Added: 12 April 2026
Google's March 2026 core update finished rolling out on 8 April. It rewards pages that show real experience, match search intent tightly, and go deep on a topic. It downgrades thin, generic content regardless of how polished the writing looks. For Devon small businesses, the action plan is simple. Show your work, prove you serve this area, and refresh tired pages before publishing new ones.
Added: 16 February 2026
DJ Haggett has stayed at the top of Devon's premium catering market for over 15 years through ongoing website development, SEO, and digital strategy designed to protect visibility and drive consistent bookings.
Added: 13 February 2026
Most SEO advice focuses on what helps you rank with very little talk about what makes someone choose you once you appear. This is the gap is where many enquiries are lost.
Added: 22 January 2026
If you hire an SEO consultant in Devon, the work should be structured, transparent, and grounded in the realities of the local market. The early weeks focus on fixing technical foundations and removing blockers. After that, the emphasis shifts to local relevance, clearer page intent, and compounding visibility across both traditional search results and AI-driven summaries.
Added: 06 January 2026
Structured data (schema markup) occupies an awkward middle ground in SEO. It is often oversold as a ranking booster, then dismissed entirely when no uplift appears. Neither position survives contact with the evidence. Schema does not directly improve rankings. It also does not do 'nothing'. Its value lies in a narrow but increasingly relevant set of use cases, especially as search interfaces shift toward summarisation, extraction, and entity-based retrieval.
Added: 29 December 2025
2025 fundamentally changed how customers find local businesses. Google's AI Overviews now appear in a majority of commercial searches, traditional organic listings have moved down the page, and well over half of searches now end without a click. For Devon businesses, the old playbook of 'rank higher, get more traffic' no longer reflects how search actually works. Here's what happened, what it means, and what to do next.