12 SEO Techniques That Only Take 1 Minute
Most SEO improvements aren’t “big projects.” They’re tiny choices repeated until the site stops bleeding. One minute won’t fix your strategy, but it can fix one leak. Do that twelve times, and your pages start behaving.
Below are 12 SEO techniques that only take 1 minute each. They’re quick, practical, and designed for real publishing workflows.
1) Rewrite the title tag to match the intent
Open the page. Ask: “What is the searcher actually trying to do?”
Then make the title say that, cleanly, in under ~60 characters.
2) Add one internal link to a stronger page
Scan the article for the first natural mention of a related topic. Link it to your best relevant page.
No need for fancy anchor text—clarity beats clever.
3) Add one internal link from a stronger page back to this one
If your site has a “hub” post, edit it and add a single link pointing to the new page.
That’s how you teach Google hierarchy without begging.
4) Improve the first 2 lines of the intro
Replace fluff with a concrete hook: a problem, a contrast, or a surprising fact.
If your intro is generic, your bounce rate will tell on you.
5) Add an FAQ question as a heading (even without schema)
Drop one H2/H3 in the form of a real question you see in autocomplete / “People also ask.”
Answer it in 2–3 sentences. Done.
6) Fix one ugly URL slug
Shorten it. Remove stopwords. Remove dates unless they matter.
Example: /best-seo-techniques-that-only-take-1-minute-2026/ → /seo-techniques-1-minute/
7) Add image alt text that describes, not markets
Pick one image. Give it accurate, human alt text.
If it’s decorative, use empty alt. If it’s informative, describe the content.
8) Add a “Related” section with 3 links (max)
At the end of the post, add 3 relevant internal links.
Not 10. Not 20. Three is enough to guide the reader and spread equity.
9) Check for one cannibalization collision
Search your site: site:domain.com "target keyword"
If two pages fight for the same query, decide which one is the “main” and adjust the other (merge, redirect, or differentiate).
10) Add one descriptive subheading to break a wall of text
Find the longest paragraph cluster. Insert a subheading that summarizes the next 2–3 paragraphs.
This improves skimmability—humans first, algorithms second.
11) Compress one heavy image
If a page feels slow, it’s often an oversized image.
Run one image through compression (or swap to WebP). That alone can shave load time.
12) Run a quick indexing sanity check
Search: site:domain.com your-page-slug
If it’s not indexed after a reasonable time, check robots/noindex/canonical. Fixing one tag can revive an entire page.
The “go fish” trick for consistency
In Go Fish, you win by remembering what was asked and what was denied. Same with SEO: keep a tiny “asked/denied” mental list.
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Asked: Did I add one internal link?
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Denied: Did I leave the title vague again?
That little loop keeps you consistent across dozens of pages.
One-minute SEO isn’t magic. It’s maintenance. Apply a few of these every time you publish, and your site quietly compounds—like a professional habit pretending to be a shortcut.