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Demand quest SEO training Session 1 May 2017

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Demand quest SEO training Session 1 May 2017

  1. 1. SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION TRAINING DemandQuest May 2017
  2. 2. TODAY’S AGENDA 1. Introduction 2. How Searching Has Evolved 3. What to expect today 4. How search engines work 5. What is SEO? 6. The SEO Pyramid 7. Local SEO 8. 30-Minute SEO Checkup
  3. 3. NATE PLAUNT Digital Marketing Manager Thomson Reuters @NatePlaunt
  4. 4. DOES SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION REALLY MATTER?
  5. 5. Search Engine Optimization FACT: 79% of search engine users say they always/frequently click on the natural search results.
  6. 6. ANATOMY OF A SERP (SEARCH ENGINE RESULTS PAGE) Paid Ads Local / Map Results Organic Results
  7. 7. • Organic traffic accounts for up to 64% of all website traffic* • Roughly 52,000 search queries happen on Google - every SECOND! • This translates into about 4.5 billion searches every day** ORGANIC SEARCH STATS * Source: http://searchenginewatch.com/sew/study/2355020/organic-search- accounts-for-up-to-64-of-website-traffic-study ** Source: http://www.internetlivestats.com/one-second/#google-band
  8. 8. DIFFERENT SEARCH ENGINE, DIFFERENT RESULTS
  9. 9. U.S. SEARCH ENGINE MARKET SHARE *Source: https://www.statista.com/statistics/267161/market-share-of-search-engines-in-the-united-states/ 63.4 % 22.6 % 11.6 % Everyone else 2.4 %
  10. 10. But the sandbox is constantly changing…
  11. 11. • Each year, Google changes its search algorithm around 500–600 times.* • That’s roughly 1.5 changes EVERY. SINGLE. DAY! THE SHIFTING SANDBOX • Source: https://moz.com/google-algorithm-change
  12. 12. BUT, THE ALGORITHM ISN’T THE ONLY THING CHANGING… SEARCHERS ARE CHANGING TOO
  13. 13. TOP GOOGLE SEARCHES 2005 1. Myspace 2. Ares 3. Baidu 4. Wikipedia 5. Orkut 6. iTunes 7. Sky News 8. World of Warcraft 9. Green Day 10. Leonardo da Vinci 2016 1. Powerball 2. Prince 3. Hurricane Matthew 4. Pokémon Go 5. Slither.io 6. Olympics 7. David Bowie 8. Trump 9. Election 10. Hillary Clinton
  14. 14. IN FACT, SEARCHERS ARE “EVOLVING” THEY ARE LEARNING HOW TO INTERACT WITH SEARCH ENGINES TO GET SOLUTIONS MORE QUICKLY
  15. 15. DOES SEO REALLY MATTER? YES! If you are not optimizing for search you are already behind your competition.
  16. 16. WHAT TO EXPECT: • A solid understanding of how search engines operate • Learn how to beat out your competition in the search engine results • Actionable tactics you can implement today • Tools to implement optimizations
  17. 17. WHAT DID YOU SEARCH TODAY?
  18. 18. WHAT DID YOU SEARCH TODAY?
  19. 19. WEBSITES SINCE 1998 0 200,000,000 400,000,000 600,000,000 800,000,000 1,000,000,000 1,200,000,000 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016* Websites
  20. 20. HOW SEARCH ENGINES WORK
  21. 21. HOW SEARCH ENGINES WORK
  22. 22. WHAT IS SEO? Search engine optimization (SEO) is the process of affecting the visibility of a website or a web page in a search engine's "natural" or un-paid ("organic") search results. • Source: Wikipedia
  23. 23. WHAT IS SEO? (SIMPLIFIED) SEO is two things: 1. The practice of making your website as accessible as possible to search engines and human visitors. 2. Ensuring your website is as useful and relevant as possible to your current and prospective customers.
  24. 24. THINK OF YOUR WEBSITE AS A HOUSE
  25. 25. Ensure your site is accessible to humans and search engines. THINK OF YOUR WEBSITE AS A HOUSE
  26. 26. Ensure your site is relevant and useful to your visitors. THINK OF YOUR WEBSITE AS A HOUSE
  27. 27. Ensure your site is accessible to humans and search engines. Ensure your site is relevant and useful to your visitors.
  28. 28. PHASE 1: PLAN FOR SUCCESS
  29. 29. PHASE 1: PLAN FOR SUCCESS 1. What is the business goal you are trying to achieve? 2. What are the key performance indicators that tell you if you’re on or off track? 3. What are your baseline metrics? 4. What does your team look like?
  30. 30. HOW DO WE MEASURE SUCCESS? Source: http://www.kaushik.net/avinash/digital-marketing-and-measurement-model/
  31. 31. HOW DO WE MEASURE SUCCESS? Source: http://www.kaushik.net/avinash/digital-marketing-and-measurement-model/
  32. 32. HOW DO WE MEASURE SUCCESS? Source: http://www.kaushik.net/avinash/digital-marketing-and-measurement-model/
