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What is technical SEO?

Technical SEO is the work that makes a website easy for search engines to crawl, index, and understand: site speed, mobile rendering, URL structure, internal linking, XML sitemaps, canonical tags, structured data, and fixing errors like broken links, redirect chains, and duplicate content. It is the foundation layer that content and links stand on.

Why technical work is the foundation layer

Content and links cannot perform if Google cannot properly access and interpret the pages they sit on. A brilliant collection page that is blocked from indexing ranks for nothing. A well-earned link pointing at a redirect chain leaks its value along the way.

This is why technical health comes first in any serious SEO program. Fixing crawl and indexing problems does not create new value; it releases value the site already built but Google could not see. On sites with long-standing technical issues, that release is often the fastest win in the entire engagement. The order is not optional: technical health first, then content, then authority, because each layer depends on the one beneath it.

The common technical issues on Shopify

Shopify stores share a recognizable set of technical problems:

  • Duplicate product URLs created by collection paths, splitting one product's ranking signals across multiple addresses.
  • Thin auto-generated tag pages that eat crawl budget while ranking for nothing.
  • Slow themes weighed down by stacked apps, each adding scripts the page must load.
  • Limited URL control, which makes clean structure and canonical tags more important, not less.

None of these are exotic, and all of them are fixable. They just need someone to look, because Shopify does not flag any of them by default.

How technical SEO fits into ongoing work

Technical SEO is mostly front-loaded. An initial cleanup fixes the bulk of the issues: crawl errors, duplicates, redirect chains, missing structured data, and indexing problems. After that, the work shifts to monitoring, because sites change constantly and every theme update, app install, or new page type can introduce fresh issues.

If a site has never had a technical audit, that audit is usually the highest-return first step in any SEO engagement. It is the difference between building on solid ground and publishing content onto a site Google struggles to read. Google Search Console surfaces many of these issues for free, which makes ignoring them a choice rather than a cost.

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