As a fan of video games, I often compare real-life scenarios to similar elements in games. These elements offer a parallel way to approach many of the same types of challenges that we face in everyday life in a fun, unique way. After all, real life challenges shouldn’t necessarily be unpleasant; if they can be stimulating and entertaining, productivity will improve, and improved productivity usually translates to higher revenue.
Growing up, the first genre of video games I fell in love with was the RTS (real-time strategy). While RTS games usually pit warring factions against each other with an assortment of units involving infantry, armored vehicles, and air and sea-borne vessels, to me, SEO is actually a lot like an RTS; it even has its own versions of those classes of units. Let’s take a deeper look at why SEO is like an RTS game and how you can leverage this idea to benefit your SEO initiatives.
The battlefield
A basic element of any RTS game is the top-down view of the battlefield. From here, commanders have complete control over their campaign. They can devise a strategy, build a base, get real-time information and updates, upgrade technology, and take tactical control over their units to lead them into battle.
An Excel or Google Doc spreadsheet may not be the first thing that comes to mind when you think about a battlefield, but in essence, isn’t that what your SEO dashboard (or collection thereof) is? Many SEO professionals use dashboards to manage the various components of their SEO campaign(s), including:
- Blog content calendar
- Ranking and traffic monitoring
- Competitor intelligence and monitoring
- Guest post content calendar
- Backlink profile monitoring
- Brand mention and social media monitoring
- Onsite optimization monitoring
Years ago, one of the revelations I had that led to vastly improved success as an RTS gamer was simple; increase my screen resolution so I can see more of the battlefield at a time. This change increased information flow to me, allowing me to react quicker and smarter to enemy threats, more effectively monitor my enemies, and control my units for offensive purposes more efficiently.
I had the same revelation one day when I was working in one my SEO dashboard spreadsheets. I had accidentally decreased the font and cell size of the spreadsheet, bringing more information into view at a time. I immediately started drawing new correlations that I hadn’t previously seen; that’s why this page isn’t ranking well. That’s what my competitor did that caused that page to have so much success in the rankings.
This idea extends beyond simply increasing the viewable area of your dashboards, though. Adding a second and third monitor on which you can constantly access dashboards containing information about the state of an SEO campaign, as well as those of your competitors, can allow you quickly detect opportunities for offensive strategies, weaknesses in competitors’ strategies, and tactical advancements being made by competitors.
It all comes down to this: information is intelligence, and what isn’t measured isn’t managed.
The offensive weaponry
In RTS games, success is usually achieved by destroying your enemies completely, and battles are fought with land, air, and naval units. Things aren’t usually so brutal in the world of SEO, but offensive tactics can and do result in harm to your competitors.
For instance, moving ahead of a key competitor in the search engine rankings for a highly-trafficked search term will not only increase traffic to your website, but also decrease traffic to that competitor’s website. Repeating this across many keywords will result in significantly decreased traffic for your competitors, as you effectively consume more of the fixed “traffic pie” that exists for your niche or industry.
Similarly, while SEO battles aren’t fought with military units, they are fought with different classes of weaponry that can be compared to air, land, and sea: onsite content, inbound links, and social media signals.
Onsite content represents the foundation of any SEO initiative’s arsenal; it provides numerous benefits that strongly impact overall search visibility while supporting each of the other types of weaponry (by helping to acquire inbound links and providing discussion content for social media feeds). Onsite content is like the assortment of land units in an RTS game, and consists of text-based blog posts, press releases, infographics, video, images, responsive design, proper optimization of internal pages, and much more.
Inbound links are like the air force of an SEO campaign. They provide unparalleled power, and whomever wields the most and best of them generally has superiority on the battlefield (i.e. the best rankings and website traffic). However, getting good inbound links is time-consuming and can be expensive.
