When it comes to building an SEO strategy, many marketers (especially those who don't spend a significant amount of time with SEO) start off by asking a few key questions. That's a good start, but only if you're asking the right questions. In today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand puts the usual suspects on the chopping block, showing us the five things we should really be looking into when formulating our SEO strategy.
For reference, here's a still of this week's whiteboard!
Video transcription
Howdy, Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week we're chatting about building an SEO strategy and having a universal set of five questions that can get you there.
So number one: What keywords do you want to rank for?
Number two: How do we get links?
Number three: Site speed. Mobile? Doesn't even seem like a question.
Number four: What about Penguin and Panda?
Number five: When do I get money?
This is bologna. That's not a strategy. Some of those go to tactics you might invest in an SEO, but this is not an SEO strategy. Unfortunately, this is how a lot of conversations about SEO start at teams, with CMOs, with managers, with CEOs, with clients or potential clients, and it's very frustrating because you can't truly do a great job with SEO just in the tactical level. If you don't start with a compelling strategy, doing all of these things is only going to produce a small amount of potential return compared to if you ask the right questions and you get your strategy set before you begin an SEO process and nailing your tactics.
So that's what I want to go through. I spend a lot of time thinking through these things and analyzing a lot of posts that other people have put up and questions that folks have put in our Q&A system and others, on Quora and other places. I think actually every great SEO strategy that I have ever seen can be the distilled down to answers that come from these five questions.
So number one: What does our organization create that helps solve searchers' questions or problems? That could be, "Or what will we create in the future?" It might be that you haven't yet created the thing or things that's going to help solve searchers' questions or problems. But that thing that you make, that product or service or content that you are making, that expertise that you hold, something about your organization is creating value that if only searchers could access it, they would be immensely thankful.
It is possible, and I have seen plenty of examples of companies that are so new or so much on the cutting edge that they're producing things that aren't solving questions people are asking yet. The problem that you're solving then is not a question. It's not something that's being searched for directly. It usually is very indirect. If you're creating a machine that, let's say, turns children's laughter into energy, as they do in the film "Monsters, Inc.", that is something very new. No one is searching for machine to turn kids laughing into energy. However, many people are searching for alternative energy. They're searching for broader types of things and concepts. By the way, if you do invent that machine, I think you'll probably nail a lot of that interest level stuff.
If you have a great answer to this, you can then move on to, "What is the unique value we provide that no one else does?" We talked about unique value previously on Whiteboard Friday. There's a whole episode you can watch about that. Basically, if everyone else out there is producing X and X+1 and X+2, you've either got to be producing X times 10, or you've got to be producing Y, something that is highly unique or is unique because it is of such better quality, such greater quality. It does the job so much better than anything else out there. It's not, "Hey, we're better than the top ten search results." It's, "Why are you ten times better than anything on this list?"
The third question is, "Who's going to help amplify our message, and why will they do it?" This is essential because SEO has turned from an exercise, where we essentially take content that already exists or create some content that will solve a searcher problem and then try and acquire links to it, or point links to it, or point ranking signals at it, and instead it's ones where we have to go out and earn those ranking signals. Because we've shifted from link building or ranking signal building to ranking signal earning, we better have people who will help amplify our message, the content that we create, the value that we provide, the service or the product, the message about our brand.
If we don't have those people who, for some reason, care enough about what we're doing to help share it with others, we're going to be shouting into a void. We're going to get no return on the investment of broadcasting our message or reaching out one to one, or sharing on social media, or distributing. It's not going to work. We need that amplification. There must be some of it, and because we need amplification in order to earn these ranking signals, we need an answer to who.
That who is going to depend highly on your target audience, your target customers, and who influences your target customers, which may be a very different group than other customers just like them. There are plenty of businesses in industries where your customers will be your worst amplifiers because they love you and they don't want to share you with anyone else. They love whatever product or service you're providing, and they want to keep you all to themselves. By the way, they're not on social media, and they don't do sharing. So you need another level above them. You need press or bloggers or social media sharers, somebody who influences your target audience.