  33. 33. HOW DO WE MEASURE SUCCESS? Source: http://www.kaushik.net/avinash/digital-marketing-and-measurement-model/
  34. 34. PHASE 1: YOUR TEAM SEO Project Team SEO Dev. P.M. Analyst
  35. 35. TECHNICAL AND STRUCTURAL FACTORS
  36. 36. • Goal: Ensure accessibility for Search Engines & Users • Foundation of your entire online presence, so it’s important to get it right • Search engines have very clear guidelines for webmasters to follow when building sites TECHNICAL AND STRUCTURAL FACTORS
  37. 37. WHAT TO LOOK FOR • Can your entire website be crawled? • Is your website indexed by the search engines? • Does your website have any errors? • Is your page load time too slow?
  38. 38. HOW YOU CAN DO THIS • XML sitemap • Accurate robots.txt file • Google Search Console • Page speed optimization
  39. 39. WHAT TO AVOID Any unnecessary hurdle for the search engines • Flash • iFrames • Serving content via JavaScript • URL Parameters
  40. 40. HERE’S WHAT HUMANS SEE
  41. 41. HERE’S WHAT GOOGLE SEES (not a glitch)
  42. 42. ROBOTS.TXT FILE The robots.txt file is a directive for all “bots” visiting your site. • It tells them what URLs to crawl or not crawl • Simple text file – can be created with notepad
  43. 43. ROBOTS.TXT FILE Disallow: Disallow: /
  44. 44. ROBOTS.TXT FILE – *PRO TIP Use the Robots.txt testing tool in Google Search Console to troubleshoot errors in your file and to test individual URLs
  45. 45. XML SITEMAP The XML sitemap is a map of your website that enables search engines to efficiently crawl and index your site. It is, essentially, the directory for your site.
  46. 46. XML SITEMAP Various tools can help you generate an accurate and up-to-date sitemap: • Screaming Frog Spider • CMS plugins like Yoast • Other web-based sitemap generators - www.xml-sitemaps.com
  47. 47. WHY DOES SPEED MATTER? In 2014, mobile search overtook desktop search. • The gap between mobile and desktop will widen • Fast page load speed is critical to optimizing for mobile • Page load in 2 seconds
  48. 48. MOBILE April 21, 2015…
  49. 49. GOOGLE PAGESPEED INSIGHTS PageSpeed Insights is a free tool from Google that gives you a prioritized roadmap on how to fix speed issues on your site. • https://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/insights
  50. 50. ON AND OFF PAGE FACTORS
  51. 51. ON AND OFF PAGE FACTORS • Goal: Demonstrate Relevance and Authority • Search engines want to provide users with search results that are relevant to their query and authoritative in nature. • Building upon a sound technical structure, we make sure that search engines and users are able to fully understand what various pages on your website are all about.
  52. 52. On-page SEO refers to factors that you can control directly on your website Examples of on-page factors are: • Metadata • Internal links • Content • Technical / Structural Off-page SEO refers to factors “out of your control” on other websites Examples of off-page factors are: • Inbound links • Social Media • Mentions • Local Directories ON-PAGE vs. OFF-PAGE SEO
  53. 53. WHAT TO LOOK FOR • Are your on-page elements optimized? • What keywords are you ranking for? • Who are your organic competitors? • Who is linking to you?
  54. 54. ON-PAGE SEO ELEMENTS • URL • Page Title • H1 heading • H2 headings • Meta Description • Page Copy • Alternative image text
  55. 55. Page Title: Unique and descriptive URL: Descriptive and readable by both humans and search engines H1 Heading: Unique and descriptive Sub-Headings: Targeted sub-topics of the page theme Page Copy: Descriptive, unique, and RELEVANTAlt Image Text: Descriptive and keyword rich SEO ON-PAGE ELEMENTS
  56. 56. PAGE TITLE Good: Organic Result #1 Bad: Organic Result #32
  57. 57. URL STRUCTURE Good: Organic Result #9 Bad: Organic Result #94
  58. 58. WHAT KEYWORDS DO YOU RANK FOR? Ground Rules: 1. Don’t “Google yourself” 2. Use a keyword tracking tool a) SEM Rush (freemium) b) Bright Local (paid)
  59. 59. WHAT KEYWORDS DO YOU RANK FOR?
  60. 60. OFF-PAGE SEO ELEMENTS • Backlinks • Link anchor text • Citations or Mentions • Competitors
  61. 61. INTERNAL vs. EXTERNAL LINKS (BACKLINKS) • Internal links refer to links within your site, such as navigation links. • External links refer to links outside of your site, such as a link from Wikipedia. • Both are very useful, but for different reasons.
