FAQs
Welcome to the Crawled FAQ. This page covers the 25 most common questions people ask about AI search, GEO, SEO, visibility, and the Crawled Field Manual.
1. What is Crawled?
Crawled is a publication about the future of visibility in the AI-shaped web. It explores how search engines are transforming into generative systems and how creators, professionals, and businesses can stay visible in this new landscape.
2. Who writes Crawled?
Crawled is written by Wesley Hopkins, a writer, strategist, and Digital Visibility Architect from Alabama. Wesley holds a BS in Professional Writing and an MA in Rhetoric and Composition, and he has more than 15 years of experience writing optimized blog posts and articles.
3. What is GEO?
GEO stands for Generative Engine Optimization. It is the practice of shaping your digital presence so that AI systems can accurately understand you, trust you, and reuse your information when generating answers.
Traditional SEO focuses on helping individual pages rank in search results. GEO focuses on how you or your brand exist as an entity inside AI systems like ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google’s AI Overviews. These systems do not simply retrieve pages. They interpret identities, relationships, topics, and facts across the entire web, then synthesize answers from that understanding.
GEO works by strengthening three core things:
Entity clarity so machines know exactly who you are
Semantic consistency so your topics and attributes remain stable
Reusable knowledge signals so your information is safe to cite in generated answers
When GEO is done correctly, AI systems:
Describe you more accurately
Attribute the right expertise to you
Connect you to the correct topics
Reduce hallucinations or incorrect associations
Begin treating you as a reliable source instead of just another page
In simple terms:
SEO helps people find your website.
GEO helps machines understand who you are and what you know.
In an AI driven search landscape, that understanding increasingly determines who gets visibility at all.
4. How is GEO different from SEO?
SEO and GEO solve different layers of the same visibility problem.
SEO, or Search Engine Optimization, is designed to help individual web pages rank in traditional search results. It focuses on signals like keywords, backlinks, page speed, internal linking, mobile usability, and technical performance. The goal of SEO is to win placement inside a ranked list of links and earn a click.
GEO, or Generative Engine Optimization, is designed for a different outcome. Instead of optimizing pages for ranking, GEO optimizes entities for interpretation. Generative engines do not present lists of links in the same way. They build answers by synthesizing information about people, companies, products, and topics across the web. That means the system must first understand what an entity is, what it does, what it is associated with, and whether it is trustworthy enough to reuse as a source.
Think of it this way:
SEO asks, “Can this page rank?”
GEO asks, “Can this entity be understood and safely quoted?”
SEO is primarily retrieval based.
GEO is interpretation and synthesis based.
SEO visibility is measured in rankings, impressions, and clicks.
GEO visibility is measured in how often and how accurately you appear inside AI generated answers.
They are not competitors. They are sequential layers.
You still need SEO to ensure your content is discoverable, crawlable, and technically sound. GEO builds on top of that foundation by organizing identity signals, semantic meaning, topical relationships, and factual consistency so that AI systems can model you correctly.
In today’s search environment, this relationship is becoming increasingly clear:
SEO gets you indexed.
GEO determines whether you get interpreted, reused, and cited.
Both matter. But as generative search expands, GEO is becoming the first filter through which visibility is decided.
5. Do I need GEO if I’m already doing SEO?
Yes. SEO and GEO solve different problems.
SEO helps your pages rank in traditional search results. GEO helps AI systems interpret you correctly when generating answers. You can rank well in Google and still be misrepresented, ignored, or replaced inside generative responses.
If SEO answers the question, “Can my site be found?”
GEO answers the question, “Will AI understand and trust what it finds?”
In an AI driven search environment, you need both. SEO gets you discovered. GEO determines how that discovery is interpreted, reused, and displayed to users.
6. What does a generative engine actually “see”?
Generative engines do not see the web the way humans do, and they do not scan pages the way traditional search engines once did. They do not primarily look for keywords, headlines, or backlink counts. Instead, they construct abstract models of reality based on entities, attributes, and relationships.