Number four: What is our process for turning visitors from search into customers? If you have no answer to this, you can't expect to earn search visits and have a positive return on your investment. You've got to be building out that funnel that says, "Aha, people have come to us through channel X, search, social media, e-mail, directly visited, referred from some other website, through business development, through conference or trade show, whatever it is. Then they come back to our website. Then they sign up for an e-mail. Then they make a conversion. How does that work? What does our web-marketing funnel look like? How do we take people that visited our site for the first time from search, from a problem or a question that they had that we answered, and now how do they become a customer?" If you don't have that process yet, you must build it. That's part of a great SEO strategy. Then optimization of this is often called conversion rate optimization.
The last question, number five: How do we expose what we do that provides value here in a way that engines can easily crawl, index, understand, and show off? This is getting to much more classic SEO stuff. For many companies they have something wonderful that they've built, but it's just a mobile app or a web app that has no physical URL structure that anyone can crawl and be exposed to, or it's a service based business.
Let's say it's legal services firm. How are we going to turn the expertise of our legal team into something that engines can perceive? Maybe we have the answers to these questions, but we need to find some way to show it off, and that's where content creation comes into play. So we don't just need content that is good quality content that can be crawled and indexed. It also must be understood, and this ties a little bit to things we've talked about in the past around Hummingbird, where it's clear that the content is on the topic and that it really answers the searchers' underlying question, not just uses the keywords the searcher is using. Although, using the keywords is still important from a classic SEO perspective.
Then show off that content is, "How do we do a great job of applying rich snippets, of applying schema, of having a very compelling title and description and URL, of getting that ranked highly, of learning what our competitors are doing that we can uniquely differentiate from them in the search results themselves so that we can improve our click-through rates," all of those kinds of things.
If you answer these five questions, or if your customer, your client, your team, your boss already has great answers to these five questions, then you can start getting pretty tactical and be very successful. If you don't have answers to these yet, go get them. Make them explicit, not just implicit. Don't just assume you know what they are. Have them list them. Make sure everyone on the team, everyone in the SEO process has bought into, "Yes, these are the answers to those five questions that we have. Now, let's go do our tactics." I think you'll find you're far more successful with any type of SEO project or investment.
All right gang, thanks so much for joining us on Whiteboard Friday, and we'll see you again next week. Take care.
Rand, great WBF! Just wanted to throw out my own five steps -- they're similar to yours but a little different.
1. What are the company's business and marketing goals? Then, answer the question: How in general will the website maximize its contribution to those goals? If the marketing goal is to maximize mobile-app downloads, then the website will want to push traffic to download the app. If the marketing goal is to get leads for a B2B product or service, then the website will want to push people to fill out a form or otherwise make contact.
2. Are conversion paths and tracking set up correctly? How -- and in what different ways -- will the website guide visitors towards the desired conversion(s)? Is every possible source of incoming traffic and leads -- social media, telephone calls, and more -- identifiable in analytics for ROI tracking?
3. Have overall marketing research and company branding been performed? In this Moz essay of mine, I outline how to incorporate traditional marketing into SEO. In this step of an audit, I would examine the company's audience research and personas, messaging and positioning, and channel research.
4. Is the website optimized on both technical SEO and marketing contexts? Then, I would make sure that website images, text, landing pages, and more all map to the overall messaging, positioning, and branding in terms of the target audience and industry. Then, I make sure that all technical issues -- XML sitemaps, mobile, schema code, meta tags, and so on -- are correct.
5. Is there a concrete marketing and PR plan? Then, I would examine the company's plans in terms of content, social media, public relations, and publicity to see how they will go about earning 100% natural links and promoting themselves to the target audience.
