10 Lessons from a 100k Pageview Post

Posted by SteKenwright This post was originally in YouMoz , and was promoted to the main blog because it provides great value and interest to our community. The author’s views are entirely his or her own and may not reflect the views of SEOmoz, Inc. This kind of thing might happen to Rand all the time, but it’s not often that a digital marketing company based in Leeds gets 100,000+ people reading anything it does (at least on its own site). That’s what unexpectedly happened to us on www.branded3.com a few weeks ago – what essentially started as a rant from some guy having a bad day blew up and now has 1,184 votes on Hacker News (and incoming links from some of the biggest sites in the world). I think it’s likely I’ll never replicate this, and I didn’t intend this either – so I’ll not preach: “this is how you get 100,000 page views.” Everyone else is just as qualified as I am to write a post that’s read all around the world, and that’s exactly what I want to happen. I’d like to tell you what I’m taking away from this, and how I’ll use it when I’m creating content for my clients in the future. Commonly known as sharking. Google it. 1. [citation needed]…but not always. Google only wants you to list the links that are most relevant to and most important to your content – Eric Enge likened this to a research paper around a month ago on Search Engine Watch . The difference between your content and a research paper, though, is that your content doesn’t get discredited if there is nobody to link to that backs up the point you’re trying to make. In a Webmaster Help Video earlier in the year, Google Engineer Matt Cutts said don’t link out to low quality sites – this is pretty much the equivalent of quoting from Wikipedia in an essay. You don’t have to get peer approved before people will read your post, though, so if there’s nobody to link to that’s talking about whatever you are then that could actually be a good thing. If someone else is covering the same subject as you there’s no real reason why you should get all the links, so you should definitely write about things that no one else is covering if you can. NB: Not having anyone to back up your point doesn’t excuse you from not having a point in the first place . 2. Content needs to solve people’s problems…or highlight them. I had a problem with Path and as of the time I started writing the post, nobody had solved it, though a few people had tweeted about experiencing similar problems. I tweeted @path at roughly 7am and the first person to reply was someone else who was (very) actively looking for an answer to the same problem. I embedded Design33’s tweet in the post and linked to him; let my cohort know; and instantly a problem shared is a problem…erm, doubled. Whether your content is solving someone’s problem, or you’re just empathising with them; if you know where to find them…let them know it’s there and get your influencers on board. 3. Find out what people are looking for. The principles behind content marketing are gaining real traction in the SEO community, and more and more companies are getting on board with long-term content strategies. There’s plenty to say about planning your content out for months in advance , but as Simon points out in this fantastic YouMoz post from last year, it’s not all about Google Keyword Tool anymore. There are some great tools out there to find hot topics ( Bottlenose is particularly useful), but the best way to find what your audience is looking for is by using the same tools as they are. Wil Reynolds is a great advocate of using Google Complete to find content topics (check out Wil’s LinkLove 2013 presentation , around slide 90) – start typing questions, don’t press enter; just note down what people are actually searching for. Search Twitter and find out not only what problems need solving, but who it is that actually has that problem (see point two)! Google Keyword Tool shouldn’t be your first stop when you’re looking for fires to put out, and if it’s monthly search volume you’re looking at, chances are someone faster has created content solving the same issue weeks ago. 4. Find your forum. …by which I don’t literally mean a forum, since as an industry we’ve pretty much ruined that for everyone – all I’m saying is that you just need to find the right soapbox to spread your message. In the comment string on our site this guy called me out for posting this on a company blog. At the time I hadn’t really questioned where else I could actually write this up, so Luca made me think. If I had put this on my own blog nobody would have read it…I would have just been complaining without any real platform to build on (might as well have just put it on Facebook or Twitter). One of our clients is a cloud storage company who obviously have a vested interest in online security, and do write about issues such as this from time to time. They’d never approve something like this for their blog (more in point six) so I would have had to dry it right out…or put it on another site on their behalf. Hammering this article to fit brand guidelines would have dulled its impact so much, and for a company to write about real life issues like this they really would have had to find a real life case…otherwise they’re just tipping off the media. It would never have worked. If you’re going to be controversial, find a site that’s fine with that to host your content – that goes for the content you’re putting out on behalf of your clients too. We’ve had plenty of content turned down by webmasters for being too much for their blogs, and you’ve got to respect that. Guest blogging is like the name implies, and you’ve got to make sure you don’t leave a mess in someone else’s house. 