Entity SEO
-
Entity support pages are the pages that strengthen a main topic page from one clear angle. They sit around a core page, explain nearby concepts, and help the cluster read like a connected system instead of a single page trying to do too much. On Semantec SEO, this page belongs in the Entity SEO cluster and sits…

-
Entity consistency is the practice of keeping a concept stable across a page, across related pages, and across the wider cluster. A page can mention the right entity and still feel loose if the naming shifts, the role changes from one section to the next, or the internal links send readers into mixed topic paths.…

-
Entity conflict resolution is the process of fixing pages, clusters, or site structures when two or more concepts compete for the same role. That conflict can show up inside one page. It can show up across sibling pages. It can also show up across a whole cluster when the site sends mixed signals about which…

-
Entity gap audit is the process of finding what a page, cluster, or site is missing at the entity level. That can mean the main entity is not clear enough. It can mean key support entities are absent. It can mean the page names the topic but skips the attributes, relationships, examples, or sibling pages…

-
Entity cluster design is the way you group related concepts around a clear central entity so a site reads like a connected topic system instead of a pile of disconnected pages. In the MIRENA model, entities are classified into primary, secondary, and supporting levels, then placed across headings, body copy, schema, and internal links based…

-
Entity led internal links are internal links placed around clear concepts, not dropped into copy just because a keyword appears. That changes a lot. Instead of linking from loose mentions, you link from the point where the page has already made the concept clear. The reader knows why the linked page belongs there. Search engines…

-
Entity led sections are page sections built around one clear concept at a time. Instead of writing loose blocks that wander across several ideas, an entity led section gives each part of the page a defined role. One section explains the main concept. The next section expands a close support concept. Another section handles comparison,…

-
Entity rich intros are opening blocks that make the page topic clear fast. They place the main entity near the top, attach the right attributes close by, and show the reader what the page is about before the draft starts to spread into support points, examples, or sibling topics. A strong intro gives the page…

-
Entity context windows are the local blocks of text that give an entity its meaning. When a page names an entity, the words around that mention tell the reader and the search engine what the entity is, what role it plays, what traits define it, and how it connects to the page goal. A strong…

-
Entity disambiguation is the process of making one meaning clear when a word, phrase, or named concept could point to more than one thing. In SEO, that clarity shapes how a page is read by both search engines and people. If the page leaves too much room for confusion, the topic gets blurry. If the…

-
Support entity selection is the process of choosing the concepts that strengthen a page without taking it over. A strong page needs more than one lead idea. It needs the right support around that lead. Those supporting entities help define the topic, expand the explanation, add context, sharpen comparisons, and connect the page to the…

-
Main entity selection is the decision that gives a page its center. Before you write headings, examples, FAQs, tables, or internal links, you need to know what the page is mainly about. That one choice shapes the title, the H1, the intro, the supporting entities, and the reader path. On Semantec SEO, this topic sits…

-
Entity density vs clarity is the balance between adding enough supporting concepts to build relevance and keeping the page clean enough to read in one pass. A strong page does not rely on one term repeated again and again. It introduces the main entity early, keeps key attributes close, adds supporting entities where they help,…

-
Entity proximity is the closeness between a page’s main entity and the terms that define, support, compare, and explain it. When those elements sit close together, the page is easier to read and easier to interpret. When they drift apart, the relationship weakens. The core idea is still on the page, but the support around…

-
Entity distance is the gap between an entity and the words, attributes, examples, and related concepts that explain it. When that gap is tight, the page reads with more clarity. When that gap gets too wide, the page starts to feel scattered. Search engines have a harder time connecting the core concept to its supporting…

-
Entity hierarchy is the order of importance you assign to the concepts on a page. At the top sits the primary entity. Under that come secondary entities. Around them sit supporting entities, attributes, and related concepts. Good hierarchy keeps the page centered, helps search engines read the page intent more cleanly, and gives writers a…

-
Entity support depth is the strength of the context built around a page’s main entity. A page can name its core topic clearly and still feel thin. That happens when the page stops at the headline idea and fails to build the surrounding layer that helps search systems and readers understand it. Strong support depth…

-
Entity placement is the job of putting the main entity and its supporting entities in the right places across the page. Across the MIRENA model, entities are treated as the starting point for planning, briefing, drafting, and rewriting, with primary entities placed in high value positions and secondary entities mapped into supporting roles. A page…

-
Entity prioritization is the process of deciding which entity leads the page, which entities support it, and how those roles should show up across the title, intro, headings, sections, and links. The MIRENA stack treats this as a core part of planning and optimization: entities are extracted, weighted, grouped into primary, secondary, and supporting roles,…

-
An entity audit is the process of reviewing a page to see if its core entities are clear, well supported, placed in the right spots, and reinforced through structure, attributes, and links. On Semantec SEO, this page belongs in the Entity SEO cluster beside What Is an Entity, Entity Salience, Entity Attributes, and Entity Map. MIRENA keeps the same logic throughout…

-
Contextual entity integration is the practice of placing entities into the right section, with the right support, so they fit the topic and strengthen the page. In simple terms, it means an entity should appear where it belongs. If a page is about semantic SEO, then entities like search intent, entity salience, internal linking, structured…

-
Entity relationships are the links between concepts, people, products, places, or ideas that belong together in a topic. In SEO, that means a page does more than mention entities one by one. It shows how they connect. A page about semantic SEO might include entities like search intent, entity salience, internal linking, structured data, and…

-
Entity co-occurrence is the pattern of related entities appearing together in the same clear context. It means a page mentions connected ideas in the same place because they belong together. On a page about semantic SEO, that could include search intent, entity salience, internal linking, structured data, and information gain. Those ideas fit the topic,…

-
An entity map in SEO is a structured view of the main entity on a page, the supporting entities around it, the attributes that define them, and the relationships that connect them. In the MIRENA workflow, the entity map is built during the early authority pipeline, before drafting starts. MIRENA identifies primary entities, secondary entities, supporting concepts, attribute…

-
Entity attributes are the details that make an entity clearer, more specific, and easier for search systems to understand. If an entity is the main thing on the page, its attributes are the facts, properties, descriptors, and relationships that explain what that thing is. In the MIRENA workflow, attribute relationships are identified during entity extraction, used…

-
Entity salience is how strongly the main subject of a page stands out to search systems. It is framed simply: topical focus Google can “feel,” reinforced through structure and proximity. That is why MIRENA treats salience as a structural problem, not a word count problem. If the quick version helps, use this: Entity salience is the strength…

-
An entity in SEO is a clearly understood thing: a person, company, product, place, concept, or topic that search systems can recognize, relate to other things, and interpret in context. Keywords still count, but entities are what give those words meaning. That is the shift MIRENA is built around: from keyword first publishing to structure built on…
