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Posted by randfish
On-page SEO is no longer a simple matter of checking things off a list. There's more complexity to this process in 2016 than ever before, and the idea of "optimization" both includes and builds upon traditional page elements. In this Whiteboard Friday, Rand explores the eight principles you'll need for on-page SEO success going forward.
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Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we're going to chat about on-page SEO, keyword targeting but beyond keyword targeting into all the realms of the things that we need to optimize on an individual URL in order to have the best chance of success in the search engines in 2016.
So what does that involve? Well look, we could spend a tremendous amount of time on any one of these, but I'm going to share eight principles that are behind all of the tactical work that you would put into optimizing that page for that keyword term, phrase, or set of phrases. Most likely, in 2016, it is a set of phrases that you're targeting rather than just a single keyword term.
What we are trying to do is fulfill the searcher's goal and satisfy their intent. So there's an intent behind every search query. I'm seeking some information. I'm seeking to accomplish a task. Oftentimes, that initial intent is different from the final goal that someone might have.
I'll give you an example. When someone searches for types of wedding formal wear, we might infer from that query that, right now, their specific intent behind this search is they want to see different kinds of potential formalwear that they could wear to a wedding, maybe as a guest or as a bride or a groom. But their ultimate goal is probably going to be to decide on one of those specific things and then potentially purchase that item or take something from their wardrobe and add it in there.
But this means that we need to try and serve both intents. It's actually going to be really tough if we're an ecommerce player to say, "Hey, you know what, I want a rank for types of wedding formal wear, and I want to rank for it with a page that tells people to buy this particular tuxedo."
That's tough for a bunch of reasons. You don't know whether that formalwear is going to be necessarily black tie in the United States, which is tuxedo. You don't know whether that person is a male or a female when they're performing the search. A woman, well, they might buy a tuxedo but probably not, at least statistically speaking, they're probably not going to. They're probably going to buy a dress. You might have much more success with a piece of content like 20 suits and tuxes men look great in at a wedding. Especially if I'm targeting men or if this is types of men's wedding formalwear, that's probably going to be the piece of content that has a great chance of serving the searcher's intent and fulfilling their goals, especially if we then take that content and link off to the places where you can buy or accessorize all those different pieces. So we're trying to do both of these items in number one.
This is frustrating because it touches on a lot of things that historically have been outside the control of search engine optimization professionals. Thankfully, as SEO becomes more multidisciplinary inside a marketing team, hopefully we have more ability to influence these things, stuff like:
Those types of overlays obviously have negative impacts, and you can see them in your user and usage data, your engagement data. You can determine how much of a sacrifice you're willing to make in exchange for, "Well, we did get some email addresses out of this, or we got some conversion rate and so we're willing to make that sacrifice," versus "No, we're not willing to make these sacrifices." You have to choose what types of engagement-dissuading apparatuses you're willing to put on your site.
But be aware, pogo sticking is a ranking signal. It's something that they judge indirectly for sure and directly potentially as well. Pogo sticking meaning a searcher clicked on your listing in the results, they went to your site, and then they clicked the "Back" button and chose someone else from the results. Google interprets that and Bing interprets that very poorly for you.
Keyword targeting, classic on-page ranking signal, still true today. I know that many of us still see or are starting to see a lot more entrants into the search results that don't do very particular keyword targeting, at least don't do it the way we've historically perceived it, where it's very keyword-driven. But it's still incredibly smart to do this if and when you can. You just need to balance it out with all these other aspects.
Places that I would start. In fact, this is basically in order of importance. Title element, I would place the keyword term or phrase, the most important term or phrase that you're targeting in the title element in the headline of the page. That can be the H1 tag, but it doesn't need to be it. It could be just the bold, big headline at the top. That should match the page title generally speaking or be very close, because what you don't want is you don't want a searcher who clicked on one title element and then landed on a page that had a different headline and they perceived that mismatch, and so they clicked the "Back" button. That's dangerous.
You want it obviously in the page content. If you can, when you can control it, you want it in external anchor links to the page. So if, for example, I have my home page about weddings and I am interviewed for something, I might put in my bio something about the wedding styles website that I own and control, and I would link back to that in that external anchor text. I want it potentially in the alt attribute of any images or photos or visuals that I've got on the page. I want it in the URL. Again, if I can control it and the URL is less important, so we're going in decreasing order of importance here.
I want it in the image name. Especially if I'm trying to rank in Google image search, image name, the file name of the actual image does matter and is important.
Finally, I want it in internal links to the degree that it's intelligent and balanced and doesn't look spammy.
Do all these items, you've got your keyword targeting down. But this is not like the past, where just nailing keyword targeting is going to take my rankings to where they need to be. I've got to do all these other seven things too, including number six, related topics targeting.
So related topics is basically this concept that Google has a huge graph of lexical combinations and semantic analysis. They can essentially say, "Hey, when we see wedding formalwear, we often also see these terms and phrases, terms like tuxedo, tux, wedding dress, bowtie, vest." In the United Kingdom, almost certainly we would see waistcoat, which is what we call a vest here in the United States, or a wedding suit, which is what is traditionally worn in weddings in the U.K. versus a tuxedo here in the United States.