Yes, I know that this is more of an overall marketing audit rather than just an SEO audit -- but I've always thought that the two are increasingly so connected that it's becoming impossible to talk about one without talking about the other. :)
Interesting. I do SEO only for the website of my company, and I'm glad I was able to correctly answer all the questions. thanks Samuel.
Yeah! Strategy FTW!
I am very happy that you are bringing this topic to the masses, Rand, because in SEO (but not just in Search Marketing) it is very easy to confuse Strategy with Tactic (see the comment of utubedownloads to this WBF).
Strategy means designing an overall plan, somehow an "ideological infrastructure", which purpose is to achieve a goal as, for instance:
The 5 questions you present are needed means for designing the strategy, and only when the strategy has been designed we can start dediding the tactics that will develop it into concrete actions.
I'd make a very little varation to the last question: "How to marry the needs the overall brand strategy is asking us to respect and the technical needs we should respect too in order to make the web site indexable, visible et al, and so having the SEO strategy reaching its purpose?".
For instance, we have a fashion brand, which considered - endorsed by market studies, their own data analysis and observation of trends - that wants to increase its market share and, because of those same information they retrieved, they decided a strategy strongly based on impacting the audience with visual messages.
That probably will lead taking decisions like using Angular, infinite scroll, product pages with almost no written content but tons of high quality images or even videos and so on, and they simply don't want to change that "vision" just because it is not the best for SEO, or - better - it is not the most comfortable for an SEO to deal with.
Therefore SEO must be able to design an SEO strategy, which can obtain the desidered goals, while being able to make it consistent with the overall marketing strategy of the Brand, not pretending to change it (sure, there are exceptions to this general rule).
What am I saying? I'm saying that when we design the "technical" part of the SEO strategy we should somehow forget the "best practices" philosophy, and being able to adapt those best practices to the overall marketing strategy of the Brand/Client. And that same attitude should have to be translated in the tactical decisions.
Hi Rand,
Seems like SEO is not letting up and keeps evolving each and every day!
Thanks for these excellent insights.
Tom
In the industry nowadays, there are two things that entrepreneurs that needs to have - patience and in depth knowledge about digital marketing. One must need to understand the ins and outs of the industry to be fully aware about the strategy that they will utilize to reach their target market. Furthermore, I totally agree that you must not ignore social since nowadays, it plays a vital role in spreading the company in the web search. And also here is my SEO Strategy https://goo.gl/gKfjCF that i am am using .....
Thank you
RIP keywords ?
RIP Keywords just for the sake of Keywords, not keywords themselves.
They are a medium for making a strategy becoming real, not the strategy itself. And they are just one of the many media.
I completely agree....I have heard a lot of people saying that keywords are dead. Keywords are not dead. Keywords are still core to a lot of what is going on but the Search Engine results are just presenting themselves in a different way by utilising lots of other factors.
I think it is the case that it is just not quite as easy to directly measure how the keywords make a difference. essentially keyword only tactics of the past are exactly that....in the past.
Not at all - I think keywords are still important, and still a big tactical part of SEO. They're not, however, strategic, because they don't need to be established at the top level of how your'e going to approach the issue of providing value to an audience and expose that value to engines. The same is true of earning links and other ranking signals - they're not dead at all, just a tactical part of the mix rather than a strategic one (at least IMO).
it has always been like that since principle. Keywords must alway been a representation of a SEO and Commercial strategy.
Hadn't watched this WBF yet but there was a keyword question in the Q&A today that lined up really well with the discussion here. My answer, pasted below, was TL;DR, "Strategize! Show how your SEO efforts are growing the brand." Here's the long version...
Hope these points help. Cheers!
"We are continually faced by great opportunities brilliantly disguised as insoluble problems." ~ Lee Iacocca
Besides the keyword that is still very important in the search for content, it is also optimize all factors of SEO positioning, as our colleague Rand explains. While studying all these points can achieve great potential in the search engines.
Great article!