  62. 62. HOW DO BACKLINKS HELP? • Backlinks act as “votes” for pages on your site. • Generally speaking, the more links you have from authoritative sources, the more your site is trusted, and the better your pages will rank. YourWebsite.com NewsSite.com RetailSite.com IndustryBlog.com ShadySite.com
  63. 63. WHY INVEST IN LINK BUILDING? A technically sound site will only get you so far. Without links, it simply will not have the equity or authority to be visible in search engines.
  64. 64. LINK ANCHOR TEXT • The words used in the anchor text of a link to your site helps search engines understand what that page is about. • So, if your page is about “Lego Star Wars collections” the anchor text Star Wars Legos would be preferable over click here.
  65. 65. CONTENT STRATEGY
  66. 66. CONTENT STRATEGY • Goal: Ensure Quality & Alignment with Audience • To convert visitors to prospects or customers we need to have high quality content that addresses their problems. • Through keyword research and customer understanding, we can determine the topics that are of interest to your customers and where you have the opportunity to be competitive in search engine results.
  67. 67. Understanding who your user is, what problems they have that you are able to solve, WHAT IS A CONTENT STRATEGY? and finding a way to solve those problems. + =
  68. 68. what problems they have that you are able to solve, WHAT IS A CONTENT STRATEGY?
  69. 69. WHAT TO LOOK FOR • Am I speaking to my customer in their language? • Do I have the content they are looking for? • Where is there opportunity to provide an answer to a question?
  70. 70. HOW YOU CAN DO THIS 1. Identify buying personas or audience segments 2. Understand the decision making process 3. Keyword research 4. Content inventory
  71. 71. • Match existing content to personas and steps in the buying cycle. • Identify areas that lack content and fill gaps. Content Inventory & Gap Analysis VS.
  72. 72. Content Inventory & Gap Analysis URL Worker Willy Fashion Freddy Awareness Interest Consideration Purchase Intent /401-red-wing-mens- 6-inch-boot-brown x x x /footwear/6- hawthorne-8113- 08113 x x x Awareness Interest Consideration Purchase Intent Worker Willy 15 17 10 5 Fashion Freddy 11 2 7 13 Content Inventory & Gap Analysis
  73. 73. CONTENT STRATEGY STEPS 1. Business Objectives 2. Persona / Buying Cycle Analysis 3. Content Audit 4. Gap Analysis 5. Recommendations
  74. 74. Content Marketing
  75. 75. CONTENT MARKETING • Goal: Right Content in front of the Right People in the Right Place at the Right Time • Content Marketing is the practice of distributing your content through various channels. • Get the right types of content to the right audiences.
  76. 76. CONTENT MARKETING
  77. 77. LOCAL SEO
  78. 78. WHAT IS LOCAL SEO? Local SEO is the process of making it as easy as possible for prospective customers to find information about your company online, either when they search specifically for your enterprise or for any businesses that provides particular goods and services nearby them. • Source: LocalU.org
  79. 79. WHAT IS LOCAL SEO? Enhancing the visibility of your business for queries with “local intent”
  80. 80. LOCAL SEO RANKING FACTORS 1. Google My Business signals 2. Link signals 3. On-page signals 4. External location signals 5. Review signals 6. Behavioral signals 7. Personalization signals 8. Social signals Source: https://moz.com/blog/local-search-ranking-factors-survey-results-2017
  81. 81. HOW YOU CAN DO THIS • Ensure your contact info is present • Acquire relevant local links • Make sure your Google My Business page is accurate and optimized • Consistent NAP (Name, Address, Phone #) • Create engaging, quality content • Make your site the best in your area • Ask for reviews!
  82. 82. GOOGLE LOCAL RANKINGS (RIGHT FROM THE HORSE’S MOUTH) Relevance “Relevance refers to how well a local listing matches what someone is searching for. Adding complete and detailed business information can help Google better understand your business and match your listing to relevant searches.” Source: https://support.google.com/business/answer/7091
  83. 83. GOOGLE LOCAL RANKINGS (RIGHT FROM THE HORSE’S MOUTH) Distance “Just like it sounds–how far is each potential search result from the location term used in a search? If a user doesn't specify a location in their search, Google will calculate distance based on what’s known about their location.” Source: https://support.google.com/business/answer/7091
