality.

Paid Search: Advertisements that appear in search results, typically above or below organic listings. Google Ads is the primary platform.

Algorithm: The set of rules and calculations search engines use to determine which pages rank for a given query.

Algorithm Update: A change to the search engine’s ranking algorithm. Major updates include core updates, spam updates, and helpful content updates.

Ranking: The position a page holds in the search results for a specific query.

Ranking Factor: Any signal Google uses to determine where a page appears in search results. Includes content quality, backlinks, page speed, and hundreds of others.

Search Intent: The purpose behind a search query. The four types: informational (learn something), navigational (find a specific site), commercial (research before buying), transactional (ready to buy).

Keyword: A word or phrase that users type into search engines. The foundation of SEO targeting.

Long-Tail Keyword: A longer, more specific keyword phrase with lower volume but higher conversion intent. Example: ‘best burr grinder under 100 dollars’ vs ‘coffee grinder’.

Short-Tail Keyword: A broad keyword with high volume and high competition. Typically 1-2 words. Example: ‘SEO’ or ‘coffee grinder’.

Keyword Difficulty (KD): A metric estimating how hard it is to rank on page 1 for a keyword. Measured 0-100 by tools like Ahrefs and Semrush.

Search Volume: The average number of times a keyword is searched per month.

CTR (Click-Through Rate): The percentage of people who click on your search result after seeing it. Calculated as clicks divided by impressions.

Impressions: The number of times your page appears in search results, whether or not anyone clicks.

Bounce Rate: The percentage of visitors who leave after viewing only one page. Can indicate content mismatch with search intent.

Pogo-Sticking: When a user clicks a search result, immediately returns to the SERP, and clicks a different result. Signals that the first result did not satisfy the query.

Dwell Time: The time a user spends on a page before returning to the search results.

KPI (Key Performance Indicator): A measurable value that indicates whether you are achieving your objectives. SEO KPIs include organic traffic, keyword rankings, conversions, and impressions.

ROI (Return on Investment): The profit generated relative to the cost of the SEO investment.

White Hat SEO: SEO practices that comply with search engine guidelines. Focuses on quality content, legitimate link building, and technical best practices.

Black Hat SEO: SEO practices that violate search engine guidelines to manipulate rankings. Includes link schemes, cloaking, keyword stuffing, and PBNs. Risks penalties and deindexing.

Gray Hat SEO: Techniques that fall between white hat and black hat, not explicitly banned but potentially risky.

Penalty: A negative action taken against a site for violating search engine guidelines. Can be manual (human-reviewed) or algorithmic (automatic).

Manual Action: A penalty manually applied by a Google reviewer for guideline violations. Visible in Google Search Console.

Google Search Console (GSC): A free tool from Google that shows how your site performs in search, reports indexing issues, and provides keyword and impression data.

Google Analytics (GA4): A free analytics platform that tracks website traffic, user behavior, conversions, and engagement metrics.

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On-Page Seo

Title Tag: The HTML element that defines the title of a page. Appears in the browser tab, search results, and social shares. The strongest on-page keyword signal.

Meta Description: A short HTML attribute that summarizes the page content. Appears below the title in search results. Does not directly affect rankings but influences click-through rate.

Meta Tags: HTML tags in the page head that provide metadata to search engines. Includes title, description, robots, and viewport tags.

Meta Robots Tag: An HTML tag that tells search engines whether to index the page and follow its links. Values include index, noindex, follow, nofollow.

Heading Tags (H1-H6): HTML elements that define the heading hierarchy of a page. H1 is the main title, H2 for sections, H3 for subsections.

Keyword Density: The percentage of times a keyword appears relative to the total word count. An outdated metric. Google now evaluates topical coverage rather than keyword repetition.

Keyword Stuffing: Overusing a keyword unnaturally in content. A spam technique that hurts rankings.

Keyword Cannibalization: When multiple pages on the same site target the same keyword, forcing Google to choose which one to rank. Often results in neither ranking well.