What I love about this WBF is that it’s about how to not just outrank/get more traffic than a competitor, but how do we actually BE a better company with more valuable products/service. When you have something so great to start with, it’s easier to market and find influencers to amplify its greatness to a relevant audience.
Awesome WBF, as always.
Great post as usual.
I think it is good that you captioned technical SEO the way you did, I feel SEO is just one tool that us online marketers need to use, but we often focus on it too much and forget the bigger picture. I guess that is why Inbound Marketing is a growth area.
Your post has been shared within my organisation today, so hopefully we can have some good discussions around it.
Cheers
Stephen
Great video. I think the other underlying implication is that once SEO becomes part of your integrated marketing and branding strategy you (executives) should no longer blindly pass that function of to consultants or departments. SEO needs a seat at the strategic table, along with everyone else. Social, content and PPC also fall under the same argument.
Integrated marketing.. What a concept!
I love this because it gets to the "why" before it addresses the "what." I think SEO freaks so many people out because they think it's all tactics and technical smoke and mirrors that they can't possibly understand, but fundamentally, SEO is content strategy. And that's what this WF addresses. Thanks, Rand, for summing it up so succinctly.
I love me some WBF! I really appreciated the fact that out of the five questions you said to ask only one dlrectly related to search engines. And it was the final question. This means that before we even start to think about how Googlebots will crawl and rank our website, we have spent loads of time focusing on the customers and users. This is what marketing is really all about. It is all about communicating with the customers, understanding their needs and wants.
Something for all of us to keep in mind!
Hi Rand, Great topic as always. I am definitely going to integrate some of these questions into my companies client consultation process.
You cannot do SEO just at the tactical level...and this is why these questions are very valuable to ask before you even start doing SEO work..
Thank you
Alex
I would say this an example of "Classic" Marketing and not only SEO. Excellent post.
What my observation is many SEOs and sites have limited their overall SEO efforts to answering question number 4. Yes it is really important to have nice designs, mobile responsiveness, great speed, easy checkout and all those stuff. Yes they are far more advanced and intelligent then those who still look for keywords, links and meta tags size only when building SEO strategy. But still they are limiting them selves to Question number 4 only while rest of the 4 are also very much important.
I think a lot of SEO's get lost in the minutiae of the technical aspects and forget that they are part of the overall marketing strategy of the company. I really like these posts that force us to take a step back and realize we are all "Classical" marketeers using a new medium.
You always make funny videos with a lot of good content. I enjoy it and I learn a lot about SEO. Thanks Rand!
Great Strategy..really use full article.
out of the many helpful postings this is on my top 10 MOZ favorites, maybe because the timing is just right. Thank you very much.
It does come into question on how to create an effective tactic on a difficult and not popular topic for sharing amplification? quora is working well, G+ is ok but usually on the peripherals not really on the core, FaceBook has a poor conversion on services such mine and twitter has been poorly performing (to be honest i hate it, so its hard to judge). Any thoughts?...........
Love the article! I love the focus on Customers or users rather than spam tactics
Great tips! I would add a small note: Make sure that SEO and marketing teams are working together. As a content producer, I often am approached by the SEO and marketing teams, each with a completely different (and non-complimentary) strategy.
Hi Rand,
Seems SEO will keep evolving relentlessly into the future!
Thank you for and excellent and insightful article.
Tom
Great Post Rand!
The fourth point in particular is really insightful !
Best point of white board Friday this month: When do I get money :D, liked the universal strategy outlined by Rand as usual he does it the best way a true marketer indeed!
Hi Rand ! Thank you for this excelent post. According to the 2015 trends, the audit of a website in its mobile version should be a priority.
Thanks for sharing this article. it is very useful to me in SEO platform. i got an new ideas to reading this article
SEO is one of the platform where we can fight with other by knowledge in the world with take our website front page in any search engines. and for all that This grate article help to us. Thank for sharing....
excellent write up rand....you have done it again.....
Enhorabuena !!!
Ah keywords, where would we be if you weren't out there distracting everyone..