Social media signals are like the naval force of an SEO campaign; depending on the battlefield, they may not be needed or useful. However, in the right scenario they can be the force that wins the battle. Social signals currently play a significant role in search engine ranking algorithms, though I believe it’s less than that of onsite content or inbound links. Nonetheless, I expect the importance of social media signals to continue to rise, eventually overtaking or matching inbound links in terms of importance in the ranking algorithm.
Developing an SEO strategy in which you think about each of these three pillars of SEO as your offensive weaponry is key to a winning battle plan (and a successful SEO initiative). Each facet should be analyzed, actionable conclusions should be drawn, and tactical plans with clear milestones should be developed.
Just like a good battle plan, your SEO campaign needs careful and strategic thought and execution. Necessary resources should be calculated and acquired, and the campaign should be monitored and managed by a commander with an expert knowledge of the tools and weapons available (ie, an SEO professional), with a mind for strategy and an aptitude for swift tactical execution.
Follow these seven steps to ensure victory:
1. Start with keyword research
Performing good, informed keyword research is like building your base. In an RTS game, without a strong foundation from which to launch your attacks, you won’t win the battle. In the game of SEO, without proper keyword research, all your future efforts could be wasted.
2. SEO-optimize your onsite content
Optimizing your onsite content is like building your base defenses. In an RTS, your defenses are what will allow you to withstand enemy attacks. In the game of SEO, optimizing your content from an SEO-perspective will patch up any weaknesses in your strategy, making you more resilient to holding your rankings as your competitors engage in their campaigns.
3. Set up Google Authorship
Setting up Google Authorship is like enhancing the attack power of your offensive units. When Authorship is set up, your content will show up with visual representation in Google’s search results. Here’s an example:
Aside from the ego-boosting appeal of getting your lovable face on Google’s search results page, this has strategic, ROI-generating impact. Since these search results include images, they stand out from normal ones, drawing the searcher’s eye and resulting in more click-throughs. Every time you get a click, that means someone else didn’t. So, as your SEO campaign benefits, your competitors suffer.
Furthermore, Google Authorship imbues your name with the ability to accrue Author Rank, which is a growing factor in the ranking algorithm. The better your Author Rank, the better your content (that you authored) will rank.
4. Create amazing content for your blog
Creating content for your blog is like building your offensive army. Every great piece of content you create is like dropping another raffle ticket into Google’s hat. The more pages of content you have, the more chances you have to show up in Google’s search results. Furthermore, more content means more linkable assets on your website, and inbound links are the strongest single factor in the ranking algorithm.
Without great content (both on and off your website), your SEO campaign won’t be able to get off the ground. But with plenty of great content, you’ll have the ammunition you need to accrue inbound links, climb the rankings, and steal market share from your competitors.
5. Get your content in front of people who will enjoy it using social media marketing
Social media marketing is a way to augment and support your “army” of content. Content that receives lots of social mentions and shares will perform much better in search results, garner more inbound links, and generate more referral traffic, brand awareness, and website traffic.
6. Start your guest blogging campaign
Your guest blogging campaign is like your special weapon or attack unit. In RTS games, each faction has its own special weapon that the enemy fears. A little later in this article, I’ll discuss one such unit, the Krogoth, from one of my personal favorite RTS games: Total Annihilation (and how that relates to SEO).
In SEO, guest blogging is a difficult, time-consuming, endeavor that requires a ton of patience, expertise, and professionalism. The barrier to entry is high, but if you can pull it off, your competitors will fear you; especially if they aren’t doing it themselves.
Guest blogging is my favorite way to build brand awareness, authority, and credibility. Best of all, it’s a great way for me to share and add value about the things I know about (like SEO, social media, and entrepreneurship). Knowing that I’m adding value to the community makes me look forward to getting out of bed and writing every morning. The referral traffic is great, too!
7. Build your personal brand
Your personal brand is what defines who you are as an individual, and this is important because people like people; not companies. If a personal brand were to be compared to an RTS game, I suppose it could be compared to your playing style. Do you like to rush your opponent quickly before they’ve had time to build their base, or do you prefer to play a long, strategic game?