At a high level, generative engines look for:
Entity clarity
Clear signals that define who or what something is. For a person, this includes name consistency, profession, credentials, affiliations, and public roles. For a brand, this includes ownership, products, services, locations, and industry alignment.Structured information
Schema, metadata, consistent formatting, and machine readable signals that reduce ambiguity and make facts easy to extract and verify.Stable identity signals across the web
Agreement between your website, author profiles, social platforms, business listings, press mentions, and third party references. The more consistent these are, the more confidence the model gains.Conceptual relationships
How often you are associated with specific topics, industries, problems, or expertise areas across different sources. This is how semantic authority is formed.Reusability and safety of information
The system evaluates whether your information is factual, repeatable, non speculative, and safe to reuse in generated answers.
Unlike traditional search engines, generative systems are not ranking pages first and then showing them to users. They are continuously building a semantic map of the world, where every person, brand, concept, and topic exists as a node with defined attributes and connections.
When a user asks a question, the engine does not simply fetch a page. It assembles an answer by pulling from this internal model. If your entity signals are weak, inconsistent, or missing, you may be invisible in that process even if your website ranks well in Google.
In simple terms:
You see web pages.
Generative engines see entities, attributes, and relationships.
GEO exists to shape what they see.
7. What are the core pillars of GEO?
GEO is built on five foundational pillars that determine whether generative engines can accurately understand, trust, and reuse your information. These pillars work together to stabilize your digital identity inside AI systems.
Entity accuracy
This is the precision of your identity. Your name, role, credentials, brand attributes, and public description must be correct and consistent everywhere they appear. Inaccurate or conflicting data weakens trust at the model level.
Entity coverage
This refers to how completely your entity is represented across the web. A thin footprint creates uncertainty. Strong coverage includes a primary website, detailed bios, authoritative profiles, interviews, citations, press, and third party mentions that reinforce who you are.
Semantic clarity
Your content must clearly communicate what you do, what you specialize in, and how concepts relate to each other. GEO favors explicit meaning over clever writing. Ambiguity weakens interpretation.
Topical grounding
This is the depth and stability of your connection to specific subject areas. Consistent publishing around a defined set of topics strengthens your association with those domains inside generative models.
Reusable information
Generative systems favor content that is factual, structured, evergreen, and safe to quote. Clear definitions, explanations, FAQs, glossaries, and verified claims are far more reusable than vague marketing language.
Together, these pillars determine whether AI systems can reliably model you as an entity. If even one pillar is weak, the entire interpretive structure becomes unstable.
8. What is an “entity footprint”?
Your entity footprint is the total collection of signals that define who you are across the web. It is not just your website. It is every place where your name, brand, role, or work appears and contributes to how AI systems model your identity.
This includes:
Your personal or business website
About pages and author bios
Social media profiles
Business listings and directories
Interviews, podcasts, and press coverage
Guest articles and citations
Knowledge panels and structured data
Mentions on third party websites
Generative engines do not rely on a single source to understand an entity. They compare information across many sources and look for agreement, consistency, and stability. When your footprint is cohesive, the system gains confidence in who you are. When it is fragmented or contradictory, interpretation becomes weak or incorrect.
A strong entity footprint does three critical things:
It confirms your identity across multiple independent sources.
It reinforces your topical expertise through repeated association.
It increases the likelihood that your information is trusted and reused in AI generated answers.
A weak or neglected footprint can lead to partial understanding, misattribution, outdated descriptions, or total invisibility in generative results even if your site ranks well in traditional search.
In short, your entity footprint is the external memory that AI systems use to decide who you are. GEO exists to intentionally shape that memory rather than leaving it to chance.
9. What is “entity drift”?
Entity drift happens when your online identity becomes inconsistent across the web, causing generative engines to misinterpret who you are, what you do, or what you are associated with.
Drift occurs when different platforms present conflicting or outdated versions of your entity. This can include mismatched job titles, changing brand descriptions, abandoned profiles, inconsistent naming, old bios, or inaccurate third party listings. Over time, these discrepancies weaken the confidence AI systems have in your identity.
Common causes of entity drift include:
Changing roles or services without updating profiles
Rebranding without cleaning up old assets
Multiple bios written at different times
Inconsistent company descriptions across listings
Old press coverage that no longer reflects reality
Duplicate or abandoned social profiles
Generative engines rely heavily on consensus across sources. When too many versions of your identity exist, the system cannot determine which one is authoritative. The result can be incorrect associations, outdated descriptions, topic confusion, or complete exclusion from generated answers.
Entity drift is especially dangerous because it often happens silently. Your website may look perfect, your rankings may be stable, and your traffic may appear normal, while AI systems are slowly losing confidence in your entity behind the scenes.
