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PBA Front-End Programming. Search Engine Optimisation - Summary. Overall goals. Gaining more exposure in search engine results, thereby having more users visit your website
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PBA Front-End Programming Search Engine Optimisation - Summary
Overall goals • Gaining more exposure in search engine results, thereby having more users visit your website • Ultimate, the user should not just visit your website, but perform the actions you wish them to perform (buy items, sign up,…) • Therefore, your website should show up in relevant search engine results
Overall goals • You can attract users that are stating their current intentions through their search query • You can then create/show relevant content that meets the needs of the user at exactly the right moment • This is much more focused and effective than traditional one-way marketing
Relevance and Authority • Search engines evaluate a website in relation to a query with regards to • Relevance; does the website appear to contain content which is semantically related to the search query • Authority; do other websites link to the website, and how authoritative are these websites themselves (weighted democracy…)
SEO vs paid advertisements • A Search Engine Result Page (SERP) will not only contain ”organic” search results, but also paid advertisements • These do not appear as the result of SEO, but because companies have paid to have listings shown which are associated with certain keywords (through a bidding process)
Search result appearance • A typical search result will appear on the SERP with • A headline • A description • A URL • However, modern search engines can also return pictures, videos, maps, etc. (blended search results).
SEO expectations • SEO is a long-term effort, and requires constant attention and tuning • Search engines also change internally; a process that we have no control over… • Optimisation is for two parties • The search engines themselves • The real human users
Keywords • Keywords: the words and phrases that users type into a search engine • First step in SEO; which keywords do we wish to optimise our pages for? • Keywords can be evaluated in terms of • Volume • Relevance • Competition
Keywords • Ideally, you would like to go for: • High volume: users type in this keyword a lot • High relevance: the keyword fits the content of your page • Low competition: Only few other pages try to rank for this keyword • …But realistically, you can only get at most two of these
Keywords • Long-tail keywords • Keywords that have high relevance and low competition, but also low volume • If you have a lot of such long-tail keywords, they may have a significant total volume, while being fairly easy to rank for individually, due to low competition
Keywords • Several tools exist for helping with keyword research, for instance Google Keyword Planner, and similar for Bing • However, they work in similar ways; type in suggestions for keywords, and get data back for those keywords, suggestions for other relevant keywords etc..
Keywords • Finally, even if our research gives us promising keywords, we still need an ongoing evaluation of them • Essentially: Do these keywords lead users to our website AND make them perform the actions we wish for, like buy an item, etc..
Content Optimisation – human perspective • Even if we can make users go to our website from the SERP, that is seldom the ultimate goal • We wish the users to perform some action on the website (buy, sign up, download,…) • The content must therefore also be optimised with regards to the actual human users
Content Optimisation – human perspective • Clarity and Quality • Users will think about • Is it clear what this website is about? • Can I trust the content of this website? • Will I want to come back to the website? • Will I recommend the website to others?
Content Optimisation – human perspective • Things to consider for the website creator • Does my website have a logical structure that makes it easy for the user to navigate to the relevant content? • Are the navigation tools (links) easy to understand and use? Are any links broken? • Are titles, headings, etc relevant and descriptive? • Am I using the right content types (text vs images, videos, games, etc)?
Content Optimisation – search engine perspective • All the search engine sees is the actual HTML code ”behind” the pages • The HTML code often contains elements that do not show up on the visual page, but can still be optimised for SEO • General principles for optimisation: Add as much (relevant) information as possible to the elements in the HTML code
Content Optimisation – search engine perspective • Examples: • If a piece of text is intended to be a heading, then make sure to actually mark it so (using e.g. <h1>) • Put relevant text into the alternative text field for an image • Put relevant keywords into URLs, filenames, link anchor texts, etc.
Content Optimisation – search engine perspective • A first criterion for a search engine to discover your content is (of course) that a link to the content actually exists… • You can also generate and submit XML sitemaps directly to search engines • An XML sitemap is a structured description of the website content that a search engine can easily interpret
Content Optimisation – search engine perspective • Server-side issues like response time may also matter in a search engines evaluation • A cheap hosting solution geographically far away from your users may hurt response time • There are options to enable users to get content from closer servers (CDN) • Also consider issues like caching and server stability (avoid excessive downtime)
Microformats • A piece of content will often have a semantic meaning (like e.g. a food recipe), that cannot be expressed with standard HTML • Microformats enables you to add metadata to such content, to express its semantic meaning • A lot of these microformat definitions can be found at schema.org
Link building • Links is probably the most important part of SEO; what matters is: • The number of links pointing to a page • The quality of those links • Link quality is primarily defined as • Relevance • Authority of linking site
Link building • Internal links – which you have control over – are also important • Help search engines in navigating the website • Help search engines understand the topics and themes of the content • Internal links are divided into • Navigational links (e.g. top or side menus) • Contextual links (inside the content itself)
Link building • Obtaining external links is challenging and a long-term effort • Possible external links • Certain link directories (reviewed) • Industry-specific directories and listings • Establish contact with institutions that could be interested in linking to your content • Don’t try to cheat the system!
Link building • Back-link analysis: • If a website is ranking high for keywords you wish to rank for as well, then it must have high-quality links pointing to it • It would be interesting to know these links, since they would be relevant for your website as well • Tools can help you with this
Measuring SEO performance • Again, the ultimate purpose of SEO is usually not to make users visit your website, but to make them perform a certain action (buy an item, sign up for something, etc.) • In order to measure if your SEO efforts are successful, some Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) must be defined and measured
Measuring SEO performance • Examples of KPIs • Signing up for a newsletter • Submitting a contact form • Make a purchase • Time spent on website • These KPIs can be broken down into e.g. keywords – which keyword searches produce the best KPI values
Measuring SEO performance • There are several tools (e.g. Google Web Analytics) that allow you to define and track KPIs, and to analyse them according to keywords, search engine source, etc.. • You can even assign a monetary value to a KPI, if it makes sense for that particular KPI
Measuring SEO performance • You should also continuously analyse the links to your website (back-link analysis) • There could e.g. be sites that use an improper anchor text to link to you • There might also be websites that you don’t want linking to you! • This will change dynamically, so it is an ongoing effort
SEO and Social Media • Social media fits quite well with SEO, since they reflect actual peoples opinions • Sharing a page link on a social media will thus positively affect the ranking of the linked-to page • Make it as easy as possible for users to share links to your content on social media
SEO and Social Media • Several tools can help you analyse how your content is shared, for instance www.socialcrawlytics.com • The data obtained hereby can also help you with improving sharability of your content, and defining your own strategy for presence on social media
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