Showing posts with label keywords. Show all posts
Showing posts with label keywords. Show all posts

Friday, 13 March 2015

Can’t Be Found On Google? Here Are 7 Reasons Why They Can’t Index Your Site

Are you struggling to get your website found on Google? Are you afraid your competitors are snapping up all your potential customers?
 
In order to place you in their search engine results Google needs to be able to “crawl” your website using a series of programs called spiders which move from link to link taking note of your coding and content. If Google can’t do that then your site won’t be listed in their search results!
 
QuickSprout have put together the infographic below describing the indexing process in more detail as well as listing seven common reasons why Google can’t index your site.
 
Can’t Be Found On Google Here Are 7 Reasons Why They Can’t Index Your Site
 
 

Monday, 9 March 2015

How Could Photos Help Your SEO?

Many people are visually oriented, preferring a good photo to a written description. While a photo may not help a search engine, it probably would help a searcher decide if your link was worth the click.
 
Matt Southern of Search Engine Journal took a look at a recent development: Google Gives Business Owners More Control Over Photos Displayed In Search Results. What it means for business owners is options like having one photo for Google+ and a different image for other Google properties, like search.
 
How many different photos you use is up to you, but you can opt for different categories like interior or exterior photos, or shots of your team or workplace. If you want to explore your options, log into your business profile, go to the Photos section, and use the new intuitive feature to see what is possible.
 

People Like Pictures

 
You know that old saying, “a picture is worth a thousand words”? It’s an old saying that keeps being repeated because people like pictures. Images that actually reflect your business are going to be better than stock photos because they trigger a more specific response.
  • Hey, I know that person! He handled my account.
  • We ate in that dining room, the meal was delicious and the atmosphere is great.
  • I loved that sweater because it was comfortable and it stayed that way after washing.
  • Those lamps look perfect, we should go see them in the showroom.
  • So that’s who I spoke to on the phone. She was so helpful.
  • That business looks familiar…of course, I’ve driven past it. I should stop next time.

 

Optimize Photos According to Publishing Guidelines

 
If you use your own photos, then do your homework and follow image publishing guidelines. Make sure those photos are high-quality, too. That isn’t really as difficult as it sounds if you can find an enthusiastic photographer in your area. That person may already be on staff. [Or take your own product and staff photos!]
 
There are definitely some things to be careful with. Some of those things include attribution, image site maps, and formatting. You also have to be careful with the mix of mobile and loading photos.
 
But along with the increased complications of images, the fact remains that people like pictures and a search result with a good photo is probably going to be picked over plain text. That’s why Google is adding the photo options, and that’s why you should look into the possibilities.

http://www.socialmediatoday.com/marketing/2015-03-02/how-could-photos-help-your-seo
 

Friday, 6 March 2015

Old SEO vs New SEO: What You Should Stop Doing and What to do Instead

The process of optimising a website for search engines like Google (SEO) is a constantly changing field, and it’s important to keep up with these changes if you want to succeed online.
 
Using old techniques that Google now considers spammy may work in the short to medium term, but you can be sure Google will catch you out eventually and slap you in the face with a penalty that could take you months to recover from.
 
For what’s hot and what’s not take a look at this infographic from Digital Marketing Phillipines.
 
Old SEO vs New SEO What You Should Stop Doing and What to do Instead
 
 

Saturday, 21 February 2015

4 SEO Tactics to Embrace in 2015

Remember when the meta keyword tag was popular? Or when a good SEO strategy was to put keywords in everything (URL, title, description, headings, images ALT text, side nav, main nav, footer nav, in the keywords and 231 times in the body content)?
 
Welcome to 2015, where the world of search is a completely different game. In fact, in 2015 you need to check site pages to be certain keywords aren’t overused in key elements.
 So why are so many SEOs still recommending that webpages include the "targeted keyword" in the URL, title, headings, and corpus? Can you say penalty risk?
 
