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Why SEOs should be conducting user testing research Posted: 17 Jan 2012 07:07 AM PST 'Build websites for users, not search engines' is the advice continually propounded by insiders at Google. As SEOs, we're used to looking at websites and analysing how they would be viewed by a search engine. In actual fact, though, there's a fairly big overlap between what's helpful for a user and what's helpful for a search engine, and the user and search engine experiences can often mirror each other. That means that it's often worth carrying out user testing research in the initial stages of your SEO project to gain valuable insights into how real visitors view and use your site. User testing isn't just about usability for humans or identifying bugs; parts of your website that are difficult to use can hide potential SEO problems that you may not have spotted. User testing can help shed light on the user behaviour behind the dry metrics you see in Google Analytics, and its benefits in conversion rate optimisation are obvious. It's also worth noting that if your client is taking some convincing that they should make a change to their website for SEO reasons, having concrete evidence from the word of users' mouths might prove more persuasive. User testing research takes people from your website's demographic and gives you the benefit of several fresh pairs of eyes to enable you to see your website (or your client's) as your target audience sees it. Sure, it can only ever be a small sample size, but the insights you can gain from user testing can nevertheless be valuable. Here are just a few of the issues and insights we've uncovered with user testing for some of our clients… High bounce rate High time on site Keywords are friendly to users, not just search engines… Hiding content behind registration So how does one conduct user testing research? We've used http://www.usertesting.com/, which costs $39 per user and allows you to set your target demographic and specific instructions/tasks that you want users to accomplish (e.g. find a particular product or page). You get a video of the user's screen as they navigate your site, and a soundtrack of their voice commenting on what they see. This sort of insight obviously delves deeper than dry metrics, user journeys and even heatmaps, because you get explanations rather than straightforward identification of patterns. Have you conducted user testing research? Did you find it helpful, and did it uncover anything you'd not spotted?
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