Content Depth: How thoroughly a page covers its topic. Deep content that addresses subtopics, edge cases, and related questions outperforms surface-level coverage.

Thin Content: Pages with little or no original value. Short, generic, or duplicated content that fails to satisfy search intent.

Duplicate Content: Substantially identical content appearing on multiple URLs. Causes indexing confusion and dilutes ranking signals.

Canonical Tag: An HTML element that tells search engines which version of a URL is the master copy when duplicate or similar content exists.

Alt Text: A text description of an image used for accessibility and SEO. Tells search engines what the image shows.

Image Optimization: Compressing images, using correct formats (WebP), writing descriptive alt text, and sizing images to display dimensions.

Internal Link: A hyperlink from one page on your site to another page on the same site. Creates crawl paths and distributes authority.

Anchor Text: The visible, clickable text in a hyperlink. Tells search engines what the linked page is about.

Content Silo: A method of organizing site content into distinct topical categories to establish topical authority.

Structured Data: Code added to a page that makes content machine-readable. Uses schema.org vocabulary in JSON-LD format.

Schema Markup: A specific vocabulary of structured data tags (schema.org) that search engines use to generate rich results.

Rich Results: Enhanced search result displays generated from structured data. Includes FAQ dropdowns, review stars, recipe cards, and how-to steps.

Featured Snippet: A special search result that displays a direct answer at the top of the SERP, pulled from a ranking page. Also called position zero.

Above the Fold: The content visible on a page before the user scrolls. Critical for engagement and first impressions.

NAP (Name, Address, Phone): The business name, address, and phone number. Must be consistent across all online listings for local SEO.

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Technical Seo

Crawling: The process by which search engine bots discover pages by following links across the web.

Crawl Budget: The number of pages a search engine will crawl on your site within a given time period. Affected by server performance and site size.

Crawlability: Whether search engine bots can access and read the pages on your site.

Indexing: The process of adding a crawled page to the search engine’s database so it can appear in search results.

Index: The search engine’s database of all crawled and processed web pages.

Rendering: The process of executing JavaScript and building the visual layout of a page. Google renders pages to see the content as users see it.

Googlebot: Google’s web crawling bot that discovers and indexes pages across the internet.

Robots.txt: A text file at the root of your site that tells search engine crawlers which pages or sections to crawl or not crawl.

XML Sitemap: A file that lists all important pages on your site, helping search engines discover and prioritize them for crawling.

Noindex: A directive that tells search engines not to include a page in their index. The page will not appear in search results.

Nofollow: A link attribute that tells search engines not to pass ranking equity through the link.

Dofollow: The default link state where ranking equity is passed from the linking page to the linked page.

301 Redirect: A permanent redirect from one URL to another. Passes most link equity to the new URL.

302 Redirect: A temporary redirect. Does not pass full link equity. Used when the original URL will return.

404 Error: An HTTP status code indicating the requested page was not found. Broken links that lead to 404 pages waste crawl budget and lose equity.

410 Error: An HTTP status code indicating the page has been permanently removed. Tells search engines to stop trying to crawl it.

500 Error: An HTTP server error indicating the server failed to process the request. Repeated 500 errors signal reliability problems to search engines.

HTTPS: Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure. The encrypted version of HTTP. A confirmed ranking signal and a requirement for modern websites.

SSL Certificate: A digital certificate that enables HTTPS encryption on a website.

Canonical URL: The preferred version of a page URL when multiple versions exist. Set via the canonical tag or HTTP header.

URL Structure: The format and hierarchy of page URLs. Clean, descriptive, keyword-relevant URLs are preferred over parameter-heavy or ID-based URLs.

URL Parameter: A query string added to a URL (after the ?) that modifies the page content or tracks user behavior. Can cause duplicate content issues.

Redirect Chain: A sequence of multiple redirects between the original URL and the final destination. Each hop wastes crawl budget and loses equity.

Orphan Page: A page with no internal links pointing to it. Invisible to crawlers unless listed in the sitemap.