Excellent post. Always great advice. Keep em coming.
Really really one of the best SEO Article i ever seen.
Your Article give the Best Steps to how SEO Sholud be start and what types of strategies we create before start SEO activities.
Thanks
Thanks
Clear and synthetic explanation. Thanks a lot for sharing this
Great explanation and I loved your piece on unique value. I have a question about that. I have just launched a site with unique value (www.unmask.us) which is all about song meanings but only from songwriters and where i can cite the source. They may be from books, concert intros, other websites, wherever I find them. The site design is simple, easy on the eye and responsive. There is a quote, an embed video of the song, and a citation to a Notes page with all the sources. I believe it is unique (song meanings.com allows anyone to say what the song is about, we source only what the songwriter says). My question is how Google will view this from an SEO standpoint given there is some duplicate web content (although with a source) and there is not vast amounts of content per page?
Thanks for the great info. I will definitely apply this.
Brilliant one Rand. While at the outset this seems to simplify SEO, having been doing SEO for the last few years, this is a crisp, relevant and only way to approach SEO where the content strategy is clear & unique. The content should be able to leverage the strengths of the brand, the company and its team members to be able to answer these 5 questions effectively.
The underlying theme I see is that you need a great product/service. SEO worked for any company willing to spam the internet--and rankings were the only result. Now that SEO is becoming more refined, effective SEO tactics work best with companies that have something worth sharing. And that's not SEO at all! Create something that adds value to people's lives and then create an SEO strategy around it that matches that value. It's amazing to me how often that foundational principle is overlooked or ignored in SEO.
Thanks Rand, for helping set everyone straight.
Thank you Rand for a great WBF, as always.
I will definatly be using these 5 questions to get to a better strategy and from there better tactics to get better ROI for my costumers. I really do think this WBF is an eye opener for some (for me it is) for the strategy part. I will also use this in my Site Audit I recently created for testing purposes. If it works out great I will go on developing this Site Audit and get back to it maybe with a youmoz blog post. At least this WBF contributed to it. Thanks Again Rand, looking forward to see next week's.
Regards
Jarno
It is just so refreshing to zoom out of the details and get a brought view and with this brought view come new ideas and better details. Thank you so much for that Rand. Your hints are so extremley valuable. I hope you know that you really helped a lot of businesses to make their dreams come true. From my site: THANK YOU!
This is really high-level but an awesome way to first approach a business relationship centered around SEO services. So many clients and business owners would be pleasantly surprised to be met by an SEO at this level - strategy, business focus, and overall business goals - rather than "link juice" and "keyword density." :)
Nice post, and i totaly agree with the points that you have mentioned. and i specially like the stills that rand uses for the whiteboard friday before starting the video those are funny, interesting and quite frankly pleasing to see in this weird digital world
I call it Brand introducing key questions instead, as the SEO purpose at all is just to rank your site higher by number of techniques. And where are all the "SEO is DEAD" advocates nowadays? ;)
Right here sunshine: SEO IS Mostly Dead as we have known it - One of my favorite movie quote: MOSTLY dead. There's a big difference between mostly dead and all dead. Mostly dead is slightly alive. lol
Nicely done Rand. This is the strategy post Humminbird update and their is no other way out if SEO is your motive. It's all about being valuable to your niche and adding that further while offering and getting business in turn. So, here is one question for you.
1. What if the services we provide is not on par with our existing competitors in a particular segment. For e.g. If my client has $1.5 for the same services which are offered by one of top competitor for a pay of $0,75. How do we go on further optimizing in such cases?
When it comes to outreach, measurement is quiet important and needs to be addressed. This is an important to gauge the effort is worth the juice or not. Gianluca is correct the "Keywords are doorways but not the means to SEO". This post is just awesome and the schema part added what core SEO would be looking for in this Video. One more questions:
2. Can we by anyway, modify the sitelinks that appear for a particular site in organic search results. I know, we can demote via Google Webmasters, but is there something we could do to it from our end?
