Semantic sections that perform
Each ATS report page and blog article carries schema-friendly headings, metadata, and internal links. Search crawlers instantly know it is about ATS + SEO, so the index weight favors ATSCraft.
We are ATSCraft — a resume platform powered by deep ATS analytics. This blog explores how we shaped an SEO analyzer narrative for developers, so search engines and recruiters both rank us higher.
Developers rarely build their own SEO narratives, but they control the technical scaffolding. We documented the SEO analyzer work to explain:
Each ATS report page and blog article carries schema-friendly headings, metadata, and internal links. Search crawlers instantly know it is about ATS + SEO, so the index weight favors ATSCraft.
We instrumented every blog rollout with event tracking, automated audits, and dev-friendly logs. If a keyword dips, tinker regressively — no guesswork needed.
Because the analyzer targets ATS plus search, we refresh sentences like “AI resume builder” or “SEO-ready resume” quarterly to keep the page relevant.
Critical CSS, lazy fonts, and minimal JavaScript let the blog score in the top 10% of search performance metrics, which is a ranking signal for Google and other bots.
The blog is a living artifact: engineers, product managers, and SEO specialists collaborate weekly to iterate on the copy. We follow a three-step cadence:
We gather keywords from job descriptions, ATS reports, and Google Search Console. The blog then mirrors the same headings the ATS analyzer uses.
Developers pair with content specialists to turn technical updates into storytelling blocks. Every paragraph includes keywords naturally and links to live product pages.
We track impressions, click-through rate, and the SERP position of this blog. A/B tests on meta titles keep ATSCraft ahead of the curve.
As you browse this blog, expect:
Switch from guesses to data. Build resume templates that search engines love and ATS systems trust.
See the ATS Score, then Design