GEO corrects entity drift by:
Aligning identity signals across platforms
Standardizing bios and descriptions
Reinforcing current roles and expertise
Suppressing outdated or conflicting versions
Strengthening the dominant narrative of your entity
In simple terms, entity drift is what happens when the story of who you are fractures across the web. GEO is the process of pulling that story back into alignment so machines can interpret it correctly again.
10. What is “semantic visibility”?
Semantic visibility refers to how clearly and consistently AI systems can associate you with the topics you want to be known for. It is not just about whether your name appears online. It is about what concepts your entity is linked to inside generative models.
Traditional visibility is about rankings and clicks. Semantic visibility is about meaning and association.
You can have high traffic and still have weak semantic visibility if AI systems cannot confidently connect your entity to specific subject areas. On the other hand, you can have modest traffic and strong semantic visibility if your entity is repeatedly and consistently tied to a narrow set of well defined topics across the web.
Semantic visibility is built through:
Repeated topic association across multiple platforms
Consistent language used to describe your expertise
High agreement between your site, bios, and third party mentions
Clear topical focus rather than broad or generic positioning
Structured explanations, definitions, and educational content
When semantic visibility is strong, generative engines:
Understand what domain you belong to
Know what types of questions you can credibly answer
Are more likely to reuse your information in generated responses
Connect your name or brand to precise concepts instead of vague categories
When semantic visibility is weak, AI systems may:
Misclassify your expertise
Associate you with incorrect topics
Treat you as a generic source
Ignore you entirely in favor of clearer entities
In simple terms, semantic visibility determines what you mean to machines, not just whether you exist online. GEO exists to intentionally shape those meaning based associations so your digital presence aligns with how you want to be understood.
11. What kinds of content help with GEO?
Content that helps with GEO is content that clarifies identity, reinforces expertise, and provides stable facts that AI systems can safely reuse. Unlike traditional SEO, which often prioritizes volume and keyword coverage, GEO prioritizes precision, consistency, and interpretability.
The most effective GEO focused content types include:
Identity clarification pages
These define who you are. This includes About pages, detailed bios, author profiles, team pages, ownership disclosures, and brand history pages. These are foundational for entity accuracy.
Topical hubs and pillar pages
These establish what you are known for. A strong topical hub connects your entity to a defined subject area with depth, internal links, and consistent thematic language.
FAQs and glossary pages
These provide direct, reusable answers. Generative engines strongly favor clearly structured definitions, explanations, and short form factual responses that can be quoted safely.
Expert interviews and first person insights
These reinforce real world credibility and strengthen association between your entity and advanced concepts or industries.
Evergreen educational content
Guides, explainers, and frameworks that remain accurate over time are far more reusable than trend based or speculative posts.
Consistent third party mentions
Guest articles, citations, profiles, and press coverage help confirm your identity across independent sources, which strengthens AI confidence.
What matters most is not just the format, but the intent behind the content. GEO favors content that:
Reduces ambiguity
Reinforces factual stability
Uses consistent language
Aligns with your core topical identity
Can be verified across multiple sources
Marketing fluff, vague thought leadership, and overly clever branding language tend to weaken GEO because they introduce interpretive uncertainty.
In simple terms, the best GEO content is content that helps machines understand exactly who you are, what you do, and what you can be trusted to explain.
12. Do backlinks matter for GEO?
Yes — but as validation signals, not ranking boosters. They help AIs confirm identity and topic relationships.
A backlink from a relevant, authoritative site strengthens:
Entity legitimacy
Topic relationships
Cross source confirmation
Trust in factual claims about your brand or identity
However, raw link volume matters far less than source relevance, consistency, and contextual alignment. A small number of high quality, topically aligned backlinks is far more valuable for GEO than a large volume of unrelated links.
Backlinks alone will not make an entity visible in generative answers. But they significantly strengthen the confidence layer that allows AI systems to safely reuse your information.
In short, backlinks still matter.
They just validate identity and meaning more than they boost rankings.
13. Can GEO improve the accuracy of ChatGPT or Gemini answers about me?
Yes. GEO is one of the most effective ways to improve how accurately generative AI systems describe you, your work, and your expertise.
When AI systems generate answers about a person or brand, they rely on distributed signals across the web, not just a single website. If those signals are weak, inconsistent, or incomplete, the system may fill gaps with partial information, outdated data, or incorrect assumptions. This is what causes hallucinations, misattributions, and distorted profiles.