Now, given that Google sees these terms and phrases very commonly associated with this one, they've essentially started to build up this graph between these, and so these topics they would say are very important to this search term. If someone's looking for wedding formalwear, it's unusual for them to find a page that has high relevance for users that doesn't also include these types of words and phrases.
Therefore, as a search marketer, as a content creator, we need to think about: What are those terms and phrases that are related here, and how do I make sure to include them in my content? If I don't, my ranking opportunity may decrease compared to my competitors who've intelligently used those terms and phrases.
With a page, we're not just trying to drive the ranking. We're also trying to drive the click. So ranking number four and earning a 6% click-through rate, that might not be great, especially if the average is more like 11%. Then we're earning half the average for our ranking position. That seems a little funny. Those percentages are not precise, but you get the idea.
We want to have the best-optimized snippet that we possibly can in the SERP. So you can see here I've got this, "what to wear to a formal wedding," "a guide from randsfashion.com" and it's mobile-friendly. It's published on May 10, 2016. Then it has this nice meta description, the snippet there. This is essentially my advertisement to searchers saying, "Please click on my link. I want your click."
Bunch of elements that go into this: the title, obviously, the meta description. The URL format, this randsfashion.com, very simple on home pages, gets much more complex when we have pages that are internal because Google starts to assign categories if you have messy URL parameters or inconsistent categories, tagging systems that can get nasty.
Publication date matters quite a bit, especially for searches that have a fresh component. So if people are searching for types of wedding formalwear, well, you might not need to worry too much. But what if lots of people who search for this search for types of wedding formalwear 2016? Well, now you really need that fresh publication date. In fact, if Google sees lots of people search for that, they might actually take it as an intent signal that types of wedding formalwear alone deserves that date in there and that they should be ranking fresher content higher up because lots of people are looking for more recent, modern stuff.
Whenever there's an opportunity, for example, if you're in the recipe space, there are schema markups specifically for recipes. If you're in the news space, there are opportunities for news. If you do video, Google doesn't really obey it very much, except with YouTube, but there are video opportunities for schema markup. There are all sorts of other kinds depending on what you're in, certainly local and maps and a bunch of other ones.
That is something to consider. In fact, when you're registering a domain name and building out a site, you should be thinking about how people want to click on it, the brandability, the snippet optimization, all that.
Content format is particularly important because Google, especially when there's a more question-based search query, they've started showing those longer meta descriptions. So if you can encapsulate what you know is essentially the critical piece of content that answers the user's question, chances are you might be able to get that larger space, vertical space in the SERP, and that might mean that you can draw more clicks in as well.
This works really well with lists. It works nicely with forums and discussions, threads. It works nicely with elements where you have a bunch of specific how-to, step-by-step process, those types of things. Same story with instant answer possibilities that you want to appear at the top of that Google SERP with an instant answer if you can. We know that that actually doesn't take away click-through rate. It actually drives more of it. In fact, the real estate there means that you often get more clicks than organic position one, which is pretty great. Of course, all the different kinds of SERP feature opportunities like we talked about — images, maps, local, news, what have you.
This is the final piece of things that we're thinking about as we do on-page optimization in 2016. That is I need to be thinking about: What bar do I need to reach in order to have a chance to rank, rank well, and rank consistently?
This is tough. So if the difficulty of ranking is very easy, the bar that I need to cross is probably somewhere between classic, good, unique content, like this content is good, it's unique, and it exists. That's all it needs. That's a very, very low bar. Even for easy rankings, I would not suggest making that your bar.
I'd put it somewhere between there and twice as good as anyone else in the competition, but essentially targeting the same types of things. You're doing the same kind of content. You just feel like you're better than anything else in the top 10. That might be a reasonable enough bar for an easy ranking.
If it gets moderate, if it gets tough, I need to go up to uniquely valuable. Uniquely valuable, by that, we've had a whole Whiteboard Friday on it, which we can refer to, but uniquely valuable being this idea that I provide a value that no one else in the search results provides. So it's not simply that I'm doing a better job. I'm also doing a unique job of providing information or data or visuals, whatever it is that is more and different value than anybody else.
Then finally, what we've called 10x content. If you have an insane difficulty of ranking, that might be the minimum bar that you need to hit, and we'll link over the 10x video as well.
Basically, the questions that I'm asking when I'm talking about providing unique value and being worthy of amplification, which is something that our content needs to consider too, is: What makes this better than what already ranks? Do you have a great answer to that question? If you don't, you should probably get one before you try targeting those keywords and producing that content.
Why will this be difficult or impossible for others to replicate? What's the barrier to entry that your content provides, that all the other content providers can't just look and go, "Oh, well I see that Rand's done a very nice job ranking there. I'll just take that and do it. That should be easy." You need a barrier to entry. What value does this page provide that no other page in the SERPs provides? That goes to our unique value question.
The last one, who. Who will help amplify this piece of content and why? If you don't have a great answer to who and why, it's going to be incredibly difficult to get that amplification. If you can't get the amplification, it's going to be really, really hard to rank, because as much as on-page optimization does matte — and all of these eight principles matter for rankings — SEO in 2016 is not merely about on-page but about off-page as well, just as it's been the last decade, 15 years. So, as we're creating content, we need to think about that amplification process too.
All right everyone, look forward to your thoughts, and we'll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.
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