marți, 23 iunie 2015

Brainstorm and Execute Killer Content Ideas Your Audience Will Love - Moz Blog

Brainstorm and Execute Killer Content Ideas Your Audience Will Love

Posted by Isla_McKetta

A fantastic idea is the heartblood of any content campaign or project. Excitement around an idea is what sustains you through the (sometimes) long slog of creation, and it's part of what gets your audience to share, share, share.

Putting time and energy into a bad idea is a waste of your resources and has the potential to turn your audience off. Plus, if your decision maker sees too many resources invested in too many ideas that fail, you could lose credibility, autonomy, and—worst case scenario—your job.

Which all makes coming up with the idea sound kind of intimidating. But finding the right idea doesn't have to be difficult. And finding a truly great idea can result in traffic, conversions, and the adulation of the masses.

You too can find a truly great idea. To help you, we're going to cover:

Where ideas come from

Ideas are all around us. Sometimes we need to focus to find them, and sometimes we need to let go a little. These tactics should help you and your team find your best ideas.

The swipe file

Some of my swipe files, dating back to undergrad. I still use these when writing.

If you aren't already keeping a file of ideas/images/approaches/technologies that inspire you or you'd love to learn from, start now. Keep feeding this file and refer to it whenever you need inspiration. If your swipe file gets thin, go back in history a little because great ideas get used over and over in different ways throughout time. Reviewing ideas that have inspired you can be a great way to prime yourself before a brainstorming session.

A swipe file can take any form that works for you: email folder, app, or physical file, as long as the system works for you. Some favorite programs to collect your ideas include Pinterest, Trello, and Evernote. Some higher powered applications like Musepeak and Mural.ly also give you more sophisticated options for collaborating on swipe files (and brainstorms...).

Successful brainstorms

Image by Juhan Sonin, licensed under Creative Commons.

Everyone brainstorms, but few people do it well. To set yourself up for success and avoid group think, follow these guidelines and remember the brainstorming space is sacred. That means that whether you're meeting in a room or building a shared board on Pinterest that all ideas are good ideas (at least for now). This is crucial, because even one person who insists on questioning ideas or dwelling on practicalities during a brainstorm can shut down the creativity of the whole process.

Participants

A good brainstorm gathers two or more brains around a shared goal whether in person or online. You can have as many people involved as you want; just know that larger groups (five or more) may need to be broken down into smaller teams that can then report back to the whole.

It can be helpful to include people who have no familiarity with the project in a brainstorming session because they'll come in without preconceived notions to weigh them down. Also include members from other teams. Sometimes it takes a designer to tell you about the latest great visual technique, and if you don't have a designer in the room, you might be starting over again later.

Some people are great brainstormers and some… have other talents. Don't be afraid to switch up your groups as you plan various brainstorms to find the right mix.

Parameters

Outline a few crucial parameters at the beginning of your brainstorm (Is your audience 10 or 100? Does the project merit 50 hours or 500?), but it's important not to get your group too hung up on constraints—"don'ts" can limit the creative thinking in the room. If your group is unusually quiet, try an icebreaker or two to get them into the brainstorming spirit. A good moderator can keep all the important constraints in mind and dole them out when the person at the end of the table insists that space monkeys are the only answer. Again.

Because all ideas are good ideas at this stage, it can be really important for the meeting organizer to keep the conversation on a "yes, and" level rather than a "no, but" one. That means recognizing the validity of each idea and helping to find a way to incorporate it. For example, to our space monkey obsessed friend, you could say, "Yes! Space monkeys are a really creative idea. And what do you think is the best way for them to showcase [product]?"

Capture all the ideas (however nuts) on a whiteboard or any place that the group can feed off of them. Take a picture or good notes. It's always important to have a record of your process in case you need to find a second idea (or remember the nuances of the first one). A few tools you might want to try out include bubble.us, MindMapper, Stormboard, and Scapple (for Mac).

Competitive research: How to find out what's working for the other guy

Obviously you're reading your competitors' content and watching what you think works and what doesn't (no, really, you have to do this on a somewhat-frequent basis). But there are also ways you can sneak a peek farther behind the curtain of what your competitors are working on.

A note before we get into the "how to do the research" part: you likely have two kinds of competitors. This can get confusing for a lot of businesses, especially when it comes to adding SEO into the content marketing mix. You have your traditional competitors—for example, if you're selling coffee in Seattle's Capitol Hill neighborhood, that cafe across the street is still your competition. But you also have competition in the SERPs (search engine results pages) who you're vying against to rank for "Seattle's best coffee." There is often overlap between these two groups of competitors, but don't leave out either group as you're checking out the competition because you can learn a lot from both.

If you're a visual learner, here's a great video that will show you how to use some of the Moz tools to start your competitive research. We'll also cover some of this below if your preferred learning method is reading. If you want to dig a little deeper or use a wider toolset, read on for ideas. Either way, this SEO workflow chart might give you a few ideas of things to consider as you start your analysis.

What's getting links?

Use Open Site Explorer to see which pages on your competitors' sites are getting the most links and who those links are coming from. This can offer insight into what topics and types of content might resonate with your audience. You can also use the link opportunities tool within OSE to find places that are linking to your competitors but not to you.

Top traffic earners

Search for your competitors on Similar Web to see what keywords they're pulling traffic for and what their top referring sites are. Or go straight to Ahrefs to see what their top performing content is. You may just spot a couple of concepts that serve as seeds for a tool or killer piece of content you can create. For example, if you're a cafe and "peach cobbler recipe" is a top keyword for a competitor, you may decide to share some of your delicious recipes online.

Or use Simply Measured to do your own analysis of your competitors' top posts.

Social: who follows whom and what they share

Use a tool like Followerwonk to analyze who your competitor is following and followed by on Twitter. You can even analyze their tweets to see what their audience retweets and favorites along with who they mention most often. If our cafe competitor is followed by people who use "freelance designer" in their Twitter bios, you might be able to get their attention with a series of interviews of successful freelancers who started out at your coffee shop.

BuzzSumo is a good place to see what content is popular on social. Paddy Moogan goes in depth on that here.