Strong GEO reduces these errors by:
Aligning identity signals across multiple platforms
Reinforcing current roles, credentials, and services
Clarifying topical associations
Providing structured, verifiable information
Increasing cross source agreement
As confidence in your entity increases, generative systems become more likely to:
Describe you accurately
Attribute the correct expertise to you
Avoid mixing you up with similar names or brands
Reuse your information safely in generated responses
While no optimization can fully eliminate hallucinations, GEO significantly narrows the error margin by giving AI systems stable, consistent truth to work with instead of fragmented signals.
In simple terms, GEO does not control what AI says.
It greatly improves the quality of what AI can know about you.
14. How long does GEO take to work?
GEO is not instantaneous, because it depends on how quickly AI systems can detect, reconcile, and trust changes across multiple sources. Unlike SEO, which reacts primarily to crawling and indexing cycles, GEO depends on slower processes of entity modeling and semantic validation.
Most people see GEO progress in phases:
Initial clarity improvements typically appear within 2 to 4 weeks.
This is when corrected bios, structured pages, and aligned identity signals begin stabilizing your entity profile. You may notice fewer obvious errors in how AI describes you.
Improved AI interpretation usually develops within 1 to 3 months.
During this phase, generative systems begin to more consistently connect your name or brand to the correct topics, roles, and attributes.
Strong semantic visibility is generally established within 3 to 6 months.
At this stage, your entity becomes more reliably reusable inside generated answers, and your topical authority becomes more stable inside AI models.
The exact timeline depends on several factors:
The current strength or weakness of your entity footprint
How much inconsistency or drift exists
The competitiveness of your topical space
The frequency and quality of your content updates
The number of third party confirmations supporting your identity
GEO is cumulative and compounding. Each aligned signal reinforces the last. While early corrections can happen quickly, long term semantic authority is built through consistent reinforcement over time.
In simple terms, you do not flip a switch with GEO.
You train the system through repetition and consistency.
15. Does GEO work for brands as well as people?
Yes. GEO applies to any entity that exists as a distinct identity online, including people, companies, products, services, organizations, and even locations.
Generative engines do not fundamentally distinguish between a person and a brand. They model both as entities with attributes, relationships, and topical associations. A company has founders, services, locations, press, reviews, competitors, and industry ties. A product has specifications, use cases, comparisons, documentation, and market positioning. All of these are interpreted through the same semantic systems that model personal identities.
For brands, GEO focuses on:
Clear ownership and leadership signals
Consistent brand descriptions across platforms
Stable product or service definitions
Clean alignment between website content, listings, and media coverage
Strong association with a defined industry and problem space
Without GEO, brands are often misclassified, oversimplified, or grouped into generic categories inside AI responses. With strong GEO, brands become recognizable, differentiable entities that generative systems can accurately describe and recommend.
In simple terms, GEO is not just personal brand optimization.
It is how organizations become intelligible and trustworthy to machines.
16. What is the future of GEO?
The future of GEO is closely tied to the continued shift from retrieval based search to interpretation based search. As generative engines become the primary interface between users and information, visibility will depend less on ranking positions and more on how well entities are modeled inside AI systems.
Several trends are already shaping the future of GEO:
More structured information will dominate
Schema, knowledge graphs, verified metadata, and machine readable context will become standard requirements, not optional enhancements.
Entity modeling will become more granular
AI systems will build deeper identity profiles that include roles, timelines, relationships, specialties, ownership structures, and topical boundaries.
Generative answers will increasingly replace traditional results
Instead of choosing from ten links, users will receive synthesized answers that pull from a small set of trusted entities. Being inside that trusted set will matter more than ranking on page one.
SEO and GEO will continue to converge
Technical SEO will remain foundational, but optimization strategy will increasingly focus on entity clarity, narrative alignment, and semantic consistency rather than pure keyword targeting.
Reputation and verification will become core visibility signals
Cross source agreement, authorship transparency, citations, and factual stability will outweigh volume based content strategies.
In the long term, GEO is not just a marketing discipline. It is becoming a foundational layer of digital identity management. Those who adapt early will shape how they are understood by machines. Those who delay will be defined by whatever fragmented signals already exist.
In simple terms, the future of visibility is not about being found.
It is about being understood well enough to be reused.