Your personal brand defines how you interact and connect with not only your community, but also your competitors. Earn the respect of your competitors and you’ll surely earn the respect of your target market. This will result in traffic, leads, and sales.
Time and effort creates value
In most RTS games, the more expensive the unit, the more effective it is in battle. I fondly remember one unit called the Krogoth (from Total Annihilation, my favorite RTS game), which was a massive and devastating offensive unit that required a huge amount of resources and time to build. However, the Krogoth could take down entire armies of enemy units. Just a few of them could march into an enemy base and wreak havoc, severely damaging the enemy if not causing their complete destruction.
In the game of SEO, extremely valuable (often expensive and/or time-consuming) content is like the Krogoth. It can attract lots of high-quality inbound links, referral traffic, and social media buzz. Neil Patel of Quicksprout has mastered this concept and represents a perfect example for how to do it correctly.
Neil invests a great deal of time and money to create and publish extremely valuable eBooks, videos, infographics, and blog posts which have helped establish him as a well-known and successful entrepreneur. Not only has Neil’s personal brand benefited from this distinction, but so have his businesses.
Similarly, SEOmoz specializes in publishing top-notch quality content. They have built their business around the success of this content, using it to build brand awareness, trust, and loyalty, which has helped grow and establish the world’s largest community of SEO professionals, to which they sell their SEO software toolset.
Just like it’s more worthwhile to build a Krogoth than an entire army of smaller units, one extremely awesome and highly-valuable piece of content is better than many low-value ones.
Conclusion
While SEO and RTS gaming may seem totally unrelated at first glance, learning to think like a battlefield commander can mean the difference between a good SEO professional and a masterful one (or a moderately successful SEO campaign vs. a wildly successful one).
I hope this unique look into the similarities of SEO and RTS games gives SEO professionals a new perspective with which to view our young industry; one that will breathe some life into the daily grind while yielding more successful SEO campaigns. Please share your thoughts in the comments below!
Still can't believe there were 0 References to Starcraft or Korea in this post :(
True :)
SEOmoz = Flash of Inbound Marketing. There you go ;D
Sorry about that, Charles! I never played Starcraft (I was a Total Annihilation guy, which came out around the same time). And regarding NKorea, I don't want to get political ;)
I didn't mean NKorea :P I meant the South Koreans taking RTS as their #1 Sport ;)
Ah, that makes sense. I didn't know that, but that's freaking awesome if it's true.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VgfGJ6sPMyoEnjoy :D
Jayson, I loved your comparison. While I usually cringe when I read titles like why is X like Y, you hit the nail on the head for me.
I was an avid RTS gamer as a teenager (AoE, Caesar, etc.) so when I first heard about SEO it was like the ultimate RTS. Thanks for the post, brought back some nice memories.
Thanks for your comment, Nemek! That was my hope; to write a fun post for SEO professionals that ties in some useful information with fun memories of the past. I loved AoE, but I never played Caesar.
Dear Jayson DeMers, Good post. I have also compared SEO activities to Games in many occasions. Genuinely many times I felt SEO like a game. Your comparison of increasing the screen resolution to play a RTS game quickly and decreasing the dashboard view area (with Ctrl+ drag) is awesome.
Before reaching to SEO profession, I was a crazy man in BlogSpot blogs. There I used to reduce the dashboard (bloggger dashboard) to easily customize blog layouts and adding Google adsense in blogs. I remember it.
Your vision in that way is really true and you have described it here very well. But in later life, being a professional SEO, responsibility, competition, risks all are changed.
Thanks for the post, regards
Thanks for your comment, I really appreciate it!
Great post Jayson!! Being consistent at posting great and quality content is an important aspect of SEO for any site especially post Google's Panda and Penguin updates. Social media likes, shares and engagement are almost as important as getting a relevant & a natural link from an authoritative site in the niche.