We can touch on a hundred different SEO strategies do improve your website, but below are 4 ways a beginner can start improving their site.
 

Hummingbird Made SEO Much Easier

 
Search engines no longer value pages filled with targeted keywords. Google’s Hummingbird algorithm drove a final nail into the keyword coffin. With Hummingbird, Google proved that they now understand what your page is about; they know the topic of the page, how unique the content is, and how well it’s written.
 
Searchmetrics released their annual white paper detailing ranking factors and rank correlations. What they found was that there is little to no benefit to strategically incorporating keywords in different page elements, and often sites can be negatively impacted. You can also read a summary of Searchmetric’s report on Moz’s website.
 

Practices that Will Strengthen the Value of a Website

 

1) Skip Meta Keywords


Remember in preschool when you’d draw on the walls and your teacher would say, "If you can’t learn how to use the crayons then I’m going to take them away from you"? You would laugh and continue drawing on the walls, only to have the teacher take your crayons.
 
Now imagine the crayons are Meta keywords and Google is that mean, old preschool teacher. Google took Meta keywords away because we didn’t use them correctly. Search engines have taken it a step further and declared that meta keywords could be a spam signal.
 
In 2009 Google’s Matt Cutts posted on the official Google Blog, "Google doesn’t use the 'keywords' meta tag in our web search ranking." Still don’t believe? Read Bing’s guidelines for webmasters to get the full picture.
 
Solution: Stop using Meta keywords
 

2) Don’t Stuff Your Content with Keywords


Nothing is worse than arriving to a site and finding content with keywords strategically (and awkwardly) positioned throughout. Let’s just put this one to bed here and now. Keyword density is no longer important and you should stop any and all strategies aiming at stuffing keywords into your content.
 
Instead, learn about an important concept known as TF-IDF, or term frequency-inverse document frequency. TD-IDF means that content should include different phrases and that some of those phrases should appear more frequently than others.
 
For example, a page about Nintendo should include the word Nintendo more frequently than the words Mario and Luigi, but Mario and Luigi should (probably) appear on the page because they are related to the topic of the page.
 
Solution: Let’s not over complicate the solution here. Cyrus Shepard wrote a comprehensive post about keyword targeting explaining what I’ll summarize in a few bullet points.
 
Optimizing Content for Users and Ranking
  1. Decide upon a topic for a page or blog post
  2. Extensively research said topic
  3. Write content that is uniquely valuable to your targeted visitor
  4. Verify that you have written a minimum of 400 words
  5. Split the content into short paragraphs, consisting of 2-4 sentences, or bulleted lists
  6. Add a headline to the opening of each paragraph to describe the upcoming info
  7. Within the body content create anchor text links to a similar page on the site
  8. Add a page title that speaks to your targeted visitor and the topic of the page
  9. Make the page easily shareable on social networks
The result will be an authoritative, user friendly, search engine friendly piece of content for your site.
 

3) Don't Ignore Your Meta Description


This last one isn’t so much about what companies do, but instead it’s what they fail to do. Too often I see sites with a Meta description that has been completely ignored, or maybe worse yet, use a tool or plug-in to dynamically generate a Meta description.
 
You have about 215 total characters (or 512px by 100px) to persuade searchers to click on your listing in SERP. 215 characters include the page title and Meta description. 215 characters because SERP is dependent upon pixels and not characters (the letter 'W' is obviously wider than "I").
 
Plain and simple, Meta descriptions are a conversion factor. Meta descriptions are not a factor in ranking algorithms, though. Knowing that they impact CTR why would you ignore them?
 
Solution: Take time to write compelling Meta descriptions for all important pages of the site, and for any pages that can be shared socially. While 155 characters is target length, keep in mind that words aligning with the search query will be bolded, causing your description to be longer. So it would be advisable to keep the character length between 115-145 characters. It’s also important to include some form of a CTA or value proposition. Words like ‘decide,’ 'learn,’ or 'find out' can be considered calls to action in this situation.
 

