How to Move Rankings Up On Older, Existing Content – Whiteboard Friday

Posted by randfish Many owners of established, older pages are facing a similar issue: they’ve been ranking decently for a keyword for some time, but they want to move into the coveted number one spot. However, older pages don’t drive a ton of new press, new social signals, or awareness. If you want to boost your rankings for the same keyword you’ve been targeting for awhile, how can you move up to move the needle on your business? Adjusting your existing, quality content can be used to help bump your site up in the SERPs. In today’s Whiteboard Friday, Rand lays out the tactics you can use to boost your older page to the next level! How to Move Rankings Up On Older, Existing Content – Whiteboard Friday Here is a screenshot of the whiteboard used in today’s video:    Video Transcription “Howdy Moz fans, and welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week I want to get a little down in the gritty details. Sometimes you’ve got a situation like this. Someone’s performed a search for air conditioners. You’re ranking number four. From an SEO perspective your real need is not, “Let me expand things and look at bunch of different channels.” It’s, “If I could move this ranking up, I could really move the needle on our business because this is a highly performing, a highly converting term, and I really want to move it just on this particular piece.” Hyper-tactical, but it’s good to know all the ways that you can move the needle on this. So if you want to go from number four to number three to number two and you’ve got essentially an older page, not a new page – so you’re not getting lots of new press, attention, or awareness, driving all these social signals, etc. – and you’re not targeting a new keyword, you have this kind of stale, older page and you want to get it ranking, there’s a bunch of tactics that you can pursue, and I want to talk about each of them in a bit of detail. So number one, point more external links to the URL. This is probably the most classic thing that folks in the SEO field have done over the last decade, 12 years. It does work, and it still does work, although it’s less powerful than it used to be because search engines, Google in particular, are looking at such a broader set of figures and data sources for their ranking signals. However, a few things about this. This is going to be pretty darn hard to do with commercial content. It’s much easier if you got educational or non-promotional stuff, because reaching out and getting links from other types of folks, from other websites is much easier when it’s authentic and not directly promotional or not directly revenue generating, that kind of thing. Now this is much easier for folks who are in like a non-profit space or in an educational or content space because they can reach out and say, “Hey, I have this great resource. I think your people might like it. Do you want to shoot over a link to it? Can I contribute something to your site and point to it?” Yes. It’s much harder to do that when you have a page that’s ranking for air conditioners and you’re just trying to beat out three other e-commerce retailers for air conditioners. This is the way it goes. I do have some specific recommendations. I’m not going to dive into every one of these, but these are the tactics that, in my experience, work the best. So that’s guest content, basically when you’re writing on other people’s sites. Of course, just like everything, it’s got to be authentic, got to be high quality. You can’t just be spamming other people’s sites or submitting to really low quality ones. Promotions do tend to work pretty well. If you’re doing a promotion on your air conditioners, other people may pick that up. You can get press and attention, social attention. Partnerships can work well. Testimonials and reviews. So other people who are writing reviews about maybe an air conditioner line that you’ve just launched, or someone’s writing a review about a new air conditioner that’s come out, and you happen to be the retailer featuring that, you can be included in those types of places. List inclusion, if you know about a list that already exists where people are covering places to get air conditioners online, you can get included in those. Again, be really careful. You don’t want to go to those spammy, generic directories. You want to be going to high-quality lists. CNET Reviews is very different from Articles-about-electronics-online.info. Apologies if that’s your site. If not, we should register it. I’m kidding. Press and blogs, of course. Social media pushes you can do, especially if you’ve got something to announce around air conditioners. Summer’s coming up, right? A Facebook page, a push on Pinterest, a push on Twitter, or on Google+. Link reclamation, meaning you go back and find places that used to link to you that don’t anymore, places that