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Basic Guide to SEO: How to Get Found on Google

Atualizado em 29 de janeiro de 2026

Categoria: SEO
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Basic guide to SEO with a simple checklist for getting found on Google

If you searched for a basic guide to SEO, you probably want the shortest path to more search traffic without getting buried in jargon. This article is that path.

SEO is mostly three jobs:

  1. Make sure Google can reach your pages and store them in its index.
  2. Publish pages that match what people actually search for.
  3. Make those pages good enough that Google feels safe ranking them.

TL;DR

Do these and you are doing SEO:

  • Set up Google Search Console and submit a sitemap.
  • Fix indexing blockers (noindex tags, robots.txt blocks, broken canonicals, redirects to the wrong place).
  • Target one main query per page and match what the searcher wants.
  • Write a clear title and H1, then answer the query fast. Add detail after.
  • Use internal links from related pages so Google can find and understand the page.
  • Keep the page fast and mobile friendly. Avoid popups that cover the content.
  • Reduce duplicates (choose a canonical URL, redirect old URLs, merge thin pages).
  • Earn a few real links by publishing things people cite (original examples, tools, lists, templates, data).
  • Watch Search Console weekly. Update pages that get impressions but few clicks.

If you do the list above, you can often see impressions within days to weeks. Clicks usually follow as Google learns where your page fits. New sites and tough topics can take months. That is normal.


What SEO Is in Plain English

Search engine optimization is the work you do so your pages show up when someone searches.

It is not magic. It is not a one time setup. It is also not only about keywords.

At a high level, SEO is about:

  • Relevance: Is this page about what the person searched for?
  • Quality: Does the page answer the question better than other pages?
  • Trust: Does the site look real and safe, with signals that it is not spam?
  • Usability: Can people use the page on a phone, fast, without friction?

You do not need tricks. You need clear pages that are easy to crawl, easy to understand, and worth ranking.


How Google Search Works: Crawling, Indexing, Ranking

When someone types a query into Google, Google is not searching the live internet in real time. It is searching a stored copy of pages it has already found and processed.

Here is the beginner version.

Crawling: how Google finds pages

Google finds pages through:

  • Links from other pages (including your own internal links)
  • XML sitemaps you submit in Search Console
  • Feeds and other discovery paths for some sites

If a page has no links pointing to it and it is not in your sitemap, Google may never find it.

Indexing: how Google stores and understands pages

Indexing is when Google can read the page, pick a canonical URL for it, and store it in the index.

Common reasons a page does not get indexed:

  • The page blocks indexing with a noindex meta tag.
  • The page is blocked by robots.txt (so Googlebot cannot fetch it).
  • The canonical tag points somewhere else.
  • The content is too thin or duplicated across many URLs.
  • The server returns an error, or the page loads only after heavy client side scripts.

Ranking: how Google chooses what to show

Ranking is the order of results for a query. Google tries to show the best match for the person, not the best match for your site.

Ranking is affected by things like:

  • What the page is about (topics, headings, copy, links)
  • How well it answers the query
  • Whether the site looks trustworthy
  • Links from other sites
  • Page experience (mobile, speed, intrusive UX)

Your goal is simple: make the right page for the right query, then remove every reason Google would skip it.


How Long SEO Takes and What to Expect

SEO is slow compared to paid ads, but it compounds.

Here is a realistic expectation range:

Change you makeWhen you may notice it
Fix a block that prevented crawling or indexingDays to a few weeks
Update a title or meta descriptionDays to a few weeks
Publish a new page on an existing siteA few weeks to a few months
Publish a new site with no linksA few months or more

Two tips that keep you sane:

  • Track impressions, not just clicks. Impressions tell you Google is testing you.
  • Treat early rankings as feedback. If you show up on page 5, you are not failing. You are getting data.

Make Sure Google Can Find and Read Your Site

Before you write more content, make sure the content you already have is reachable and indexable.

1) Set up Google Search Console

If you do nothing else from this guide, do this.

  1. Add your site as a property in Google Search Console.
  2. Verify ownership (DNS is best if you can).
  3. Submit your sitemap URL.
  4. Use the URL Inspection tool on a few key pages.

