SEO comes with a lot of jargon. This page explains every acronym and technical term you'll see across the strategy, in one or two sentences, with a Sensesbit-specific example wherever it helps.
Where a reader is in their journey from "just curious" to "ready to buy."
Pages aimed at people who are ready to choose a vendor right now. They've already decided they need sensory-analysis software — they just need to pick which one.
Why it matters: BOFU pages convert at 10–20× the rate of educational content. They're built first.
Pages for someone who understands their problem but is still researching solutions. They know Excel isn't working — they don't yet know which tool replaces it.
Pages for someone who is just learning about the topic. They may not even know sensory analysis is a discipline yet.
The journey from "never heard of you" to "paid customer". The further down the funnel a reader is, the closer they are to buying.
A named, detailed profile of one specific kind of buyer — their job title, what they care about, what frustrates them. Helps us write for one real person instead of "anyone".
The reason someone typed a search query. The same words can mean different things — and we have to match the meaning, not just the keywords.
How the 119 pages connect, group, and reinforce each other.
Google trusts websites that cover a topic thoroughly — not just one page about it. If we publish 30 strong pages on sensory analysis, Google starts treating sensesbit.com as the source.
A page architecture: one big hub page covers a broad topic; smaller spoke pages each cover one slice in depth. The spokes link up to the hub; the hub links down to every spoke.
A group of related pages that all support one big topic. The IA Tree shows our 15 clusters — one per major theme (methodologies, industries, integrations, etc.).
A two-week chunk of work. The 26-sprint roadmap means we publish content for 52 weeks, with a fixed list of pages per two-week window.
A machine-readable list of every page on the website. Lives at sensesbit.com/sitemap.xml. Google reads it to know what to crawl.
A tag that tells Google "if you see two versions of this page, this one is the real one". Prevents duplicate-content penalties.
The "Home › Industries › Food & Beverage" trail you see at the top of a page. Helps users and Google understand where a page lives in the structure.
Getting cited by ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google AI Overview.
The newer cousin of SEO: optimizing not for Google's blue links, but for the generated answers in ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, and Google AI Overview. The techniques overlap with SEO but have additional rules.
The AI-generated summary that now appears at the top of many Google search results. If Sensesbit is cited inside an AI Overview for "best sensory analysis software", that's free authority in front of every searcher.
Invisible labels on a page that tell Google what the content actually is. A pricing table becomes "this is a price". An FAQ becomes "this is a question-and-answer set". Google then displays it as a rich result.
A specific type of schema markup that labels a list of questions and answers. Lets Google show your Q&A directly in search results — and lets ChatGPT quote your answer verbatim.
A thing Google "knows about" — a company, a person, a methodology, a product. Sensesbit is one entity. Compusense is another. The triangle test is another.
The web of connections between entities — Sensesbit is connected to "sensory analysis", which connects to "triangle test", which connects to "ISO 8586", and so on. A page with a dense entity graph earns more trust.
A schema field that links Sensesbit to its presence on Wikidata, LinkedIn, Crunchbase, Capterra, etc. Tells Google "this is the same company across all these places" — and consolidates authority into our brand.
Google's quality framework. To rank well, content needs to demonstrate that whoever wrote it has lived experience, real expertise, recognized authority, and trustworthy sources.
The expandable "questions related to your search" block on a Google results page. Owning a PAA slot puts our answer in front of millions of searchers without them clicking through.
The bordered answer box Google sometimes shows at the very top of search results. Owning a featured snippet means our page is the answer Google trusts most.
The plumbing that lets Google find, understand, and serve the right page to the right person.
A tag that tells Google "this is the English version, that one is the Spanish version, send each user to the right one". Without it, a Mexican searcher might land on the English page instead of the Spanish one.
The page Google shows after you search. Includes ads, AI Overview, the 10 blue links, "People Also Ask", and other features.
The hierarchy of headings on a page. H1 is the main title (one per page). H2 is a section heading. H3 is a sub-section. Search engines and screen readers use them to navigate.
The 150-character summary Google shows under the blue link in search results. Doesn't directly affect ranking, but affects whether anyone clicks.
A text description of what's in an image. Used by screen readers, by Google Image search, and as a fallback when an image fails to load.
A page is "indexed" when Google has stored it and can show it in results. "De-indexed" means Google has removed it. We index pages we want found; de-index thin or duplicate pages so they don't drag down our overall quality score.
When two pages on our own site compete with each other for the same keyword. Bad — they split traffic instead of one of them ranking strongly.
A 0–100 score (from Ahrefs) of how strong a website's backlink profile is. Higher = harder to outrank. Sensesbit DR is 42 — the strongest in our category.
A link from another website to ours. Each one is a "vote" of credibility. Quality matters far more than quantity — one link from a respected food-science journal beats 50 from random blogs.
The clickable words inside a link. If E3Sensory links to us with the anchor text "sensory analysis software", that helps us rank for that exact phrase.
A new file (like robots.txt but for AI) that tells ChatGPT, Claude, and other AI tools where the canonical content lives. Helps them quote us correctly.
How fast and stable the page feels to a real user. Google now ranks based on this.
Google's three official speed metrics: LCP (loading speed), CLS (visual stability), INP (responsiveness). Pages that pass all three rank better.
How long it takes for the biggest element on a page (usually a hero image or headline) to appear. Target: under 2.5 seconds. Anything over 4 seconds hurts ranking.
How much the page jumps around as it loads. If a banner appears late and pushes the rest of the page down, that's a high CLS. Bad for users, bad for ranking. Target: under 0.1.
How we'll know what's working — and prove SEO is paying for itself.
Someone who downloaded a template, joined the newsletter, or otherwise raised their hand — but hasn't yet asked to talk to sales. They're warm.
An MQL who has now booked a demo or actively wants to talk to sales. They're hot. The 2026 SEO target: 720 SQLs over 12 months.
Google's free tool that shows which keywords our site ranks for, how many clicks each page gets, and any technical errors. Our truth source for what's actually happening in search.
Google's free analytics tool. Tracks visitors, what pages they view, how long they stay, and whether they convert.
Tags appended to a URL (like ?utm_source=linkedin) that tell our analytics where a click came from. Without UTMs, every paid campaign looks like "direct traffic".
If something on another page uses a word that isn't here, flag it and we'll add it. The glossary is meant to grow.