5. Write for your audience… Something everyone is taught in English class from a relatively early age is how to write for an audience. Even if you came into SEO from something else – a computer science degree, MA in marketing; whatever – you still have those classes to fall back on, and they’ll give you a pretty solid foundation in content marketing. In this industry everything comes from experience – if you covered search engine optimisation in your degree I’m sure you found half the things you knew were obsolete by the time you’d graduated…and post-Penguin the other half will get you penalised too. I found when I moved from in-house to agency side search engine marketing, most of the things I’d been doing for the last year were considered pretty spammy. If you’re writing to put content on websites that nobody reads, like article marketing websites, then you’re not writing for an audience…and that shows in the work you put out. You don’t have to be a journalist to create great content. If you’re solving problems imagine you’ve got that problem yourself and then just write for you… 6. …don’t write for your client. If you think you’ve found a hot topic and your client isn’t happy with being associated with it, there’s probably a case for not pushing that. Controversial content gets links, but there’s a certain amount of press that comes with those links. I don’t have a PR agency, so TechCrunch pointing out that it was probably my fault isn’t a disaster from my point of view. If your client makes a mistake then it might be. In the case of my blog post it wasn’t long before the media-at-large didn’t care anymore (TechCrunch may have even been the start of that) and the chances are pretty good that nobody will remember a guy getting mad at his phone in a few weeks – if a tech company posted a rant about Path it would probably be called a smear campaign. …and I won’t lie – when the VP of Marketing called me I was more than a little worried. 7. Your content has to be worthy of links to get any… This is my very first YouMoz post, and there’s a good reason for that – up until now I’ve not really had anything to say that I think might help the community, so I’ve stuck to my blog, Twitter and getting all up in other people’s business when I get the chance . If you’ve got an opportunity to write for a great site – or to work with a well-known journalist, or whatever – giving them a few hundred words of nothing content will a) not generate much in the way in traffic, b) not generate any leads, and c) make that great site think twice about having you back. 8. …and so does your site. Which leads me on to number eight: the whole point of placing links as part of a content marketing strategy (or at least it probably should be the main point) is for people to click through to your site. Make sure your users are arriving on a page they want to see. @ stekenwright @ phillipsnick @ newsyc20 @ path I think that branded3.com needs to install a WordPress caching plugin. :D — David Lynch (@kemayo) April 30, 2013 When St. Louis-based developer David Lynch submitted the post to Hacker News our entire site went down almost immediately (at 17:25, which our Development team were definitely not happy about). It’s a pretty extreme example, but if your site doesn’t present people with the screen they were expecting to see they’re probably going to leave straight away. This applies not only in a technical SEO sense (see Aleyda Solis’ wonderful resources on mobile SEO and which versions of a page you should be serving to which people for a start), but also in something as intrinsic as the services you’re providing. Going back to point four (Find your forum): the company I work for not only has a burgeoning social team, but an entire blog dedicated to social media – the perfect place to host an article about a social network, in my opinion. Make sure your link is pointing to the kind of page your audience wants to find. 9. Be funny, or insightful. Probably not both. The links generated by my post contain so much more useful information and insight than my content does. Like I said, I’m not pretending to be a journalist uncovering a story. I just presented a real life experience in a humorous way…because it was pretty funny. How do you explain what you do to your partner’s grandparents? I go with “I work with computers”. Imagine trying to explain a social network to two different pairs of 80 year-olds before 6:30 in the morning? You’ve got to laugh, as the expression goes. Your multi-national debt management firm probably can’t be funny in its content (very happy for people to prove me wrong here). Companies like this have guidelines to uphold and the chances are they’re much more interested in their brand guidelines than the links you’re working so hard to get for them. Make sure you take tone of voice into account and if your content doesn’t work in their speak, see point six. You’re writing the wrong thing. Your post definitely needs a Wonka meme. 10. Don’t do it for the links. Writing my blog post, I had absolutely no intention of getting a single link. In all honestly I didn’t fully expect the guys at Path to see it – I just wanted to vent and if possible, make my colleagues laugh. In a very helpful post on Quick Sprout last October KISSmetrics’ Neil Patel wrote that he never manually built a link – he just kept writing. We’re not KISSmetrics, but our blog has been covering as many of the happenings in the digital marketing world as we can possibly manage for more than half a decade – and mostly we just do it because we want to. Posting a piece of content on your blog every few weeks or months and expecting it to get picked up isn’t going to happen; and it’s definitely not content marketing – it’s just content. No matter how good your stuff is, don’t be disheartened if you don’t get any traction with a blog post…or a hundred blog posts. What I do think is important is that you look at every piece of content you write and think about how to make it better this time. You don’t need to over-analyse every post before it goes live – I would guess you’ve got targets and deadlines to make after all – just think about how to improve on what you’ve got so your next article will make outreach easier, or will help more people out; and if your last piece performed well, how are you going to beat it? Even if you know you won’t. Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

Read More:
10 Lessons from a 100k Pageview Post

The 3 Steps for Success in a Multi-device Search World