4) Don't Forget to Markup Pages with Schema, RDFa, JSON-LD


Next time you search in Google or Bing, look at the results. Spot the results that contain more information than just a title, description, and URL. Those results have additional info because the html of the site is marked up to relay explicit information to crawlers. The result is more equity of SERP.
 
BuildVisible wrote a comprehensive guide to help with Microdata. They found that search listings with rich snippets would be clicked on up 25% more frequently.
 
Solution: Plain and simple, make microdata part of every site you create. Markup logos, images, addresses, phone numbers, business name, type of business, reviews, prices, software, and anything else that’s relevant to the site. Clients will thank you and visitors will appreciate it.
 

Conclusion

 
Once you’re using these tactics you can build upon them. Taking just these steps will help your site rank, but optimizing a website is a practice that doesn’t really end. You can stop improving certain pages, but the site as a whole can always be improved.
 
You may not be an SEO expert, but you’ll strengthen your website with the simple strategies above.
 
 

Tuesday, 17 February 2015

36 Tried-and-True Ways to Promote Your Blog Posts

There are lots of things you need to do to have a successful blog. Not only do your posts need to be well-written, helpful, and relevant to your target audience, but you've also got to make sure you're promoting them correctly so they get in front of people who could become your fans -- and maybe even your customers.
 
Luckily, you have many creative options when it comes to promoting your blog content.
 
In the infographic below from ReferralCandy, we hear from over 40 marketing experts about their favorite blog promotion tactics -- everything from relationship building to email segmentation to social media. Check it out.
 
blog-promotion-tactics-infographic
 
 

Tuesday, 27 January 2015

8 SEO Trends Every Website Owner Must Pay Attention To In 2015

Do you know what SEO trends will affect your website in 2015? Want to make sure you’re keeping up with Google’s latest guidelines?
 
It’s essential for any website owner wanting to be found online to understand what Google is looking at when they crawl their site and, perhaps more importantly, what makes them decide who should rank above who.
 
Take a look at this infographic from CJG Digital Marketing for their 8 trends to look out for.
 
8 SEO Trends Every Website Owner Must Pay Attention To In 2015
 
 

Thursday, 8 January 2015

Tips & Tricks for Searching Google Like a Pro

Sometimes, I wish Google would just read my mind.
 
google-search-tips
I usually have this thought after trying variation after variation of pretty specific search terms, like "recent social media statistics," without finding what I'm looking for. You'd think those search terms would return relevant results -- it's not like I typed in "cool shoes" and hoped for the best. But they don't -- and after a few attempts, I just want to hand over the reins to Google and say, "Can you please just find me what I'm looking for?"
 
Alright, so Google can't quite read your mind (yet ...), but they do have lots of operators in place to help you find more relevant search results.

You just have to know what those tricks are and how to use them. 
 
How-to-be-a-google-power-user
  
 

Monday, 29 December 2014

How to Create a Successful Blog Strategy: A Step-by-Step Guide

Today, age and experience no longer necessarily determine your credibility. Instead, people care about your ideas, your generosity, and your willingness to take risks and learn from mistakes -- those are the kinds of things that can give you a voice in the conversation.
 
We've witnessed a blogging revolution over the past fifteen years, where individuals have become famous on the back of 500-word snippets or rants that resonate with some online audience. Many of the thought leaders of our time became well-known because of their blogs. But as more people blog, the quality of blog content is becoming more important -- and this is especially true for businesses who are blogging to get found on the internet.
 
blog-strategy
 
It isn't enough to simply have a blog -- businesses need to spend time creating a blogging strategy that allows for high quality content creation so you can, slowly, build a reputation for thought leadership that will pay off big time in the long term.
 
It's the strategy part that trips up a lot of businesses. I've found that documenting your blog strategy is a great way to bridge the gap to successful execution. Check To help you get started, here's a nine-step process for creating a successful blog strategy for your business. Each step is marked by a question. Adapt it based on your business needs and experience. 