used to link to your competition but those links are now broken. You can go talk to those kinds of folks. Those are the kinds of link building techniques that have worked best, in my experience. Please be so super careful not to build the wrong links. If you haven’t watched it already, Matt Cutts has been tweeting and talking in video – Matt Cuts being the head of the Web Spam Team at Google – talking about how they’re going to be taking even more aggressive action than what they took with Penguin in a Penguin 2.0 algorithm that’s coming out in the next few weeks. So just please be super cautious about where you’re getting these external link sources from. Especially since links are a little less powerful than they used to be and because a lot of the linking sources are more dangerous than they once were, there are some other ways I want to mention. Those include increasing your click-through rate. Now, I’m not trying to say here that correlation equals causation, or that it even implies that, but what we do know is more people clicking through on your listing means fewer people clicking through to your competitors and a higher chance that some of those people are going to take actions that we know does increase ranking, so things like linking to you and sharing you and those kinds of things. Your page is clearly providing a more compelling experience. That tends to be exactly what Google’s algorithm is trying to accomplish, and so increasing your click-through rate can help with this. One of the ways that this can be done, and this is not to say that Google is sort of biased to people who do it, but if you supplement with PPC, with paid search ads, it tend to be the case, and lots of people have tried different tests around this and gotten different performance, but, on average, it tends to be the case that one plus one equals a little more than two. I put 2.25 for that. Your mileage may vary. But basically, if I take a look over here and I’ve got my air conditioner page and I also have an ad on the sidebar or on the top up here, it tends to be the case that the click-through rate here, plus the click-through rate here, is a little more than if I just had a paid ad or if I just had the organic listing. So two listings on the page slightly better than one and one. So that’s certainly an angle you can try again. Again, I urge you to test this, not to just take it on blind faith. Included in that test methodology should be testing modifications to the title and the description. So if your air conditioner page here has got a description and a title and a URL – the URL matters too, and you can do things like 301 redirect the old one to a new one – this can move the needle. I have found a lot of the time that what I’d call keyword-stuffed, kind of SEO 1.0, back in the late ’90s, early 2000s type of things where it says, “Air conditioners, your air conditioners, get the best air conditioners here,” followed by a brand name that’s kind of off, after what people can see in the title in the search results, doesn’t perform nearly as well as a brand people recognize, a compelling title that has a little bit of authenticity, a little bit of your brand and your culture and your unique value proposition embedded right in the title and the description. The same story with the URL. Lots of hyphens separating something, a longer URL, a dynamic URL versus one that has readable keywords in it and readable text in there. Again, you’re going for authenticity. You’re going for, “Boy, what would I click on? What do I tend to click on? What do people like?” Think of this just like you’d think of a paid search ad. You want to optimize all the areas of this and try and test it and get better performance out of that click-through rate. Another thing you can obviously do is add rich snippets. These are things like we could add a video to the page and add the video XML sitemap so that we get the video markup next to that result. We could add rel=author and get our profile picture next to it, assuming we connected with Google+. For some types of rich snippet results, recipes in particular, news items, you can add images and get those in there. For other types of results, air conditioners, any ecommerce result, you can have star reviews and number of reviews. All of those things can help move the needle on click-through rate. Number three, improve and revitalize the page’s content itself. Again, this isn’t always a direct needle mover. It can be indirect. But Google is pretty sophisticated with analyzing content. Better content, I don’t mean better content in terms of it has more keywords stuffed into it, or better content in terms of it just happens to be longer or more in-depth. I mean more compelling, more uniquely valuable, more interesting, more worthy of being shared, more special. That kind of stuff tends to perform better in Google. They’ve got a wide variety of text-based content