Posted by Aleyda Solis We live in a multi-device world, and if you’re still focused on improving your visibility, traffic, and conversions solely for desktop users, you’re losing a great opportunity. This gap, coupled with the fact that you’re probably staying behind your competitors and unconnected with your audience, is not great for business. Not convinced? Let’s see some data…  Mobile search is booming.  It’s already driving important multi-channel conversions. However, we’re still not doing our best for mobile and are losing opportunities. Despite the multichannel conversions that mobile search drives, we’re still not making the most out of it. There are people that feel it is still too complicated and insecure to purchase goods on their smartphones:  Unfortunately, what are now fundamental aspects on our desktop-focused optimization activities are sometimes still unknown when developing a mobile-focused presence, even for some very important websites. For example:  A. Some websites don’t have a mobile-focused presence Remember that, despite having an audience that may be using the most advanced smartphones and tablets, they still need an optimized offer that fulfills their specific behaviors (not necessarily the same than the one from the desktop users), providing the best experience according to their device characteristics (and device-specific restrictions). For example, can you guess which of these two sites provide me the best experience, is really optimized for me, will make me stay (as a consequence), and have a higher chance of conversions from me?   Although I have an iPhone 5 and my fingers are tiny, it’s very difficult for me to browse, interact, and consume information if the site doesn’t have a version well-optimized for the device I’m using.  B. Some sites have a mobile presence, but forget about optimization fundamentals On the other hand, other websites have a mobile presence (websites and apps included), but that doesn’t mean they’re really optimized. As I mentioned before, basics from our day-to-day “desktop focused” optimization activities are for some reason forgotten when we go mobile or tablet.  For example, many websites love promoting their apps with intrusive interstitials that disrupt the user mobile web flow , requiring interaction from the user in order to continue:   What about relevant, descriptive titles? This optimization basic is frequently forgotten, even by big websites when they go mobile (although these are well-optimized in their desktop versions):  How about businesses that forget to create a landing page on their site for their own mobile apps? When you search for the app, you get the first results with iTunes store profiles that may confuse you (which one to choose?) featuring not-so-great descriptions, along with some posts with negative reviews:  Time to get better control of your own app web results? Yes, please.  Two questions arise from these situations:  Can you blame people for not converting from their mobile devices? How can you change it? First, let’s acknowledge the challenge of a multi-device ecosystem. Once we get a handle on it, we’ll have an overall vision in order to make the best decisions, optimize your presence accordingly, and maximize your opportunities.  Mobile, Tablet, Web vs. App: The Segmentation Challenge Usually, the first question we need to answer when we go mobile (whether smartphone or tablet focused) is: d o I develop a website or an app?  As I shared in this State of Search post , your decision should be based on certain factors such as your business model; the goals you’re trying to achieve; how important is for your content to have a wider reach, and if it is web indexable or not; whether or not you need to provide a complex functionality that requires a higher hardware integration or connection independence; and if your audience is highly-concentrated in few devices types and platforms. You’ll need to asses these characteristics along with mobile web and apps pros and cons:   When you’re deciding whether going mobile with a website or an app is the best option for you, use the following visualization to analytze the alternatives:  You’ll see that is easier to target  your mobile audience with less web presence than to do so with an app that is much more segmented. However, when you think beyond the development alternatives to target your mobile audience with the required functionalities and start thinking about how you can optimize, grow the visibility, and generate conversions,  you’ll find that most of the principles and good practices are the same (or can be easily extrapolated): Realize that, despite the many segmentation levels a multi-device presence may have from a development and audience perspective, there are optimization principles that are the same for any type of approach, platform, and device type that you should be taking into consideration in order to make the most out of the organic search channels to connect with your audience. It’s now the time to identify these similar principles and good practices to make the most out the multi-device search opportunity, instead of focusing on its complexities as an excuse. Otherwise, you will stay behind.   3 Steps to Improve Your Visibility in a Multi-device Search World 1. Optimize your presence for multi-device search visibility  People not only search for websites through web search, but also for apps (whether from smartphones, tablets, or desktops, remember we’re in a multi-device world), so it’s fundamental that you don’t forget about creating and optimizing a mobile web presence to increase your mobile app visibility through web search, too.  Take a look at the exact-match local monthly search volume for some mobile apps related keywords in the US, from desktop and laptop devices:   And the volume for the searches from mobile devices with full Internet browsers:  So, if you want to maximize the chances that your mobile presence (web or app) gets the search visibility, users, and conversions it deserves, then you need to make sure that it’s easily found through the web search results. If you have a mobile app, you’ll also need to take into consideration your visibility in the app store search. Let’s see how!      1.1. Mobile web: select and optimize the best mobile web approach for your situation When you’re developing a mobile website, the key is to select the best setting according to your characteristics, restrictions, and needs. These settings include responsive web, dynamic serving, or parallel mobile sites.  