Love the analogy and was actually just making a very similar reference for website security. In many aspects of building an online business, you need to have a constantly moving strategy to combat a constantly changing battlefield.
Thanks for the input!
Total Annihilation was an epic game!
It sure was! My favorite RTS of all time.
thanks Jason, I love the push here and definitely google authorship is ego boosting for sure and believe it is helping me build my small biz brand...guest blogging is a big black hole for me and I need to begin a plan to get going here...good boost!
Thanks Ginny! Guest blogging is definitely the way to go. You can do it! For a full walkthrough, check out my post here: https://www.audiencebloom.com/2013/04/the-ultimate-step-by-step-guide-to-building-your-business-by-guest-blogging/
Thanks Jayson. Its a very helpful post!
Content is King! and will remain...
On point 6 - Guest blogging campaign - Agreed! This is an amazing technique. But honestly and unfortunately, very few people in the industry are moving in the right direction. Most people put their posts on expired domains with PR that use a fancy theme and accept almost every second article!
It's very important to check the quality, authority, relevance and audience of the blog you are posting your article to..
Totally agreed. Good points!
I found this post to be very informative, especially for someone who is new to SEO. As a gamer I found the analogy extremely helpful and entertaining.
Nice Post Jayson it is really, good analogy. It's hard to break this stuff down in meaningful/useful ways sometimes, but you've done it aptly here.
I love the analogy Jayson! As a former hardcore gamer I can both appreciate the examples and agree with what you are saying. When I first started doing PPC years ago I always compared it to a turn based strategy game like Sid Meyers Civilization. Make the most out of your turn for the day (pull levers, optimize bids, etc.) and the next day you had a new set of things to optimize.
Much like in AdWords, the Artificial Intelligence built into the game were never quite as good as what you could do on your own. You could crush it if you knew the best way to get the most out of your system. Maybe I should write that post about PPC/Turned Based Strategy!
I agreed! what have you said is so true. #SEORTSGAME
Good way to sum it up, it keeps us playing the 'game' day in, day out, just like RTS ;)
I conceive your thinking; I also enjoy to play the game most of the time beside to do seo.
Hi Jayson,
You chose a perfect example for comparing seo. I love RTS games. And without a strategy we can't chase our goal or complete our mission as same we should work with a strategy in Seo to get better results. And recently i am playing Project IGI-2. I have completed its first version.
As a former esports reporter I love this analogy. Our office has a fair number of gamers in it but not many play RTS, it may just be a generational thing. However, if anyone out there plays SC2 I'm a bronze league veteran with an average APM of about 70..
Fortunately, I find SEO easier than professional SC2 (my dream job) but the mindset comes in useful more often than not.
Hi Jayson,
Yes these all the factors play a great role in SEO. One thing i just need to ask you here that if we do not have any internal blog link to my website. And we are not going to add any kind of new content through the blog.So,
Can we get keywords on top in SERPs without any blog posting?Is blog posting play major part for the results??
Thanks
waiting for your reply.
Nice post jayson your idea of taking SEO as a real-time strategy is very good and interesting.
As online gamer and SEO at the same time I never thought I could find such amazing and very interesting post like you do Jayson. I've been reading different kinds of SEO blogs from different guru's most of the time to gather as much information as possible but they all do the same thing - Contents are written in an obviously SEO way = Boring! I love the analogy very smart and very nicely done good job!
... and freelancers are from rpg:)
Great job for publishing such a beneficial article. Your blog information isn’t only useful but it is additionally creative with high content too. Thanks..
Brawler, Big Bertha, inbound marketing, Krogoth and SEO. All my favourite things in one place. Love it.
Great read and Analogy Jayson. I used to love strategy games especially RTS such as world of warcraft the earlier versions of it and age of empires.
It's great to get that helicopter view of your campaigns to pursue your plan of attack and how you defend your land if you like.
Great Analogy on this as well, amazing viewpoint :) Kinda makes a lot more sense this way. Although the graphics have improved a lot haha...
