[Estimated read time: 7 minutes]
SEO is changing. We can no longer rely on keyword targeting alone to optimize our content. Whether we should focus on topics or keywords is a debate in progress. But figuring out which topics can influence the SERP is, at best, a manual process; at worst, it's a timesuck that can take hours out of your day.
TL;DR
Today we've launched a new feature in Moz Pro that can help you make sense of how search engines understand topics and phrases.
You can use this data to build deeper content, improve your topical authority, find keyword ideas, and generally better understand the SERP. It uses machine learning and topic modeling to mine related topics from the SERPs.
We see this as another step on the journey to help marketers better understand the complex world of SEO in 2016. As of this moment, Moz Pro is one of the only places you can get this kind of data.
Can't wait to dive in? Already an avid Moz Pro user? Head to the Keyword Rankings section of any campaign and get started. And if you're not a Moz Pro subscriber, you can satisfy your curiosity with a free trial, too:
Pandas, Hummingbirds, and the relationship between keywords and pages
We've all noticed that SEO has become a lot more complex in the last few years. When Google started to figure out the meaning of words and phrases, simple keyword usage alone no longer guaranteed us results. Then Hummingbird spread its wings, and now in some cases, pages in the SERP don’t contain the keyword at all. Utter chaos, right?
Panda made sure we put effort and research into our content. And while it’s still a good idea to ensure your target keywords appear in key parts of your page, the simple on-page optimization of the past can no longer move the rankings needle on its own.
Related Topics is a new feature in Moz Pro that helps you understand how phrases and topics influence the SERP, allowing you to broaden your content and build out pages instead of devoting yourself to time-consuming (and let’s be real, sort of boring) research. As of today, Moz Pro is one of the few places you can get this kind of data.
That all sounds well and good. But how do we get insight into how Google understands the relationship between topics? Well, it turns out they give us a handy clue: the SERP itself.
Related Topics examines all of the pages that rank in the top 20 for a given keyword. Using machine learning and topic modeling, it figures out which unique sets of terms and phrases those pages include. It then removes the topics that your page already talks about and presents the resulting list, along with the ranking URLs. Armed with this mighty list, you can now understand which topics have influence in the SERP and decide whether to integrate these into your own pages and content. It lives within the Page Optimization feature in Moz Pro, which you can now get to by clicking the "Optimize" next to any keyword in the ranking table.
While it’s impossible to say for sure that including topics in your page will result in a higher ranking (that ol’ correlation versus causation thing), we do know that pages that rank well are already including these topics in their content. If you’re looking to diversify and broaden your page’s subject coverage to try and win more authority, Related Topics is the place to start. Bonus points: it’s also quite likely that including coverage of these topics will improve the user’s experience of your content.
How can I use this data to get ahead?
1. Experiment with including different topics and content to build authority
Adding topically similar content to your page can help Google understand what that page is about, establishing yourself as an authority on those topics.
I'm a fan of Tim Ferris and his productivity hack blog, fourhourworkweek.com. Let’s take this article on speed reading. Looks like the page is optimized pretty well for the target keyword and has a decent link profile and PA. Now, let’s look at some other topics that have influence on the SERP.
Here I can see a couple of variations I might want to play around with, but a couple in particular catch my eye. I notice the topic “reading comprehension” seems influential (it's included in 3 of the top 5 ranking pages), and it’s not syntactically related — this is a topic I might not have discovered manually by looking at variations of the target keyword. I also see “subvocalization” being influential. This is a term I might not be familiar with, but using Related Topics, I can drill into the actual URLs mentioning that topic, learn about it, and get some inspiration for how I could build out my content to include it.
This is a particularly interesting case, as “speed reading” has a somewhat reasonable search volume of 9,900 (from Keyword Planner). In contrast, “reading comprehension” has a search volume of 18,100. If I can integrate it well, I have an opportunity to broaden my audience.