I’ve posted and presented about these many times, so it may be easier to check out what I’ve shared before and avoid repeating myself. You’ll see that each one of these alternatives have their pros and cons, as well as specific and general SEO best practices that I discussed in this Moz post and  Mozinar  some months ago about mobile SEO:  Nonetheless, beyond specifically optimizing each mobile web alternative according to their characteristics, there are mobile web optimization fundamentals that should always be followed:   1.1.1. Reorganize your content to be correctly displayed in mobile devices Prioritizing the devices used by your audience (that you can identify through your Google Analytics “Audience > Mobile > Devices” report) gives the required visibility to the most important elements of your content. Think about your user’s goals as well as your own, and align them to reorganize your web interface:   Beware of elements (like flash or interstitials) that are not correctly displayed, don’t work, or provide a bad user and search experience. Take a look at the following Mobile usability resources:  Organizing Mobile  by Luke Wroblewski Nielsen’s Mobile Website and Application Usability Report and   Mobile Site vs. Full Site article Brad Frost post about Content Parity 1.1.2. Optimize your mobile pages relevance Make your titles, meta descriptions, URLs, and, of course, your page’s main content relevant for your mobile web audience. Take your keywords into consideration, and the visibility limitation of mobile search results in the different type of devices:  Use mobile emulators and user agent switchers to easily validate by yourself how your own pages are shown in mobile search results (for smartphones and tablets, too), along with your competitors.  1.1.3. Enhance your pages visibility with structured markup and Google+ presence Use structured data markup  (reviews, people, businesses, apps, etc.), Google’s authorship , and create a presence in Google+ for your business to enhance your page’s results visibility, not only in desktop results, but also in your mobile search results (where the visibility provided by these can be even higher in comparison):  Google has also recently announced content recommendations  for mobile sites with a Google+ presence that will make the visibility obtained with it even higher.  1.1.4. Make your mobile site fast Your mobile site has higher speed restrictions due to mobile networks and CPU capabilities, which means it’s even more important to optimize its speed. Use your Google Analytics site speed report information to easily identify your pages load times and analyze them with  Google’s PageSpeed Insights mobile filter to identify opportunities to improve them:   Follow PageSpeed’s mobile best practices and take into consideration what’s explained in this ” Make the Mobile Web faster ” article.  1.1.5. Serve the right web version according to the used device It’s important to effectively identify the type of device (desktop, tablet, smartphone) used by your visitors and provide them the right web version by using different techniques according to the Mobile Web approach you’re following: With CSS media-queries with  responsive Web With User agent detection with dynamic serving With User agent detection and redirects with a  parallel mobile site 1.2. Mobile apps: create and optimize landing pages for apps in your site Give visibility to your app beyond the app store search results by creating a landing page for each of your mobile apps on your own website. Make the landing pages relevant, and optimize them to rank for popular searches of users looking for your apps:  Make sure to feature testimonials and reviews, and add a visible link to your app store page with call to actions to incentivize downloads:  Integrate your social presence as well, inviting for shares in social networks:   Additionally, Google has recently announced even more integration with Google+ for apps by showing  Google+ Sign-In  app activities  in their results, which would also give your results more visibility:  1.2. App Store Search   Although app store search optimization is still in early stages when we compare it with web search and is specific to each app store (Android Market and the Apple App Store),  it’s also evolving , aligning each time more with web search type of factors, with an algorithm that is looking to reward: Relevance: with the relevant terms in the App name, description, and keywords Popularity: with download rate, install base, ratings, comments, and even external review sites  Take these into consideration for your app store presence, by optimizing the different elements of your profile:    In addition to promoting, gamifying your mobile experience (with profiles, levels, badges, rewards, lists, etc.) to incentivize your app users activity is a huge download driver. Take a look at how successful apps do it, like Foursquare:   You can additionally promote your app through relevant sites in the sector, such as app review blogs and communities:  On the other hand, take into consideration that sometimes app store preview pages also rank in web search results and that there’s also a specific “Applications” search feature in Google, listing only application related presence, for which these optimization best practices would be also beneficial in order to get a better visibility:  There are also sites and tools like App Annie  and  Searchman that provide free app store statistics about the top apps per store, category, and country, which can serve you as an input when optimizing your app:  2. Cross promote between your multi-device presence Create awareness of your multi-device web and app presence through each other. Promote your mobile app in a non-intrusive way (no interstitials) by inviting users to download it when accessing the mobile site with a relevant device or to switch to another web version, as shown in these images:  Make sure you also create awareness about your different multi-device presence through all of your channels, from email signatures to social profiles to your home page and emails, with updates and specially targeted mobile offers:    3. Measure to improve your multi-device presence You cannot improve what you cannot measure, so it’s fundamental to track, continuously analyze, and make improvements not only to your desktop, but also to your mobile presence based on their analytics data. You can still using  Google Analytics  for this, which provides an  SDK for mobile app analytics. 3.1. For your web presence You can use Google Analytics mobile reports and default segments along with your own advanced segments and dashboards to follow-up and verify if you’re advancing as expected with the traffic and conversions volume and trend per device type, keywords, and pages: To easily check your Google Analytics campaign tagging and referrers for your mobile site (or your competitors), you can use user agent switchers along with Google Analytics debuggers extensions for your browser:  For Firefox: use this  user agent switcher and Google Analytics debugger For Chrome: use this user agent switcher and Google Analytics debugger Unfortunately, there are issues with the search referrer data that are not passed from the Safari search box in iOS 6 , and as a consequence, it’s shown as direct traffic in your analytics platform. Something similar also happens for Android 4 mobile search traffic . Check out  this post by AJ Khon  showing how we can create an advanced segment in Google Analytics to calculate the approximate amount of the lost search traffic.  