analysis algorithms that tell them all sorts of stuff about a page, not just keywords and TFIDF and stuff like that. So things like rich media, video, images, graphics, the layout design, the user experience, the visual aesthetics, how the page looks, these actually can move the needle, not just on how it performs in the search results, but how it performs in terms of conversion rate. Conversion rate actually tends to be tied pretty nicely to how it performs in search results, because again, Google is looking at all those pieces of the algorithm, trying to piece together what provides the best experience for our users. Text content too. I’m not just talking about keywords. I’m talking about that unique value. If you haven’t seen the Whiteboard Friday on unique value versus unique content, you should check that out. I know I didn’t have enough room, so I switched sides. Number four, internal links and redirects. So there are a few things that can happen here. Sometimes you have an orphaned page. It’s only linked to from one section. You’ve got to drill way deep down into a subcategory or sub-subcategory to find this page on your site. E-commerce sites are particularly messy with this kind of stuff a lot of the time. Make sure that the page is getting link love, internal link love, relevant link love. I’m not  talking about stuffing an anchor text-rich link in the footer of every page or the category section or something like that. I’m talking about when you have pages that are relevant to air conditioning, you have a page on summer appliances, you have a page on electronics, you have a page on what should homeowners be thinking about to upgrade their homes, great. Make sure that you’re linking to your air conditioner page. Those are relevant pages where people would want to see that. If you’re confused, do an “air conditioners”site:yourdomain. See all the pages where you mentioned it, and yet have somehow failed to link over to your air conditioner’s page that you actually got. Consolidation. This is a really powerful one. So this is essentially saying, “I’m going to take all the pages that are targeting that same term or phrase and 301 them all together.” We’ve done this a number of times on Moz, because we’ll have a bunch of old blog posts or old content pages that are all talking about exactly the same thing. Then we go, “Man, why do we have seven of these? And, by the way, six of them are more than three years old.” Let’s just take those and 301 them back to the most relevant, most high-quality content. If we have some content that was on those other pages that we want to put on the existing one, let’s do that. Let’s consolidate so people don’t get lost in terms off which is the most relevant page about air conditioners on your site. Google shouldn’t be confused about that either, and that can actually really move the needle. I’ve seen that a number of times pop us from page two to page one, or pop us from the bottom of page one to the top five results, that kind of stuff. Number five, newer signal, but something that I’m pretty sure in this year’s ranking factors is going to prove to be very interesting, and that is branding, co-occurrence, and mentions. What I mean by this is if your brand name, that’s usually your domain name and usually your company name as well, is often connected with the words “air conditioners” – by connected I mean connected when the press talks about you, when third party sites talk about you, when people blog about you, when social media users talk about you – if those words tend to appear frequently together, your brand plus thing you want to rank for, you tend to do quite well. We’ve seen some early signals that mentions, that co-occurrence of terms, phrases plus brand can really move the needle. So don’t ignore that either. All right. Hope these five techniques are things that you can try out. Share your experiences with the rest of the Whiteboard Friday readers in the comments, and I’ll look forward to seeing you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard Friday. Take care.” Video transcription by Speechpad.com 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!

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How to Move Rankings Up On Older, Existing Content – Whiteboard Friday

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!

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How to Rank: 25 Step SEO Master Blueprint

#MozCon 2013 Agenda

