You’re absolutely right about this. I’ve also noticed that many developers focus heavily on design and modern frameworks but often ignore technical SEO during the development phase. Later, when the website struggles with rankings or performance, fixing those issues becomes much harder. We’ve seen that even a well-designed website can underperform if the technical foundation isn’t strong. Problems like poor Core Web Vitals, heavy JavaScript, missing semantic structure, or weak mobile optimization can seriously affect visibility on Google. In our experience, frameworks are not the issue by themselves. The real problem is how they are implemented. When developers don’t think about crawlability, rendering, page speed, or clean architecture from the beginning, SEO suffers. One of the biggest mistakes we repeatedly see is treating SEO as something to handle after development is complete. Technical SEO should be part of the development process from day one, just like responsiveness, security, and user experience. Even small improvements in loading speed, structured content, and optimized code can make a noticeable difference in rankings and overall user engagement over time.