On Facebook, you can type "Pages liked by people who like [brand]" into the search bar to get an idea of other interests that brand's followers may share. For example, using our coffee shop located on Capitol Hill, you might find that your competitor's fans love the Capitol Hill Block Party, which could inspire you to write a blog post series, "Where the Stars of the Capitol Hill Block Party Fuel Up Before Their Sets."

A couple of other tools that can help you get information on your competitors' social efforts are RivalIQ and the Share Metric plugin for Chrome.

Top brand mentions

A tool like Fresh Web Explorer or Google Alerts will help you find brand mentions on the web which will help you see what kind of content is earning attention for your competitors. This is also a great way to find link opportunities and get intel on what people are saying about your brand.

Competitive research beyond the blog

Don't forget to include your competitors' other types of content when you're doing your analysis. Here's a look at how to do competitive research on email. At the very least, subscribe to all their email campaigns to keep an eye on what is (and is not) working. Some things to consider are: subject lines, length, tone, time of day, and imagery, but anything that catches your attention is worth noting.

You should also be looking at and analyzing their landing pages, white papers, and even product descriptions to see what they're doing well (and not so well). You never know when (or where) an idea is going to strike.

A note about your competitor's ideas

It can be really easy upon noticing that your competitor gets most of their traffic from that peach cobbler recipe to want to run out and make your own, better peach cobbler recipe. You might have success with that tactic, and it can feel safer to build off of someone else's success, but imitation always puts you behind your competitor.

A better way to build your own empire through content marketing is to take that inspiration from your competitors as a starting point for your ideation. You may decide that you're really famous (or would like to be) for your danishes. Or, you could decide that recipes aren't your bag at all and you want to focus on something entirely different. There isn't a wrong answer as long as you're true to your own brand. And if you're really stuck for ideas on what that brand is, the next section should help.

Horizontal thinking

Sometimes the best way to get a fresh take on a new idea is to come at it sideways. That's what many artists do and it's called lateral, horizontal, or tangential thinking. So if you're finding yourself in a "how do I write one more article about the internal workings of a toilet?" kind of rut, it's time to look at your subject from a new angle.

To get that fresh take, first take a giant step backward to the place where you have just your original subject (or keyword, if you prefer). Here we'll focus on plumbing fixtures (because if you can find creative new ways to talk about plumbing fixtures, you can find creative new ways to talk about anything). As we said, the rut we're trying to get out of where we're thinking too straightforwardly about the subject matter, and the very best way to do that is to explore all the tangential relationships. If you do this with a bubble chart, it's even fun (the image below was created using Coggle but pen and paper still work).

ideation for difficult industries - plumbing

You could take this a lot farther, but let's analyze what we've got here. The "installation" tangent is pretty good, but you've probably explored that pretty well already.

Where things might start to get interesting is in the "materials history" area. For example, if it's true that more expensive toilets are made from more expensive materials, you might swing an upsell with a post waxing metaphoric about how porcelain helped forge trade between the ancient Islamic and Chinese worlds. Or, you could tell stories of the most indulgent toilets ever purchased.

If you also sell bathroom accessories, get your customers interested with that "Cultural Bathroom Traditions" idea. It's interesting that some Japanese restrooms are equipped with noise machines to preserve ladies' modesty or that Indian toilets sometimes come equipped with a hose. A series like this might result in some really unusual and shareable content (and give you a fresh way to look at toilets for the next little while).

Looking at the various angles on "shower heads," there's a lot of room to explore based on whether you're going for an upscale audience, eco, or even DIY. And once you start talking bathroom decor (from shower heads to the perfect guest bathroom) you've got a huge potential audience (along with some pretty stiff competition).

Related to lateral thinking, never rule out serendipity when looking for content ideas. If you hear the Senate has just spent some crazy amount on rehabbing a bathroom, consider that a gift from the content idea gods. And there are loads more of those types of gifts out in the ideation ether if you keep your spidey sense tuned.


Content freshness

Image by tanakawho, licensed under Creative Commons.

Some companies can base an entire content strategy on newsjacking (responding to the latest news either directly or indirectly), but, especially if you're just starting out, you're going to want to find a balance between timely ideas and those that are evergreen and will stay fresh for a good long time.

One way to come up with more timely ideas is to look at when your content will go live and what might be happening at that time, e.g., holidays, big movie releases, seasonal changes, music awards shows. It's amazing how easy it is to forget about the back-to-school season when you're pitching ideas in March. Build yourself a calendar of events that are important to your industry, and save it for next year's ideation.


Inspiration for boring/difficult industries

Image by peasap, licensed under Creative Commons.

We already covered how to write about plumbing fixtures. What could be harder? Banking, roofing, hydrology services, you name it. Many people consider anything outside the fashion/entertainment realm (aka anything you can't link a celebrity's name to) to be a difficult topic to write about.

That's just not true. There are no truly difficult topics if you can key into what makes you excited about something. Because there are people out there who are very much like you and are curious and nerdy about the same things you are.

  • How can you maximize your benefit from the new IRS IRA laws?
  • What are the best kinds of fasteners to use with cedar shingles?
  • How much erosion is too much erosion?

These are all completely reasonable (and interesting) topics for the right audience.

If you feel like you've exhausted the easy wins and answered all the FAQs, go back to lateral thinking, grab a buddy, and brainstorm what makes your industry fun or interesting to you and your audience. Watch the movies they watch, read the news sources they're into, and listen to the music they like. Learn about the industry and keep your mind open for questions that occur to you along the way, and then turn answering those questions into your next set of content ideas.


Recognizing the right idea

Image by Maxime Raynal, licensed under Creative Commons.

Now that you've got a whiteboard, swipe file, or notebook full of ideas, it's time to winnow those fantastic ideas and select some top contenders. This is usually easiest either alone or in a small group. You'll want to:

  1. Cross off anything that bores you.
  2. Set aside anything that doesn't fit within your parameters (like if it takes too much time or budget). You might be able to preserve some of the idea later if you love it. So don't throw it out the window or anything :)
  3. Make a separate list of the ideas that call out to you. You don't have to know why you love them at this stage, you can always build a justification later, but trust your gut. You're going to need that excitement over the long haul as you shepherd this project.
  4. Think about whether this idea works for one piece of content or if you can turn it into a series.

