I do not teach SEO because most people use it as a distraction. They spend months chasing tactics, plugins, checklists, and keyword tools, and they never build anything solid.
SEO changes. What matters more is structure and consistency. A site with clear topics, useful pages, and steady improvement usually does better over time than a site built around tricks.
I am not anti-SEO. I just put it in the right place. You earn the right to care about SEO after the site exists, after the content is real, and after you have a simple structure you can maintain.
If you are building a long-term asset, the best SEO is boring: publish useful pages, keep them clean, and link them properly. That is what I focus on, because it is stable and it works without constant reinvention.
This note explains the thinking behind the main system.