 

1) Purpose

 

Why does your blog exist?

 
What to document: One defining statement articulating the purpose of your blog.
 
Before you can dig in to the strategy of your blog, you need to clearly articulate its underlying purpose. Take a moment to ask yourself these questions:
  • What is the greater purpose your company is trying to fulfill?
  • What story supports this purpose?
  • Who shares your passion for this purpose?
  • Is your team aligned with the meaning of this purpose?
If you can answer these questions with some clarity and then collate them into one defining statement, you create a powerful anchor for all future blogging (and marketing) decisions.

 

2) Buyer Personas

 

Who are your ideal customers?

 
What to document: A clear, detailed description of your ideal customer(s). 
 
Ideally, you'll tailor your blog content to people who might buy from you -- after all, your blog will become a great lead conversion tool. But who are these ideal customers? Once you can answer that question in detail, you'll be able to write blog posts that are better tailored to their interests. (Here's a helpful template for creating a buyer persona to get you started.)
 
Once you've arrived at detailed descriptions of your ideal customers, you'll need to research their behavior so you can adapt and tailor blog content for their biggest challenges, interests, and curiosities. But isn’t customer research expensive, you might ask? Sure, it can be -- but if you want to bootstrap it, here are a few places to start:
  • Question and answer forums like Quora, Yahoo! Answers, and Fluther.
  • Social media. I find LinkedIn Groups, Twitter Advanced Search, and Google+ Communities excellent resources.
  • Tools that tell you about other content being created in your niche and how popular it's been with your potential customers (at least according to social shares). Examples include BuzzSumo and Topsy.
  • Blog comments on other blogs your potential customers might read. What type of content are they already engaging with on other blogs?
One main goal of inbound marketing is to build trust with your audience. If you discover the information your customers seek and then become the go-to blog for providing that information, they will likely start to trust you. This trust gains momentum over time, and before you know it, that high trust relationship will bring your customers back time and time again -- and they'll probably bring their family and friends with them.

 

3) Competition

 

Which of your competitors have blogs?

 
What to document: A list of 5-10 of your closest competitors with blogs you could conduct a content audit on.
 
Do you want your customers seeking purchasing information from your competitors? This is a rhetorical question -- of course you don’t. But if your blog doesn’t provide the information your customers are looking for and your competitors’ blogs do, what choice do they have?
 
Try conducting a content audit of your biggest competitors. If they're ranking higher than you for crucial keywords, then write and promote better content for those keywords. If you see gaps in the content on their site, capitalize on those gaps.

 

4) Keywords

 

Which keywords are you targeting?

 
What to document: A list of 5-10 keyword groups you want to rank for and their associated long-tail keywords you can include in blog content
 
Keywords let search engines understand what your content is all about. When one of your customers searches for a specific phrase, you want them to find your blog (or web page), not a competitor’s. But what are your potential customers searching for? You'll need to dedicate some time researching which keywords they tend to type into search engines, and then including those keywords in your blog posts.
 
Just remember: Google's algorithm is constantly changing and is becoming more and more intuitive -- and old tactics like keyword stuffing will hurt your ranking nowadays. Instead, marketers are better off writing copy that engages humans first, and search engines second. 

 

5) Distribution Platforms

 

Where will you distribute your blog content? 

 
What to document: A list of the platforms where you will distribute your blog content.
 
Rand Fishkin, SEO Expert from Moz, once quipped: "'I hit 'publish' for the first time, and everyone just showed up' – said no blogger ever."
 
I love this quote. Writing quality blog content is a great start toward running a successful business blog, but the hard part is getting that content discovered and turning your platform into an authority.
 
But creating blog content can be time consuming, especially when you aim to command authority in your niche with well-researched posts. One tactic I've found very useful is repurposing your blog content. Take a look at the content you used to write a blog post -- the ideas, research, structure, and stats -- and using that same information in a different form. You'll reach a wider audience and engage with people that may not have read your blog the first time.
 
