Mark Khoo (@markkhoo95)

What Mark Khoo (@markkhoo95) should help someone understand

View @markkhoo95's profile, achievements, and growth journey on Skill Life.

The public people surface currently includes 12 profile routes, so the first response should make those profiles and adjacent utility pages reachable without depending on the sitemap alone.

Why these routes need public context

A public profile should explain who this person is, what they care about, and how their visible skills, goals, books, and accountability signals fit together before the client-side profile UI takes over.

That is what keeps people discovery understandable instead of turning it into a thin wrapper around later app content.

What the next clicks should cover

Useful next moves from here include public profiles, followers, achievements, family context, groups, and skill routes that show what visible progress looks like across the broader product.

The crawler shell should preserve those choices in the first document response.

How to evaluate this route

This markkhoo95 route should help a visitor understand what Mark Khoo (@markkhoo95) covers, what kind of action or progress it supports on Skill Life, and which signals show they are in the right place before any interactive UI loads.

If the current page is too broad or too narrow, the next move should stay obvious. Public routes work best when they help someone move toward a parent branch, a child branch, or a related person, group, event, book, challenge, or trust document without losing context.

That clarity also helps search engines. A route with stable explanatory copy, enough text to stand on its own, and visible internal paths reads like a real public document instead of a thin shell wrapped around a client-side application.

Good crawler copy is not separate from product copy here. It is the fast-loading explanation that makes the topic legible, shows why the route belongs in the wider public graph, and makes the first click after this page feel intentional rather than accidental.