White Hat SEO You DO HAVE TIME for SEO: 15 Things You CAN DO in an Hour!

t0mmy

Senior Member
OG Platinum Member
Sapphire Member
Patron
Hot Rod
Bronze Star Bronze Star Bronze Star Bronze Star Bronze Star
Joined
May 10, 2025
Messages
818
Reaction Score
2,068
Feedback
0 / 0 / 0
You DO HAVE TIME for SEO: 15 Things You CAN DO in an Hour!

A ton of business owners still picture SEO as this massive, brain-melting, back-breaking grind. Sure, parts of it can feel rough, but once you grasp the basics you can run a strong campaign without losing your mind - especially now in 2026 with AI Overviews and E-E-A-T signals flipping the game on its head.

SEO basically breaks down into three buckets: on-page (URLs, titles, content), off-page (links and brand mentions), and technical (load speed, Core Web Vitals, broken links, redirects). Yeah, some technical headaches can be annoying as hell, but there are loads of fast fixes that actually move the needle. Knock out enough of these little wins and your overall results improve - plus your pages start showing up in both regular search rankings and those AI-generated answers.


So here’s a practical list of fifteen quick tasks you can knock out in an hour or less to tighten up the smaller but still crucial pieces of the SEO puzzle.


1. Strengthen your internal linking.

Plenty of sites completely ignore internal links and lose out on two major advantages right off the bat. First, they keep people browsing longer by guiding visitors to related pages and resources on your own site. More time on site usually means higher chances of a lead or sale.

On top of that, solid internal linking sends a clear message to Google that your site is packed with useful material. Pages that sit there with zero links (internal or external) just look weak and low-value. WordPress users can simply hit the search bar while linking to find the perfect internal pages. (Bonus in 2026: strong internal links also help AI systems map your topical authority.)


2. Speed up your site and fix Core Web Vitals.

A sluggish website hurts you in two big ways. Google flat-out dislikes slow sites, and page speed plus Core Web Vitals are straight-up ranking factors. Their whole mission is delivering great user experiences - and AI summaries love pulling from fast, smooth sites. Nobody wants to wait around for a page to load.

Worse, slow load times make visitors bounce instantly, tanking your metrics. Plenty of free tools can check this stuff, but Google’s PageSpeed Insights (with Lighthouse) and GTmetrix both give you clear, actionable advice on exactly what to fix.


3. Push all your page-two rankings higher.

This is hands-down the simplest way to see traffic spike fast. Fire up SEMRush or Ahrefs, pull every keyword you rank for, then sort out the ones sitting in positions 11-20.

Those are pure low-hanging fruit - tweak the on-page stuff and add a couple solid links and you can often jump them straight to page one. More eyes on your site equals more traffic. Do this monthly because fresh blog content keeps pushing new pages into ranking range - and it gives you a better shot at AI Overviews too.


4. Clean up and update every directory listing.

Lots of companies pay good money for local listings then forget about them. Grab a tool like Yext, Moz Local, or BrightLocal in 2026 to manage everything in one spot. Keep checking that your name, address, phone, and details match perfectly across the board.

For any local business, these listings carry serious weight in the SERPs. Mismatched info makes Google think your business is outdated or gone. They want accurate results for users, so make sure every listing is spot-on.


5. Answer three HARO queries every single day.

Help a Reporter Out is still one of the easiest routes to strong authority links and brand mentions, yet most owners skip it because they’re lazy. The service blasts queries three times a day - reply fast with a sharp, relevant answer and you have a real shot at getting quoted. (Good news - it’s back and stronger than ever in 2026!)

The second the email lands, pause and scan for good fits. If one matches your expertise, respond immediately. Some days you’ll spend five minutes and find nothing; other days you’ll knock out several. Stay consistent and the high-quality links and mentions will roll in, boosting both domain strength and rankings.


6. Hunt for link opportunities straight from Google.

Most killer links come from relationships, not random outreach. If you can’t hire an agency, you still need to build those connections yourself.

Search your main keywords in Google, note the big authority sites that pop up, then track down the writers or editors behind the content. Reach out offering to be a helpful source. Spend an hour or two doing this regularly and you’ll build contacts that open doors to real links and mentions.