There are many things you can do to get better results from your blog. Here are a few:
  • Take key quotes and takeaways from your blog post and schedule them across your social media networks, including links to the blog post. Even better, put these quotes into images using a platform like Canva and post them on social media.
  • Split up the blog post as a string of emails to your community, with links back to the blog post.
  • Create a SlideShare using content, stats, and so on from your post.
  • Create an infographic. This isn't as hard as it sounds, and all you really need is PowerPoint.

 

6) Promotion

 

How will you promote your blog content? 

 
What to document: A list of potential influencers in your niche, as well as all the other promotional tactics you will use to get your blog content discovered.
 
When it comes to blog strategy, "promotion" simply means getting your content out there so people discover it, read it, and (hopefully) share it with others. There are lots of inbound marketing tactics for promoting your blog posts, but for the purpose of this post, I’d like to focus on influencer marketing.
 
Using an inbound approach to promoting your blog content requires a lot of deliberate effort up front. You need to identify key influencers in your industry -- people your customers perceive as credible and trustworthy. These influencers command authority in their field and provide access to authoritative sources.
 
First, create a list of influential people in your niche. Then, you can start placing deposits -- for example, if they have a blog, read it, comment on it, and share it. If they have an email list, sign up for it and respond to (some of) their emails with thanks, and encourage others to join up. If they have a book, read it, review it, and generously promote it to your network. In the words of Adam Franklin, “Lead with generosity."
 
It's important to remain in regular contact with your list of influencers. I schedule time into my calendar to place further deposits with certain people. Typically, this looks like a brief email message or a social share, but sometimes it might play out as something more meaningful. If you work hard on placing deposits you expand your network to a group of people that command great authority with your ideal customers.
 
Now you can leverage the combined power of an extended network next time you publish a blog post. Influencer marketing is just one component of my blog promotion strategy, but I believe it's the most important.

 

7) Headcount

 

Who will run your blog?

 
What to document: Exactly who is accountable for each role within your blog strategy.
 
You need to decide exactly who will execute on your strategy. As you can see from this blog post, there are lots of moving parts -- and if you don’t create ownership around each of those components, your chances of success decrease. Here are some examples of the roles you need to effectively implement a blog strategy. (Depending on the size of your marketing team and the skills available, you may find one person holds responsibility for multiple roles.)
  • Keyword research
  • Facts, stats and examples research
  • Copywriting
  • Editing
  • Strategy and editorial calendar governance
  • Creative
  • Promotion
  • Repurposing

 

8) Rhythm

 

How many blog posts can you commit to scheduling?

 
What to document: An editorial calendar and the number of blog posts you can commit to scheduling per week.
 
The beauty of creating a blogging rhythm and publishing that in an editorial calendar is that it’s not about frequency, it’s about creating accountability. It makes sure that every blog is optimized for keywords, CTAs and is developed and scheduled on time. This gives you a consistent stream of blog content that your readers can get in sync with.
 
Your editorial calendar should be designed to align with the rest of your blog strategy. I like to incorporate the specific promotional tactics, goals and resources required for each individual blog post.

 

9) Metrics

 

Which metrics matter to you?

 
What to document: The goals you aim to achieve from blogging and the metrics that contribute to those goals. (I recommend setting goals over a 60-day period. This gives you long enough to see whether your strategy is working, and allows you to then adapt and change your goals based on the results you experience.)
 
Traffic, likes, plus ones, re-tweets, follows, backlinks, subscribers… What do all of these metrics mean? How do any of them contribute to your bottom line?
 
Metrics are helpful, but they're pointless if you can’t track them back to a meaningful outcome. Perhaps the most important element of an effective blog strategy is accurately defining the goals you want to achieve. Here are three helpful questions you can ask yourself while defining a goal or outcome:
  • Does this goal help us achieve our purpose, or is there something more relevant we can aspire to?
  • Is this goal aligned with the initiatives of other parts of our business?
  • Which metrics track the progress towards this goal? Are these metrics complementary or counterintuitive?
Answering these questions will help you set meaningful goals, and consequently, understand the metrics that will help achieve them. There is no exact science to measuring the effectiveness of your blog strategy, but this process creates a direct line of sight from your activity to a desired outcome. Once you understand exactly how many of a specific metric -- say, a social share -- contributes to a specific outcome -- say, a sale -- then your strategy becomes more targeted.
 
