This post is a part of the "Starting Over" series, the story of starting a blog (MinimalTalent.com) from scratch. See the end of the post for links to the rest of the series.
In parts one and two, I showed how I got my blog off the ground, indexed by Google, and just starting to rank. Now, it's time to dive in and sand off any rough edges, before they cause future SEO injuries.
(1) Spot-check the SERPs
Marketing automation tools are great, but sometimes we get so enamored with those tools that we forget they only offer a window into the big picture. Early in a site's life, I'm a big believer in actually typing in searches and seeing how your results look in the wild. The first time I started ranking for the phrase "minimal talent," it looked something like this:
On the bright side, the site was getting picked up on Google+ (thanks, Jeremy!). Unfortunately, Google was creating a snippet from my first blog post. Why? Well, I hadn't actually specified a Meta description. Sometimes, even the professionals forget the basics. Once I fixed the problem, I kept watching and eventually saw this:
There's a wealth of information in this one image. I learned that Google was using my Meta description, but that it might be a bit long (note the odd jump to mid-sentence). I learned that Google was picking my authorship attribution and displaying my profile picture. I learned that my title wasn't getting cut off. I learned all of this by just opening my eyes and looking.
(2) Google Webmaster Tools
Ok, now that we've at least made a few sanity checks with our own eyes, let's see what the tools have to say. First, is Google indexing the site the way we'd like them to? Since I set up an XML sitemap, I can just go to "Crawl > Sitemaps", and see something like this:
I've submitted 8 pages, and all 8 were indexed – so far, so good. Of course, the "indexed" count on this page only tells you which of the URLs in your sitemaps have been indexed. To get a glimpse at Google's full index stats for your site, go to "Google Index > Index Status":
The total count is right in the ballpark of my sitemap count, which, at least in my case, is good. Of course, Google didn't index any pages before the site existed, so the graph really isn't that useful. Over time, though, it can show you any unusual trends.
Keep in mind that, for large sites, you can't expect every single page to be indexed, and that's often not even desirable. The more you break up your sitemaps, the more you'll be able to spot problems. If you see your total index count really take off, or you know it's just way too large (your site has 500 pages, and Google has indexed 25,000), then this could be a sign of runaway URL parameters and duplicate content.
Finally, let's make sure I don't have any obvious crawl errors. Go to "Crawl > Crawl Errors" and you should see an overview like this:
I've got two "Not found" (404) errors, which really isn't bad at all. I'm a bit concerned that my initial WordPress "Hello World" post is popping up, so let's click on that:
The "Error details" aren't particularly useful here, so I'll go straight to "Linked from" and can see that the bad URL was on the page itself (a non-issue) and the home-page. Looking at the home-page source code, this link is now gone. So, Google just crawled the site a bit too early, and this problem should take care of itself.
(3) Moz Analytics
While Google Webmaster Tools has a lot of useful information, there can be pitfalls to getting the story from just one point-of-view (especially when it's Google's). Let's look for any crawl issues in Moz Analytics, starting with "Search > Crawl Diagnostics". Toward the bottom of the page, I get this summary:
Problems are sorted (left-to-right) from high priority to low priority, but my job this time around is pretty easy. I have 38 occurrences of one error, "Missing Meta Description Tag." This is problematic not just because of the error, but because I really don't expect to have 38 pages of the site crawled. So. Let's drill down and look at a few sample pages…
A quick spot-check of the site reveals that these pages do not, in fact, have custom Meta descriptions. While this isn't mission critical just yet, I should add them soon for my main pages.
As for the 38 crawled pages, it looks as if Moz Analytics is crawling my comment/reply pages. Looking at the source code, these pages have two Meta Robots directives and a rel=canonical tag in place, which is probably giving the crawlers some grief. It's probably not a big issue, but let's make sure that Google isn't indexing these pages, by using the "site:" operator with "inurl:" on the comment/reply URL parameter. Entering the following into Google…
site:minimaltalent.com inurl:replytocom
…results in no documents found. So, at this point, it looks like Moz is being a little overprotective. It may be worth removing either the canonical or Meta Robots down the line, to make sure I'm sending Google clear signals.
Now, let's look at what really matters – have my rankings improved? Or, at the very least, are they stable?
It's looking good. I took the top spot for my brand name ("minimal talent"), kept the #1 spot for my tagline, and have even moved into the top 10 for "minimalism 101". I don't expect to be ranking for "minimalism" or "yahoo logo" any time soon – these are stretch goals at best. What's important is to see gradual progress, even if that progress isn't always as fast as you'd like.
(4) Google Analytics
Are these rankings helps my traffic? Honestly, only a tiny bit. Here's the graph of sessions for the first couple of months:
It's not a bad graph, as graphs go, but the spikes correspond with blog posts and almost entirely with traffic from social media (at this point, primarily Twitter). The small increase in traffic between posts toward the right side of the graph is a good sign, and some of that is coming from Google.
