SEO & Web System
TL;DR – How I Treat SEO
I design global SEO and web systems across 20+ markets, not one‑off hacks.
I start from reality (what already works, where money comes from) and build a clean keyword → URL → intent map everyone can understand.
I run a simple loop: ship pages, structure the site, point links, read data, adjust.
How I Think About SEO & Web
Most “SEO problems” are really system problems.
No clear information architecture.
No agreed keyword → URL map.
No shared view of which pages actually matter for money.
My job is to fix that by:
Mapping what’s already working and where the real upside is.
Designing a small set of core hubs and money pages that carry most of the value.
Tying that to a keyword → URL → intent sheet that even non‑SEOs can read.
Building a loop where content, tech, and links all point at the same targets.
I’m not trying to win every keyword on Earth. I care about a shortlist of high‑intent terms that move signups, deposits, trades, or ARR – and a system that consistently wins those across markets.
Example: Crypto Wallet – From Frantic-site to Focused Hubs
When I stepped into Crypto Wallet (let’s just call the brand “Crypto Wallet”), the site was a bit of a chaotic site:
300+ geo pages.
Lots of duplicated / rogue “crypto” URLs.
Fuzzy lines between product pages, guides, and blog content.
And to get to the point, I ended up fixing this in several phases.
1. Audit and Information Architecture
I worked with my content team to run a full content audit and put everything into a singular view (in this case, it was a Monday board – every page, every geo, status, and obvious issues).
From that, we designed a new IA in Figma: fewer, bigger hubs with a clear split between:
Product pages
Guides / education
Blog / top‑of‑funnel
2. Keyword → URL Map
I like to show Leadership explicit keyword mapping, not just “trust us.” i.e. we should always use data where possible.
We turned the IA into a concrete sheet:
Each important query (e.g. “best crypto wallet app”, “best bitcoin wallet”, “beste Krypto Wallet”) → one primary URL.
Tagged by geo, funnel stage, and whether it was a money page or supporting page.
This became the single source of truth across SEO, content, product, and management – no more guessing where something should live.
3. Wallet Cluster Build-out
I then built a proper wallet page cluster:
Now in the crypto world, it would be for example: ERC20, Solana, Polygon, USDT, Web3, BEP20, BNB, plus a “How to get a crypto wallet” mid‑funnel guide.
Each followed the same internal logic:
Clear H1 and meta that match the main intent.
Short value prop above the fold.
“What is X?” section.
“How to use X in Crypto Wallet.”
Risks / FAQs based on real query patterns.
Internal links to related flows (Web3, non‑custodial, DEX, staking, etc.).
That meant new pages didn’t start from zero. Writers had a template, designers knew the shape, and my reviews were about clarity and intent, not structural surgery every time.
4. Link and Internal Link System
Finally, we built a link system around that map:
External links largely focused on:
EN homepage + Prio geos “crypto wallet” homepages.
The wallet pages and “how to get a crypto wallet” guide.
Internal links from:
Other relevant pages throughout our site.
Partner sites where we had control (essentially our partnership content, so in this case, big editorial companies).
Result in a very competitive niche:
Strong, defensible positions on “crypto wallet app” and “best crypto wallet app” in several markets.
A good share of tracked wallet queries in top 10 / top 3 across non‑US geos.
A wallet cluster leadership understands and can focus budget and attention on.
Example: Trading Platform – Tech & Structure as SEO Work
On Tech Product #2 (let’s call this Tech Product #2), the biggest SEO gains weren’t from new content at all. They were from fixing structure and hygiene:
Hreflang and register pages were confusing search and users.
Some key “how to day trade” type articles were broken or half‑indexed.
Low‑value app pages were getting indexed instead of core flows.
I worked with my dev stakeholders to:
Turn my loose complaints into a clear tech audit:
Hreflang issues.
Duplicate / competing register pages.
Noindex rules for low‑value / thin app pages.
Broken articles that needed fixing.
Tag each issue with:
Owner.
Affected URL set.
Deadline.
This is still “SEO work” in my book – because until foundations are clean, content and link power leak everywhere.
The Framework I Use When I Walk Into a New SEO/Web Situation
I’m basically doing some version of this every time:
1. Map Reality
Rankings + GSC by URL and query.
What’s actually working now per geo.
Where the obvious gaps and cannibals are.
2. Design the Spine
New or updated IA diagram: hubs, money pages, supporting pages.
Keyword → URL → intent map that everyone can see.
A tiny list of money URLs we agree to care about first.
3. Build the Cluster
Templates for key page types:
Product pages
“Best Of” / comparison
How‑to guides
Set a standard for:
FAQs
Metas
Internal linking
4. Point Firepower
Focused external links to the agreed money URLs (whatever the vendor mix is).
Internal links from any other assets we control (partners, apps, docs).
5. Run the Loop
Watch rankings and GSC regularly.
Decide whether the next move is content, IA, links, or tech – never “do everything at once.”
Update the map and roadmap so leadership sees a clear story: here’s what we changed, here’s what moved.
If you hand me a messy SEO/Web setup and enough access, this is the lens I’ll use to turn it into a calm, focused system that can actually scale.