Applying these parameters to your list of potential ideas should help you find an idea or two that's ripe to work on. If not, go back through ideation and use what didn't work this time as your starting point for discussion.


Targeting and providing value for an audience

Image by Yann Duarte, licensed under Creative Commons.

If you didn't already do audience research as part of your content strategy, you can start at any phase of ideation. Some people like to use this information to create personas that shape your ideas from the very beginning. Others like to let the ideas flow first to see how crazy they can get and then narrow down the choices using audience information.

To get your feet wet, go through the same process for your company that you did while gathering all the intel on your competitors. Then it's time to get specific, because you should have access to a lot more information about your own company and customers.

Building personas

Creating a set of archetypal people to represent your target customers can be a very in-depth process. You can start with basic demographic information and a few guesses at pain points and goals, but to understand the vast array of qualitative and quantitative research you can do to build a persona, read Mike King's comprehensive guide to personas. Another helpful read is Kyra Kuik and Harriet Cummings' look at audience research.

Whether you choose to create detailed personas or basic persona sketches, anything you can do to understand your audience is a good thing for planning and executing your content. Here are some other ways you can get at what ideas your audience might find engaging.

Understanding your audience's needs

Remember as you're pulling together this information to consider audience intent as part of your process, because it's not enough to know that your audience is interested in a topic. You have to understand what they want from information about that topic (are they researching? shopping? reselling?) to make your content marketing truly conversion-worthy.

Don't forget to look at places where your audience is already talking with you, too. Customer service surveys, social interactions, and Q&As are all amazing resources. Find out what all your customer touch points are and what kind of intel you can uncover.

Random affinities

Once you know who your audience is and what they might be looking for, it's time to take the extra step and find content that will engage their interests. Random affinities are a great way to do this. Related to tangential thinking, you're looking for an overlap in interests that can help you build a stronger relationship with your audience.

We did this a little above by bringing the Capitol Hill Block Party to the ideation table. But by digging a little deeper you might find that people who like coffeehouses often also like yoga. Although that makes for a smaller audience overall (some people who like coffeehouses probably hate yoga), if you cater to that specific intersection of interests, you're likely to build a deeper connection with those yoga-loving coffee addicts. Let Ian Lurie show you how to discover random affinities.

What makes content valuable

As a final check in your ideation process (or any time you get stuck), consider what people find valuable about content (from this presentation by Rand):

criteria for modern content investments

If your ideas aren't meeting these criteria, keep thinking. Often something you were working with just needs to be tweaked a little. Sometimes you'll need to start fresh. It's all worth it when you find the idea that rocks your readers' worlds.


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Your Daily SEO Fix: Week 5

Posted by Trevor-Klein

We've arrived, folks! This is the last installment of our short (< 2-minute) video tutorials that help you all get the most out of Moz's tools. If you haven't been following along, these are each designed to solve a use case that we regularly hear about from Moz community members.

Here's a quick recap of the previous round-ups in case you missed them:

  • Week 1: Reclaim links using Open Site Explorer, build links using Fresh Web Explorer, and find the best time to tweet using Followerwonk.
  • Week 2: Analyze SERPs using new MozBar features, boost your rankings through on-page optimization, check your anchor text using Open Site Explorer, do keyword research with OSE and the keyword difficulty tool, and discover keyword opportunities in Moz Analytics.
  • Week 3: Compare link metrics in Open Site Explorer, find tweet topics with Followerwonk, create custom reports in Moz Analytics, use Spam Score to identify high-risk links, and get link building opportunities delivered to your inbox.
  • Week 4: Use Fresh Web Explorer to build links, analyze rank progress for a given keyword, use the MozBar to analyze your competitors' site markup, use the Top Pages report to find content ideas, and find on-site errors with Crawl Test.

We've got five new fixes for you in this edition:

  • How to Use the Full SERP Report
  • How to Find Fresh Links and Manage Your Brand Online Using Open Site Explorer
  • How to Build Your Link Profile with Link Intersect
  • How to Find Local Citations Using the MozBar
  • Bloopers: How to Screw Up While Filming a Daily SEO Fix

Hope you enjoy them!


Fix 1: How to Use the Full SERP Report

Moz's Full SERP Report is a detailed report that shows the top ten ranking URLs for a specific keyword and presents the potential ranking signals in an easy-to-view format. In this Daily SEO Fix, Meredith breaks down the report so you can see all the sections and how each are used.


Fix 2: How to Find Fresh Links and Manage Your Brand Online Using Open Site Explorer

The Just-Discovered Links report in Open Site Explorer helps you discover recently created links within an hour of them being published. In this fix, Nick shows you how to use the report to view who is linking to you, how they're doing it, and what they are saying, so you can capitalize on link opportunities while they're still fresh and join the conversation about your brand.


Fix 3: How to Build Your Link Profile with Link Intersect

The quantity and (more importantly) quality of backlinks to your website make up your link profile, one of the most important elements in SEO and an incredibly important factor in search engine rankings. In this Daily SEO Fix, Tori shows you how to use Moz's Link Intersect tool to analyze the competitions' backlinks. Plus, learn how to find opportunities to build links and strengthen your own link profile.


Fix 4: How to Find Local Citations Using the MozBar

Citations are mentions of your business and address on webpages other than your own such as an online yellow pages directory or a local business association page. They are a key component in search engine ranking algorithms so building consistent and accurate citations for your local business(s) is a key Local SEO tactic. In today's Daily SEO Fix, Tori shows you how to use MozBar to find local citations around the web


Bloopers: How to Screw Up While Filming a Daily SEO Fix

We had a lot of fun filming this series, and there were plenty of laughs along the way. Like these ones. =)


Looking for more?

We've got more videos in the previous four weeks' round-ups!

Your Daily SEO Fix: Week 1

Your Daily SEO Fix: Week 2

Your Daily SEO Fix: Week 3

Your Daily SEO Fix: Week 4


Don't have a Pro subscription? No problem. Everything we cover in these Daily SEO Fix videos is available with a free 30-day trial.