Log File Analysis: Examining server log files to see how search engine bots crawl your site. Reveals crawl frequency, errors, and wasted crawl budget.

Hreflang: An HTML attribute that tells search engines which language and regional version of a page to serve to users in different locations.

JavaScript SEO: The practice of ensuring search engines can crawl, render, and index content generated by JavaScript.

Mobile-First Indexing: Google’s practice of using the mobile version of a page as the primary version for indexing and ranking.

Responsive Design: A web design approach where the layout adapts to the screen size of the device viewing it.

AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages): An open-source framework for fast-loading mobile pages. Usage has declined as Core Web Vitals replaced AMP as the speed standard.

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Page Speed And Core Web Vitals

Core Web Vitals: Three specific metrics Google uses to measure page experience: LCP, CLS, and INP.

LCP (Largest Contentful Paint): Measures loading speed. The time it takes for the largest content element to become visible. Target: under 2.5 seconds.

CLS (Cumulative Layout Shift): Measures visual stability. How much the page layout shifts during loading. Target: under 0.1.

INP (Interaction to Next Paint): Measures responsiveness. How quickly the page responds to user interactions. Target: under 200 milliseconds. Replaced FID in 2024.

FID (First Input Delay): A deprecated metric that measured responsiveness. Replaced by INP in March 2024.

TTFB (Time to First Byte): The time between the browser requesting a page and receiving the first byte of data from the server.

FCP (First Contentful Paint): The time from page load to when the first piece of content is rendered on screen.

Page Speed: How fast a page loads and becomes interactive. Measured by Core Web Vitals and tools like PageSpeed Insights, Pingdom, and GTmetrix.

PageSpeed Insights: A Google tool that measures Core Web Vitals from both lab data and real-user field data. The definitive speed benchmark for SEO.

Lighthouse: An open-source tool built into Chrome DevTools that audits performance, accessibility, SEO, and best practices.

Field Data: Real-user performance data collected from actual visitors via the Chrome User Experience Report (CrUX). What Google uses for ranking.

Lab Data: Simulated performance data from controlled test environments like Lighthouse. Useful for diagnosis but not used for ranking.

CDN (Content Delivery Network): A network of servers distributed globally that caches and serves content from the location closest to the user, reducing load time.

Caching: Storing copies of files or pages so they can be served faster on subsequent requests without regenerating them.

Minification: Removing unnecessary characters (whitespace, comments) from CSS, JavaScript, and HTML files to reduce file size.

Lazy Loading: Delaying the loading of images and other resources until they are about to enter the viewport. Reduces initial page load time.

Render-Blocking Resources: CSS and JavaScript files that prevent the page from rendering until they are fully loaded and processed.

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Off-Page Seo And Link Building

Backlink: A link from another website pointing to your website. One of the strongest ranking signals.

Referring Domain: A unique domain that contains at least one backlink to your site. 100 backlinks from 1 domain counts as 1 referring domain.

Link Equity (Link Juice): The ranking value passed from one page to another through a link. Affected by the linking page’s authority, relevance, and link attributes.

Domain Rating (DR): An Ahrefs metric measuring the strength of a website’s backlink profile on a 0-100 scale.

Domain Authority (DA): A Moz metric predicting how likely a domain is to rank. 0-100 scale. Not used by Google but widely referenced in the industry.

URL Rating (UR): An Ahrefs metric measuring the strength of a specific page’s backlink profile on a 0-100 scale.

PageRank: Google’s original algorithm for measuring page importance based on the quantity and quality of links pointing to it. Still used internally but no longer publicly visible.

Link Building: The practice of acquiring backlinks from other websites to increase your site’s authority and rankings.

Guest Post: An article written for and published on another website, typically including a link back to your site.

Editorial Link: A backlink earned naturally because another site found your content valuable enough to reference. The highest quality link type.

Link Scheme: Any pattern of link manipulation intended to artificially inflate rankings. Violates Google guidelines and risks penalties.