7. Create or finish your Google Business Profile.

I still can’t believe how many sites either skip this or leave it half-done. When Google checks for trust signals, you know they look hardest at their own directory. Ignoring it is just dumb - they obviously trust their own data more.

Upload photos, write a solid description (hire help if writing isn’t your thing), reply to every review, add posts, and answer questions. If you have a physical location, this is the single most important listing you can own - and it feeds straight into local pack and AI visibility.


8. Set up your Bing Places for Business profile.

Same idea as Google - no local business should skip Bing Places (bing.com/forbusiness). It helps Bing local results and gives you an extra citation that boosts other engines too. Takes minutes and is a total no-brainer if you run a real-world business.


9. Check and improve every page’s mobile experience.

Whether you use an off-the-shelf theme or custom build, plenty of pages still deliver a lousy mobile view. Most people only test the homepage and call it good. Big mistake.

Manually open every single page on your phone - contact forms and checkout pages are the usual culprits that break. Those are the exact pages where mobile matters most! Plus Core Web Vitals on mobile are huge now. Fix whatever sloppy code or cheap theme issues you find so the whole site works perfectly on phones.


10. Get Google Search Console set up and actually use it.

I’m tired of so-called experts telling people to avoid Google tools because “they’re spying.” With millions of sites out there, Google doesn’t have time to care about yours.

Skipping Search Console is shooting yourself in the foot. It shows exactly which pages are indexed, what queries bring traffic, and even some AI Overview insights these days. Set it up, verify your site, and check the dashboard every week for issues and new keyword opportunities.


11. Refresh old content to today’s higher standards.

Google rewards deep, useful, original material that hits E-E-A-T hard. Back in the day everyone pumped out 500-word keyword-stuffed posts. If those are still on your site, rewrite them now - add fresh examples, real insights, author details, and genuine helpfulness.

You can knock out a couple rewrites in under an hour. After updating, resubmit the URL in Search Console so Google re-crawls and sees the improved value (for both humans and AI systems).


12. Rewrite titles for better SEO and more clicks.

If a title misses your target keyword, fix it - but don’t make it sound spammy. The title is your billboard in the search results. It needs the keyword, sure, but it also needs to grab attention and make people click.

Higher click-through rates tell Google your page is more relevant, so you climb higher. Think about it: if you’re in spot five but getting most of the clicks, you’ll move up. Craft titles that stand out and play well in AI summaries too.


13. Hunt down and fix every broken link.

Broken links scream “something’s wrong here” to Google - it can make them think your site or business is dead or shady. You probably have some you don’t even know about, especially outbound ones.

Run Screaming Frog’s broken link checker, then fix everything it flags. Update internal URLs where needed and swap dead external links for fresh, working resources.


14. Rewrite meta descriptions using ideas from your PPC ads.

Meta descriptions don’t directly affect rankings, but they absolutely drive clicks - and better clicks help rankings. If you’re on WordPress, Yoast SEO makes swapping them super easy.

While you’re in there, toss in basic schema markup for rich snippets - it only takes a few minutes and makes your listing pop.


15. Clean up your URL structure so it actually targets keywords.

This is dead simple, yet tons of sites (especially ones built by non-SEO designers) still use dates or random numbers in URLs. Change them to include your target keyword for each page. After updating, submit the new URL in Search Console for a fresh crawl. Do this across the site and you’ll often see traffic jump almost right away.


Conclusion

SEO has a ton of moving parts, and the sites that cover all the bases always beat the ones that only chase links. Links and brand mentions are still huge ranking signals, but ignoring the rest is a mistake. You need to hit everything if you want real organic growth - especially in 2026 when AI search engines are pushing sites that feel fast, trustworthy, and actually helpful.

Got any tips I didn't cover? Drop them below...
 
Last edited:
Sorry @t0mmy to ask silly questions

5. Answer three HARO queries every single day.

can you please give an example of this , that will be great.

11. Refresh old content to today’s higher standards.

My company website was done in 2023 so I can simply edit the content of the pages , blogs etc or how it goes and resubmit for indexing or how it goes.
 
