Categories
SEO

8 Ways To Improve Rankings and Increase Traffic To Your Site

There are nearly two billion separate websites on the internet. Every awesome website added to the net today is the digital equivalent of a drop in the ocean. So how do you improve rankings and increase traffic to make your drop stand out?

The answer still lies, as it always has, in taking advantage of the way search engines filter through this enormous amount of content to bring users the results they want to see.

An overwhelming 93 percent of “web experiences” begin with an online search, overwhelmingly through Google, but also through other search engines like Bing and DuckDuckGo. Furthermore, users overwhelmingly focus on the first few results of any search, with at least a third of users clicking on the top result.

In other words, the best bang-for-your-buck in improving traffic and lead generation is by making sure your search engine ranking improves, and capitalizing on the way search engines like Google rate and rank the websites that show up on people’s searches.

That’s where search engine optimization (SEO) comes into play. Search engine optimization is about utilizing the known factors that companies like Google use to rate and rank websites according to different user searches, including ones such as content relevance, user experience, loading times, keywords, and more.

While there are hundreds of factors at play in any given search, we’ve picked out eight important ones for any new website to focus on.

Improve Your User Experience

Recently, use experience has taken center stage regarding ranking factors. Ignoring user experience is one of the most common SEO mistakes. Is your website intuitive, easy to navigate, and pleasant to the eyes? These aren’t just vague metrics – user experience (UX) is an integral part of both web design and SEO, as search engines like websites that snowball in traffic, and the only way to keep users on your site is to give them a few reasons to stay.

Poor performance, a cluttered look, and a confusing web architecture can serve to push potential clients away, and cost you leads. Loading times in particular are crucially important.

Search engines hate slow websites, and you’ll have a hard time outranking the competition if your pages take forever to load. If you’re in a niche that relies on multimedia, leveraging smarter ways to load image- and video-based content can help your ranking significantly.

UX depends on the target audience, as well as some simple best practices that aim to streamline the user through your website, from product search to purchase.

Include the Mobile Market

The mobile market has been exploding in popularity and significance in nearly every branch and industry since the early 2010s. About 68 percent of all website visits in 2020 came from smartphones and other mobile devices, and over half of the planet’s population now has access to the mobile internet, and mobile searches are becoming an ever-larger part of the pie.

To that end, you need to make sure your website is just as fun and intuitive to use on the small screen as it is on the big one.

Home In On a Niche

The Internet is a big place, and there are far too many competitors in any given industry to take them all on without some serious marketing guns and a lot of time and capital. However, even smaller startups can gain massive traction online without the financial backing of a venture capitalist or a viral Twitter campaign by simply picking their battles.

While you might not reach number one on Google for “New York bakeries” just a few weeks after the launch of your new site, you can focus on a niche that might not have quite as much competition, and dominate the search results there – such as “Brooklyn wedding cakes”.

Beyond picking popular keywords with less competition, focusing your brand and content on a particular niche can help improve your traffic and ranking by improving the legitimacy of your site.

A website focused on consistent leads in a single industry is going to have more success than one that produces content for both confectionary and woodworking.

Do a Little Keyword Research

Some keywords are better targets than others, even when they’re contextually related. Keyword research tools like Google Trends, Google Keyword Planner, and Moz can help you figure out how most potential leads word their searches, helping you funnel your SEO resources in the right direction.

Quality and Consistency

Websites need content to help search engines rank and categorize them. While you can just build a simple storefront, slap it on the web, and push it via social media, you’re going to see a lot more organic search traffic (and better leads) if you add content to that storefront to attract and educate readers on the uses and benefits of your product or service.

To that end, there are two major factors to consider when producing web content: quality and consistency.

Your content shouldn’t be riddled with spelling errors, and it should be relevant to the product – without reading too much like a marketing brochure, or an attempt to do nothing but sell your services. The best content is the kind that helps readers learn something, and produces actual value for your brand.

It’s a big plus when the content is easily readable. That’s where header tags come in, letting you break up your content into digestible chunks, while providing opportunities for both readers and search engines to, at a glance, understand what your content is about.

Consistency is important too. You don’t need daily or even weekly new posts or updates, but do pick a realistic content schedule and stick to it. The more content you post, the more traffic will begin to snowball.

