A Simple SEO Checklist for New Websites

Launching a new website is exciting — but if it’s not set up with SEO basics from day one, it can take months longer to start showing up in search results. Here’s a straightforward checklist to work through, whether you just launched or are about to.

1. Technical foundations

  • Submit your sitemap to Google Search Console. This helps Google discover and index your pages faster instead of waiting to stumble upon them naturally.
  • Check that your site is mobile-friendly. Most search traffic today comes from mobile devices, and Google primarily uses the mobile version of your site to determine rankings.
  • Test your page speed. Use a free tool like Google PageSpeed Insights — slow-loading pages hurt both rankings and visitor patience.
  • Make sure your site uses HTTPS, not HTTP. This is now a basic trust and ranking factor, and most hosting providers offer free SSL certificates.

2. On-page basics

  • Write a unique title tag for every page, ideally under 60 characters, with your main keyword near the front.
  • Write a compelling meta description for every page, under about 155 characters, that gives someone a reason to click.
  • Use one clear H1 per page that describes what the page is about, and organize the rest of your content with H2s and H3s.
  • Choose clean, readable URLs (e.g., /services/website-audit/ rather than /page?id=347).

3. Content basics

  • Answer the question your visitor actually came with. Before writing anything else, ask: what is someone searching for when they land on this page, and does this page clearly answer it?
  • Avoid keyword stuffing. Write naturally — repeating the same phrase over and over reads poorly to visitors and can actually hurt rankings rather than help them.
  • Add internal links between related pages on your site (for example, linking from a blog post to a relevant service page) to help visitors and search engines navigate your site.
  • Keep content updated. A page that’s accurate and current builds more trust — with both visitors and search engines — than one left untouched for years.

4. Local basics (if you serve a local area)

  • Set up and fully complete your Google Business Profile — categories, hours, service area, and photos all matter.
  • Keep your business name, address, and phone number consistent across your website, Google Business Profile, and any directory listings.
  • Encourage and respond to customer reviews. Both the quantity and your responses influence local search visibility.

5. Ongoing habits

  • Check Search Console monthly for new keyword opportunities, indexing errors, or mobile usability issues.
  • Publish new content regularly, even if it’s just once or twice a month — consistency signals an active, maintained site.
  • Revisit old pages periodically to update outdated information or improve pages that aren’t performing well.

The bottom line: SEO isn’t a one-time setup — it’s a habit. But getting these fundamentals right from the start means every piece of content and every future improvement has a solid foundation to build on.

Not sure where your site currently stands? Get in touch for a full audit — I’ll walk you through exactly what’s working and what needs attention.

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