17. What is SEO and why does it matter?
SEO, or Search Engine Optimization, is the discipline of making your website crawlable, indexable, understandable, and competitive inside traditional search engines like Google, Bing, and DuckDuckGo. It ensures that your content can be discovered, evaluated, and ranked in response to user searches.
At its core, SEO governs:
Technical performance and page speed
Site structure and internal linking
Content relevance and topical depth
Mobile usability and accessibility
Indexation and crawl efficiency
Authority and external validation
SEO still matters deeply because it is the primary acquisition layer for organic visibility. It is how users find your site, how your content enters the index, and how authority is initially established.
From a GEO perspective, SEO serves an additional role. It is the foundation layer that makes entity signals accessible to AI systems. Generative engines still depend on clean, well organized, high quality websites as input sources. If your site cannot be crawled, indexed, or understood properly at the technical level, your GEO efforts are severely limited.
In practical terms:
SEO ensures your content can be found and evaluated.
GEO ensures your identity and meaning can be interpreted and reused.
You do not choose one instead of the other.
SEO builds the road. GEO determines how the vehicle is identified and where it goes.
Without SEO, GEO has nothing stable to work from.
Without GEO, SEO increasingly stops at ranking instead of meaning.
18. How long does SEO take to work?
SEO is a long term process, not an immediate switch. While small improvements can happen quickly, meaningful and stable results typically take 3 to 6 months, and sometimes longer in competitive spaces.
SEO progress usually unfolds in stages:
The first 2 to 4 weeks are focused on technical fixes, crawlability, indexation improvements, and early on page optimizations. Search engines begin to reprocess your site, but visible ranking changes are often limited.
Between 1 and 3 months, content updates, internal linking improvements, and structural changes start to influence relevance signals. Some keyword movement and traffic fluctuation is common during this phase.
Between 3 and 6 months, authority signals, topical depth, and external validation begin to take effect. This is when more consistent ranking improvements and traffic growth usually emerge.
The exact timeline depends on:
The age and authority of your domain
The competitiveness of your industry
The quality and depth of your content
The strength of your backlink profile
The severity of technical issues at the start
How consistently optimization work is applied
SEO is also non linear. Rankings can move up, down, and sideways as algorithms test, reweight, and reassess your site over time. Short term volatility is normal. Long term momentum is what matters.
In simple terms, SEO rewards patience, consistency, and compounding effort. Quick wins can happen, but sustainable visibility is built over months, not days.
19. How do I improve my SEO?
Improving SEO is about strengthening a few core systems that work together to make your site easier to crawl, easier to understand, and more competitive in search results. There is no single tactic that fixes everything. SEO improves through layered, consistent optimization.
The most important areas to focus on are:
Site structure and internal linking
Your pages should be logically organized, easy to navigate, and well connected. Strong internal links help search engines understand what matters most on your site and how topics relate to each other.
Page speed and technical health
Fast loading pages, mobile friendly design, clean code, and proper indexing are foundational. Technical issues can suppress visibility no matter how good your content is.
Content quality and topical depth
Create content that fully answers real questions, not just surface level keyword targets. Depth, clarity, and usefulness matter far more than volume.
Keyword and intent alignment
Your content must match what users are actually trying to find. This includes informational, commercial, and navigational intent, not just exact match phrases.
Consistent publishing and updates
Fresh signals help maintain relevance. Updating old content is often just as important as publishing new content.
Schema and structured data
Structured markup improves machine understanding and supports both traditional SEO and GEO.
Consistency across your digital footprint
Your site, profiles, listings, and bios should all reinforce the same identity and topical focus. This strengthens both rankings and entity trust.
SEO improves fastest when these elements are worked on together rather than in isolation. Small improvements across multiple areas compound far more effectively than chasing a single tactic.
In simple terms, SEO improves when your site becomes faster, clearer, more useful, and more consistent over time.
20. What’s the difference between on-page and off-page SEO?
On page and off page SEO represent two different signal systems that search and generative engines use together to evaluate your site.
On page SEO governs everything that exists on your website itself. This includes page structure, headings, content quality, keyword usage, internal linking, page speed, mobile usability, schema markup, and overall technical health. On page SEO tells engines what your site is about and how clearly it communicates that meaning.