Links, Backlinks, and URLs

There are a few types of links to keep an eye on when improving your website’s ranking and traffic. These are:

Backlinks: These are external links leading to your website from other websites. These are random at best, as any means of trying to purposefully influence your backlink count (such as buying backlinks) can drastically backfire. Your best bet is to ensure that news outlets and trusted websites publicizing your company are linking to it as well. You want good backlinks.

Internal links: These are links leading to other relevant pages on your website. You can use these to keep readers interested and on-site, linking them from one topic to the next. Use internal links to lead readers to relevant on-site content, or products.

External links: These are links leading to websites outside of your own. External links can also be used to refer to backlinks. You can use these to boost the credibility of your content, or just provide quality sources for your information.

Furthermore, keep an eye on your page’s URLs. Dynamic URLs (those with a bunch of numbers) typically won’t perform as well as static URLs (especially ones relevant to the content of the page).

Keep an Eye on Your Traffic Metrics

You can’t gauge the impact of any major change in your SEO strategy without first having some idea of how your website is performing. While you don’t need to be a data junkie to implement good SEO, it helps to keep an eye on your weekly metrics and track how well new content is performing.

This can help you course-correct in the middle of a campaign, figure out a niche that seems to be doing much better than others, or halt a change that seems to be backfiring.

Google Analytics is the most common way to review your traffic and other metrics, but there are several other options.

Keep On Learning

Google alone makes changes to its search algorithm daily, and SEO experts always harp on the importance of keeping up-to-date on best practices to stay relevant on the web.

Websites have seen traffic tank for seemingly no reason at all, because of a subtle change to the way Google ranks pages, and more major changes can drastically affect a website’s strategy, to the point that what was once a best practice becomes actively harmful to your traffic and reputation.

If you’re looking for a team to get your content up to snuff, and start outranking the competition, get in touch with us today.

Categories
SEO

Diagnosing Why Your Organic Traffic is Failing – And How to Fix It

If you’ve noticed even after a seemingly well executed SEO campaign that your organic traffic is falling, don’t get discouraged. There are several reasons this could be happening. I’m going to go through the most common issues and provide ways to address them, so you can start to see an increase in your organic traffic again.

It’s important to remember competition is rising. Every day countless new websites come online, while others shut down. There’s already someone out there gunning for the same keywords. Everyone wants (and needs) organic traffic to sustain their online businesses, so getting and holding onto a high ranking for valuable keywords is everyone’s goal. The reality is, there’s only one coveted number one spot, no matter how hard you try. And there are hundreds of factors that go into a ranking, even though no one will ever know exactly how Google does it.

Let’s take a look at what could be the reason why you’re seeing a decline in your organic traffic volume.

 

You’ve Been Given a Manual Penalty

Let me say this is rare and unlikely that you’ll face a manual penalty from Google, but it does happen. If you’ve been penalized, you’ll see a steep and instant drop in traffic, along with a message in you Google Search Console, letting you know your site has been penalized. If you don’t see both of those things, your site is in the clear. But, if you have gotten a penalty, you’ll need to find and correct the issue that caused it. Then, you can appeal with Google, or simply wait for it to be lifted.

If you’ve focused your efforts on white hat SEO, and haven’t built out spammy link profiles, or used poor quality plagiarized content, you should be fine.

 

Your Domain Doesn’t Have Enough Authority

Domain authority (DA) is a score that comes from Moz. It’s a prediction of how well a website will rank in the search engines, on a scale from one to 100. Higher scores mean there’s a greater ability to rank. Because of how it is scored, it’s much easier to build your DA from 20 to 30 than it is to move it from 70 to 80.

“Good” domain authority comes when your site has a high number of high-quality external links and inbound links. Typically, sites with larger numbers, like Google, are at the high end of the DA spectrum, where small business websites, or those with few inbound links will have a lower score. If you’ve got a brand new site, you’ll always start with a DA of 1.

It’s really a comparative metric because it helps you determine which sites have better link profiles than others – and there isn’t really a good or bad score. The only thing you can do here is focus on quality link building, and letting time pass if you’ve got a brand new site.

 

Your Page Doesn’t Have Enough Authority

Page Authority measures the strength of each individual page, rather than the domain itself. It’s the same thing, but calculated at the page level, and you can have a different score for each page on your site. You’ll start out with a low page authority, but as you build out quality content and start getting traffic and links, you’ll see it rise. The best way to improve your page authority is to improve its link profile – getting links to it from other high authority pages and websites.

