SEO Strategy Techniques For Increasing The Traffic | Webmaster Tools
We'll discuss using Webmaster Central as our mock company, hopefully, to draw similarities to your own situation. Next, we'll talk about building an SEO strategy. This is a multipart process. We'll cover the steps to understanding the searcher persona workflow, determining company and website goals, auditing your site to best reach your audience, and executing and making improvements. Our discussion will end with overcoming obstacles.SEO Strategy Techniques For Increasing The Traffic |
AGENDA |
Pretend SEO for Webmaster Central Blog
Pretend SEO for Webmaster Central Blog |
Once again, here's a snapshot of my company, Google Webmaster Central, and how various components currently reference one another. I'm going to pretend to be the SEO, managing the Webmaster Central blog.
Your company and your situation |
Creating an SEO Strategy
Creating an SEO Strategy |
Next, after the user enters a query, the ranking and display of your site comes into play. If the searcher selects your site and results, then comes the next step-page content or making sure that your page is relevant to their query.
Capture Workflow For Various Searcher Personas
Capture Workflow For Various Searcher Personas |
How Webmaster Tools Helps
How Webmaster Tools Helps |
Business department responsibilities
Business department responsibilities |
Create seamless Searcher Workflow
Create seamless Searcher Workflow |
Verify Component are Seamlessly Integrated
Verify Component are Seamlessly Integrated |
Once you have an understanding of the searcher persona workflow, as well as the general user's needs and how responsibilities are shared within a company, it's time to begin discussion about building an SEO strategy that's cohesive with your company's goals.
Company Goals
Company Goals |
What's our overall business goal?
What can our company's product or service do that no one else can?
What's our value add?
What does success look like?
What components are involved?
How does our website uniquely play a role in this success?
As the pretend SEO at the company Google Webmaster Central, I meet with my entire webmaster support team. We may answer something similar to, what's our business goal?
Help all site owners.
What can our product or service do that no one else can?
Act as the official Google source of information.
What does success look like?
Increased webmaster community through higher participation in products and services.
What components are involved?
We have a diagram. It's the blog, Webmaster Tools, Help Center, discussion forum etc.
How does your website play a part in the success?
The Webmaster Central blog is unique because it provides the latest information and announcements for webmasters. This is different from our Help Center, which acts as a longstanding reference. The blog helps us quickly communicate breaking news. Another aspect that can be helpful in defining your company's business goals is understanding more about your competition. Questions like,
what do our online competitors do well?
What are they missing?
And if we were to fill that gap, is there a strong enough market need?
There are always many exciting directions to take a company. But be careful to only spend time creating features or experiences that will differentiate your company in a way that users really care about. With business goals set, a clear picture of your website's part in the success, a sense of the market needs and your competition, it's time to think about metrics. If I were to create metrics
for the Webmaster Central blog, I first look at our business goals and then create metrics for my website accordingly. Take the company goal to increase webmaster community. Given this company goal, we might look at metrics like increasing the number of unique users who visit the blog, such as their page views. This could come through search, from referrals, or from direct traffic. We might also look at the metric of subscribers.
GOOGLE WEBMASTER CENTRAL |
Your audit might begin with,
what groups are we targeting?
Where are they located?
What devices are they using?
Search queries and Webmaster Tools provide some of this data.
You can see that in the last three months, many of the Webmaster Central blog leaders have come from Canada and New Zealand. What are their objectives?
Do any or some of their objectives match why our company is special? Do their query terms match our content?
To answer some of these questions, you can check out the Search Queries and Content Keywords features in Webmaster Tools, as well as other helpful products you may know about. For example, in our site audit we may notice that much of our content uses the phrase "search friendly," as in, building a search-friendly website.
By using the Search Queries feature in Webmaster Tools, however, we can see that "search friendly" isn't even a query term we've ranked for in the last three months. Being the pretend SEO for the Webmaster Central blog, my site audit reveals that we often mention phrases like "search friendly." Even if that makes sense to us, to searchers that language rarely enters their mind. So with this data I might suggest to the team, let's continue to write valuable content but also start naturally incorporating the keywords that our potential visitors actually search for. The last stage in building an SEO and online strategy is to execute. Make improvements, track metrics, and iterate. With business goals defined as well as high-level SEO goals, I might start to execute the content and user experience improvements I discovered during my site audit. In our make-believe situation, I might talk to our marketing and tech writing teams about using more of the language of searchers, rather than only the terms most familiar to us, like "search friendly." I might also begin to consider more blog posts that mention issues especially relevant to our readers in Canada or New Zealand, since our audit revealed that many searchers come from those locations. As I execute ideas, I'll continue to track metrics. And I'll always need to keep in mind my company's goal to increase the webmaster community.
When it comes to implementing an SEO strategy and improving a site for searchers, Webmaster Tools can help us monitor and optimize our site for crawling, indexing, and search results. Although it may be tempting to focus solely on rankings, we'd be missing valuable opportunities if we disregarded the user in searcher persona workflow. Rankings could stay as is, but if we could increase the search volume through better marketing, that could lead to a larger percentage of visitors to our site and possibly more conversions. Or perhaps our content team produces excellent material that allows us to upsell even more products to each visitor. For example, really great content on our blog could drive more subscriptions. Or if our development, user experience, and usability teams made our site an enjoyable destination, that experience could bring referrals and repeat customers.
Again, we can meet our business goals without focusing on the traditional role of SEO.
Essentially, all steps in the searcher persona workflow can be optimized. Effort in each step and perhaps by each team is crucial to making your company's goals a reality. Finally, I often hear about the obstacles many SEOs face. Yes, there are obstacles, and they can make executing an online strategy difficult. For example, I can't implement a strategy. I'm not the person responsible for all of this. I just run department X. I need to know the keywords my competitor is targeting. I need to know what sites are linking to my competitor before I know who to target. Is my competition planning to have a social media presence?
Search engine algorithms change so much, I can't keep up If you've encountered these obstacles, you're certainly not alone. And realistically, just as when you played a sport or entered a contest, you're not going to perfectly understand every variable before you begin. Remember though, that with your initiative in educating yourself and your current knowledge of the SEO fundamentals, you're likely in a great place to get started on your strategy. In fact, you might be the best leader for your company to get the job done. So I say go for it. Understand the searcher persona workflow and create an integrated strategy inclusive of all components. Determine goals, define metrics. Audit your site to best reach your audience. Maximize existing search traffic by optimizing the crawl, index, and search results pipeline. And last, make sure the entire team works together to improve your online business. The entire workflow needs to be satisfying to the user and may require that all your teammates lend a hand. Thanks for your time.
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