2) Avoid thin content and go deeper
You’ve got to pacify the Panda. If you’re looking for ways to expand on thin content, go deeper or broader on an existing page, or convert shorter content to long-form, using Related Topics suggestions can give you inspiration for subject-matter expansion. Multiple studies have shown that deeper and more topically relevant content correlates with better ranking performance.
In the example below, I have a page about Product Management Events, if I wanted to make it broader I might do a deep dive on the subject of Product Design, or even talk about some of the branded topics that were discovered.
3) Save time on topical, competitive, and SERP research
This can be especially helpful when you’re wearing many hats, and tackling a new domain you're not as familiar with. Using Related Topics — and especially researching the ranking pages they appear on — can give you a head start for topic-appropriate language to use, or inspiration for areas to research.
At Moz, we all think we're experts on the housing market since we watched "The Big Short." But challenge us to write about the more technical terms and we might struggle! Here's another example using a US real estate blog recommended by our own in-house real estate guru Tim Ellis.
Let’s say we want to understand a bit more about the SERP for the keyword "real estate forecast," and perform some industry research on terminology. Here are some topics that have influence:
I notice there are a few technical terms in here that I'm not familiar with, and if I want to learn more I can jump right into the ranking URLs that contain the topic and research them instead of trying to manually pull them out of the SERP.
4) Keyword Ideas
The list of topical suggestions also double as suggestions for other keywords to target, or as seed keywords for keyword research (we have some new keyword research tools coming very soon).
How does it actually work? (Tech jargon alert!)
Wondering how Related Topics knows just which content is on the page? Well, we use Moz’s proprietary Context API, which also powers other tools around here (such as Moz Content). Here are a few words from Dr. Matt Peters (Moz’s Chief Data Scientist) on how it works:
Moz's topic modeling algorithm extracts relevant keyword phrases from English language web pages. We use natural language processing algorithms to analyze the page content and create a list of candidate topics. Then, a machine learning model assigns each candidate phrase a relevance score and ranks them from most-to-least relevant. The relevance score is a combination of traditional information retrieval techniques like term frequency–inverse document frequency (TF-IDF) and language modeling, syntactic and semantic signals such as part of speech tags, and graph-based features. The resulting lists of highly relevant topics and relevance scores are used in both Moz Pro and Moz Content.
As mentioned above, Related Topics takes the top 20 ranking pages on the SERP, extracts topics from them using the Context API, and then applies a series of filters and rules to show topics that we think are relevant. We exclude topics we find on any URLs that you rank with for the keyword. During feature development, we were faced with a choice: show topics that occur more frequently, but show less of them; or show more topics with varying ranges of frequency. We decided that our customers prefer having more data, and often we find gems near the bottom of the list. For this reason we went with the “more data” option. You might find the odd strange suggestion in there, but we think that’s outweighed by having more data to choose from.
See it in action!
Want to take it for a spin? If you're already a Moz Pro subscriber (hey, pal!), head to your Keyword Rankings section in any Moz Pro campaign and hit the "Optimize Keyword" button.
Curious but not ready to commit? Check it out with a 30-day free trial:
As always, we want your feedback / comments / experiences in the comments below!
Google is changing itself everyday! It will come a day where all the thing you're alooking for it will appear in the search bar without typing any word!!
It's an interesting post! Thanks Jon for sharing!
Thank you! I would love to get your feedback when you check it out!
Jon I think the tool would make a lot of things easier and especially if ol’ correlation versus causation is being effectively used ;) I have been taking similar approach on few of my projects manually and have seen great results.
That is great! Like all techniques there is definitely some expertise required to apply the data, hopefully this feature gives marketers a core set of data to start from.
Hey Jon,
Just noticed the change in SERP, I was expecting a boost but rather 2 pages for the exact match search ;) whats your take on that? and mind you that was fast within 2 week of publish..... (March 24 2016)...Just wanted to add I been thinking alot what maybe intended here is almost what maybe is negative i.e. we have the right and master piece however one that is coming up is also good we can vouch for it but they are not the best as they are semantically connected to something similar and related but not exactly 100% this. :) I must say I have to watch this for few months but these are my thoughts.