PBN (Private Blog Network): A network of websites created solely to build links to a target site. A black hat technique that risks deindexing.

Nofollow Link: A link with the rel=’nofollow’ attribute that tells search engines not to pass ranking equity.

Sponsored Link: A link with the rel=’sponsored’ attribute indicating it was paid for or part of an advertising arrangement.

UGC Link: A link with the rel=’ugc’ attribute indicating it was placed by a user rather than the site owner. Used in comments, forums, and user profiles.

Anchor Text Distribution: The variety of anchor text used across all backlinks to a site. Natural profiles show a mix of branded, raw URL, and descriptive anchors.

Toxic Backlinks: Low-quality or spammy backlinks that can harm your site’s ranking. Options: dilution (preferred) or disavow.

Disavow File: A file uploaded to Google Search Console telling Google to ignore specific backlinks when evaluating your site.

Link Velocity: The rate at which a site acquires new backlinks over time.

Brand Mention: A reference to your brand name on another website without a hyperlink. Still contributes to entity recognition.

Citation: A mention of your business name, address, and phone number on another website. Critical for local SEO.

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Content Strategy

Content Pillar: A comprehensive page covering a broad topic that serves as the hub for a cluster of related supporting articles.

Content Cluster: A group of interlinked articles organized around a central pillar page, designed to establish topical authority.

Hub and Spoke Model: A content architecture where a central hub page links to multiple supporting spoke pages, and each spoke links back to the hub.

Topical Authority: The degree to which a website is recognized as a comprehensive, trustworthy source on a specific topic.

Content Gap: A topic or keyword that competitors rank for but your site does not cover. Identified through content gap analysis.

Content Gap Analysis: The process of comparing your content to competitors’ to identify topics and keywords you are missing.

Content Calendar: A schedule for planning, creating, and publishing content over time.

Evergreen Content: Content that remains relevant and useful over time without frequent updates. Contrasted with news or trend-based content.

Cornerstone Content: The most important, comprehensive articles on your site that you want to rank highest.

Content Pruning: Removing or consolidating low-quality, outdated, or thin pages to improve overall site quality.

Content Refresh: Updating existing content with new information, better structure, and additional internal links to improve rankings.

User-Generated Content (UGC): Content created by users rather than the site owner, including comments, reviews, and forum posts.

E-E-A-T: Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness. Google’s quality framework for evaluating content. Not a direct ranking factor but influences the signals that are.

YMYL (Your Money or Your Life): Content categories that can impact health, finances, safety, or well-being. Held to higher E-E-A-T standards.

Helpful Content: Content created primarily to help people rather than to rank in search engines. The standard set by Google’s helpful content system.

Search Intent Match: How well a page’s content aligns with the purpose behind the query. The strongest relevance signal.

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Local Seo

Local SEO: Optimization focused on ranking in location-specific search results, including the map pack and localized organic results.

Google Business Profile (GBP): A free listing that displays your business in Google Maps and local search results. Formerly Google My Business.

Map Pack (Local Pack): The group of 3 local business listings displayed with a map at the top of local search results.

Local Citations: Mentions of your business name, address, and phone number on directories, review sites, and local websites.

NAP Consistency: Having the same Name, Address, and Phone number across all online listings. Inconsistencies hurt local rankings.

Service Area Business: A business that serves customers at their locations rather than at a physical storefront.

Geo-Targeting: Optimizing content for specific geographic locations to rank in local search results.

Local Landing Page: A page specifically optimized for a geographic area, typically targeting ‘service \+ city’ keywords.

Review Signal: Customer reviews on Google, Yelp, and other platforms that influence local rankings and click-through rates.

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Ai And Emerging Seo

AI Overview: An AI-generated summary displayed at the top of Google search results that synthesizes information from multiple sources.

AI Search Visibility: How prominently a brand or website appears in AI-generated answers across platforms like ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews.

GEO (Generative Engine Optimization): The practice of optimizing content to be cited by AI-powered search platforms and answer engines.