Your response would be really helpful for all of us Rand & Gainluca.
Thanks!
Thx Rand! Great WBF about the SEO Strategy.
You're so right about point 5; indexation and understanding. Often forgotten, endlessly postponed or just left as it is. If search eniges do not understand your web site....is it really that hard to believe that this is a bottleneck for getting more visibility / better rankings...
That was a great WBF! Especially the 1th point, on understanding and serving user's needs :) thanks for sharing!
Question from point no. 1 - if our organization don't invest in ppc management thing, then how can we analyze through this?
One more Great post as always...
A perfect SEO strategy with excellent 5 question. I really Enjoy your 4th question of turning from search into customers, I will definitely discuss this 5 question with my team...
Happy Whiteboard Friday
I like the order the steps are presented, quite often people start auditing how much the site is crawlable and indexable before figuring out what their goals are, how to reach their audience and how to convert with the right content/experience.
Hi Rand and the WBF viewers,
What does our organization create that helps solve searchers' questions or problems?
Ask your client is much as they're willing to tell you about their business. Spend a good amount of time researching it try to become as close to an expert in that field issue can. Conferences, trade shows, client may not have email, millions of things will start to show up and the fruit will be picked from the trees are all low distance.
If you do not understand your client's business well enough to come up with ideas rather not there “SEO” or something that client will benefit from quite a bit.
Some people say press releases are dead well not can argue a lot with that but if you have something amazing put it on a press release press do not expect the no follow link to give you anything if you're doing it for that stop.
I have a client we did a very unique segment on a bulletproof and crush diamond suit this caught fire and literally turned into an organic link building machine.
We got attention of celebrities Time magazine, all the big news networks. This was not easily repeatable however I'm talking about a local business that was not exciting if I were to describe it to you.
We write a “complete” a word we use to determine what we know about the client up until that date. We place that complete into base camp. We then normally utilize tools like usability tools in order to get at minimum 100 people to go through the site and tell us there opinion of the website.
Put yourself in the users shoes not Google's but the user
What is the unique value we provide that no one else does?"
We have years of experience in both founding and creating will be considered medium to large manufacturing companies.
I think this gives us insight that most companies do not have into business and we can start using what we know to capture low hanging fruit off rather its web-based or not whatever you know about the company if you can give a good suggestion and help them follow through they will love you for it. we do not cut corners and really will put the extra effort and time and for our clients staying up to date by attending conferences, always learning.
Who's going to help amplify our message, and why will they do it?
We want to have everyone on the same page this should be in your proposal with your milestones and what you expect to have done by whatever time you expect it to be done.
use organic, PPC, social media, paid social media. I will admit no agency is the best at everything there are some that are pretty close but I think everyone will agree if you could pick SEO’s and content writers and strategists like fantasy sports you would probably reach outside of your agency.
Not because you're not qualified but because if you are dealing with attorneys like Rand stated and you are unable to make yourself stand out without brilliant marketing you owe it to your customer to reach out and request advice. That will get the wheels turning and this is not something everyone has to do it is just the tip.
I have met at conferences to help in areas where they are better than my team currently is at that particular subject.
I'm not talking about outsourcing and talking about using the people with the most knowledge.
create a consistent once a week week video similar to what Rand is doing right now with whiteboard Friday.
extend your reach beyond what you think SEO is if there is something you can do that will push this message out there to hundreds of thousands or more hell even 20 more people than you thought do it. Do not be afraid to reach out to your friends in the industry and asked them. Also it's polite to compensate people for their time pay them.
create affiliate programs between attorneys that cannot handle the work of other attorneys so if I'm a tax attorney and somebody calls me because they have been charged with a crime consistent with living in the 19th century I am going to try to set up an affiliate network between attorneys that take calls for all sorts of things and if they have received a call for my expertise then I have acquired a lead that is backed by a referral from a attorney that the client as already reached out to
Tom
PS Thanks Gianluca
Just for the curiosity, but the link you put at the end is sending to a page that substantially is clone of this comment you publish here. So - albeit being the comment interesting - why linking to that page?