Hah, great post, especially the Land/Air/Navy analogy. Too often in SEO you see commanders sitting on derelict warships in the middle of the desert.
No, I don't want to follow the trash compactor company on Twitter.
I totally agree that game theory has a lot to teach SEOs. In this analogy, who's your opponent: the comp set or the algorithm?
gg, really fun to read.
I often do it myself, compare life to games :)
You are right! SEO is a a strategic game which rules you either follow or loose. I had fun reading your post! Thanks
Glad to hear it!
Insufficient vespene gas ...
No, really, good analogy. It's hard to break this stuff down in meaningful/useful ways sometimes, but you've done it aptly here. Props.
Thanks very much, Pat! I'm glad you liked it =)
Inbound links are like the air force of an SEO campaign - amazing!
Your pal,
chenzo
Thanks Chenzo!
Ha awesome article. I have always told people I think the reason I can handle the hectic / ever changing SEO biz is because growing up I played warcraft (the original..), Age of empires, and sim city. I LOVE complex games where you have to be mindful of many things and manage accordingly. I will be sharing this article with my network Jayson!
I totally agree, Phil. I grew up playing SimCity, a bunch of RTS games, and have always LOVED strategy games. SEO really fits my brain wiring for this reason!
This is really nice post Jayson for all SEO Professionals.. I like the way you compare SEO with Video Games. :/ I am going to follow this :)
Is there any SEO Management Tool which is totally Free?
Not that I know of... SEO is not generally free or even cheap ;)
Hi Jayson
Interesting Post,Although I'm not RTS gamer but You mentioned all points very clearly specially when it comes to your personal brand , Because Our blogging(Guest blogging) Totally dependent on it, When our playing style will be poor then definitely we'll be kick out by our competitors, So we should more concentrate on it, For the rest post you did a great job. Thanks for this.
Abeerah
Thanks Abeerah!
Huh! Very nice post, Jayson! The 1st screenshot reminded me of the very first Star Craft game *nastalgic*
P.S. special thanks for "Sendible" social management tools suggestion - haven.t known about it yet. Sounds interesting.
No problem! I really like Sendible, glad I was able to help. I never played Starcraft, but I heard from many people how great it was.
Ah... as an RTS fanatic (and boardgames fan in a era far far away) I've really enjoyed your post Jayson, but with a big but referred to this assumption of yours:
Furthermore, Google Authorship imbues your name with the ability to accrue Author Rank, which is a growing factor in the ranking algorithm.
Right now there is no proof that Author Rank is a growing factor in the algorithm (hence, the post by Neil Patel, which is a good post, is all built over a false premise).
More over, there is no proof that the Agent Rank patent principle are even considered right now by Google in how it shapes the SERPs.
So, I would simply talk about Authorship and the advantage it may lead to, but not create an "big expectations bubble" about Author Rank now, even though it possibly (and hopefully) will become part of the set of Graphs that Google will use
If you need proof that author rank is a growing factor in the algorithm, do 100 searches on high traffic keywords. See how many times you see an author image on the home page. And, click through to pages 2-5. You will see them even more there. Authorship matters and is counted in the algorithm at some level. You CANNOT argue that. Are you one of those guys that waits until Matt Cutts has said it before you believe it is considered in Google's algo? Look at Google's patents as well. Author rank is powerful for helping you rank.
Ah! If you will give me data, a large scale study with correlation indicators and not simply cite me how many time you see a snippet with the authorship snippet, I will consider that agent rank is used already. What kind of searches gave you those results? what niche (there a niches where rel=author" is barely used)? were those SPYW personalized results or not?
I repeat, I am quite sure that author rank (and "publisher rank") will play a role, especially as a trust factor, which will have a correlation with good rankings (I wrote about this in a Seomoz post in 2011), but right now I still believe that we should talk of authorship because the real % of use of rel="author" is still to small in niches other than tech to offer reliable data for the Google algorithm.