  84. 84. GOOGLE LOCAL RANKINGS (RIGHT FROM THE HORSE’S MOUTH) Prominence “Prominence refers to how well-known a business is. Some places are more prominent in the offline world, and search results try to reflect this in local ranking. Prominence is also based on information that Google has about a business from across the web (like links, articles, and directories). Google review count and score are factored into local search ranking: more reviews and positive ratings will probably improve a business's local ranking.” Source: https://support.google.com/business/answer/7091
  85. 85. CITATIONS • Citations are essentially a mention of your brand on another site like a listing directory. • Yelp • Yellow Pages • City Search
  86. 86. CITATIONS • It is important that these listings maintain consistency and accuracy. • Name • Address • Phone Number • *Check up on your listings using Moz Local • - moz.com/local
  87. 87. REVIEW
  88. 88. 1. If done right, SEO is a distinct competitive advantage 2. Get the foundation right 3. Optimize your pages and off-page presence 4. Strategically create and distribute content 5. Optimize for local visibility TL;DR
  89. 89. MEASUREMENT & IMPROVEMENT And then do it all over again!
  90. 90. 30 MINUTE SEO CHECK UP
  91. 91. 1. Analytics Platform (Google Analytics) 2. Google Search Console (formerly Webmaster Tools) 3. Bing Webmaster Tools 4. Google 5. Screaming Frog Spider 6. Crawl Data Visualization Spreadsheet 7. Panguin Tool – by Barracuda Digital 8. Word, Excel, Google Docs, pen and paper, or anything else you want to use to make a checklist WHAT YOU NEED:
  92. 92. 1. Google Analytics - https://www.google.com/analytics/ 2. Google Search Console - https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/home 3. Bing Webmaster Tools - http://www.bing.com/toolbox/webmaster 4. Google - https://www.google.com/ 5. Screaming Frog Spider - http://www.screamingfrog.co.uk/ 6. Crawl Data Visualization Spreadsheet - http://bit.ly/1npByIE 7. Panguin Tool - http://barracuda.digital/panguin-tool/ WHAT YOU NEED:
  93. 93. 30 MINUTE SEO CHECK UP: STEPS
  94. 94. STEP #1: CRAWL YOUR SITE WITH SCREAMING FROG
  95. 95. • Download Screaming Frog Spider • http://www.screamingfrog.co.uk/seo-spider/ • Enter your domain into the box at the top and hit Start • *Pro Tip: exclude the “www” to capture info on all subdomains STEP 1: CRAWL YOUR SITE
  96. 96. • Download the Crawl Data Visualization Worksheet • http://www.threedeepmarketing.com/blog/visualizing-website-data-with-screaming-frog • Save your crawl once it’s complete • Export the Crawl Overview Report as a .csv file • Copy and Paste into the “Data” tab of the Crawl Data Visualization Worksheet STEP 1: CRAWL YOUR SITE
  97. 97. STEP 1: CRAWL YOUR SITE
  98. 98. Page Title: Unique and descriptive URL: Descriptive and readable by both humans and search engines H1 Heading: Unique and descriptive Sub-Headings (H2): Targeted sub-topics of the page theme Page Copy: Descriptive, unique, and RELEVANT Alt Image Text: Descriptive and keyword rich SEO ON-PAGE ELEMENTS Meta Description: The elevator pitch - unique and descriptive
  99. 99. • Take note of: • Any redirection (3xx), broken links (4xx), and server error (5xx) status codes • URL Issues • Page Title Issues • Meta Description Issues • Missing Heading Tags (H1, H2) • Mark any issues down on your checklist STEP 1: CRAWL YOUR SITE - OUTPUT
  100. 100. STEP #2: GOOGLE SEARCH CONSOLE
  101. 101. • If you haven’t already, go verify your site in Google Search Console – https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/home • Once verified, click on your site to access the Dashboard* STEP 2: GOOGLE SEARCH CONSOLE
  102. 102. • First stop here is to check out your crawl errors report. • Click on the section banner to access the report • This will bring you to a different screen STEP 2: GOOGLE SEARCH CONSOLE
  103. 103. • Here you will see the graph on each type of error encountered over time. • Clicking on the individual error URLs will show you exactly where that URL is linked from (internal or external too!) STEP 2: GOOGLE SEARCH CONSOLE
  104. 104. • Next, from the left-hand navigation, head to the HTML improvements area • Here you’ll find a listing of issues with various on-page elements such as: • Meta descriptions • Title tags • Non-indexable content • Take note of any issues reported here and mark them in your checklist. STEP 2: GOOGLE SEARCH CONSOLE