3.1. For your apps The mobile app analytics will give you information about the amount of active users, screen views, sessions to demographic information, used app versions, goal completions, and in-app revenue:   Additionally, to verify your Google Analytics campaign tagging and referrers for your mobile app (or your competitors), you can set a proxy on your own computer, using a software like Charles Proxy  (available for Windows and Mac), so you’ll be able to monitor the HTTP traffic that goes through it, even the one from the apps installed on your mobile (that you’ll need to set so it uses your computer as proxy).  Follow these installation and configuration steps  to set your computer as a proxy and configure your mobile network settings to use it as an HTTP proxy (you’ll need to add in the manual proxy settings your computer IP as the server one with the 8888 port):  Now you’ll able to monitor the HTTP requests made from your mobile through Charles, including the ones made by your apps, as it can be seen in the following example:    You can use this not only with your own apps, but with your competitor’s to check how they’re tracking their mobile traffic and with your providers or partners to see if they’re effectively tagging their campaigns.  Be sure to take a look at  this Distilled post  with a complete check-list that will guide you with the necessary settings and questions to better measure your mobile presence.  Conclusion: There’s no excuse. Start optimizing for multi-device search now.  As you can see, there’s no excuse to not optimize for a multi-device search ecosystem. It’s true that the landscape may become more segmented, but many of the best practices and optimization steps can be aligned between the different presences, and will give you the chance to connect with an audience that you’re likely already losing.  Remember that search is always evolving, and if you don’t catch it now, it might be even more difficult with new type of device and  search interactions in a future that look even more segmented. Do you have any questions or would like to share your opinions? I look forward to your comments! Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

More:
The 3 Steps for Success in a Multi-device Search World

How to Rank: 25 Step SEO Master Blueprint

Posted by Cyrus Shepard If you’re like most SEOs, you spend a lot of time reading. Over the past several years, I’ve spent 100s of hours studying blogs, guides, and Google patents. Not long ago, I realized that 90% of what I read each doesn’t change what I actually do – that is, the basic work of ranking a web page higher on Google . For newer SEOs, the process can be overwhelming. To to simplify this process, I created this SEO blueprint. It’s meant as a framework for newer SEOs to build their own work on top of. This basic blueprint has helped, in one form or another, 100s of pages and dozens of sites to gain higher rankings. Think of it as an intermediate SEO instruction manual, for beginners. Level : Beginner to Intermediate Timeframe : 2 to 10 Weeks What you need to know: The blueprint assumes you have basic SEO knowledge: you’re not scared of title tags, can implement a rel=canonical, and you’ve built a link or two. (If this is your first time to the rodeo, we suggest reading the Beginners Guide to SEO and browsing our Learn SEO section .) Keyword Research 1. Working Smarter, Not Harder Keyword research can be simple or hard, but it should always be fun. For the sake of the Blueprint, let’s do keyword research the easy way. The biggest mistakes people make with keyword research are: Choosing keywords that are too broad Keywords with too much competition Keywords without enough traffic Keywords that don’t convert Trying to rank for one keyword at a time The biggest mistake people make is trying to rank for a single keyword at a time . This is the hard way. It’s much easier, and much more profitable, to rank for 100s or even 1,000s of long tail keywords with the same piece of content. Instead of ranking for a single keyword, let’s aim our project around a keyword theme . 2. Dream Your Keyword Theme Using keyword themes solves a whole lot of problems. Instead of ranking for one Holy Grail keyword, a better goal is to rank for lots of keywords focused around a single idea. Done right, the results are amazing. I assume you know enough about your business to understand what type of visitor you’re seeking and whether you’re looking for traffic, conversions, or both. Regardless, one simple rule holds true:  t he more specific you define your theme, the easier it is to rank. This is basic stuff, but it bears repeating. If your topic is the football, you’ll find it hard to rank for  “Super Bowl,” but slightly easier to rank for “Super Bowl 2014” – and easier yet to rank for “Best Super Bowl Recipes of 2014.” Don’t focus on specific words yet – all you need to know is your broad topic. The next step is to find the right keyword qualifiers. 3. Get Specific with Qualifiers Qualifiers are words that add specificity to keywords and define intent. They take many different forms. Time/Date : 2001, December, Morning Price/Quality : Cheap, Best, Most Popular Intent : Buy, Shop, Find Location : Houston, Outdoors, Online The idea is to find as many qualifiers as possible that fit your audience. Here’s where keyword tools enter the picture. You can use any keyword tool you like, but favorites include Wordstream , Keyword Spy , SpyFu , and Bing Keyword Tool and Übersuggest . For speed and real-world insight, Übersuggest is an all-time SEO favorite. Run a simple query and export over 100 suggested keyword based on Google’s own Autocomplete feature – based on actual Google searches. Did I mention it’s free? 4. Finding Diamonds in the Google Rough At this point you have a few dozen, or a few hundred keywords to pull into Google Adwords Keyword Tool . Pro Tip #1: While it’s possible to run over a hundred keyword phrases at once in Google’s Keyword Tool, you get more variety if you limit your searches to 5-10 at a time. Using “Exact” search types and “Local Monthly” search volume, we’re looking for 10-15 closely related keyword phrases with decent search volume, but not too much completion. Pro Tip #2 : Be careful trusting the “Competition” column in Google Adwords Keyword Tool. This refers to bids on paid search terms, not organic search. 