Sign up for The Moz Top 10, a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don't have time to hunt down but want to read!

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8 SEO basics to optimise your site

8 SEO basics to optimise your site

Link to White.net » Blog

8 SEO basics to optimise your site

Posted: 23 Jun 2015 01:00 AM PDT

As someone who is relatively new to the world of SEO, I have been reading a lot around the fundamentals of the subject, and the processes involved in successful SEO campaigns. Beginning in SEO can be quite daunting when considering all of the factors that are involved. This is why I would like to share what I have learnt with you, so without further ado, here are my top 8 SEO basics to optimise your site!

Something to keep in mind before we begin is that ultimately there is not one magic quick fix that can help your website rank higher, and it won’t happen overnight. SEO is a complex process and there are many rules and factors that need to be taken into consideration. There are also a number of myths and misconceptions (we’ve collected them in our SEO Myths piece by the way) around what is considered to be best practice, the basics I share below and are ones that I feel are fundamental.

1. Optimise titles and descriptions

Title Tags

Firstly, title tags are a short meaningful description of the content for each page on your website. They are displayed at the top of your web browser window and are often used as a preview snippet on search engine results pages (SERPs).

This has a big part to play in SEO particularly with Google, yet is also important in terms of social sharing. It is important that each page title is unique and is accurately aligned with the page content – this is critical for both SEO and user experience.

Meta Descriptions

Meta descriptions are a short description of what a particular page is about and along with title tags these should be unique to each page on your website. An ideal meta description should be between 150 – 160 characters to avoid text cut off when displayed on search engines – you will want to be concise and informative sparking the reader's interest. Meta descriptions do not directly influence rankings on search engines, however they do encourage  user’s to click on your search result.

By creating a compelling description with the use of important keywords it can help to improve the click-through rate of the given webpage. In order to maximise click-through rates it is important to know that Google amongst other search engines display keywords in bold when the terms match the search query. However it is important not to overuse keywords, keep in mind that your content should flow naturally. Below you can see a SERP preview displaying title tags and Meta descriptions.

SERP Snippet

2. Make your site mobile friendly

Another basic SEO factor to consider is making sure your website is mobile/user friendly and optimised for mobile browsing. This is vital as mobile marketing statistics show that more and more users are using their mobiles/smartphone devices to search online each day.

I am sure you are already aware but in April this year Google decided to roll out a mobile friendly update. Google decided to reward those with mobile friendly sites by boosting their rankings in mobile search results. Google insists that text is readable, without the need for tapping and zooming. For platforms such as WordPress, Wp-touch pro is a useful plugin offering mobile optimised themes. The plugin also has additional mini plugins useful for your site such as responsive images, which leads on to my next point.

3. Optimise your images

The use of visuals and images is a great way to enhance a user's experience.

  • Text browsers and other web user agents are unable to see images. Using alt text or text near your images will enable text browsers/web user agents to understand what your image contains.
  • When labelling your file names avoid using generic names such as image.jpg. Instead use relevant keywords to describe what your image is displaying for example, womens-nike-clothing.jpg.
  • The smaller your image (in KB) the faster your website will be – Kraken is a tool enabling you to reduce your image size without compromising quality.

4. Use internal links well

Internal links are another factor to consider for SEO optimisation on your site. Internal links are those links that direct users to other pages within your website. Make sure the pages relate in some way; for example, if you wrote a blog post on cardio exercise, you could link this back to a previous post about warm up techniques.

Internal links can be useful for SEO however, many are still using this incorrectly.

Here are a few SEO tips for internal links:

  • DO NOT create links purely for the purpose of SEO – links should only be used for the purpose of site navigation, and make sure you do not overuse them.
  • Make sure that text within the links are descriptive – use target keywords from the page you are linking to within the anchor text. By using the target key phrase it helps Google to identify the relevance of the page.
  • Don't use terms such as, 'click here' or 'read more here' because search engines use the text in a link to help identify what the link is about.

Tip: When running a blog, every couple of weeks go back and link newer posts from older posts. It's not an easy task to do especially if you have a lot of posts, but it can be a very good tactic for showing your readers different content on your website.

5. Make sure URLs are user friendly

A URL is the unique address of a web page, they can be seen in the address bar of your web browser. A page URL is one of the most important parts of your website when looking to make your website user-friendly and SEO compliant. It consists of a string of words usually ending with .co.uk/.com/.org or .net. URLs should be simple and easy to understand, as well as mimic the structure of your website.

How to optimise URLs:

  • Make sure URLs are easy to understand, not only for search engines but also for users
  • Don't use capital letters within URLs (they can be case sensitive), this will avoid causing confusion to visitors and search engines
  • Don't use lengthy URLs that include irrelevant words
  • Use hypens (-) to separate words within an URL

Still unsure of what your URLs should look like? I have included a couple of good examples below, these follow all the steps that I have mentioned above to optimise your URLs.

Good and Bad URL Structures

6. Create sitemaps

A sitemap is a list of all public facing pages and posts on your website, search engines use this as a way to understand the structure of your site. There are two types of site maps – an xml sitemap and an html sitemap.

XML Sitemap – created for search engines

An xml sitemap is submitted to Google, Bing and other search engines. To create and also update your sitemap it could be easier to install a plugin, however this is dependent on the platform you are using.

Here are the key steps you need to consider when creating an XML sitemap:

  1. Identify your most important content pages for search. For example, you can ignore shopping cart pages and user login pages
  2. Validate your sitemap using a tool such as Google's sitemap generator
  3. Post the sitemap file to your website, the root directory is the perfect place to put it – helping to cut out the issue of invalid URLs. Once you have posted your sitemap you should update your robots.txt file with reference to the location of your sitemap by adding a line to the end of your robots.txt file similar to the following sample: Sitemap: http://www.example.com/sitemap.xml
  4. Register your sitemap with Google and Bing, the best way to do this is through Google Search Console
  5. Update and repost your sitemap file as site content changes

HTML Sitemap – created for users

An html sitemap is created to enable the user to browse through your content more easily. The sitemap should include links to all posts and important pages on your site. It is also possible to group posts in terms of author and category etc.