Thank you for the kind words Gianluca. I would love to hear your feedback on what you found interesting when you have time.
(cannot remove please look below for part two)
Well... I think that some of things you suggest (I.e. An intelligent use of affiliate programs) are good tips.
On the other hand, and without meaning to offend :-), I think:
1) the you are confusing "what we should do" (tactics) with "why" (the ultimate purpose of every strategy) and "how" (the strategy itself);
2) that your comment is gigantic (even for me, who I am writing long comments), so much that maybe you could have better results with writing a smaller synthetic one and writing a post detailing it and addressing it to Rand and the WBF viewers. And that would have been a better tactic for achieving a "earn more personal brand visibility and trust" strategy.
Hi Rand, Gianluca and the WBF viewers,
Gianluca you are no doubt you are correct. I use voice recognition and honestly should not have written anything because I was too tired. Not that that's an excuse. I have made some changes that hopefully will help.
Thank you for your feedback it's honestly extremely valuable I cannot be offended by somebody taking their time to critique and point out issues with my work.
thank you for the pointers I have tried to implement them and see what you mean.
All the best,
Tom
Part 2
What is our process for turning visitors from search into customers?
This goes back to thinking about the way the user thinks and not your client, Google or your self.
The web has made people very honest and the opposite as well. But my point is if the user sees something they do not think will help them achieve whatever they're looking for they will leave that page immediately.
We use usability tools and higher at minimum 100 people that meet the description of a qualified lead.
From those 100 people are asked a series of questions pertaining to what would make them convert on the site and what our some examples of what they do not like about this site this can range from. Colors, inability to find what they want quickly navigation, as well as lead to people who are interested in your clients services. Because the demographics are so granular you can ask them if they'd like to opt in.
Email without a strong email campaign I think it would be very hard to convert. We use HubSpot & get verlo to give us an advantage by telling us if it's the best time to send an email based on how often the person has come to the site and their behavior when on the site. We can send a triggered email (I recommend personalized) if somebody has left the shopping cart prior to putting in their credit card information.
we can fire off a timed email reminding them to please refill their order. This works surprisingly well.
I believe that be easier you make it for the client to sign up talking about using social media for one click sign ups, the least amount of clicking and/or scrolling while providing the most informative and relevant content that is catered to that client based on their Persona.
Stay up to date spend the money on conferences invest in your business remember when to tell the client you are not the right fit. Some clients need more handholding that others if you can spot this you will save yourself time and help your other clients in the process.
Have confidence in yourself. Especially when dealing with sales. Be yourself the largest cliché ever right well how do you think you got that big? People that are friendly and genuine are relied upon and do get the big deals. I have found The ability to to work with others and relate to them helps out immensely in sales. even the largest companies CEO has self-doubt do not allow that to affect your work.
Look professional for instance this post makes me look unprofessional but have hired a full-time assistant to do my writing. This will transform the way I come off on paper.
How do we expose what we do that provides value here in a way that engines can easily crawl, index, understand, and show off?
Create a baseline that you and your client agree on this is where you have started. You plan on being on X by Y try to do your best to stay in those timelines if things change explain it to the client.
Using tools like Moz analytics makes life a lot easier. You can show your progress very easily and you can supplement Moz with other tools like Ahrefs, deep crawl, screaming frog
scribe content and keeping up with the latest like distilled.net/content-guide will give you the opportunity to create fantastic content calendars if your WordPress user there are any of plug-ins that will really synchronize your team.
They can see that you are working and learn from what you are doing.