LLM (Large Language Model): An AI system trained on massive text datasets to understand and generate human language. Powers ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and others.

llms.txt: A root-level text file that summarizes site content for LLM ingestion. The AI equivalent of robots.txt.

Entity: A uniquely identifiable thing (person, business, place, concept) that Google tracks in its Knowledge Graph.

Knowledge Graph: Google’s database of entities and relationships between them. Powers Knowledge Panels and entity-based search understanding.

Knowledge Panel: An information box on the right side of Google results showing structured data about a recognized entity.

Zero-Click Search: A search resolved entirely on the SERP without the user clicking any result. Driven by featured snippets, AI Overviews, and Knowledge Panels.

Answer Engine: Any AI platform that generates direct answers to queries by synthesizing information from multiple sources. Includes ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and AI Overviews.

Agentic Search: AI-powered browsing where an agent performs multi-step web tasks autonomously on behalf of the user.

AI Content: Content generated by artificial intelligence tools. Google does not penalize AI content per se but evaluates it by the same quality standards as human-written content.

AI Content Detection: Tools that attempt to identify whether content was generated by AI. Unreliable in 2026 with high false positive rates.

Programmatic SEO: Generating large volumes of template-based pages from structured data. Effective when each page provides unique value. Spam when it does not.

NLP (Natural Language Processing): The branch of AI focused on understanding human language. Google uses NLP to interpret search queries and evaluate content relevance.

Semantic Search: Search based on meaning and intent rather than exact keyword matching. Powered by NLP and machine learning.

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Analytics And Measurement

Organic Conversions: Desired actions (purchases, signups, form submissions) completed by visitors who arrived through organic search.

Conversion Rate: The percentage of visitors who complete a desired action on a page or site.

Attribution: The process of identifying which marketing channel or touchpoint drove a conversion.

Sessions: Individual visits to a website. One user can generate multiple sessions.

Pageviews: The total number of pages viewed. Includes repeated views of the same page.

Users: Unique individuals who visit a website within a given time period.

Engagement Rate: The percentage of sessions that involved meaningful interaction (clicks, scrolls, time spent).

Search Visibility Score: A metric estimating the percentage of all available clicks your site captures for tracked keywords.

Share of Voice: The percentage of total search visibility your site captures compared to competitors for a set of keywords.

Rank Tracking: Monitoring keyword positions in search results over time to measure SEO performance.

CrUX (Chrome User Experience Report): Google’s dataset of real-user performance metrics from Chrome users. The source of field data in PageSpeed Insights.

UTM Parameters: Tags added to URLs to track campaign source, medium, and name in Google Analytics.

Event Tracking: Recording specific user interactions (button clicks, video plays, form submissions) in analytics.

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Tools And Platforms

Ahrefs: An SEO platform for backlink analysis, keyword research, rank tracking, site auditing, and competitive analysis.

Semrush: An SEO and digital marketing platform offering keyword research, site audits, competitive analysis, and rank tracking.

Moz: An SEO platform known for Domain Authority, keyword research, and link analysis tools.

Screaming Frog: A desktop SEO spider that crawls websites to identify technical issues, broken links, and on-page problems.

Google Search Console: A free Google tool for monitoring search performance, indexing status, and technical issues.

Google Analytics: A free platform for tracking website traffic, user behavior, and conversions.

PageSpeed Insights: A Google tool that measures page performance using both lab and field data.

GTmetrix: A performance testing tool that provides Lighthouse scores, waterfalls, and monitoring capabilities.

Pingdom: A speed testing tool that measures load time from geographic locations and provides waterfall analysis.

RankMath: A WordPress SEO plugin for schema markup, sitemaps, and on-page optimization settings.

Yoast SEO: A WordPress SEO plugin for meta tags, sitemaps, and content optimization. Competitor to RankMath.

Cloudflare: A CDN, DNS, security, and performance platform that sits between your server and your visitors.

WordPress: The most widely used content management system, powering over 40% of all websites.

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