The Framework

Semantiqa is not a tool. It is a way of designing content.

A framework for the semantic structure of digital content — designed to make websites understandable to search engines, AI systems, and human beings.

The premise

Digital content no longer exists only to be read by people. It must be interpreted by systems — search engines, artificial intelligences, language models, automated interfaces.

These systems do not read the way humans do. They do not look for keywords. They look for structure, relationships, and coherence.

Most websites are not designed with this in mind. They are built to attract traffic, to rank for terms, to fill pages. The result is content that looks complete but communicates poorly — to systems and, often, to people as well.

The principle

Semantiqa starts from a single principle: the visibility of a piece of content depends on its semantic structure, not on the number of keywords it contains.

A piece of content is truly visible when it is comprehensible, coherent, and structurally sound. When it can be interpreted — not just crawled.

This distinction — between being indexed and being understood — is at the heart of everything Semantiqa does.

The three levels

The framework operates on three interconnected levels.

01
Content organisation
How information is structured within and across pages. Every piece of content is designed as part of a system, not as an isolated element.
02
Relationships between information
Meaning does not live in a single page. It emerges from the relationships between pages, concepts, and levels of content. Semantiqa maps and defines these relationships explicitly.
03
Semantic coherence
A system is readable when it maintains coherence over time. Structure, language, and organisation must follow stable rules. Coherence is what makes content interpretable by automated systems.

What Semantiqa produces

Applying the framework produces three types of output.

Structural analyses that map how content is currently organised and where the gaps lie. Semantic reports that define how content can be improved, reorganised, and made more visible. Operational guidelines that translate the framework into concrete actions for editors, developers, and strategists.

These outputs are designed to be shared, discussed, and used as the basis for strategic decisions — not filed away as technical documents.

Where it applies

Semantiqa can be applied to any digital context where structured, coherent communication matters: company websites, e-commerce platforms, editorial content systems, and complex information architectures.

The entry point is the AI Readiness Audit — a professional analysis of your website across the five dimensions that determine how well it communicates in the current digital environment.