If you are on Next.js and Search Console shows “Couldn’t fetch sitemap”, I have a separate fix here: Fix: Google Search Console “Couldn’t Fetch Sitemap” on Next.js.

2) Make sure your sitemap is real and up to date

A sitemap is not a ranking booster. It is a discovery tool.

Good sitemap habits:

  • Include only canonical URLs that return 200.
  • Do not include pages you marked noindex.
  • Update it when you publish or remove pages.

Internal links do two jobs:

  • They help Google find pages.
  • They tell Google how pages relate to each other.

Simple rules:

  • Link from high traffic pages to pages you care about.
  • Use link text that says what the page is about.
  • Avoid orphan pages (pages with no internal links pointing to them).

4) Avoid accidental “do not index”

Two common beginner mistakes:

  • Blocking Googlebot in robots.txt and wondering why nothing ranks.
  • Using noindex and forgetting it is there.

If you do not want a page to show up in search results, use noindex. If you block crawling with robots.txt, Google cannot fetch the page to see the noindex.

5) Reduce duplicates and pick a canonical URL

Duplicates can happen from:

  • http vs https
  • with www vs without www
  • URL parameters
  • trailing slash vs no trailing slash
  • the same content copied across many pages

Pick one version of each page as canonical and redirect the rest to it. This keeps your indexing clean and focuses link signals.


Choose Topics and Keywords That Match Intent

Keyword research is not a spreadsheet contest. You are trying to answer one question:

What is the searcher trying to do right now?

Start with topics, then pick the query

Write down your main topics. If you run a product or service, your topics are usually:

  • The problems you solve
  • The jobs your product helps people do
  • Alternatives and comparisons
  • Setup and troubleshooting
  • Pricing and plans

From each topic, pick one main query for one page.

Check the search results to see intent

Search your target query and look at the first page:

  • Are the results guides, lists, tools, videos, or product pages?
  • Are they beginner friendly or advanced?
  • Are they short or long?

This tells you what Google thinks the searcher wants. You can still be different, but you need to meet the baseline.

Pick your primary keyword and a few close variants

For a beginner post, you do not need 50 keywords. You need:

  • One primary query (the main one you want to rank for)
  • A handful of close variants that fit naturally in the page

For this article, the primary query is “basic guide to seo”. Close variants might be “seo basics”, “beginner seo”, and “how to do seo”.


On Page SEO: Write Pages That Answer the Query

On page SEO is what you do on the page itself.

Write a title that earns the click

Your title tag is often the first thing someone sees.

Good titles are:

  • Specific
  • Honest
  • Easy to scan

Example title patterns:

  • Basic Guide to SEO: How to Get Found on Google
  • SEO Basics for Beginners: A Simple Checklist
  • How to Do SEO: Step by Step for a New Site

Use one H1, then clear H2 sections

Your page should be easy to skim.

  • One H1 that matches the topic
  • H2 sections that match the questions people have
  • Short paragraphs and lists for the how to parts

If you look at top ranking pages, they usually have the same structure because it works.

Answer fast, then go deeper

A simple format that works for many queries:

  1. A short answer near the top.
  2. A checklist or steps.
  3. Examples.
  4. Common questions (FAQ).

This helps both readers and Google. People get what they came for, then stay for detail.

Write for humans first, then help Google understand

You do not need to repeat the keyword in every sentence. Instead:

  • Use natural language that covers the topic fully.
  • Include related terms where they fit (like “Search Console”, “sitemap”, “indexing”).
  • Add examples and screenshots when they help.

External links can be good when they support your point or help someone complete a task. Link to the primary source (official docs) when possible.

Image basics

Images can bring in extra traffic through image search and also help the page.

Checklist:

  • Put images near the text they relate to.
  • Use descriptive file names.
  • Use alt text that describes the image for someone who cannot see it.
  • Compress images so they load fast.

Technical SEO Basics That Block Ranking

You do not need to be an engineer to handle the basics, but you do need to avoid a few common issues.

Make pages fast and stable

Speed is not only a ranking factor. It is also a user factor.

Start here:

  • Optimize images (size and compression).
  • Use caching and a CDN if you can.
  • Remove heavy scripts you do not need.