Many websites are destroyed in terms of ability for Google to crawl them
I am going to say this fast reliable hosting along with strong firewalls there are an abundance of attacks on Google analytics giving false information to Google.
through malicious referrals you can harm your relationship with your client by showing them something that is incorrect because of these referrals.
if you want a one-stop solution FireHost, if you are happy with the hosting you have add
Distill networks, incapsula or Sucuri WAF All Three Can Be Added to Any Website & Will Protect against This Malicious Junk.
Schema Can Be Created With PHP If You Know You're Doing Or Using
https://www.google.com/webmasters/markup-helper/
one of the greatest schema tools and it has a WordPress plug-in if needed.
https://schema-creator.org/organization.php
https://www.feedthebot.com/tools/address/
I Hope This Is Helpful To Some People out There Sorry About The Writing Voice Recognition and Very Late.
Great Job Rand!
Thanks Gianluca!
Haha Rand my brow was furrowing slightly in the first 30 seconds of this WBF - seemed a little old school!
In my opinion the concepts of adding value and earning exposure (not just links) through this value are concepts that should be at the core of anyone who is practicing SEO...and other facets of marketing. You could argue that points 1 and 2 overlap considerably in regards to adding value for the user.
I also think that many companies neglect point 4. Not ONLY does it drastically effect your ROI in regards to SEO, but it will no doubt have a not inconsiderable effect on your business. This should be a priority for every website - are we doing enough to convert visitors? Without answering that question you might as well not have a website (*sweeping statement with many holes in it....said for effect).
Cheers Rand
I think the best way to create an excellent SEO strategy is to keep what's good for the client in mind. As SEO's we tend to get a little greedy with our content and link building strategies. It's not our fault, it's just in our nature. But when you step back and look at things from how it will affect the client instead of how it will affect the rankings, you end up creating content worth sharing and a link profile that has no choice but to have sustained, positive rankings. Excellent video!
"Who's going to help amplify our message?" is an important question. As you mentioned it's about earning links now. It goes back to the second question and deciding what your unique value is. If you are creating/publishing anything of unique value- what's the incentive to share or link to it?
Mind blowing post!! The 5 points you have explained and the rest in comment section by other commentators will really help create a better SEO strategy.
Whiteboard Friday is my favorite section of this blog !!
Thank You for Video. Its very useful !
Wow, very concise and to the point! You make it look so easy ;-)
Hi there, this very nice steps which is a great use.It might be helpful,Thank you for your research buddy
This is a very relevant analysis of the existing problems among those promoting themselves as "SEO experts" and businesses who want to do well on search engines.
These are just the questions I ask my clients before writing content for them: exactly what they are offering, of what value and how it is going to serve their customers. Once this is taken care of, more than 60% of the SEO problem is already solved.
Usuful art, thanks!
1. Create great content and solve searchers's questions
2. Add your unique value
3. Expand your message
4. Know what you are doing and how you're selling your service
5. SEO optimization
:)
Great one Rand!
Excellent white board, Rand you have out done yourself - distilling where we are with SEO. I see this strategy going forward as key.
You missing the question:
The site is properly optimized for selected keywords?
What does our organization create that helps solve searchers' questions or problems?
What is the unique value we provide that no one else does?Who's going to help amplify our message, and why will they do it?
What is our process for turning visitors from search into customers?
How do we expose what we do that provides value here in a way that engines can easily crawl, index, understand, and show off?
Yes those are radical SEO strategy.
But Keywords & Backlinks are SEO tricks.
Links from Resource page, Local Citation, Q&A, Link to relevant sites, Blog and Forum Discussion those are working well. Details here: 7 Proactive Ways to Get Backlinks That’ll Actually Boost Your Traffic
(2) What does our competition look like for keywords and estimate the number of hours it would take to get into the same arena. (5) 50% upfront :)
Excellent post!
hmmm... wonder what I said here that caused me to get 5 down votes :(
Excellent post, thanks for video! :)
Thanks rand for excellent article
This is a great post Rand! Really gets you thinking about new ideas, and the real way to go about SEO.
Aggressive and Powerful Post Keep up the Good work Sir Rand ..... !!!