February and March popped and crackled with news and analyses about Google ranking factors. There was a recent ‘phantom update,’ and SEOs posted observations and changes since the possum and the mobile-first updates from last year.
So what really moves your site now? What are the most important ranking factors you and your team should tackle?
I’ve categorized them here to make it easy for you to assign work to teams, or to a workflow calendar. Like I did, you’d immediately see the new angle: customer focus.
Content, links, user-experience/trust, and technical ranking factors are all geared to giving the user what they need as fast and as best as possible. Optimize your site to provide for your audience’s every intent and you’d do well. It’s that simple.
Google announced three ranking signals last year. Their AI, Rankbrain, and links and content. That’s it. But links follow when you create good content. Of course you also need links for your good content. They build on each other– they’re the cornerstones of SEO.
All the recent Google updates boil down to this: Angle your content and its trimmings for the buyer personas you sell to. Google rewards that.
“Focused content that covers a single topic significantly outperformed content that didn’t cover a topic in-depth.” – Backlinko
Aside from SEO opportunities, it also comes down to user-benefit: content is more memorable and ‘snackable’ in visual form.
It varies for every topic and niche. And yes, it still does matter in relative terms. Look at the pages that already rank well for the keywords you’re targeting. That provides a general idea of your ideal word count. Think about it– if your article is so much shorter than the others in the same topic, Google would take that to mean yours is less relevant, less comprehensive.
When you think ranking, think user-benefit. Keyword-focus is important, but stuffing and non-natural use will get you demoted. SEO is all about the buyer persona you are trying to reach.
Related content signals that matter less, but still matter
Sub-headings also divide your articles into easier chunks as I mentioned in my article about avoiding Google penalties. Headers provide content preview and value to your readers.
Relevant content that your audience “likes” and devours means you’re also sending more ranking signals to Google, the user-experience and trust factors. These are the performance indicators you should watch:
Site speed
The first and most important factor of mobile-friendliness–and therefore UX (user experience) and trust– is site speed. People on mobile are on-the-go and need information FAST.
“Desktop websites should load in 3 seconds or less, while mobile websites should load in 2 seconds or less (according to SearchMetrics, the top-ranked mobile websites are approximately one second quicker than their desktop equivalents).” – Search Engine Journal
Pop-ups
Google will no longer tolerate intrusive popups. To rank well in search, provide great content and user experience– and you don’t annoy your visitor by blocking his/her access to your content with a huge popup, on desktop or mobile. There are pop-up guidelines that tell you what is acceptable.
“Any page with an ad or CTA that covers the main content or whisks users to a new page upon clicking might suffer a penalty. Exceptions to this include login dialogs, small banners that are easy to dismiss, and legally-required interstitials (e.g. age verification).” – Search Engine Journal
Links are established as a result of relevant content that provides for the needs of your audience. The quality and quantity of your backlink portfolio plays a big role in your search engine rankings.
Create good content. Promote so your audience finds you, and make sure your article provides enough value that readers– and influencers– turn into a voluntary marketing army.
Reach out to your niche’s big fish. Create something they’d be proud to feature. They’re usually delighted to ‘discover’ you, share something new and fresh to their own followers.
Almost everyone in the world has a smartphone, and everyone uses it for Googling. Nearly 60% of queries now come from mobile devices. 85% of sites are now mobile-friendly, and following Google Webmaster’s guidelines for mobile-first approach has all the criteria required to perform well.
We’ve mentioned site speed a few times. While that is a significant ranking factor, user intent is more critical. Search intent on mobile is different from desktop. Optimize accordingly. What do your mobile users need when they search?
Mobile users often utilize maps, addresses and numbers– they’re on the go and need places ‘near me’ so they can drop by. They want to see reviews and testimonials so they can trust you right off, know what to expect, and go to you. Your links and buttons need to be obvious and easy to click and your phone number should always be hyperlinked.
The following ranking factors will impact how well your pages rank when relevant search queries are performed.
Note: Finish your mobile site before launching. A broken or incomplete mobile version of your site will hurt your ranking. – Search Engine Journal.
Technical factors typically relates to on-page SEO. Be sure every page on your site has been optimized in accordance with Google Webmaster’s best practice guidelines. It is critical to your ranking and site speed.
If you want more, head over to Google’s 200 Ranking Factors .
Here’s the thing… This stuff isn’t just for business who do an ecommerce business. It is for everyone.
If your buyer cannot find you at the click of the “Enter” button, they’ll find your competition. To think you can complete without aligning your online efforts with the best practices of 2017 and beyond is to think your customers are still looking for you in the Yellow Pages.
Not happening.
I know it stinks. It is expensive. It can be intimidating and yes, you have to find someone you can trust.
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