Growing an influential blog in your niche is a surefire way to nurture your potential customers. By creating regular content that solves the challenges of your readers and fulfills their biggest curiosities, you'll start to build a vault of trust and advocacy, which will inevitably contribute to the overall success of your business. Start with your purpose -- the big why -- and slowly unpack the individual levers that will contribute to your blog marketing performance.
 
 

Friday, 3 October 2014

12 Ways You Can Improve the SEO of Your Website Today

As we keep saying SEO isn’t a quick fix, but there are slight improvements you can make to your website right now that could result in moving up a few places in the Google search results.

That might not sound a lot but if that is the difference between you and the first page that could mean a massive increase in web traffic and could lead to a load of new customers.

Take a look at the infographic below from Klood which gives you 12 on site SEO improvements you can make today.

12 Ways You Can Improve the SEO of Your Website Today

http://blog.red-website-design.co.uk/2014/05/27/12-ways-you-can-improve-the-seo-of-your-website-today/


Thursday, 17 July 2014

12 Tips for Keyword Selection to Guide Your Content Marketing SEO




12 Tips for Keyword Selection to Guide Your Content Marketing SEO


Some content marketers do not take their time in terms of keyword selection for natural search engine rankings. They shirk proper research and analysis, or merely take wild stabs at whether a keyword phrase is worth pursuing in the first place which is a reckless way of approaching it.

If you continually create content without thinking through search engine optimization (SEO) and keywords, you will rank for something (content does resonate with search engine algorithms). Yet, you will consistently run the risk of short changing your SEO strategy — and your company’s ability to gain a fair share of relevant search engine traffic — for branding, conversions and much more.

Every single piece of content on a specific website or in a blog post is not necessarily going to lift a company to number one on Google for a keyword phrase that people use 15,000 times a month. But you can get more out of SEO with just a small bit more effort.

As much as your time and your skills allow, you should consider the following questions and factors that affect content marketing and SEO in every piece of online content you create and distribute. To make the process easy, we have created a short checklist that you can reference when thinking through keyword possibilities for your website or blog content.

keyword checklist
Ask yourself the questions in this checklist as you begin your SEO efforts — you can learn a bit more about the details involved in each point below:

1.  Have I mined keyword research resources?
It’s not altogether uncommon to go straight to Google for ideas (though your AdWords account provides more in-depth data than this free tool), but Keyword Discovery, WordTracker, and other tools can provide more insights. We are partial to SEMrush, which suggests possible keywords that you may have overlooked in your own pages and posts (it analyzes more than 95 million keywords). You can also tune into the words people use at Social Mention. I’ve even checked the index at the back of a book for ideas.

Here are some keyword phrases we found at SEMrush. Within a few minutes, we had an Excel spreadsheet filled with 30,000 keyword ideas from a Fortune 100 company. Despite some high rankings, it is clear that the company has plenty of opportunities to rank better:
                                     keyword phrases

Even if you find keywords among the data that’s available, it is very important to know if people are searching for them or not. Your list might look good, but search counts really matter. Yes, sometimes you should target a keyword phrase with over 1,000 monthly searches. But quite often, you may want something less competitive. I don’t rule out keyword phrases with 50 searches a month, but I also don’t jump at ones with 30,000 searches. If you do go that high, it’s because the keyword phrase is relevant and the website has much going for it, especially in terms of inbound links.

2. Is the keyword phrase relevant?
Does the keyword really match what your business does or who it is targeted at? Years ago, someone told us that he wanted to rank for the word “e-commerce.” It never occurred to him that this term might be a little broad. In a case like this, he should have considered “e-commerce” as part of a keyword phrase, like “e-commerce solution provider.”