Posted by Erica McGillivray Holy cannoli, it’s MozCon 2013 Agenda time! July 8th-July 10th here in Seattle are going to be out-of-this-world. I know many of you have been asking for the complete MozCon schedule, and we’ve been working hard with all our 2013 speakers to find those perfect words to express how awesome MozCon’s going to be. I’m thrilled for the variety of programming we’ll have from local SEO and mobile content strategy to video and marketing analytics. There will be plenty of amazingess to fill your brain. You’ll see that we have some MozCon favorites returning like Avinash Kaushik, Wil Reynolds, and Joanna Lord, and we’ve invited some great new folks like Kyle Rush, Karen McGrane, and Dana DiTomaso. Those are some insanely smart industry experts! You’ll learn a ton of actionable info to take home and start implementing on your site(s) right after MozCon. And for those of you wanting to know about the party… This year we’re raising the roof of the EMP Museum. That’s right, we wanted to meet and greet our community while hiding from Daleks. We’ve listened to your needs, and the EMP’s amazing space works for those who want to rock out to karaoke as well as those interested in quieter conversations with a new friend. Sing your heart out if you choose. If that hasn’t got you purchasing your ticket yet… MozCon 2013 Agenda Monday 8:00am – 9:00am Breakfast 9:00 am – 9:30am Intro: The Year in SEO, Marketing, and Moz with Rand Fishkin 9:30am – 10:00am Really Targeted Outreach with Richard Baxter We’ve all sent guest post pitches and “link building requests” and begged for precious links any way and anywhere we can. But, that simply isn’t marketing. We have all the tools for a better way of finding our audience and determining what they love. Richard will show you a data-driven approach to marketing your brand to your target audience. No more guesswork, you’ll know exactly how to get the right eyeballs on your content. 10:00am – 10:30am International SEO and the Future of Your ROI with Aleyda Solis Take a bold step into the international market. Aleya will walk you through how to calculate the possible ROI of international sales, how to sell it to your boss or client, and the practical how-to’s of international implementation on your site. 10:30am – 10:50am Break 10:50am – 11:50am Simplifying Complexity: Three Ideas For Higher ROI with Avinash Kaushik One of the awesome realities of our existence is that we have to deal with a lot of complexity. Often the natural response to that is to try and overpower that with even more complexity. In this session, we’ll apply the Occam’s Razor to three user cases and learn practical tips. 11:50am – 1:20pm Lunch 1:20pm – 1:50pm Wordless Wednesdays: How to Swaggerjack the Power of Visual Memes with Lena West Image-heavy, responsive websites are all the rage, but can be problematic for SEO, load times, and other inbound marketing concerns. But how does this balance out with the popularity of images-based memes like “Wordless Wednesday”? Lena will examine these visual memes and their impact on traffic, and she’ll talk about how you can parlay the power of visual memes into serious search and traffic results. 1:50pm – 2:20pm Rapid Fire Link Building Tips for Your Content with Ross Hudgens You’ve built your content and made it King. Now what? Ross teaches you how to take your content and turn it into links for your site. Whether you’re just hunting for backlinks or building up social shares, you’ll find all the tips to get your community engaged and building those links for you. 2:20pm – 3:00pm Hot Off the Press: 2013 Ranking Factors with Matt Peters Moz’s data scientist Dr. Matt walks you through the 2013 Ranking Factors. He’ll be breaking down Google’s cutting-edge ways of how they figure out if your pages are relevant beyond keywords. You’ll walk away with an understanding of the data and the knowledge to craft a sound SEO strategy. 3:00pm – 3:30pm Strings to Things: Entities and SEO with Matthew Brown In the last year, Google and Bing have both indicated a shift to entity-based search results as part of their evolution. Google has unscored this point with rich snippets and Knowledge Graph, and Bing has now upped the ante on personal search results with Bing Snapshots. Find out how you can adopt strategies to stay ahead of the curve in the new world of semantic search results. 3:30pm – 3:50pm Break 3:50pm – 4:20pm The Mobile Content Mandate with Karen McGrane Do you think “no one will ever want to do that on mobile”? Chances are, someone already wants to. Karen will discuss why you need to deliver content wherever your customer wants to consume it — and the risks of ignoring mobile users. She’ll also explain how to start your mobile content strategy, define what you want to publish, construct the relationship between your mobile and desktop site, and evolve your editorial workflow and content management tools. 