 

Your Site is Slow

If your website takes a long time to load, people are going to get impatient and click away from it. When this happens too often, Google and other search engines will take that click back to mean they didn’t find what they were looking for. And if you’re ranking, but people aren’t finding their answers, the search engine will assume that you don’t need to be in that position anymore.

47% of people expect a website to load within two seconds or less. If your website doesn’t, then you could be missing out on lots of traffic. Use a website speed test tool like PageSpeed Insights to see how quickly your pages load. If you need to, use a content delivery network (CDN) to ensure content loads quickly no matter where your user’s servers are located. Keep in mind, a number of factors influence site speed – some of which you can control, some of which you can’t. Make sure you’re addressing all the things you can to improve it.

 

Your Bounce Rate is High

Bounce rate isn’t a direct ranking factor, but it can be a strong indication of user engagement. If your bounce rate is over 80%, it means people aren’t sticking around on your website for whatever reason, and you won’t hold your ranking position wrong. It could be that your content sucks, or that prices are too high, or people were looking for something other than what they found when they came to your page. Bounce rate is closely related to site speed, because if it takes too long to load, then people aren’t going to stick around and wait. If your site is slow, expect your bounce rate to be high. Fix your bounce rate by running some split tests to see if it’s the content, pricing, or what other factors could be contributing to it. Make adjustments accordingly to see if the bounce rate falls.

 

Your Content Isn’t Topically Relevant Enough

Yes, it’s true Google killed the authorship program, but the idea that authors have topical expertise remains. The use of the rel=author tag allowed Google to collect data, so many believe that it could still influence the results. Anyone can write and publish online thanks to blogging platforms and the ability to start a website at any time, but not everyone can write content for trust websites with relevant audiences and expertise.

Search algorithms have always used language processing, and the more Google focuses on user intent, the more relevant the search results become. Every search we do on Google teaches the AI the common language we use around various topics.

 

Your Backlink Profile Has Changed

If you’ve gotten a lot of spammy links suddenly – either through not knowing any better, or as a result of negative SEO, you could see a change in ranking, and thus a change in traffic. If some of your best backlinks are suddenly gone, or the websites are offline – then that’s a problem, too.

Audit your backlink profile with Ahrefs or SEMRush to see if there have been any changes that need your attention. Disavow any harmful links, and craft a link building strategy that will help you build more authority.

 

You’ve Recently Migrated Your Website

If you done any kind of site migration or moved old URLs around, especially if those URLs had strong backlink profiles, you can cause your rankings to plummet. Most websites receive the majority of their organic traffic from a small percentage of the pages on their site. If you’re moving your site from one host to another, make sure to follow a website migration checklist. If you must change your links for any reason, make sure to use a 301 redirect to alert the search engines that a URL once found at the original location can now be found at the new location.

 

There’s Increased Competition

If there’s a new player on the field, and that player has a bigger budget to spend on advertising and content, there’s a chance they’ll be able to rank quicker than you did. If they’re spending a lot of money on content and promotion, maybe they’re earning more backlinks than you. Maybe their PPC campaigns are bringing in more traffic. Maybe they’re running TV and radio ads to drive more traffic. Whatever the case may be, if a competitor comes into the game with more resources, they’ll be able to get further and faster, which puts more pressure on you.

Do a quick search of the keywords you were ranking high on before. See what kinds of new results are popping up, and specifically look closely at the competition that has the spot you used to be in. Check their backlink profile and compare it to yours. Look at their social media and compare it to yours. Use the information to make adjustments to your strategy that will allow you to better compete, and eventually surpass them.

 

Don’t Panic – It’s Fixable

Look at where your traffic drop is coming from. Though you may see your entire site’s traffic go down, it’s likely the drop is coming from a few particular pages or keywords. This information will guide the rest of your examination and help you determine the best way to fix it. If you notice it’s only happening on one page, but that page happens to be the most popular on your site, you can focus on links, content, and the competition to determine what you need to do.

SEO is a slow and steady long game. It’s going to have peaks and valleys from time to time. Just keep an eye on your analytics and adjust your strategy to keep everything moving in the right direction. Sometimes, you may take one step forward and two steps back, but with consistent effort, you’ll get to where you need to be.

What did you do to recover the last time you saw a major decline in your traffic? Tell me n the comments.

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