7. Setup Search Console and Google Analytics

Google’s Search Console tool is where you register and submit your website index. This is your central point of tracking valuable information about your site.

  • It is a way of telling search engines about your site – for example submitting your sitemap
  • It enables you to get feedback on your indexed pages
  • Enables you to get notified about possible problems such as issues that restrict your content from being crawled
  • Identify the amount of internal links you have directing to your site
  • And much more…

Google Analytics is also a great tool, in fact it is one of my favourites. The tool enables you to find out a number of factors about your site, helping you to identify where you can make improvements (there is always room for improvement):

  • Track how visitors are directed to your website for example, directly through your URL or from particular search terms
  • How much time is spent on particular pages
  • How many pages are viewed per visit
  • How many are returning or new visitors
  • Measure the impact of mobile engagement

There are endless benefits.

8. Take care of your content

All the factors I have mentioned above are all very important. However, don’t forget about the content – content is still key. Your content should be of a high quality and original – it should always answer what the user is looking for.

How do I know if my content is good?

There are two simple ways in which you can identify if your content is useful to others. Firstly, you can look at your analytics package – this will enable you to find out how much time is spent on a particular page. Also checking your social media shares on Facebook and Twitter etc, this is a good way to understand what type of content users are looking for and enjoy reading enough to share.

Remember that promoting and sharing your content is just as important as creating it. After-all, what’s the point in having great content if no-one can see it?

How to create good content?

Firstly, there are no particular guidelines that need to be followed in order to write good content. Content will vary depending upon the topic you are writing about. However, there are certain things that you can consider when writing content. I have included the factors which I feel are the most important below:

  • It is crucial to stick to the point you are hoping to make with your content
  • Tell the user what the page is about with a short snappy introduction – make the user want to continue reading.
  • Check content for typos, spelling and grammatical errors.
  • Make sure your content has structure and flows well.
  • Provide links in your content to other pages within your site (for extra information) – only do this where appropriate, not simply for the sake of it.
  • Show reference to research or case studies to back up what you are suggesting – again only do this where appropriate.

How long should my blog post be?

What type of content should I create? - this is quite a common question. The point is that there is no set limit – the length is dependent on the type of post and the topic.

All in all this is where the quality vs quantity scenario comes in – it is much better to write a quality post without feeling that you have to meet a certain criteria with the word count. This is a key difference between print and online content; where once space for content was at a premium, when printed in a document, online content is not restricted to a pre-defined length. Content should answer what the user is looking for, it's quite easy to start rambling but if the post is not to the point it is potentially more likely to be ignored.

Create fresh content

Having fresh content will give search engine bots a reason to come back and crawl your site more often. Alongside this it will also encourage users to come back and browse your site. Be sure to keep your content original, avoid posting similar content on your blog or website for the sake of posting.

Summary

You should always keep SEO to the front of your mind and always remember to follow best practices. Ignoring the basics of SEO will leave your site's groundwork messy, preventing you from maximising your full revenue opportunities.

Are there any other SEO practices that you feel are important? Please share your suggestions in the comments, I would like to hear them.

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Google Search Console: A Beginner’s Guide

Posted: 17 Jun 2015 02:22 AM PDT

This blog post supersedes the original version which was published by Daniel Bianchini in July 2011 under the title ‘Google Webmaster Tools: A Beginner’s guide to Installation’.google-search-console-800x146

Since Google Webmaster Tools first launched around 10 years ago, its been the first port of call for webmasters diagnosing issues with their website. In 2015 that hasn’t changed. We may have sophisticated  tools for monitoring web projects and software that shows us our data in a million different segments, but Webmaster Tools remains as valuable today as ever.

Webmaster Tools in 2007

Webmaster Tools in 2007

 

I should mention first and foremost that as of May 2015, it is no longer called Webmaster Tools but in fact, Google Search Console. It’s essentially the same set of tools, just with a different name and a greater focus on making the data within more accessible and open to less tech-savvy people. It follows a couple of minor UI changes and an overhaul of the ‘Search Queries’ tool. Check out Google’s John Mueller reminiscing over Webmaster Tool below…

John Mueller - Gplus

So what is Google Search Console?

It is a free and useful way for webmasters to view their own website the way that Google sees it. It features the following information:

  • How many pages on your site have been indexed
  • Errors encountered while crawling your site
  • The crawl rate of your site
  • Analyse your website’s performance in Google organic search via ‘Search Analytics’
  • Which domains link to your site

It also allows you to:

  • Submit your xml sitemap(s) to Google and receive feedback on how many contained URLs are indexed and any URL errors found
  • Test URLs against your website’s robots.txt file to ensure they are blocked/allowed
  • See how Google renders (views) your website with the Fetch as Google tool
  • Configure the use of parameters on your website
  • Check the implementation of Hreflang tags, via the International Targeting tool

Your  input

Google Search Console allows you  to report the actions you have taken to solve some of the issues you have diagnosed, for example:

  • Submit and update disavow files
  • Reconsideration request
  • Submit and configure new parameters
  • Remove URLs from search results

Search Console implementation and verification

Many of us who have been using Webmaster Tools for years probably don’t even remember how we implemented Google Webmaster Tools across our websites. Often we get invited by another owner who has already verified the site previously.

For new users of Search Console, the options for verifying your site are:

      • Adding a meta tag to your home page (proving that you have access to the source files). To use this method, you must be able to edit the HTML code of your site’s pages
      • Upload an HTML file with the name you specify to your server. To use this method, you must be able to upload new files to your server
      • Verify via your domain name provider. To use this method, you must be able to sign in to your domain name provider (for example, GoDaddy.com or networksolutions.com) or hosting provider and add a new DNS record
      • Add the Google Analytics code you use to track your site. To use this option, you must be an administrator on the Google Analytics account, and the tracking code must use the asynchronous snippet (all codes generated these days are but legacy ones may not be – it’s time to upgrade!)
      • Verify via the Google Tag Manager Container Snippet which should be placed after the opening <body> tag of your page

For many, the easiest option will be verifying via your Google Tag Manager Account or via your website’s Google Analytics code. We recommend  that you use the same account for all Google products and if it's a business account, create a central account for the entire business.

