SEO Services
SEO is not one thing. It is four overlapping disciplines, and most agencies are good at one or two — leaving the others quietly broken. Below is how we split the work, what each layer is for, and how we report progress so you can audit us monthly.
The four layers of SEO, in plain English
- On-page SEO — what visitors and crawlers see on each page. Headings, content, internal links, schema.
- Technical SEO — what crawlers see between pages. Site speed, indexability, sitemap, hreflang, Core Web Vitals.
- Local SEO — Google Business Profile, citations, local content, reviews. The map-pack stuff.
- Mass-page / programmatic SEO — capturing the long-tail with hundreds of city, service, or product-combination pages.
You usually need three of these. Sometimes all four. The mix depends on what you sell and where your buyers search.
On-page SEO — the foundation
Title tags, meta descriptions, H1 hierarchy, internal linking, image alt text, FAQ schema. The boring fundamentals that most sites still get wrong. We start here on every audit because fixing on-page is the cheapest, fastest ranking lever — and it has to be solid before technical or off-page work pays back. Our deliverable: an audited list of every page on your site with prioritised on-page fixes ranked by traffic potential.
Technical SEO — what most agencies skip
Technical issues are invisible to your team but obvious to Google. Slow LCP (Largest Contentful Paint), high CLS (Cumulative Layout Shift), broken canonical tags, orphan pages, hreflang errors, robots.txt accidents — any of these can suppress rankings even when content is great. We run a full crawl with Screaming Frog, audit Core Web Vitals against Google’s targets, and ship a fix list with developer notes.
Local SEO — for businesses with a location
If you serve customers nearby — or you want to rank in SEO Pattaya, SEO Bangkok, or any other city — local SEO is its own discipline. Google Business Profile optimisation, NAP consistency across 50+ directories, local backlinks, location-specific landing pages. We’ve helped Pattaya businesses move from page 4 of Google Maps to the top three pack in under 60 days. Most local-SEO wins come from boring discipline, not clever tricks.
Mass-page SEO — programmatic at scale
If you sell a service in many cities, or a product in many configurations, you can capture thousands of long-tail searches with programmatic pages. Each page is unique, useful, and targets one specific query. Done badly, this is the “site reputation abuse” trap Google penalised in 2024. Done well, it doubles a site’s organic traffic in a year. Our mass-page service handles research, content, internal linking, and indexing pace.
How we report — every month, every metric
You get a monthly report (PDF + live dashboard) covering: keyword rankings (top 50 you care about), organic traffic from Google + Bing + AI search, indexed pages count, Core Web Vitals trend, conversion events from GA4, and an itemised list of what we shipped that month. No vanity metrics. If something is not moving, we tell you first.
SEO FAQ
How long does SEO take to work? First wins (technical fixes, on-page) show in 2–4 weeks. Ranking lifts on competitive terms typically take 3–6 months. Local SEO is faster — often 30–60 days for the map-pack.
What’s the difference between on-page and technical SEO? On-page is what’s on a page (title, headings, content). Technical is the infrastructure between pages (speed, sitemap, indexability). Both matter; they solve different problems.
Is SEO still worth it in 2026 with AI search? Yes — AI Overviews cite the same ranking pages Google used to rank. Sites that did SEO well are now also showing up in ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity citations. Bad SEO loses both surfaces.
Do I need local SEO if I sell online? Sometimes. If your audience searches “{your service} near me” or “{your service} in {city}”, local SEO matters even for online businesses. We test for this in the kickoff audit.
How do I know if my SEO agency is doing real work? They share monthly reports with specific deliverables and rankings, not just “we worked on your site.” If the report is vague, the work probably is too.