  105. 105. • Finally, make sure you do not have any manual actions from Google. • These can be extremely time consuming and costly to clear up. • If you see something here, consult an experienced partner. STEP 2: GOOGLE SEARCH CONSOLE • Pro Tip: for a detailed walk-through on how to recover from a link based manual penalty and a hacked content penalty, see instructions here: http://www.threedeepmarketing.com/blog/complete-guide-google-manual-penalty-removal/ http://www.threedeepmarketing.com/blog/how-to-remove-a-hacked-content-google-manual-penalty
  106. 106. STEP #3: BING WEBMASTER TOOLS
  107. 107. • If you haven’t already, go verify your site in Bing Webmaster Tools – https://www.bing.com/webmaster • Once verified, click on your site to access the Dashboard STEP 3: BING WEBMASTER TOOLS
  108. 108. • From the left-hand dropdown menu, select “SEO Reports” • Although there is a lot of great information here, we’re only going to check out this section. STEP 3: BING WEBMASTER TOOLS
  109. 109. • Here you’ll find a list of “SEO Suggestions” • Clickable links to lists of URLs on which the issue occurs. • Prioritize the most severe issues and mark them down in your workflow checklist. STEP 3: BING WEBMASTER TOOLS
  110. 110. STEP #4: CHECK YOUR ANALYTICS
  111. 111. • Log into your analytics tool and access your website profile • For this example we are going to look at Google Analytics as it is one of the most popular and powerful website analytics tools on the market…and it’s “free” STEP 4: CHECK YOUR ANALYTICS
  112. 112. • Choose a period of time you want to analyze and compare it to the previous year. • Drill down into the Channels report • Here you’ll see a listing of traffic by channel • Next step is to click on “Organic Search” STEP 4: CHECK YOUR ANALYTICS
  113. 113. • Now change the Primary Dimension to “Landing Page” • Here you can see the year over year difference in entrances per page from organic search • Mark down any pages with drastic drops in your checklist STEP 4: CHECK YOUR ANALYTICS
  114. 114. STEP #5: THE PANGUIN TOOL
  115. 115. • The Panguin Tool is a tool developed by a company called Barracuda Digital • It pulls in your organic data and overlays when major updates to the Google algorithm have occurred • This is SUPER helpful when trying to diagnose whether or not your site took a hit • While you are logged into Google Analytics, head over to http://barracuda.digital/panguin-tool/ and follow the instructions to connect your site’s analytics to the tool STEP 5: THE PANGUIN TOOL
  116. 116. • Once connected you will see something like this: STEP 5: THE PANGUIN TOOL Color-coded lines represent updates to the Google algorithm Toggle switches allow you to turn off update types
  117. 117. • Mark down major traffic correlations • Read up on the provided information about the update • List out possible solutions in your checklist STEP 5: THE PANGUIN TOOL
  118. 118. STEP #6: GOOGLE YOURSELF (BUT NOT LIKE THAT)
  119. 119. • Pull up google.com in your browser and use the “site:” advanced search operator to check your indexation • Example: “site:domain.com” • How many pages are indexed? • How does this compare to your actual page count? • If it differs greatly, mark it down in your checklist. STEP 6: GOOGLE YOURSELF (LIKE THIS)
  120. 120. NEXT STEPS:
  121. 121. • High priority issues include: • Internal redirection – 301 and 302 status codes • Broken links – 404 status codes • Page Title issues • Uncrawlable website • Manual actions • Medium priority issues include: • H1 and H2 issues • Pages with traffic loss YoY • Low priority issues include: • Meta Description issues • Alt image text PRIORITIZE YOUR CHECKLIST
  122. 122. 1. Launch a crawl on your site with Screaming Frog 2. Download the Crawl Data Visualization spreadsheet 3. While crawl is running, log into Google Search Console 4. After that, log into Bing Webmaster Tools 5. Check your crawl, if it’s done export the crawl overview and load data into the Crawl Data Visualization spreadsheet 6. Log into Google Analytics 7. While logged into GA, head over to the Panguin Tool 8. Check your indexation in Google 9. Mark down issues as you go WORKFLOW TIMELINE AND REVIEW
  123. 123. THANK YOU! NEXT UP: ADVANCED SEO TACTICS QUESTIONS?