It is very important to remember that the keywords you choose must look like a natural part of what you’re writing. Also, it is vital to keep in mind that the spelling can make a difference. “Swing set” may be the preferred term for playground equipment, but many people search for “swingset.” You don’t want to use the “wrong” word and appear like you can’t spell correctly. (Though with something as common as “swing set,” you could probably go with a version on one page and another spelling on a different page.)

3. Are we buying this keyword phrase through paid search?
Paid search, including buying ads on Google, is another source of keyword research that your company may already have on hand. But many companies settle for performance from paid search and skip SEO to their detriment. If you are buying a keyword for paid search, you must make sure that it is also a viable candidate for SEO and content marketing.

For example, a large specialty retailer may invest in the keyword “GE dishwasher.” If it’s working because the paid search conversions are acceptable, then it may also be worth pursuing with SEO.
Conductor, which released “Natural Search Trends of the Fortune 500” in 2010, found that Fortune 500 companies spent $3.4 million a day on paid search with nearly 100,000 keyword phrases. However, only 2 percent of their websites and keywords made it into the first 30 organic (non-paid) results on Google.

Sure, you can buy your way to the top of the paid results on the search engines, and outstanding natural search engine rankings may not come easily. But if you are paying for the keywords, that should be a signal that an SEO strategy must be given serious consideration. It’s not just about ranking so high that you can stop paying for a keyword phrase. Depending on the conversions and ROI goals, maybe you will keep a keyword phrase with both paid and natural search.

4. Are you already ranking for the keyword phrase?
As you start writing, it is good to know how well you are ranking for the topic you are covering. Are you in the Top 10, Top 15, Top 20 or all the way out at 199?

You can use online tools like Web CEO, BrightEdge, and SEOmoz to get ranking data. (To learn more about tools like these, get the “Enterprise SEO Tools: The Marketer’s Guide,” which explores the different platforms that can help you manage, track, and optimize thousands of keywords.)

5. Will my new page adequately mention the keyword phrase?
You can write some incredible material that goes into great detail about a topic with examples and fresh perspectives. But make sure that you incorporate your most strategic keyword phrases along the way. You cannot get by with just one reference in the 13th of 15 paragraphs.

Keyword density “rules” have been debated for a long time. But a top priority should always be to look out for natural opportunities to mention specific keywords. If you are using your target keyword phrase every 150-200 words, you’re probably on track. And don’t worry too much if you use them more often, as long as it doesn’t look like you forced the keyword phrase in where it doesn’t necessarily belong it will be fine. You can always scale back the references after you check on your rankings (which will also be heavily influenced by the page title, page header, the age of the website, inbound links, and many other factors).

6. How much traffic is my website receiving for the keyword phrase?
As you look in-depth into your own website analytics, you should see a lot of keyword data. You can dive deep a couple of ways, including analyzing the initial keywords used to reach your website and your internal site search data when they arrive. For example, you might discover that someone searches for “construction loan financing,” but that may prompt you to look at some options like “construction loan requirements” or “how construction loans work.” You may also need to change your content strategy to work the new keyword phrases into existing or new website pages.

Do not be too discouraged if you find that a keyword phrase is not searched that often, as it may still hold a lot of value. We look at the keyword traffic in light of rankings. For example, a keyword phrase may have only 30 or so searches a month, but that 30 may rank poorly only as a result that no one gave the keyword a boost with serious SEO. On the other hand, a keyword phrase might rank as number two on Google and still bring only a couple dozen visitors. However, this would be okay if the keywords are a good match for the services or products that you are selling. You do not need over 1,000 visitors to connect with good prospects.

We always keep an eye out for multiple keyword phrases on a web page that rank highly in terms of SEO. You might find that a single page could support “free online checking account” and “free checking accounts online.” However, sometimes you cannot get both phrases to rank among the top three positions (maybe one keyword phrase ranks number six and the other ranks number thirteen). You might need a new priority page that just focuses on one of the phrases in order to get it to rank much better.