Google-tag-manager-code

Delegating access in Google Search Console

GWT allows the administrator of the account to provide access to multiple users by adding them to the Verification Details via the "Manage" link as you log in to the tool.

Once you have clicked the "Manage" link, you will be directed through to the Verification Details page, where you will be allowed to add/edit/delete the users who have access to the data via their own Google account.

To add a new user, click the "Add an owner" button and enter their email address. This will only work for users who have a registered Google Account, so if they do not currently have one please refer them to step 1.

If you would like to remove any users who have been previously added then just click the "Unverify" link.

verify-capture

 What is Search Analytics?

Graph

Previously called the ‘Search Queries’ report, Search Analytics is still in beta (as of 16th June 2015) however, its definitely an upgrade in terms of data and segmentation. Whilst this feature still only provides the last 90 days worth of data, you can get quite granular in order to identify impressions and clicks across:

  • Keyword
  • Landing pages
  • Device
  • Country
  • Date range

For full run through of how to use the data contained within the Search Analytics tools, see Google’s documentation here.

Finding this data in Google Analytics…

If you link your Webmaster Console account to your Google Analytics account, you can access this same data in the ‘Search Engine Optimisation’ section within ‘Acquisition’ in Google Analytics (see image below) This is helpful if you like to have all your data in one place, although it should be noted that this still only provides the last 90 days of data.

GA-capture

So there you have it, our beginner’s guide to Google Search Console. If you have any tips to share or questions on making the most of this excellent, free resource that we haven’t answered here, drop us a comment below.

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Matt Bentley on SEO tools, keywords & the future

Posted: 16 Jun 2015 01:26 AM PDT

SEO can be a hard craft. It can feel a slippery, fickle topic; the downside to the industry’s fantastic agility, adaptive streak and drive for constant improvement is a need to continually adopt new techniques, knowledge and tools.

That does however give us the perfect excuse to always be trying out new software and tools, and who doesn’t like to kick the tyres on some new toys?

It was while checking out one of the new keyword tools on the block, CanIRank, that I got chatting to Matt Bentley, the tool’s founder. Matt kindly agreed to turn our banter into a full interview. We discussed about how the tool fits into an increasingly crowded market, why he wanted to build it, and how he’d like to see the industry develop.

During our conversation Matt showed he’s not only very passionate about SEO and building a tool that helps marketers, but is also one of the industry’s most articulate and forward-looking thinkers.

CW: Hi Matt, thanks for taking time to speak with us; can you tell us a little about CanIRank – who is it for, and what can users achieve with it?

MB: We call CanIRank an SEO Intelligence tool: it's part keyword research, part competitive analysis, and part artificial intelligence. The purpose of SEO intelligence tools is to improve your productivity by giving you a better understanding of why each site ranks where it does, which factors are holding you back, and what your biggest opportunities are.

In short, we let computers do what they do best — compile and analyze data — to free up more time for marketers to focus on what they do best — coming up with creative ways to attract and engage potential customers.

In the past 5 years SEO has become almost exponentially more complex. To really understand why a site ranks where it does you need to consider a huge list of factors (keyword usage, anchor text, topical relevancy, website authority, trust, speed, mobile friendliness, https, user behavior, etc…). It's no longer possible for humans to keep all of that in their head and really understand how sites compare in these hundreds of factors, and which ones might be making the difference.

In the past 5 years SEO has become almost exponentially more complex

But computers can make sense of it all. CanIRank collects 4,000 data points from 11 different sources for every single keyword analyzed. Our software can take 40 randomized URLs, collect data on them, and re-rank them in the same order as Google to a 60% correlation. I don't think the best human SEOs in the world could do that, even if you gave them a week.

And honestly, SEO is just a whole lot more fun when you can focus on the creative aspects, the problem solving and relationship building, rather than spending all day poring over data in Excel.

Matt Bentley speaking at Stamford alumni panel

CW: I think for many folks it really is (though some of us still like geeking out in Excel!) For you, what’s the most exciting thing about CanIRank?

MB: The most exciting part for me is seeing the results we've been able to help clients achieve. First is the massive time savings. So far we've analyzed over 200,000 websites, which means collecting 40,000,000 raw data points and distilling that down into 23,000 Action Recommendations. That's a 99.9425% reduction in data you have to pay attention to!

For small teams or those trying to get results quickly, it can be pretty overwhelming trying to figure out where to start, so it’s a big deal to know specifically which issues you should address to make the biggest positive impact on your ranking. SEO is just too big these days to do everything.

Of course, all of that wouldn't be worth anything if our AI models didn't make accurate recommendations, but we've tested that and clients who don't follow CanIRank’s Action Recommendations actually see a slight decrease in ranking on average, whilst those who follow at least some Action Recommendations for just 1 week see an average ranking increase of 12%, and those who spend 1 month completing Action Recommendations see an average 25% improvement.

Obviously, that's just the average. We had 1 client who managed to increase search traffic 533% in just one month — and he was brand new to SEO!

 

CW: Is that what you built CanIRank for, to help those with less experience or technical nous or is it for everyone, including agencies? Who is the tool aimed at?

MB: Our initial goal was to improve the transparency of SEO — to take all these ranking factors and distill it to something where anyone can just look at a CanIRank report and say "aha! so that's what's going on."

So that's certainly helpful for someone who's a bit newer to SEO and maybe doesn't have the years of experience that really badass SEOs do where they can just look at all these numbers flying by and instantly see the big picture, kind of like operators in the Matrix.

But as we've grown we've discovered that agencies and professional SEOs also appreciate being able to quickly diagnose issues, automate their keyword research, and find keywords they can rank for quickly.

Basically, everyone these days is under pressure to deliver more results in less time, so even the most expert SEOs benefit from the productivity and efficiency increases of automating the most time-consuming analysis.

You could give me detailed instructions on how to build a house, and I'd probably get through it with considerable time and effort, but it's not going to be the same result as you'd get from a master carpenter

CW: You’ve built CanIRank to let users really develop their SEO understanding and ability – do you think it allows people to do SEO for themselves without outside training/expertise? Was this a goal?