I think this graph really illustrates the dilemma of modern SEO. You aren't going to get search exposure without first building traffic and interest somehow. For me, social is one obvious tool, but for the first few months of a project that means a sustained effort on an established network. For someone with no network at all, the build-up is going to take even longer.
Recapping Parts 1-3
I hope this short series has at least given you some insight into getting started and how the pieces can all come together. I hope it's also not entirely bad news – ranking in 2014 isn't easy, but it can be done, and getting the basics right does still matter quite a bit.
We're going to put this series on hold until something interesting happens to Minimal Talent that's worth talking about. If anyone has specific questions about getting started or about the site's successes or failures so far, please chime in.
Read the full series
Use the links below to explore the entire "Starting Over" series:
- Part 1 – Pre-launch
- Part 2 – Launch
- Part 3 – Optimize
Hi Dr Pete
Really enjoying the series. At this stage my question would be regarding the initial traffic from each post. You're very well connected in social media and in the industry. What percentage of visits to date would you say have come via the network that you already have in place? If we took that network out of the equation, and you're effectively starting a blog in an industry where you have few contacts, and therefore limited reach on social media, would your approach in building an audience differ?
Cheers,
Liam
Yeah, that's absolutely a fair point. I toyed with the idea of really starting from scratch with new social accounts, but that would've been so artificial that I think it would've detracted from the case study.
When I first started my consulting company and blog in early 2006, I spent a lot of time on other industry blogs and forums. I commented a lot - not for links, but to build relationships in the industry. I focused on smaller blogs, where I had a chance to get to know authors and wouldn't be lost in the crowd. This worked well for me at the time. It took effort, but it created genuine reciprocity and I got to know the community. Twitter really added to that, and I was able to grow my network organically.
Eight years later, things are a bit different, but I think that general approach can still work. It's about building a real following, so that you have a network in place when you need it.
Good advice! So inline with Rand's WBF on building a blog following, participate with bloggers and influencers who aren't too big where your contribution would just get lost in the crowd.
I would love to see you break out organic traffic vs everything else if there's enough data there to show!
Exactly Very Well Advice for newbies who are just starting their efforts to building connection via blogs and forums.
As per Dr. Peter J. Meyers suggestion get more socialize post good interesting post on blogs so that people subscribe you have more topics on which you can have discussion with people :). Don't forget to ad invite me when you start.
Don`t you think that it isn`t the "optimisation"? Optimisation is anouther thing. Technical cleaning and remaking the site. Am i right?
I got caught in the trap of one-word titles. I tend to use optimization broadly, but yes, this was really more of a "mini-audit", for lack of a better term.
Hi Dr Pete,
Is that it? ....
What about: Titles, Keywords, URL, Alt Tags, Navigation, and many more ... or you will write a "Optimize Part 2"
Cornel
"Optimize" may have been a poor choice of words - it was more of a mini technical audit. I wanted people to get a sense of what to look for early on that might signal large, long-term problems.
One goal in this series was not to write a classic "how to" post - that people sometimes can't relate to - but to walk through a real story of what I did and why. Truthfully, I'm not sure if that approach was effective, but live and learn.
I'd say your approach was very effective. We can all go and find hundreds of posts going through the technical aspects of optimising a site. The approach that you've taken with the blog series is much more practical than that and, in my opinion, much more interesting for it.
Great post Dr. Pete. This was an excellent "mini technical audit" for getting your site up and running. In the beginning of the article you said "Now, it's time to dive in and sand off any rough edges, before they cause future SEO injuries." I took that to mean this was going to be the basics of SEO, to get you started and I believe you did very well covering this topic.
SEO is an ongoing battle and to cover all of the areas both on page and off page would literally be a novel for you to write.
Thanks again for this series, very insightful and helpful.
part 3, great - i have to save all three posts to read it later again when I need it again.
great series - enjoyed reading
Can anybody help me?
I just realized that one of my keywords is on the first page with google.es but not in www.google.fr , although the word is in french....I thought once you are indexed you should appear in google.com with all the different countries extensions.... anybody knows what´s happening?
Thanks and Regards
Thank you Dr. Peter J. Meyers for good suggestion
Hi Dr. Pete,
I really loved this series of yours in terms of simple strategy to start from scratch and reach to something that your can actually work on in an easy manner and get things work out for you. I see that you have been caught up in "Mini-Audit" title dilemma in above discussions. Practically there are lot of on-site issues which needs to be catered ranging from meta to deep linking but the core focus of this post was to get the basics right into their place with some initial analysis through tools. I think you should write your next post as "Beyond Optimization" :)
Great educational series Dr Pete!!