Notes de l'éditeur

  • Study conducted by Conductor in 2014
  • This is because each search engine has its own ranking algorithm

    Google
    Over 200 “ranking factors” help to decide where your site ranks
    Roughly 10,000 sub-factors
    Bing
    Fewer ranking factors in algorithm
    Heavy reliance on social factors

    Search engines use a mathematical algorithm to serve up search results for any given query.
    They have to, because any given day, 15% of all searches have never been searched before
    That means that of the 3.5 billion queries that happen on Google, 525 million of them are brand new.
    There are over x factors that influence the algorithm, but let’s focus on the top ones….
    Keep in mind that it is always changing….
  • Data as of April 2016
    Everyone else: AOL, Ask Jeeves
  • As SEOs or people working in digital marketing, we are playing in Google’s Sandbox
  • Study conducted by Conductor in 2014

  • This is a familiar image that most of us see everyday.

    When you type a search query into Google, how do those results come so fast?

    More importantly, what came up when you searched today?
  • Search engines do not crawl the web in real time, they categorize web pages into their index for easy retrieval

    16-20% of searches have never been searched before
    http://readwrite.com/2012/02/29/interview_changing_engines_mid-flight_qa_with_goog/#awesm=%7EoiNkM4tAX3xhbP

    900,000,000 searches world wide
  • There’s an incredible amount of information that search engines have to parse through
    -about 1.1 billion websites that Google has to crawl and keep track of.
    -compared to only 2.4 million in 1998 – when Google was first launched
  • How do they do this…a mathematical algorithm (next slide)
  • And instead of walking in, all you have to do is type
  • In this step we’re really looking at making your site accessible
    Here are some things to avoid
    What happens when you have unnecessary road blocks for search engines?
  • The XML sitemap is like the directory for your website.

    Search Engines use this like we use the directory in an office building – to more efficiently find what they are looking for.
  • The XML sitemap is like the directory for your website.

    Search Engines use this like we use the directory in an office building – to more efficiently find what they are looking for.
  • The XML sitemap is like the directory for your website.

    Search Engines use this like we use the directory in an office building – to more efficiently find what they are looking for.
  • Search engines want to stay in business – to do so they need people coming back. To be people coming back they need to provide the best answers to questions.
  • A shady link may be one that looks completely unnatural or comes from a totally unrelated site
    Search engines have filters that take the quality of links into account and tend to serve up pages with a trusted backlink profile
    Too many shady links can result in a penalty from Google so it’s best to just build links organically from providing the best content
  • A shady link may be one that looks completely unnatural or comes from a totally unrelated site
    Search engines have filters that take the quality of links into account and tend to serve up pages with a trusted backlink profile
    Too many shady links can result in a penalty from Google so it’s best to just build links organically from providing the best content
  • Gather all existing assets you have. Understand the landscape and move forward.
  • Not all personas or steps are created equal. You should have content to support all of your personas at each step in the cycle, but you may focus on some areas more than others.
  • Your website is not an online brochure, it is the solution to your customer’s problems.
  • On-page signals
    Link signals
    Google My Business signals
    External location signals
    Behavioral signals
    Personalization signals
    Review signals
  • For example, famous museums, landmark hotels, or well-known store brands that are familiar to many people are also likely to be prominent in local search results.
  • All of these tools have much, much more to offer than the high level functionality that we are going to walk through so take time after to familiarize yourself with them
  • Add URLs
  • Warning: if your site has more than 500 URIs (Uniform Resource Identifier) – all website assets like pages, videos, images, files, etc. – you should buy a license to activate all features.
    - A license costs less than $12 / month
  • Add Definitions
  • Definition of GSC – It is the portal that Google uses to send you information pertaining to your site
    There is lots of good info here but we’re just going to look at a couple different areas
  • Definition of GSC – It is the portal that Google uses to send you information pertaining to your site
  • Note – it is usually easier to export to excel to manipulate the data
  • Each color-coded line represents an update to the Google algorithm
    The toggle switches at the right allow you to turn off update types
    Clicking on a line will bring up an information box with specifics about that update and any related links with more information
  • Each color-coded line represents an update to the Google algorithm
    The toggle switches at the right allow you to turn off
  • Pro tip
  • Pro tip
  • Pro tip

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