MB: The combination of increased transparency into search ranking factors along with detailed instructions means that CanIRank is a great way to learn SEO. It's "learning by doing" where each step is tailored to addressing the needs of your site, like a book that was written just for you.

That said, there's always going to be a role for SEO experts. You could give me detailed instructions on how to build a house, and I'd probably get through it with considerable time and effort, but it's not going to be the same result as you'd get from a master carpenter following the same instructions.

Experts can look at an issue that CanIRank uncovers and immediately think of a dozen different approaches for addressing that issue, some of which they have absolutely dialed. So for most businesses it's going to be worth it to let the experts do what they do best.

But even for businesses who aren't doing the work themselves, CanIRank can serve as a kind of bridge between the business and their SEO agency. Put it this way: hiring an SEO shouldn't feel like a trip to the auto mechanic. I take my car in for an oil change, and the mechanic tells me there's a problem with my rear flux capacitor turnbuckle coupler, and I should pay £3,000 to get that fixed unless I want to put my entire family at risk.

I have no idea if he's just making that up; the car seemed fine to me! Looking at a CanIRank report, even a novice can see where their website falls short of the top rankers and have a real understanding for the challenges that lie ahead and the value they're going to be getting from the work done by their SEO agency.

CanIRank's keyword value calculation

CW: I think that’s a fantastic analogy – bridging the gap between what we do and what our clients understand is a big part of the job, especially when it can sound like gobbledygook…

We’ve seen a fair number of new SEO tools enter the market as it starts to reach a new level of maturity; how do you see CanIRank fitting into an SEO’s toolbox?

MB: It is a very crowded market! Only a few years back the problem was we couldn't get enough data. Now, the problem is there's way too much! It's almost a full time job keeping track of all the great data coming in from all these different marketing tools, there's no time to act on what you're learning.

And I guess that pretty much captures where CanIRank fits in: we're a layer of machine learning intelligence on top of the tools that you're already using (Moz, SEMRush, Ahrefs, social media, crawlers, keyword tools, etc.) that automates the data collection, makes it understandable, and helps you figure out which things you need to pay attention to.

We have a sister company (http://www.lightship.me/) in stealth mode that kind of hints at where we're headed: automation and intelligence that turns all your raw data into directly actionable opportunities.

 

CW: What other online marketing tools have you used that you really liked? Have any of them inspired CanIRank at all?

MB: Well of course we're long time users and big fans of the companies that provide data to CanIRank — especially Moz, SEMRush, and Ahrefs — all do a fantastic job and are really the backbone of SEO analysis.

More generally, I'm super excited about the potential of predictive analytics technology to transform online marketing. I think within a relatively short timeframe we'll all be doing our jobs in collaboration with an AI of some sort — companies like Adometry, Pretarget, TellApart, Preact, and 6Sense are some other leaders in this space.

I owe much of the inspiration behind CanIRank's technology (not to mention the direction of my career in the past 7 years!) to coaching and advising from Dean Abbott of Abbott Analytics who helped me get started as a data scientist and lay the foundation for CanIRank's predictive analytics technology.

I think within a relatively short timeframe we'll all be doing our jobs in collaboration with an AI of some sort

CW: Now that is interesting. We’re big fans of SEMrush, Ahrefs and Moz here as well. I think the possibilities for AI predictive input into what we do is fascinating, probably deserves its own dedicated conversation!

As you’ve brought up your background, I wanted to ask; you’ve been an online entrepreneur for many years, as well as working in data science, what’s your experience with online marketing? Is it something you’ve always been keen on?

MB: Online marketing, and particularly growth marketing, has always seemed like the most interesting challenge in startup companies, and I've been lucky enough to have spent time in a variety of online marketing roles at startups, some successful, some not so much. SEO has always been a part of that, but I'm definitely more of a generalist than some of the other folks who have spent 15 years doing nothing but SEO.

In a way, I think that's been beneficial as the tool we built was what I always wanted as a startup growth marketer trying to grow traffic on a limited budget: it's much more accessible than other tools that might only make sense to professional SEOs.

Online marketing, and particularly growth marketing, has always seemed like the most interesting challenge in startup companies

CW: What made you want to take on building an SEO tool? Was it simply about a gap in the keyword analysis market, or was it more about filling a need in the increasingly competitive industry overall?

MB: I talked with a lot of startups and small businesses about the challenges they faced with their online marketing, and one of the most common scenarios went something like this:

  1. Pick a target keyword that's way too challenging
  2. Learn just enough SEO to be dangerous, start building links in all sorts of unsavory ways
  3. Get penalized by Google and end up worse off than when you started

So we thought: what if we could build an app that could tell people whether or not a keyword was reasonable for them to target? They could avoid wasting time chasing impossible dreams, stay out of trouble with Google, and see results much more quickly.

Since then of course we've added many more features and it's as much how can I rank? and what are my biggest opportunities as it is can I rank, but still the original name stuck!

CanIRank seo tool in action

CW: It still works well as a different way to present the information – feeding in the terms you feel are important, and then getting a checklist of ideas.

CanIRank gives out detail on next steps to take for on-page, off-page & technical SEO aspects – with so much debate on the best way to do things, how did you select the right advice to give? Is it all tied directly to the app’s machine learning?

MB: Yes, the algorithm learns which factors are most influential based upon what's working well for each keyword. This is an important differentiator between us and other software that follows a standard "checklist" approach for every website: if we've learned one thing over the past few years, it's that SEO changes extremely quickly. By the time something becomes generally accepted as a "best practice" and starts getting pushed heavily by all the gurus, it's already on its way to being a penalty trigger.

From directories to reciprocal links to guest blogging, many SEO tactics have tended to follow a similar evolution:
Discovery -> Promotion -> Broader awareness -> Automation and abuse -> Penalty trigger

One or two experts stumble upon something that works, they promote it to help build their brands and expertise, it becomes more widely known including amongst spammers, someone figures out how to automate it or otherwise do it at massive scale, it's now so widely (ab)used by low quality websites that it becomes a penalty trigger.

So we rely on the results to teach us what's working, rather than expert opinion.