4:20pm – 4:50pm Building a Better Business with Digital Marketing with Mackenzie Fogelson Extraordinary businesses and communities are built with a higher purpose than just making money. Mack will walk you through how you can achieve bigger objectives for your clients or for your own business. Using the power of digital marketing tools (along with passion and hard work), you’ll learn how to shape and foster your company and the community around it. 4:50 – 5:20pm The 7 Heavenly Habits of Inspired Inbound Marketers with Dharmesh Shah Curious about how some of the world’s best inbound marketers work? How do they come up with ideas for content? What’s their policy on handling Twitter mentions? How much do they really spend on A/B testing? Dharmesh will walk you through these habits and more. Tuesday 8:00am – 9:00am Breakfast 9:00am – 9:30am Building a Winning Video Marketing Strategy with Phil Nottingham Phil’s going to guide to you through the process of building a video content strategy from inception to launch. He’ll explain the creative and technical tactics required to win the internet with video. By the end of this session, you’ll know where to host your video, how to optimize it, what kind of content you should be creating, and how to get professional quality returns without spending a fortune. 9:30am – 9:45am The Next Generation of Mozscape with Phil Smith As we crawl the web, collecting data, our Mozscape has run into a few pitfalls as we’ve grown. Phil’s been working on an incremental indexing for the next generation of Mozscape, and he’ll give you insights on how this faster, fresher, and scalable index will be useful to you. 9:45am – 10:00am How to Moz Lingo: Cross-Team Communication When Crisis Hits with Carin Overturf Mozzy does not alway mean bright and shiny. Sometimes things go south, and it’s these times when good communication across all teams, technical and not-so-technical, is critical. Carin brings the tactics she’s learned about effective crisis management after surviving a few storms as a technical manager on the Mozscape team. 10:00am – 10:15am Empower Your Customers to Become Your Evangelists with Aaron Wheeler You have the power to turn customers into one of your strongest, most cost-effective marketing teams. By creating great experiences for customers during good times and bad, they’ll share their successes and demonstrate the value you’ve given them to a broader audience, much to the delight of your marketing and customer service teams. 10:15am – 10:30am Engineer Your Life: Agile for Work and Play with Miranda Rensch Agile development, it’s not just for software companies anymore. Miranda will show us how you can use an agile process to plan anything from side-projects, marketing launches, and personal improvement goals. You’ll come away with templates and processes to try in your own team or at home! 10:30am – 10:50am Break 10:50am – 11:20am Let’s Play for Keeps: Building Customer Loyalty with Joanna Lord We all know that customer loyalty is a key ingredient in building brands, hitting revenue goals, and cultivating a community. Joanna will walk you through how the landscape has changed, and she’ll leave you with tools and tips on how to build customer loyalty that lasts. 11:20am – 11:50pm Ecommerce SEO: Cutting Edge Tactics That Scale with Adam Audette Fight Panda and other modern SEO realities by using the best on-page techniques and content strategies for your ecommerce site. Adam teaches you how to sustainably improve your click-through-rates as SERPs become noisier and properly prepare for G+ and Graph Search. Then he’ll round things out be giving practical advice on how to build your ecommerce team and work flows. 11:50pm – 1:20pm Lunch 1:20pm – 1:50pm Building Your Business: Relationship and Other Critical “Soft” Skills with Brittan Bright Ever dealt with a difficult client or a boss who just didn’t understand? Brittan teaches you essential relationship building skills and tips and tricks for making your business interactions smooth and easy. Whether you’re always putting out fires or pitching new ideas, you won’t want to miss this. 1:50pm – 2:20pm Win Through Optimization and Testing with Kyle Rush Kyle shares his knowledge from the front lines of the most intense web campaign to date: the 2012 US presidential election. His team won big for Obama with a data-driven approach. Kyle will explore tactics like how they increased donations by 49% and help you implement these wins for your site. 2:20pm – 2:50pm How Gender and Cultural Differences in Web Psychology Affect the Customer Experience with Nathalie Nahai Are you missing half your audience? Your site may be giving off the wrong psychology signals and causing potential customers to click away. Nathalie covers how gender and cultural differences impact your business and winning tactics to change the message and convert more customers. 2:50pm – 3:20pm Breaking Up with Your Keyword-Based KPIs with Annie Cushing Raise your hand if you hate (not provided)? Annie shows you how to raise your battle cry by finding your keyword data elsewhere. By changing your focus from (not provided) to what your landing pages can tell you, you’ll be able to audit your site even better than before. 