Mobile friendly is not optional

Most searches are on phones. Test your pages on a phone and fix anything that is hard to use:

  • Text too small
  • Buttons too close
  • Tables that do not scroll
  • Popups that cover the content

Fix broken pages and bad redirects

Make sure:

  • Pages return 200 when they should.
  • Old URLs redirect to the best new match (not always the homepage).
  • You do not have long redirect chains.

Use canonical tags when you have near duplicates

If two URLs are almost the same page, pick one as canonical so Google knows which one to index and rank.

Add structured data only when it fits

Structured data can help Google understand your page type and show rich results for some queries.

Use it when it matches the content on the page (FAQ, article, product). Do not add it just to chase rich results.


Links still matter because they act like votes of trust from other sites. You do not need to buy links. That can backfire. What works for most sites:

Publish things people want to reference

Examples:

  • Original examples and templates
  • A free tool or calculator
  • A clear comparison page
  • A list of resources that saves time

Do basic outreach

If you publish something that helps a specific group, send it to the people who would care:

  • Partners
  • Communities
  • Newsletters in your niche

The point is not to spam. It is to show the page to the right audience.

If you’re launching an AI tool, directories can also help with early distribution. Here is my Hand-Curated List of AI Directories.

If you do good work, ask customers, friends, and partners if they can mention you in a resources page or case study. Those links are normal and usually safe.


Measure Results and Improve Over Time

If you do not measure, you will guess. Search Console is the first place to look.

What to watch in Search Console

In the Performance report:

  • Queries: what you show up for
  • Pages: which pages get clicks and impressions
  • Countries and devices: where traffic comes from

In the Indexing report:

  • Pages excluded from indexing and why
  • Canonical issues
  • Crawl errors

A simple weekly routine

Once a week:

  1. Find pages with impressions but low click through rate.
  2. Improve the title and meta description so it matches the query better.
  3. Add a missing section if people keep searching for a question you did not answer.
  4. Add internal links from related pages.

Once a month:

  1. Update your top pages with fresh examples and screenshots.
  2. Merge or remove thin pages that do not get traffic.

Things to Ignore at First

SEO has endless rabbit holes. As a beginner, ignore these for now:

  • Keyword density formulas
  • Buying links
  • Spinning content with AI and posting hundreds of thin pages
  • Submitting your site to random directories
  • Obsessing over tiny ranking changes day to day

Keep your focus on crawlability, clear content, and steady improvement.


A Simple 7 Day Plan

If you want a plan you can finish, use this.

Day 1: Set the foundation

  • Set up Search Console.
  • Submit your sitemap.
  • Check URL Inspection on your homepage and one key page.

Day 2: Fix blockers

  • Check robots.txt and remove accidental blocks.
  • Remove noindex from pages you want indexed.
  • Fix canonicals that point to the wrong place.

Day 3: Pick one page to improve

  • Choose a page that already gets some impressions.
  • Rewrite the title and first section so it answers the query fast.
  • Add a short FAQ at the bottom.
  • Add links from 3 to 5 related pages to your target page.
  • Add links from your target page to the next best pages on your site.

Day 5: Improve speed

  • Compress images on your top pages.
  • Remove scripts you do not need.

Day 6: Publish one new page

  • Pick one query with clear intent.
  • Write the page with a clean structure and real examples.

Day 7: Review and repeat

  • Check Search Console for new queries and pages.
  • Write down what to fix next week.

FAQ

Can I do SEO myself?

Yes. Most early SEO wins are basics: indexation, site structure, and writing pages that match queries. You can do a lot before you ever hire help.

Do I need an SEO plugin?

If you use WordPress, an SEO plugin makes it easier to set titles, meta descriptions, canonicals, and sitemaps. On other platforms, you may not need a plugin if the platform already handles the basics.

Why is my page not showing up on Google?

Common causes:

  • Google has not found the page yet (no links, no sitemap).
  • The page is blocked (robots.txt) or marked noindex.
  • The page is a duplicate and the canonical points elsewhere.
  • The site is new and Google has not built trust in it yet.

Use Search Console URL Inspection to see what Google says about that URL.

Should I write one long guide or many smaller pages?

Start with one strong page per topic. If you have many distinct questions with different intent, make separate pages and link them together.

What is the one thing I should do first?

Set up Google Search Console and make sure Google can crawl and index your key pages. Everything else depends on that.

Categoria SEO
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