5. Get Strategic with the Competition Now that we have a basic keyword set, you need to find out if you can actually rank for your phrases. You have two basic methods of ranking the competition: Automated tools like the Keyword Difficulty Tool Eyeballing the SERPs If you have an SEOmoz PRO membership (or even a free trial) the Keyword Difficulty Tool calculates – on a 100 point scale – a difficulty score for each individual keyword phrase you enter. Keyword phrases in the 60-70+ range are typically competitive, while keywords in the 30-40 range might be considered low to moderately difficult. To get a better idea of your own strengths, take the most competitive keyword you currently rank #1 or #2 for, and run it through the tool. Even without automated tools, the best way to size up the competition is to eyeball the SERPs . Run a search query ( non-personalized ) for your keywords and ask yourself the following questions: Are the first few results optimized for the keyword? Is the keyword in the title tag? In the URL? On the page? What’s the Page and/or Domain Authority of the URL? Are the first few results authorities on the keyword subject? What’s the inbound anchor text? Can you deliver a higher quality resource for this keyword? You don’t actually have to rank #1 for any of your chosen words to earn traffic, but you should be comfortable cracking the top five. With keyword themes, the magic often happens from keywords you never even thought about. Case Study: Google Algo Update When SEOmoz launched the Google Algorithm Change HIstory (run by Dr. Pete ) we used a similar process for keyword research to explore the theme “ Google Algorithm ” and more specifically, “ Google Algorithm Change .” According to Google’s search tool, we could expect a no more than a couple thousand visits a month – best case – for these exact terms. Fortunately, because the project was well received and because we optimized around a board keyword theme of “Google Algorithm,” the Algo Update receives lots of traffic outside our pre-defined keywords. This is where the long tail magic happens: How can you improve your chances of ranking for more long tail keywords? Let’s talk about content, architecture, on-page optimization and link building. Content 6. Creating Value Want to know the truth? I hate the word content. It implies words on a page, a commodity to be produced, separated from the value it creates. Content without value is spam. In the Google Algorithm Update example above, we could have simply written 100 articles about Google’s Algorithm and hoped to rank. Instead, the conversation started by asking how we could create a valuable resource for webmasters. For your keyword theme, ask first how you can create value. Value is harder to produce than mere words, but value is rewarded 100x more. Value is future proof & algorithm proof. Value builds links by itself. Value creates loyal fans. Value takes different forms. It’s a mix of: Utility Emotional response Point of view (positive or negative) Perceived value , including fame of the author Your content doesn’t have to include all 4 of these characteristics, but it should excel in one or more to be successful. A study of the New York Times found key characteristics of content to be influential in making the Most Emailed list. Source: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1528077 7. Driving Your Content Vehicle Here’s a preview: the Blueprint requires you create at least one type of link bait, so now is a good time to think about the structure of your content. What’s the best way to deliver value given your theme? Perhaps it’s an Infographic Video series A new tool An interview series Slide deck How-to guide Q&A Webinar or simple blog post Perhaps, it’s all of these combined. The more ways you find to deliver your content and the more channels you take advantage of, the better off you’ll be. Not all of your content has to go viral, but you want to create at least one “tent-pole” piece that’s better than anything else out there and you’re proud to hang your hat on. If you need inspiration, check out Distilled’s guide to Viral Linkbait or QuickSprout’s Templates for Content Creation . 8. Title – Most Important Work Goes Here Spend two hours, minimum, writing your title. Sound ridiculous? If you’re an experienced title writer like Rand Fishkin, you can break this rule. For the rest of us, it’s difficult to underplay the value delivered by a finely crafted title. Write 50 titles or more before choosing one. Study the successful titles on Inbound.org , Mashable , Wired , or your favorite publication. Whatever you do, read this fantastic post by Dan Shure and the headline resources at CopyBlogger . 9. Length vs. Depth – Why it Matters How long should your content be? A better question is: How deep should it be? Word count by itself is a terrible metric to strive for, but depth of content helps you to rank in several ways. Adds uniqueness threshold to avoid duplicate content Deeper topic exploration makes your content “about” more Quality, longer content is c orrelated with more links  and higher rankings I. Uniqueness At a minimum, your content needs to meet a minimum uniqueness threshold in order for it to rank. Google reps have gone on record to say a couple sentences is sometimes sufficient, but in reality a couple hundred words is much safer. II. Long Tail Opportunities Here’s where the real magic happens. The deeper your content and the more in-depth you can explore a particular topic, the more your content becomes “about.” The more your content is “about”, the more search queries it can answer well. The more search queries you can answer well, the more traffic you can earn. Google’s crawlers continently read your content to determine how relevant it is to search queries. They evaluate paragraphs, subject headings, photographs and more to try to understand your page. Longer, in-depth content usually send more relevancy signals than a couple short sentences. III. Depth, Length, and Links Numerous correlation studies have shown a positive relationship between r ankings and number of words in a document . “The length in HTML and the HTML within the tag were the highest correlated factors, in fact with correlations of .12 they could be considered somewhat if not hugely significant. While these factors probably are not implemented within the algorithm, they are good signs of what Google is looking for; quality content, which in many cases means long or at least sufficiently lengthy pages.” – Mark Collier The Open Algorithm This could be attributed longer, quality content earning more links. John Doherty examined the relationship between the length of blog posts on SEOmoz and the number of links each post earned, and found a strong relationship . 