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seo-fundamentals skill

/skills/seo-fundamentals

This skill explains how search engines evaluate quality with E-E-A-T, Core Web Vitals, and technical foundations to inform sustainable SEO decisions.

This is most likely a fork of the seo-fundamentals skill from xfstudio
npx playbooks add skill sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills --skill seo-fundamentals

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SKILL.md
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---
name: seo-fundamentals
description: >
  Core principles of SEO including E-E-A-T, Core Web Vitals, technical foundations,
  content quality, and how modern search engines evaluate pages. This skill explains
  *why* SEO works, not how to execute specific optimizations.
allowed-tools: Read, Glob, Grep
---

---

# SEO Fundamentals

> **Foundational principles for sustainable search visibility.**
> This skill explains _how search engines evaluate quality_, not tactical shortcuts.

---

## 1. E-E-A-T (Quality Evaluation Framework)

E-E-A-T is **not a direct ranking factor**.
It is a framework used by search engines to **evaluate content quality**, especially for sensitive or high-impact topics.

| Dimension             | What It Represents                 | Common Signals                                      |
| --------------------- | ---------------------------------- | --------------------------------------------------- |
| **Experience**        | First-hand, real-world involvement | Original examples, lived experience, demonstrations |
| **Expertise**         | Subject-matter competence          | Credentials, depth, accuracy                        |
| **Authoritativeness** | Recognition by others              | Mentions, citations, links                          |
| **Trustworthiness**   | Reliability and safety             | HTTPS, transparency, accuracy                       |

> Pages competing in the same space are often differentiated by **trust and experience**, not keywords.

---

## 2. Core Web Vitals (Page Experience Signals)

Core Web Vitals measure **how users experience a page**, not whether it deserves to rank.

| Metric  | Target  | What It Reflects    |
| ------- | ------- | ------------------- |
| **LCP** | < 2.5s  | Loading performance |
| **INP** | < 200ms | Interactivity       |
| **CLS** | < 0.1   | Visual stability    |

**Important context:**

- CWV rarely override poor content
- They matter most when content quality is comparable
- Failing CWV can _hold back_ otherwise good pages

---

## 3. Technical SEO Principles

Technical SEO ensures pages are **accessible, understandable, and stable**.

### Crawl & Index Control

| Element           | Purpose                |
| ----------------- | ---------------------- |
| XML sitemaps      | Help discovery         |
| robots.txt        | Control crawl access   |
| Canonical tags    | Consolidate duplicates |
| HTTP status codes | Communicate page state |
| HTTPS             | Security and trust     |

### Performance & Accessibility

| Factor                 | Why It Matters                |
| ---------------------- | ----------------------------- |
| Page speed             | User satisfaction             |
| Mobile-friendly design | Mobile-first indexing         |
| Clean URLs             | Crawl clarity                 |
| Semantic HTML          | Accessibility & understanding |

---

## 4. Content SEO Principles

### Page-Level Elements

| Element          | Principle                    |
| ---------------- | ---------------------------- |
| Title tag        | Clear topic + intent         |
| Meta description | Click relevance, not ranking |
| H1               | Page’s primary subject       |
| Headings         | Logical structure            |
| Alt text         | Accessibility and context    |

### Content Quality Signals

| Dimension   | What Search Engines Look For |
| ----------- | ---------------------------- |
| Depth       | Fully answers the query      |
| Originality | Adds unique value            |
| Accuracy    | Factually correct            |
| Clarity     | Easy to understand           |
| Usefulness  | Satisfies intent             |

---

## 5. Structured Data (Schema)

Structured data helps search engines **understand meaning**, not boost rankings directly.

| Type           | Purpose                |
| -------------- | ---------------------- |
| Article        | Content classification |
| Organization   | Entity identity        |
| Person         | Author information     |
| FAQPage        | Q&A clarity            |
| Product        | Commerce details       |
| Review         | Ratings context        |
| BreadcrumbList | Site structure         |

> Schema enables eligibility for rich results but does not guarantee them.

---

## 6. AI-Assisted Content Principles

Search engines evaluate **output quality**, not authorship method.

### Effective Use

- AI as a drafting or research assistant
- Human review for accuracy and clarity
- Original insights and synthesis
- Clear accountability

### Risky Use

- Publishing unedited AI output
- Factual errors or hallucinations
- Thin or duplicated content
- Keyword-driven text with no value

---

## 7. Relative Importance of SEO Factors

There is **no fixed ranking factor order**.
However, when competing pages are similar, importance tends to follow this pattern:

| Relative Weight | Factor                      |
| --------------- | --------------------------- |
| Highest         | Content relevance & quality |
| High            | Authority & trust signals   |
| Medium          | Page experience (CWV, UX)   |
| Medium          | Mobile optimization         |
| Baseline        | Technical accessibility     |

> Technical SEO enables ranking; content quality earns it.

---

## 8. Measurement & Evaluation

SEO fundamentals should be validated using **multiple signals**, not single metrics.

| Area        | What to Observe            |
| ----------- | -------------------------- |
| Visibility  | Indexed pages, impressions |
| Engagement  | Click-through, dwell time  |
| Performance | CWV field data             |
| Coverage    | Indexing status            |
| Authority   | Mentions and links         |

---

> **Key Principle:**
> Sustainable SEO is built on _useful content_, _technical clarity_, and _trust over time_.
> There are no permanent shortcuts.

Overview

This skill explains the core principles that determine sustainable search visibility, focusing on how modern search engines evaluate pages rather than providing tactical checklists. It covers E-E-A-T, Core Web Vitals, technical foundations, content quality signals, structured data, and the role of AI in content creation. The aim is to clarify why SEO works so teams can prioritize durable improvements over short-term tricks.

How this skill works

The skill inspects the conceptual signals search engines use to judge pages: first-hand experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness (E-E-A-T); user experience metrics captured by Core Web Vitals; and technical accessibility like crawlability and HTTPS. It explains how content quality, structure, and schema inform relevance and eligibility for rich results. Measurement guidance maps these concepts to observable metrics such as indexing status, impressions, engagement, and performance data.

When to use it

  • Planning content strategy for competitive or sensitive topics
  • Assessing why an otherwise good page fails to rank
  • Designing site architecture and crawlability early in a project
  • Evaluating trade-offs between experience signals and content depth
  • Auditing AI-assisted content for publication readiness

Best practices

  • Prioritize original, useful content that fully answers user intent
  • Demonstrate real experience and expertise with clear author signals
  • Fix technical blockers: HTTPS, sitemap, canonicalization, and mobile responsiveness
  • Improve user experience metrics only after content quality is competitive
  • Use structured data to express meaning, not to substitute for good content
  • Treat AI as a drafting tool; always apply human review and source checks

Example use cases

  • Deciding whether low traffic is due to content quality or technical indexing issues
  • Preparing a site migration while preserving authority and crawl signals
  • Assessing a content portfolio to identify pages needing deeper expertise or original insights
  • Evaluating whether poor Core Web Vitals are limiting performance for comparable pages
  • Setting editorial policies for AI-assisted drafts and human verification

FAQ

Is E-E-A-T a direct ranking signal?

No. E-E-A-T is a quality evaluation framework; search engines use its dimensions as signals to judge content quality rather than as a single numeric ranking factor.

Will fixing Core Web Vitals alone boost rankings?

Rarely. Good CWV helps when content quality is comparable, but it does not replace depth, accuracy, and trustworthiness.