7. Am I getting website traffic for similar keywords?
I constantly check website analytics to see what relevant keywords people are searching for that I didn’t even include on my list of the most strategic keyword phrases. Existing and new content created in conjunction with SEO efforts can give life to a wide assortment of related keywords and phrases. For example, I may have originally targeted “laptop computer” for a given piece of content, but the way you write your content may give rise to a number of other keyword phrases like, “buying a laptop computer.” You can take credit for the impact by charting search engine traffic growth for those keywords, page views, and more.

8. Is this keyword phrase (or similar phrases) already converting?
You can track keywords through your website analytics and conversion funnels, including e-commerce (associating the keywords with the product sales). Some companies gain greater insights with call tracking services like those offered by Mongoose Metrics and Marchex and others. Call tracking technology has does have many benefits. For example, at keyword level, when someone uses a keyword phrase on a search engine and then reaches a website, a unique phone number temporarily appears in the content (replacing the regular website phone number). The phone call, which is associated with the keyword phrase, can be tracked and recorded fairly easily.

9. Are there calls to action on the page?
It is very important that you target keyword phrases in your content by including very effective calls to action. What is on offer? What exactly does it look like? Is it buried? If you drive traffic through SEO, you do not want the visitor to have to struggle in order to figure out what you want him to do as a result of viewing your content. Make it easily apparent that readers should call a toll-free number, request a demonstration, download a guide, or request more info, and then make sure you’ve made it easy for them to do it. It is also vitally important that you test the placement and colours of forms, phone numbers, and assorted offers. Many people think of SEO only in terms of keywords, but website usability and conversion opportunities can also help ensure that the SEO traffic pays off, rather than be wasted if too many people leave moments after they arrive at a website.

10. Are there related pages that could support an internal link strategy?
You can get high rankings for a single page, but your content marketing strategy will get a boost through SEO if you have related pages created to support internal cross-linking. In simple words, ensure that you create opportunities to cross-link the strategic keywords in the anchor text on several of your pages or posts to improve your odds of higher search engine rankings. It is very important not to forget to include the targeted keyword phrase within your links (or at least near the link). For example, maybe one page mentions “low cost car insurance” in passing, but those words could be included in the text of a link to another page on your site or blog that goes into more detail about the pros and cons of low cost car insurance policies.

11. How will this keyword phrase choice fit into future content?
The keyword selection options for SEO and content marketing should be based on planned content for the upcoming weeks ahead, not just the content you’re dealing with today. With a content calendar, you will start thinking about keyword possibilities even before someone writes up an article, describes a certain service, or creates a blog post. If you have a main set of keyword phrases, your content planning strategies should then reflect your keyword phrase priorities and deficiencies. For example, if you are already ranking very high for “riding lawn mowers,” maybe that doesn’t need your attention. However, you may be ranking poorly for “self propelled lawn mower,” and want to create content to address this in the near future, your keyword plans should keep this in mind.

12. Is the keyword phrase in our domain name?
Google announced in 2012 that it would drastically cracking down on low quality exact match domains (EMD) for websites that want to rank primarily on the merits of their domains. It is certain that Google wanted to deal with obnoxious domains and small websites (like this pretend domain: seocontentmarketingtipsideasforonlinemarketers.com). However, for respectable websites, the domain name still seems to influence search engine rankings.

Conclusion
We are sure you will want to weigh some other factors as well before selecting keywords, but the above list gives you a good starting point.

At a minimum, leverage the keyword research tools available to see if people are actually using the keyword phrase that you are targeting. It is inevitable that you’re going to create content that people aren’t searching for at a rate of 10,000 times a month (maybe you will need to settle for 100 in some instances when you look at alternative keyword phrases). But any new content can be a good opportunity to include your most strategic set of keyword phrases and cross-link them with your existing content.