Plain-language definitions for every geo-targeting, redirect, and SEO concept — with practical examples and best practices.
A geo redirect automatically sends website visitors to a different URL based on their geographic location, using IP geol...
Geo-targeting is the practice of delivering different content, ads, or experiences to users based on their geographic lo...
Geo-fencing creates a virtual boundary around a geographic area — defined by GPS coordinates, IP ranges, or radius from ...
Hreflang tags are HTML attributes (rel="alternate" hreflang="x") that tell search engines which language and geographic ...
Content personalization dynamically changes website elements — such as headlines, images, pricing, calls-to-action, and ...
IP geolocation maps a visitor's IP address to their approximate geographic location — accurate to the country level 99.5...
Geo-blocking restricts access to website content based on the visitor's geographic location, typically returning a 403 F...
Smart links are URLs that dynamically redirect visitors to different destinations based on conditions like geographic lo...
URL redirects (301, 302, 307, 308) tell browsers and search engines that a page has moved — 301 and 308 are permanent re...
Cloaking in SEO is the practice of showing different content to search engine crawlers than to human visitors — explicit...
Flash of Unstyled Content (FOUC) occurs when a webpage briefly displays default content before JavaScript applies person...
Crawl budget is the number of pages a search engine will crawl on your website within a given timeframe — determined by ...