10. Content Qualities You Can Bank On If you don’t focus on word count, how do you add quality “depth” to your content? SEOs have written volumes about how Google might define quality including metrics such as reading level, grammar, spelling, and even Author Rank . Most is speculation, but it’s clear Google does use guidelines to separate good content from bad. My favorite source for clues comes from the set of questions Google published shortly after the first Panda update. Here are a few of my favorites. 11. LDA, nTopic, and Words on the Page Google is a machine. It can’t yet understand your page like a human can, but it’s getting close. Search engines use sophisticated algorithms to model your sentences, paragraphs, blocks,  and content sections . Not only do they want to understand your keywords, but also your topic, intent, and expertise as well. How do you know if your content fits Google’s model of expectations? For example, if your topic is “Super Bowl Recipes,” Google might expect to see content about grilling, appetizers, and guacamole. Content that addresses these topics will likely rank higher than pages that talk about what color socks you’re wearing today. Words matter. SEOs have discovered that using certain words around a topic associated with concepts like LDA and nTopic are correlated with higher rankings . Virante offers an interesting stand alone keyword suggestion tool called nTopic. The tools analyzes your keywords and suggests related keywords to improve your relevancy scores. 12. Better than LDA – Poor Man’s Topic Modeling Since we don’t have access to Google’s computers for topic modeling, there’s a far simpler way to structure your content that I find far superior to worrying about individual words: Use the keyword themes you created at the beginning of this blueprint. You’ve already done the research using Google’s keyword tool to find closely related keyword groups. Incorporating these topics into your content may help increase your relevancy to your given topic. Example: Using the Google Algorithm project cited above, we found during keyword research that certain keywords related to our theme show up repeatedly, time and time again. If we conducted this research today, we would find phrases like “ Penguin SEO ” and “ Panda Updates ” frequently in our results. Google suggests these terms via the keyword tool because they consider them closely related. So any content that explored “Google Algorithm Change” might likely include a discussion of these ideas. Note: This isn’t real LDA, simply a way of adding relevant topics to your content that Google might associate with your subject matter. 13. Design Is 50% of the Battle If you have any money in your budget, spend it on design . A small investment with a designer typically pays outsized dividends down the road. Good design can: Lower bounce rate Increase page views Increase time on site Earn more links Establish trust … All of which can help earn higher rankings. “Design doesn’t just matter, it’s 50% of the battle.” -Rand Fishkin Dribbble.com is one of our favorite source of design inspiration. Architecture Here’s the special secret of the SEO Blueprint: you’re not making a single page to rank; you’re making several. 14. Content Hubs Very few successful websites consist of a single page. Google determines context and relevancy not only by what’s on your page, but also by the pages around it and linking to it. The truth is, it’s far easier to rank when you create Content Hubs exploring several topics in depth focused around a central theme. Using our “Super Bowl Recipes” example, we might create a complete section of pages, each exploring a different recipe in depth. 15. Linking the Hub Together Because your pages now explore different aspects of the same broad topic, it makes sense to link them together. Your page about guacamole relates to your page about nachos . Your page about link building relates to your page about infographics . Your page about Winston Churchill relates to major figures of World War II . It also helps them to rank by distributing PageRank , anchor text, and other relevancy signals . 16. Find Your Center Content Hubs work best with a “hub” or center. Think of the center as the master document that acts as an overview or gateway to all of your individual content pages. The hub is the authority page. Often, the hub is a link bait page or a category level page. It’s typically the page with the most inbound links and often as a landing page for other sections of your site. For great example of Hub Pages, check out: CopyBloggers Magnetic Headlines SEOmoz’s Learn SEO Amazon’s author pages (this one about Stephen King) On-Page Optimization 17. Master the Basics You could write an entire book about on-page optimization. If you’re new to SEO, one of the best ways to learn is by using SEOmoz’s On-page Report Card (free, registration required) The tool grades 36 separate on-page SEO elements, gives you a report and suggestions on how to fix each element. Working your way through these issues is an excellent way to learn (and often used by agencies and companies as a way to teach SEO principals) Beyond the basics, let’s address a few slightly more advanced tactics to take advantage of your unique keyword themes and hub pages, in addition to areas where beginners often make mistakes. 