Off page SEO governs everything that happens outside your website that influences trust and authority. This includes backlinks, brand mentions, citations, reviews, press coverage, and third party references. Off page SEO tells engines how the rest of the web views your site.
From a GEO perspective, these two signal types are increasingly blended. On page signals establish semantic clarity and identity. Off page signals establish validation and consensus. Generative engines rely on both to determine whether your information is safe to reuse in answers.
In simple terms:
On page SEO explains who you are and what you offer.
Off page SEO confirms whether the rest of the web agrees.
21. Can AI improve my SEO?
Yes. AI can significantly improve many parts of your SEO workflow, but it works best as a support tool, not a replacement for strategy, expertise, or human judgment.
AI is especially useful for:
Generating content outlines and structural frameworks
Analyzing SERPs and identifying common topical patterns
Expanding semantic coverage and related subtopics
Drafting meta titles, descriptions, and schema inputs
Rewriting and refreshing existing content for clarity
Summarizing competitor content for research purposes
Assisting with internal linking suggestions
These uses can dramatically increase speed, consistency, and scalability in SEO work.
However, AI also has clear limitations. It does not truly understand your business, your customers, your legal or ethical boundaries, or your long term brand strategy. It can reproduce patterns, but it cannot independently verify facts, establish real world authority, or replace lived expertise.
From a GEO perspective, this distinction is even more important. Generative engines value originality, factual stability, and trusted sources. Over automated content that lacks unique insight or verifiable grounding can actually weaken both SEO and GEO signals.
The most effective approach is a hybrid one:
Use AI for acceleration and pattern recognition
Use human expertise for strategy, verification, positioning, and originality
In simple terms, AI can help you work faster and cover more ground.
It cannot replace the thinking that determines what actually deserves to rank or be reused.
22. Why does Crawled cost $1/month?
The full price of Crawled is $5 per month, but early subscribers receive a permanent discount as the project grows. The first 100 subscribers pay $1 per month, the next 100 pay $2, the next 100 pay $3, the next 100 pay $4, and after that the price stays at $5.
The subscription simply helps cover the time, research, tools, and resources that go into producing the Field Manual and keeping everything current. Nothing here is mass produced or automated. Everything is built, tested, and written by hand.
More than anything, I am genuinely grateful for every person who chooses to support this project. If you ever have feedback, feature requests, or suggestions for what you want to see covered, I am always open to it. I want this to be useful, responsive, and worth far more than the cost to you.
23. What do subscribers get?
Subscribers receive practical, in depth resources focused on GEO, AI driven search, and modern visibility strategy. Everything is built to be directly usable in real world projects, not just conceptual.
This includes:
Clear, no fluff breakdowns of every major Google update and what it actually means in practice
Step by step GEO frameworks and models
Deep dives into how generative search systems actually work
Field tested templates and checklists
Semantic audit guides and signal breakdowns
Ongoing analysis of AI and search changes
Early access to new GEO concepts and tools
Exclusive resources created only for subscribers
The goal of the Field Manual is simple: to help you understand what is changing, why it matters, and exactly what to do about it without hype, fluff, or recycled advice.
I am also genuinely grateful to every person who supports this project. Crawled exists because of its readers. If you ever have a topic you want covered, a tool you wish existed, or a suggestion to improve what I am building here, I want to hear it. I truly aim to please, and subscriber input directly influences what gets created next.
24. Can I request topics or resources?
Yes. Subscribers are always welcome to request topics, tools, templates, audits, walkthroughs, or specific GEO and SEO concepts they want explored.
This might include:
A breakdown of a confusing update
A GEO framework for a specific industry
A new audit template
A glossary of emerging terms
A step by step guide for a real world scenario
Subscriber requests actively shape the direction of the Field Manual. If enough people ask for something, it moves to the front of the line. If one person has a niche but valuable need, it still gets thoughtful consideration.
This is a living project, not a static library. The goal is to keep it responsive, relevant, and driven by the real challenges subscribers are facing right now.
25. How do I contact you?
You can reach me in the following ways:
Email: wesley@crawled.blog
LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/wesleyhopkins
Schedule a call: https://calendly.com/wesley-crawled/30min
Website: https://wesleyhopkins.digital
If you have a question, a collaboration idea, a GEO or SEO challenge, or just want to connect, feel free to reach out through any of these. I personally read every message and do my best to respond as quickly as I can.
If you have a question that wasn’t answered here, feel free to reach out.