Thanks
The new feature of studying different topics and semantic correlation to build content and gain authority it´s great. I'm not a Moz Pro subscriber, but I'm going a try
Great! Let us know how you get on!
Talk about taking on page to the next level. Great feature - can't wait to sink my teeth into it.
are you a Moz Pro customer? Check it out - we would love to hear your feedback!
Thanks for posting such an awesome article
Now that is really really cool! I'm definitely going to dig in and have a play around. Thanks for keeping things updated guys.
thansk for the feedback!
Thanks for your post. I think that on-page SEO is perhaps the most vital process for not only better rankings but also a perfect internet marketing campaign. Any campaign should start from the website; thus, if your site isn't optimized for search engines and users, the chances for success seem to be minimized.
Thank you! Let us know how you get on!
I'm not a mozpro customer but now i want to have a try with mozpro.will join with you soon. Thank jon for this great post
please let us know how you get on!
Thank You for sharing ,This site is very helpful for me.
thank you!
Thanks for writing this!! From the beginning of this (2016) year i have read number of articles stating that SEO is changed, changing, No value of PR, PA,DA blah blah. My question is simple. What should one do if he wants good genuine visitors and rankings on Google for new website(SAFE SEO). ( No matter of time, happy to spend week, months, years).
Hello! Are you a Moz Pro member? (if not a 30-day trial is free - https://moz.com/checkout/freetrial)
This would be a perfect type of question to post at https://moz.com/community/q - available to all Moz Pro members.
Thanks
I'd love for it to be something we could do when doing keyword research in Moz instead of only pages that a project currently ranks for. Having to have it as a keyword for which you already rank adds a layer of annoyance, especially if you're trying to build out new pages from scratch.
Hi Colin, could you elaborate? I am not sure what you mean but would love to hear more.
I have noticed so many bloggers who don't know A B C of SEO and optimization are Ranked well. Having best knowledge and optimizing pages pages not getting good organic visits. Moreover, now a days Google changes their trends and modify algorithm and improving a lot. In this case, we can't spend more and more time only on optimizing instead, people started focus fifty fifty concepts. I also think that the fifty fifty concepts works very well.
Hi Jon, did the location of this feature change? I have Moz Pro but can't find it. Thanks!
yep same place! Let me know if you are still having issues!
Great feature addition - and awesome to see a detailed post around it. Thanks. Such a big drive towards Intent!
Interesting article, every day I learn more new things in this blog, I hope to follow your concerns and take into account all the knowledge put into this article, thank you very much
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Hi there! This is the sort of question that is much more likely to get a response in our Q&A forum. I recommend asking there. :)
Love the new tool, but one thing to improve would be to remove the "fewer than 100 links" recommendation. It's quite common nowadays for Ecom sites to have more than 100 links/page, and Matt Cutts confirmed the 100 links per page guideline was no longer in effect as long ago as 2013, so it seems a bit strange that Moz would still recommend this.
Source: https://searchengineland.com/googles-matt-cutts-we-...
I trust that a website with brilliant content may do great, eventually with or without SEO. A website with poor content won’t survive with or without SEO while a website with good one may become even better with SEO! You should start with Original Content. That means no copies or re-writes of articles is acceptable! Then, content should be published on your website first, even though it’s your own content. In case you have already published it on other sites, it’s not good for your site.
I would like the design of the web had more scoring, at least in my industry I see no responsive websites that punctuate still very high and is very discouraging for me :(
Interesting, how would you see that working?
Great blog. I am starting my SEO journey and I have the feeling that it's going to be a long road but made easier with well written articles like this. Many thanks for all the tips.
Brilliant!! I was delighted to know this functionality MOZ tool , hopefully take advantage shortly ... Thanks !!!
Great! Check it out and let us know what you think
Cool new feature, with the increasing importance of semantic search, data like this will become invaluable. Great to see it added as a part of Moz Pro with no additional costs.
We are excited too - let us know what you think when you check it out!
Yes - we feel this is an important step forward. Please let us know how you get on with it!
