How to Rank in 2018
How to Rank in 2018
It's hard enough as it
is to explain to non-SEOs how to rank a webpage. In an increasingly complicated
field, to do well you've got to have a good handle on a wide variety of
detailed subjects. This edition of Whiteboard Friday covers a nine-point checklist
of the major items you've got to cross off to rank in the new year — and maybe
get some hints on how to explain it to others, too.
Video Transcription
we know that many of you sometimes wonder, "Gosh, it feels
overwhelming to try and explain to someone outside the SEO profession how to
get a web page ranked." Well, you know what?
There is a ton of detail
to ranking in the SEO world, to try and rank in Google's results. But when we
pull out, when we go broad, I think that just a few items, in fact just the
nine we've got here can basically take you through the majority of what's
required to rank in the year ahead. Dallas
SEO Consultant
Use Crawl able, accessible
URL
So we want Googlebot's
spiders to be able to come to this page, to understand the content that's on
there in a text readable format, to understand images and visuals or video or
embeds or anything else that you've got on the page in a way that they are
going to be able to put into their web index. That is crucial. Without it, none
of the rest of this stuff even matters.
Keyword research
We need to know and to uncover the words and phrases that
searchers are actually using to solve or to get answers to the problem that
they are having in your world. Those should be problems that your organization,
your website is actually working to solve, that your content will help them to
solve.
What you want here is a primary keyword and hopefully a set of
related secondary keywords that share the searcher's intent. So the intent
behind of all of these terms and phrases should be the same so that the same
content can serve it. When you do that, we now have a primary and a secondary
set of keywords that we can target in our optimization efforts. Dallas
SEO Consultant
Investigate the
SERP to find what Google believes to be relevant to the keywords’ searches
I want you to do some
SERP investigation, meaning perform a search query in Google, see what comes
back to you, and then figure out from there what Google believes to be relevant
to the keywords searches. What does Google think is the content that will answer
this searcher's query? You're trying to figure out intent, the type of content
that's required, and whatever missing pieces might be there. If you can find
holes where, hey, no one is serving this, but I know that people want the
answer to it, you might be able to fill that gap and take over that ranking
position.
Create most
credible, amplifiable team
There are three elements
here. First, we want an actually credible, worthy of amplification person or
persons to create the content. Why is that? Well, because if we do that, we
make amplification, we make link building, we make social sharing way more likely
to happen, and our content becomes more credible, both in the eyes of searchers
and visitors as well as in Google's eyes too. So to the degree that that is
possible, I would certainly urge you to do it.
Craft a compelling
title, meta description.
Google still does use
the meta description quite frequently. I know it seems like sometimes they
don't. But, in fact, there's a high percent of the time when the actual meta
description from the page is used. There's an even higher percentage where the
title is used. The URL, while Google sometimes truncates those, also used in
the snippet as well as other elements. We'll talk about schema and other kinds
of markup later on. But the snippet is something that is crucial to your SEO
efforts, because that determines how it displays in the search result. How
Google displays your result determines whether people want to click on your
listing or someone else's. The snippet is your opportunity to say, "Come
click me instead of those other guys."
Intelligently employ
those primary, secondary, and related keywords
Related keywords meaning
those that are semantically connected that Google is going to view as critical
to proving to them that your content is relevant to the searcher's query — in
the page's text content. Why am I saying text content here? Because if you put
it purely in visuals or in video or some other embeddable format that Google
can't necessarily easily parse out, they might not count it. They might not
treat it as that's actually content on the page, and you need to prove to
Google that you have the relevant keywords on the page. Dallas
SEO Consultant
use rich snippets and
schema markup
This is not possible for
everyone. But in some cases, in the case that you're getting into Google news,
or in the case that you're in the recipe world and you can get visuals and
images, or in the case where you have a featured snippet opportunity and you
can get the visual for that featured snippet along with that credit, or in the
case where you can get rich snippets around travel or around flights, other
verticals that schema is supporting right now, well, that's great. You should
take advantage of those opportunities.
Optimize the page to
load fast
look great from a
visual, UI perspective and look great from a user experience perspective,
letting someone go all the way through and accomplish their task in an easy,
fulfilling way on every device, at every speed, and make it secure too.
Security critically important. HTTPS is not the only thing, but it is a big
part of what Google cares about right now, and HTTPS was a big focus in 2016
and 2017. It will certainly continue to be a focus for Google in 2018. Dallas
SEO Consultant

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