I could be wrong as no official studies have been done, and no I haven't done one, but I don't think that is necessary. To me it seems so obvious. It helps you rank at some level and definitely on some search terms more than others. Seems to be on lots of QDF/News searches. To your point about not having reliable data because so few use it: Just because it is not used by many does not mean that Google can't give the few people using it more ranking power.
Great correlations. I'm starting to build my Krogoths now....
Love it! Build lots of them and rule the world!
Wonderful post. Great checklist of to-do items.
Thanks very much, Alan!
I guess I should do the authorship stuff more. Thanks for your ideas.
No problem! Wishing you best of luck.
That's an interesting way of looking at SEO - maybe that's why I enjoy the job so much.
Thanks Christina!
Big fan of RTS and big fan of SEO - makes this an interesting read to me.
Once you have the data and you have the weaponry, sometimes the best strategy is just to go out and start attacking, even if you don't feel ready. When you do play RTS, who's more difficult to beat? The guys who attack you with sustained effort early in the game or those who attack you all at once later on? It really depends, right? But what if you can send that sustained effort? If it's a poor effort, you fail. If it's a GOOD sustained effort early on, you will win.
Maybe the same for us in marketing - enough trying to build a tank. Just go on the offensive as soon as your attack can even remotely be effective. Sustain it - and win. :)
Love the analogy, Matt! As an RTS player, I'm usually a quick rusher; I like to overwhelm my opponents with a constant attack from early on that they can't defend, and really put their micromanagement skills to the test. I guess in SEO, though, you have you be more of a long-term player; there really is no easy quick win.
I think it depends on your gameplan and your resources. A site like SEL or SEW almost always has "the day's news" in SEO - such as Cutts talking about patents yesterday. They're so fast on that stuff it becomes sort of "what's the point" for the rest of us to write about it. Their front lines are rushing but while we're overwhelmed, they're also building the mega structures to dominate later on. With thousands and thousands of posts, they "control" the news AND the long term strategy.
It's actually very interesting to think about SEO in terms of RTS - makes me very much think about my own plans and how ineffective they will be at doing some of the stuff I want them to do. It's a great analogy ... but now I need to figure out how to rush without spreading myself too thin. Always the way, isn't it? ;-)
I used to draw comparisons to WoW (many years ago.) Ranking up in WoW is like increasing your search rankings. Getting better gear, is like getting better content which allows you to battle higher level competitors. And the higher you rank, the more money you could make.
Love it, David! WoW definitely has comparisons to SEO as well.
I find having experience in video games make understanding the comparison a lot easier. Great post! Love the comparison.
Thanks Tommy!
So link spamming = 4-gating? ;D
Funny, RTS and SEO.. aka 80% of my online presence driven into one written post.
Haha, unfortunately, 99% of my online presence is now SEO, but I wish it was the other way around... no time to play RTS games anymore! Hopefully I can change that eventually...
I am just surprised it took this long for me to find a blog here that related seo to video games. Great post - do you see a sequel to this blog in the future?
Do a Google search, there are a couple of good ones worth a read.
I already have some ideas for a sequel to this post, but it'll probably be months down the line. Thanks for your thoughts!
Jayson, thanks for the great post. I presume it's largely generational, but the majority of our in-house team is made up of gamers; maybe it's just that the skill-sets overlap so well. Intense micro-management paired with timing the development of additional units and monitoring the flow of resources...plus, you know, explosions.
Have to say I agree with Charles though, needs more StarCraft love. Can easily draw the parrellels between an all-in/cheese strat with grey/black hat that may get results but isn't sustainable and isn't anything to build a consistent plan around.
Back to working on my APM if I'm ever getting out of Bronze league.
I totally agree, Ryan -- the skill sets are very similar between RTS games and SEO, just as you stated. Also, I love your reference to, you know, explosions ;)
As for StarCraft, I never played it, so I guess I missed out. But I played just about every other RTS!