18. Linking Internally for the Reasonable Surfer Not all links are created equal (One of the greatest SEO blog posts ever written!) So, when you interlink your internal pages within your content hub together, keep in mind a few important points. Links from inside unique content pass more value than navigation links. Links higher up the page pass more value than links further down. Links i n HTML text pass more weight than image links. When interlinking your content, it’s best to keep links prominent and “editorial” – naturally link to your most important content pages higher up in the HTML text. 19. Diversify Your Anchor Text – Naturally If Google’s Penguin update taught us anything, it’s that over-thinking anchor text is bound to get us in trouble. When you link naturally and editorially to other places on the web, you naturally diversify your anchor text . The same should hold true when you link internally. Don’t choose your anchor text to fit your keywords;  choose your anchor text to fit the content around it . Practically speaking, this means linking internally with a mix of partial match keyword and related phrases . Don’t be scared to link occasionally without good keywords in the anchor – the link can still pass relevancy signals. When it comes to linking, it’s safer to under-do it than over-do it. Spouce: Google’s SEO Starter Guide 20. Title Tags – Two Quick Tips We assume you know how to write a compelling title tag. Even today, keyword usage in the title tag is one of the most highly correlated on-page ranking factors that we know. That said, Google is getting strict about over-optimizing title tags, and appears to be further cracking down on titles “written for SEO.” Keep this in mind when crafting your title tags I. Avoid boilerplates It used to be common to tack on your business phrase or main keywords to the end of every title tag, like so: Plumbing Supplies – Chicago Plumbing and Fixtures Pipes & Fittings – Chicago Plumbing and Fixtures Toilet Seat Covers – Chicago Plumbing and Fixtures While we don’t have much solid data, many SEOs are now asserting that “boilerplate” titles tacked on to the end of every tag are no longer a good idea. Brand names and unique descriptive information is okay, but making every title as unique as possible is the rule of the day. II. Avoid unnecessary repetition – Google also appears (at least to many SEOs) on what’s considered the lower threshold of “keyword stuffing.” In years past it was a common rule of thumb never to repeat your keyword more than twice in the title. Today, to be on the safe side, you might be best to consider not repeating your keywords more than once. 21. Over-Optimization: Titles, URLs, and Links Writing for humans not only gets you more clicks (which can lead to higher rankings), but hardly ever gets you in trouble with search engines. As SEOs we’re often tempted to get a “perfect score” which means exactly matching our title tags, URLs, inbound anchor text, and more. unfortunately, this isn’t natural in the real world, and Google recognizes this. Diversify. Don’t over-optimize . 22. Structured Data Short and simple: Make structured data part of every webpage. While structured data hasn’t yet proven to be a large ranking factor, it’s future-facing value can be seen today in rich snippet SERPs and social media sharing. In some verticals , it’s an absolute necessity. There’s no rule of thumb about what structured data to include, but the essentials are: Facebook Open Graph tags Twitter Cards Authorship Publisher Business information Reviews Events To be honest, if you’re not creating pages with structured data, you’re probably behind the times. For an excellent guide about Micro Data and Schema.org, check out this fantastic resource from SEOGadget . Building Links 23. The 90/10 Rule of Link Building This blueprint contains 25 steps to rank your content, but only the last three address link building. Why so few? Because 90% of your effort should go into creating great content , and 10% into link building . If you have a hard time building links, it may be because you have these numbers reversed. Creating great content first solves a ton of problems down the line: Good content makes link building easier Attracts higher quality links in less time Builds links on its own even when sleeping or on vacation If you’re new to marketing or relatively unknown, you may need to spend more than 10% of your time building relationships, but don’t let that distract you from crafting the type of content that folks find so valuable they link to you without you even asking. 24. All Link Building is Relationships – Good & Bad This blueprint doesn’t go into link building specifics, as there are 100′s of ways to build quality links to every good project. That said, a few of my must link building resources: Jon Cooper’s Complete List of Link Building Strategies StumbleUpon Paid Discovery Citation Labs Promoted Tweets Ontolo eReleases – Press releases not for links, but for exposer BuzzStream Paddy Moogan’s excellent Link Building Book These resources give you the basic tools and tactics for a successful link building campaign, but keep in mind that all good link building is relationship building. Successful link builders understand this and foster each relationship and connection. Even a simple outreach letter can be elevated to an advanced form of relationship building with a little effort, as this Whiteboard Friday by Rand so graciously illustrates.     25. Tier Your Link Building… Forever The truth is, for professionals, link building never ends . Each content and link building campaign layers on top of previous content, and the web as a whole like layers of fine Greek baklava. For example, this post could be considered linkbait for SEOmoz, but it also links generously to several other content pieces within the Moz family, and externally as well; spreading both the link love and the relationship building as far as possible at the same time. SEOmoz links generously to other sites: the link building experience is not just about search engines, but the people experience, as well. We link to great resources, and build links for the best user experience possible. When done right, the search engines reward exactly this type of experience with higher rankings. For an excellent explanation as to why you should link out to external sites when warranted, read AJ Kohns excellent work, Time to Long Click . One of my favorite posts on SEOmoz was 10 Ugly SEO Tools that Actually Rock . Not only was the first link on the page directed to our own SEO tools , but we linked and praised our competitors as well. Linkbait at its finest. Sign up for The Moz Top 10 , a semimonthly mailer updating you on the top ten hottest pieces of SEO news, tips, and rad links uncovered by the Moz team. Think of it as your exclusive digest of stuff you don’t have time to hunt down but want to read!

Excerpt from:
How to Rank: 25 Step SEO Master Blueprint