Sorry @t0mmy to ask silly questions

5. Answer three HARO queries every single day.

can you please give an example of this , that will be great.

11. Refresh old content to today’s higher standards.

My company website was done in 2023 so I can simply edit the content of the pages , blogs etc or how it goes and resubmit for indexing or how it goes.

HARO is short for Help a Reporter Out (if you didn't know?) - journalists, bloggers, researchers, reporters and so on use it to ask for answers to questions, citations from experts and similar - if your submission to their querie gets selected they will then use your input within whatever content they're working on... 9 times out of 10 you can score a link alongside it.

I've written a few guides on HARO through the years, I'll look into getting one of those up here next... I'm almost certain I've written a full walk through on using it years back, I used to talk about it a LOT, leave it with me!

I'm doing so right here in this thread, I've done it on the other few threads I've shared here too. They're older guides and tutorials I've given a 2026 make over, but yes that's exactly right.
 
Last edited:
2. Speed up your site and fix Core Web Vitals.

A sluggish website hurts you in two big ways. Google flat-out dislikes slow sites, and page speed plus Core Web Vitals are straight-up ranking factors. Their whole mission is delivering great user experiences - and AI summaries love pulling from fast, smooth sites. Nobody wants to wait around for a page to load.

Worse, slow load times make visitors bounce instantly, tanking your metrics. Plenty of free tools can check this stuff, but Google’s PageSpeed Insights (with Lighthouse) and GTmetrix both give you clear, actionable advice on exactly what to fix.
Don't sleep on this. Leverage anything you can to fix your TTFB and page load. If you're on Wordpress, use a good caching plugin, enable redis to store memory objects, if you're self hosting making sure your Apache/NGINX configuration is up to snuff, if you're leveraging Cloudflare make sure you're either enabling Polish and/or check you're not hitting cache-miss on your images and static assets.

I've done a few refactors for clients in the last couple years with 1MM+/unique visitors and bounce rates dropped drastically, time on page skyrocketed, and subsequently significantly more traffic on their affiliate/ad placements. Taking page loads from 4+ seconds to ~600ms has significant benefits.
 
HARO is short for Help a Reporter Out (if you didn't know?) - journalists, bloggers, researchers, reporters and so on use it to ask for answers to questions, citations from experts and similar - if your submission to their querie gets selected they will then use your input within whatever content they're working on... 9 times out of 10 you can score a link alongside it.

I've written a few guides on HARO through the years, I'll look into getting one of those up here next... I'm almost certain I've written a full walk through on using it years back, I used to talk about it a LOT, leave it with me!

I'm doing so right here in this thread, I've done it on the other few threads I've shared here too. They're older guides and tutorials I've given a 2026 make over, but yes that's exactly right.
You don't have to even do that now really.

If you sign up to Qwoted (even as a free account) put in a real detailed profile you will get the moderation team pitch articles to you via email which have had little to no responses on where the deadlines are running out. As long as your honest about your skill set, experience and knowledge level it works - having a photo there can help but I've toggled having a photo on and off and it makes very little difference to the replies you get.

You can also save topic keywords and have emails come to you daily or hourly when topics are posted. So no need to sign in or do anything really.

As a free user you have to wait 2 hours before you can reply to an article which sometimes goes agains you and I think you only get 2 pitches per month to apply for an article I think. Which is fine to start out and is often enough.

You want your profile to have a good few reviews from publishers before you spend money on it. I've only ever bought additional pitches.

Only because once you go down the paid route you start competing with all the "gurus" on there that pitch for all the high end shit straight away I'm talking newspapers and news outlets. But I stay on the free one, if you spend a bit of time getting to know the platform and learning the right topics to pitch 2 credits is fine.

If a company / newspaper / blog likes you they can reach out direct to you for help without needing the credits to apply anyway.


Not taking away from you @t0mmy just expanding on it.
 
Not taking away from you @t0mmy just expanding on it.

Not at all... keep them coming, this is excellent and so was the advice from @GoldenGlovez above you - it's refreshing to see great input and others expanding on the original post, it sure beats one sentence Ai slop that's running wild on a lot of communities right now.
 
Back
Top