Ooh, I'm a big fan of the Keyword Rankings tracker but rarely ever use the Page Optimization tool as its suggestions always seemed quite obvious. Related Topics I feel was a much needed feature that will probably have me using Page Optimization more as an extension of Rankings.
Let us know how you get on and if you have any feedback!
Thast another interesting one and yet important tool in the first quarter of 2016. Hope to have more reliable and useable tool in upcoming months.
Good work Team Moz.
We have some more stuff in the works :) Thank you!
The idea of studying different topics and content to build authority it´s great.
A few days ago I finished my trial period of 30 days and I worked with it, keyword opportunity, rank tracker and keyword difficulty.
Recommend check it moz pro to all users looking for a complete tool for analyzing opportunities , the combination of keyword difficulty with rank tracker lets you analyze the competition to enter the top10 in google for that keyword, with rank tracker we can see if the word can be optimized to improve in that numerical ranking from 1-100 john shows us in the post.
Sorry to hear you didn't continue your trial! I would love to hear what didn't quite work for you? [email protected]
I've been waiting for this feature and it's great that we have it in Moz Pro.
I added a new keyword to the campaign but it seems like I have to wait 5-6 days for the new ranking report to be able to see the related topics report. How frequently do you update the related topics list? The top 20 can change from week to week.
Hey Gyorgy! The Related Topics list is refreshed every 24 hours, so it will always be bang up to date. Let us know how you get on with it!
Moz Pro saves my enough time while making SERP research and competition. Actually its all assumptions of us based on experiments and now I realize that SERP is basically depends on content and the search query. Search query doesn't mean to keyword, it is all the phrases that are frequently asket by many.
That is exactly why we built this - we feel page optimization needs to go deeper. Please try it out and let us know how you get on - we would love to hear feedback!
Interesting tool, this would be really helpful for our real estate portal. Whenever my content team covers a new story, they always ask me to find out related topics for them. I am sure this tool is going to save a lot of research time.
Great! Let u know how you get on when you try it!
Interesting addition. I asked Rand for something like this a year or two ago, after Google released Hummingbird.
Go Moz!!! And thank you Rand and the rest of the crew for staying on the cutting edge of SEO software in light of Google changes.
Great stuff. We are excited too! Let us know how you get along with it!
wow! Interesting post for on page optimization. I always admiring moz pro tool because it always add new thing in it and that really help for all SEO's and now it add this new feature. Also I thankful for jon.white for teaching us new thing in SEO.
Thank you! Let us know how you get on
Nice and very informative post. However i have never tried MOZ pro but will sure try it out.
Please let us know how you get on! We would love to hear your feedback!
After Read this content i should go with moz pro. I do not use pro version in past but now that is time to go with mozpro.
Thanks Dear
Great! Let us know how you get on
Yo veo que si que esta cambiando pero defiendo que el diseño de una pagina debiria de contar mas que lo que cuenta actualmente, todo no es contenido y palabras claves se deberia de puntuar el diseño la pagina que este mas clara y mas completa en todo en contenido y en diseño, bajo mi humilde punto de vista.
Yo no hablo español , pero me voy a encontrar a alguien que lo hace para que pueda responder a su comentario .
Hi
I have a trial and I can´t find where this new function, could you mind indicate it to me?
Thanks!!
ok, I got it, I forgot that it´s only appear in a campaing ;)
You find it ok now? There is a video in the blog post that should help
This new feature seems very powerful. I haven't a Pro account, but we are wondering if we must have it. It seems that the Moz tools are every day more valuable to improve your SEO. I think we going to try it
We have a 30-day free trial so you get to try it out and see if it works for you. We would love to hear your feedback
Interesting article but the music in the video is distracting. No doubt Moz Pro is a good product but those of us on a budget have to pick and choose where we spend those dollars. The competitin is fierce with SEO tools.
Which tools do you currently use?
Hey, That's an interesting post.. I guess i need to buy Moz Pro .. i will again ask my company to go for Moz pro..
Please let us know how you get on! We would love to hear your feedback!