 

CW: What’s next in the pipeline for CanIRank? What do you hope the tool will eventually grow into?

MB: Our primary focus right now is on making our Action Recommendations more intelligent and personalized.

Whereas now we can identify a certain issue and recommend some specific actions that will address it, the next step iteration won't just describe the action, but will show you specifically where you can go for your website. For example, if you need to build more Website Strength, we'll be analyzing your competitors' links to determine which ones might represent an opportunity for you.

Lots of actions involve something like looking for industry resource pages, or influential bloggers, or niche communities to participate in. Rather than just describe how to do that we'll go out and find resource pages/ bloggers/ communities/ etc. and analyze them to determine which ones represent the best opportunity for you.

So in this case the AI will be used to answer questions like:

  • Can I get a link on this page?
  • Is it worth the effort for me to get a link on this page?
  • How trusted/ relevant/ authoritative is this page?

And then presenting you with the best opportunities based upon that analysis.

So basically, new applications of our core theme: collect a ton of data, analyze it to determine what's most relevant and actionable for your website, then present just the best stuff to you so you can focus on getting things done!

 

CW: Wow, that sounds like a hugely impressive ideal to reach for. I’m curious, how much does CanIRank’s ability to correlate with Google’s order depend on stability?

For example, has the recent Phantom update meant you’d had to reassess any of your learning? And what would happen if another Panda (the original affected 12% of English queries) was launched?

MB: If you think about it, most search engine updates don't involve new signals, but rather new ways of processing and prioritizing those signals. So some of those shifts we’ll pick up automatically, others we'll pick up second-order effects that still let us reflect the change. Of course, as search engines start to prioritize new signals, like https or mobile friendliness, we'll have to add as many of those things as is feasible into our models.

But as hard we try, we're not Google, and never could be. No one has access to the kind of data they have. We're just trying to make the data that is out there and available as actionable as possible.

The cool thing about SEO is that it's a series of little competitions. In competitions, you don't have to perfect to win, you just have to be better than the other guy. So if (other things being equal, which they're not!) a tool gives you even a slight edge, say increasing your productivity by 5%, that can mean the difference between page 1 and page 2, translating into a 1,000% increase in ROI.

On a side note, that's why it's usually worth it to hire the best SEO you can afford, since the difference between high rankings and low rankings is a lot bigger than the difference in their rates!

We're just trying to make the data that is out there and available as actionable as possible

CW: I love diving deep into keyword topic models and user-led content development, which is one of the reasons I was excited to try CanIRank. The way we analyse keywords with lots of data, their intent as well as relevancy, is becoming hugely important. CanIRank also values understanding what works for a keyword in detail – do you think this is the future of keyword research?

MB: Yes, in any case it's certainly been the biggest change in the past couple years, as the actual keyword string has greatly declined in importance, and the amorphous "topic model" and even more amorphous "intention” have risen. In some ways this has made keyword research a lot easier: you no longer have to analyze every keyword micro-variation (singulars, plurals, sizes, etc.) or try to find a less difficult variant by adding superfluous modifiers or awkward plurals like very cheap iPhones 6+ case

Now the search engines just ignore your silly obscure keywords anyway, so you might as well focus on the real meat keywords, and instead use the extra time to dig deeper into truly understanding what it will take to rank.

We still have some customers who come in with the mindset of wanting to analyze thousands of micro-variations in order to uncover some hidden gem that no one else has thought of. And unfortunately a lot of 1st generation keyword research tools that only look at keyword string occurrence will tell them "yes! very cheap iPhones 6 case is way easier because nobody's targeting that right now". So they waste time adding silly pages to their website, and still don't end up ranking.

 

CW: For me the rise of a topic model makes things easier, as you can concentrate on creating several excellent pieces of content, rather than being asked to develop tens of near-identical Panda fodder. It not only works for SEO, it just build better websites.

Finally, as someone who has been a keen observer of the industry, and has now jumped right into it, what do you think the future holds for SEO and online marketing? Is it data-driven tools working alongside creatively-minded brand building? And what do we need to be doing better?

MB: Well, it's definitely going to be an interesting time! Marketers have experienced this unprecedented explosion of data. Where once we were swimming blind, now we're all ADHD. When it's literally possible to know more about your customers' interests and behavior than previous generations knew about their own spouse, how do you even process that?

I think online marketing right now is still going through the awkward teenager phase, struggling to incorporate all this knowledge, or worse, using it in creepy ways. As it grows up, we have an opportunity to reach what I consider the ultimate pinnacle of marketing: Helpful Marketing. Marketing that informs rather than deceives, and helps you make the best purchasing decision.

Helpful marketing is some future version of FitBit or Apple Watch that can monitor my health metrics and say "Matt, you're starting to get some inflammation in your rotator cuff that could lead to impingement, here are the top rated shoulder specialists in your area. Would you like an appointment?" Or my Tesla monitoring its own performance, automatically identifying any issues and suggesting nearby mechanics or appropriate aftermarket parts.

And perhaps some not-so-distant future version of CanIRank that monitors all of your online marketing metrics and can connect you to the appropriate experts for whatever challenges your site is facing.

So when we're all constantly getting advice from Future Siri/ Google Now, our Tesla, even our refrigerator telling us when we're out of milk, will SEO evolve into helping companies better meet the demands of these billions of new "implicit search queries"? I hope so!

In any case, for marketers it's going to be a great time. Our data processing tools will help connect us to people who have the exact problems our clients are able to solve.

Only helpful and relevant messages will make it through the blockers and filters anyway (that's a hole we dug for ourselves!) Nothing feels better than being able to authentically connect with someone and help them out!


 

And that’s all we’ve got space for!

A huge thanks once again to Matt for chatting with us. I hope you’ll agree it’s been a fascinating insight into the motivation behind creating an SEO tool. We’ll be taking a deeper look at CanIRank in the coming weeks and will be writing up our thoughts on how to use it. If you’d like to find out more about CanIRank for yourself, or jump right in and take a free 30 day trial, head over to canirank.com, or you can find Matt on Twitter.

The post Matt Bentley on SEO tools, keywords & the future appeared first on White.net.