3:20pm – 3:40pm Break 3:40pm – 4:10pm Next Level Local Tactics: Making Your SEO Stand Out with Dana DiTomaso Competing against giant brands in the Local SEO space can be daunting, but Dana’s here to turn your epic battle into an epic win. She’ll show you how to put personality into your local search efforts so that local searchers want to know who you are. Dana’s practical tactics and advice for thinking around the problem will crank your creativity up to 120%. 4:10pm – 4:40pm End-to-End Local Optimization with David Mihm The paradox of Local Search has always been that it’s one of SEO’s most time-consuming areas, and yet, the businesses who stand to gain the most have the smallest budgets and limited internal resources. Whether you’re an agency serving SMB clients or a large brand with hundreds of locations, scaling your efforts is critical. Learn how to increase the efficiency of your Local optimization process with these tips and tools from David. 4:40pm – 5:10pm Cater to Your Audience via UX with Allison Urban User experience is critical to making your audience feel your site, services, or products are for them. Allison will use case studies to show why UX matters and how it conveys respect for your customers. Then she’ll deliver tactics and advice she learned while working on MailChimp’s redesign. 5:10pm – 5:40pm Living in the Future of User Behavior with Will Critchlow As the technology space constantly changes, users and their behavior adjust with the tide. But what should we do? Will takes a look at where the trends are going and gives you the tactics and tips to keep up and maybe get ahead of the game. 7:30pm – 11:00pm Party at the EMP Wednesday 08:00am – 9:00am Breakfast 9:00am – 9:40am Beyond 10 Blue Links: The Future of Ranking with Pete Meyers In the year since we launched MozCast, the face of Google has changed dramatically. We’ve seen the roll-out of 7-result SERPs, the rapid expansion of Knowledge Graph, mass-adoption of authorship, and dozens of new features, rich snippets, and widgets. Ranking is no longer just a number, and achieving it is a moving target. Find out how to think like a brand and carve out a place in the SERP of the future. 9:40am – 10:10am Using Metrics to Build Social Media Engagement with Carrie Gouldin Between Edgerank, noise, and upcoming networks, social metics are daunting. Carrie will show you what makes interesting content, how to track links, read metrics, and keep your followers hungry for more. By testing and trying new things, she’s built up a 25-50% engagement rate for ThinkGeek’s Facebook and you can too for your brand. 10:10am – 10:30am Break 10:30am – 11:00am The Search for Company Culture and Why It Matters with Sarah Bird Whether you realize it or not, your company has a culture. Is it helping you or holding you back? Learn how to identify your company culture, foster the culture you want, and avoid common pitfalls. Sarah will share what she’s learned at Moz, and why what works for one company might not work for yours. 11:00am – 12:00pm Why the Internet Hates Us and Can #RCS Change That Perception? with Wil Reynolds Post-MozCon 2012, Wil has been focused on helping you get things done by using #RCS paired with facts and figures from his own company, his clients, and insights from 30 members of top US design agencies. He’s also been reviewing the successes, the failures, and the steps his team put into place for change. Wil wants to get the word out that it’s time to stop chasing all the shiny SEO shortcuts! 12:00pm – 1:30pm Lunch 1:30pm – 2:00pm Building Your Community From the Ground Up with Jen Lopez What if we had to start over and rebuild the Moz community from scratch? Jen walks us through the steps, from how to start building an audience all the way through to how she’d build her team. Learn actionable tactics and deep insights that you can apply to building your community, both internally and externally, for your business.   2:00pm – 3:20pm Community Speakers! This could be you! We’re having four community speakers. Have you tossed your hat in the ring? Applications due Tuesday, May 14th at 5pm PDT. 3:20pm – 3:40pm Break 3:40pm – 4:40pm The Secret Ingredients of Better Marketing with Rand Fishkin Content bombards our online experience. Ads and salespeople interrupt us. But every now and then, marketing is truly remarkable and its message transforms from unwelcome to irresistible  What makes it stand out? Why do some companies inspire us to take action and to share them? The ingredients have been hidden too long. It’s time we discovered the what, why, and how behind crafting better marketing. 4:40pm – 5:10pm Ultimate Q&A Get your questions answered by our amazing speakers. Unlike the traditional give-it-up, Ultimate Q&A gives you the opportunity to pinpoint what amazing tips you’d like to know and gives you the actionable and inspirational information you crave. Wowzers, that’s a lot of crazy amazing stuff. See you there! 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!

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#MozCon 2013 Agenda