I just want to ask a question about meta descriptions. From my understanding, nowadays the meta description does not really hold much SEO value. I prefer to use it for the key pages such as the home page, top level category pages or a call to action where needed. For all the other pages I prefer to let Google define the meta description to minimise 'over optimisation' and make things look more natural. Would love to hear peoples thoughts about this.
I used SERP book and I like its features especially the alerts. I think that its a great tool for checking the ranking of websites. I use it for 10 of my websites [link removed] and it gives notifications whenever there is a slight change in rankings.
Hi
I just started a web site and it's persian . So the words that I'm competing for , are persian (not a big competition) and our job is web designing , portals , CRM and etc.
I decided to translate articles about SEO and other stuffs that relates to our business .
The question is that should I place portal(in persian) as a keyword in every article that I'll publish about portal ?
And if the article is about multiple topics , can I place multiple keywords in that article ?
Thanks .
Great post Dr. Pete. This was an excellent "mini technical audit" for getting your site up and running. In the beginning of the article you said "Now, it's time to dive in and sand off any rough edges, before they cause future SEO injuries." I took that to mean this was going to be the basics of SEO, to get you started and I believe you did very well covering this top.
[link removed]
I've got a question regarding incoming links. I know I have a few dozen on one of my newer sites - and have had such for about 3-4 weeks. Yet they're still not populating on OpenSiteExplorer nor Google Webmaster Tools. How long do you typically have to wait for new websites inbound links to propagate?
Depends on the quality of the link. If they're smaller or on weaker sites it will probably take a little while.
One cool trick I learned to at least get your links into Fresh Web Explorer from Moz is to Tweet each link, since Fresh Web Explorer looks out for Twitter links (forget where I heard this). I've seen it work for some of my links. Possibly if they're in Fresh Web Explorer they'll make it into the next OSE update, which is generally a month apart - but I don't know that for sure.
Awesome - thanks for the tip :)
Hi Dr. Pete!
Thanks for sharing the article, however it did not keep the excitement level the same that you maintained in the other 2. I wish it would have had some more details. Hope to see something interesting (like always) coming from your soon.
Correct me if I'm wrong - but wouldn't Google's HTML Improvements section show you missing meta descriptions?
Great series, just to mention some extras for optimizing - don't forget your great tool here -
https://moz.com/blog/new-title-tag-guidelines-preview-tool
and screaming frog can be great for a quick overview.
https://www.screamingfrog.co.uk/seo-spider/
Thanks again
It's a good insight. categories play an important role to increase your visibility. In Minimal Talent, I've checked that all blog posts are uncategorized and no tagging. If you will categorize all the post with tagging, Do you think it would rank for other terms?
For example, you can see that "reciprocal link" term has been ranking 5th on Google.com for Moz.com.
Fantastic series. Clear and concise, and great for a quick audit as a baseline!
Dr. Pete,
Very interesting series. However, I would be a lot more concerned with creating content and marketing it at this point. If there is not much to engage with visitors cannot be engaged.
Hello Peter,
thank you for your article. It sums up the basic Analytics functions a blogger should know. Can you please explain how you "persuade" Goolge to add your profile picture in the SERPs?
Thank you
Hi there,
that's an author tag -
https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/2539557?hl=en
you need to link your Google plus account with your site, i recommend taking a quick look in the Q&A as there are loads of posts to help you in there.
Thanks Chris!
*Image not guaranteed though!
Being an E-commerce manager, It's hard for me to accept that you're unaware about Google Authorship even your favorite topic include technical SEO, Analytics.
Hello Rajesh, I am an amateur e-commerce manager and still learning a lot. This thing had escaped me. Thanks!
"Persuade" is a good word - set up your authorship tags and G+ profile (as Chris said), but it can take time for Google to accept/display it, and that display is query-dependent. The more authority you have the better, etc.
can you give me information about my site...
many error page... why???
my site is https://duniainformasikesehatan.blogspot.com/
Our Beginner's Guide to SEO is a great place to start for more information.
Hi Dr.Peter,
The series is going great. I would like to add a SERP tool
https://www.serplab.co.uk
This is a very good tool to check position.
Looks like it uses the same as:
https://serpbook.com
which also has a free account but I think is superior.
I agree serpbook is great, it has lots of features but i found the free account far too limited!
Must remember to give serplab.co.uk a try
I have heard a lot about serpbook. It is a good one but it doesn't have much functional. I am using now seranking.com. It is useful with finance reports for clients and service running on your own domain.
Simple, not jargony and easy to follow. Good job!
Kinda makes me want to start a new site. The trouble is thinking up something that people would be interested in or that there's a demand for. I don't have the social network off the ground enough to rely on that. It'd have to be "Wow, Look At That!" content.
Hey Dr. Peter, series is continue in flow, that's good. But I was expecting large analysis//how-to/study under "Optimize" part.
However, it is worth to read.
Nice