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The 17 Most Important SEO Tips for Higher Rankings

In fact:

These SEO tips have helped me get #1 ranking for keywords like “link building tools”:

SERP – "link building tools"

And “Ecommerce SEO”:

SERP – "ecommerce seo"

So whether you’re a new to SEO, or a seasoned veteran, I hope you get a lot of value from the techniques in this post.

Here are the 17 most important SEO tips to follow when optimizing your website:

1. Use Keywords In The Right Places

You probably already know that you should add keywords to pages that you want to rank.

Use your target keyword in your content

But where you use your keywords is just as important than how many times you use them.

Specifically, you want to make sure that your keyword appears at least once in your page’s title tag.

Include your keyword in your title tag

Webpage URL:

Include your keyword once in your URL

And in the first 100 words of your content.

Include your keyword in the first 100 words of your page

For example, I have a page on my site that’s optimized around the keyword: “copywriting”.

And I made sure to add that exact term in those key places.

Keyword in URL, title and intro

If you want to get more advanced with your on-page SEO, I recommend checking out this video.

And once you finished with the video, check out the rest of the SEO tips in this post…

2. Keep Users On Your Site Longer

Here’s the truth:

Pogosticking can make or break your Google rankings.

So: what is pogosticking exactly?

Pogosticking is when a Google user clicks on your site…

…then “pogosticks” back to the search results to find something that actually helps them.

Pogosticking

And when someone pogosticks, it sends a strong message to Google: “I didn’t like that result.”

Needless to say: if your site doesn’t make users happy, Google will downrank you.

Downranking

The question is:

How do you keep users on your site longer?

Use lots of bullets and subheadings.

When your content is easy to read, people will spend more time on your site.

(It also stops them from hitting their “back” button)

As it turns out, bullets and subheadings make your content MUCH easier to read:

Bullets and subheadings

Which leads us to our next tip…

3. Find “Suggest” Keywords

You probably already know that you can use Google Suggest to find long tail keywords:

Google Suggest example

But what you may not know is that you can use this same approach with OTHER search engines.

Like Wikipedia:

Wikipedia Suggest

YouTube:

YouTube Suggest

And yes, even Bing:

Bing Suggest

4. Delete Zombie Pages

Zombie pages are pages on your site that don’t bring in any traffic.

They’re just sorta…there.

And when you delete Zombie Pages, you can get higher rankings and more Google traffic.

In fact:

One ecommerce site saw a 31% boost in search engine traffic (not to mention a 28% increase in revenue) when they “pruned” 11k product pages.

Google Analytics – Screenshot of traffic

And they’re not alone.

Proven.com saw their organic search traffic increase by 88.3% after deleting 40 thousand Zombie Pages from their site:

Proven traffic increase

Why does this strategy work?

Well, Google doesn’t want to rank sites that are bloated with thin, low-quality content.

In fact:

Google recently stated that they prefer “one stronger page versus many smaller pages”:

Google prefers one stronger page

This is something I pay A LOT of attention to here at Backlinko.

To date, I’ve only published 44 posts on this blog.

Backlinko – Published posts

And those 44 posts generate 120k+ search engine visits per month.

Backlinko – Monthly users

5. Do An Industry Study

What’s the best way to get backlinks from authority blogs and news sites in your niche?

An industry study.

In fact, BuzzSumo found that publishing an industry study can bring you a ton of traffic, social media shares, and mentions in the press.

BuzzSumo – Industry study benefits

A few months back I noticed that lots of SEO blogs were talking about voice search.

Voice search is a popular topic

But I also noticed that these posts gave out SEO tips for voice search… without any data or research to back them up.

So we decided to do the first large-scale voice search SEO study.

Voice search study

How did this content do?

Even though this post is less than a year old, it’s already generated over 900 backlinks.

Voice Search SEO – Backlinks – Ahrefs

The best part?

I didn’t need to do a ton of outreach to get these links.

Because my content provides bloggers and journalists with data…

Voice search data

…they reference (and link to) my content automatically.

Voice search study – Referenced

Sweet!

There’s a lot more to on-page SEO than: “make sure to include your keyword a few times on your page.”

(Although that’s important too).

To rank in Google today, you also need to add synonyms and other related keywords in your content.

Why?

Something called Google Hummingbird.

Search Engine Land – Hummingbird

Google’s Hummingbird update allows Google to go beyond simple keywords. Instead, they try to understand the topic of your page.

Keyword bubble

(Kind of like how a human would)

So:

How do you optimize your content for Hummingbird?

Include variations of your main keyword in your content.

To do that, just search for your target keyword in Google…

"paleo diet" Google search

…and scroll down to the bottom of the search results.

"paleo diet" bottom of SERPs

Add a few “Searches related to…” terms to your content.

"paleo diet" related searches

7. Add Text to Infographics, Podcasts and Videos

Yes, visual content (like infographics and podcasts) are an awesome way to get traffic and backlinks.

But they have one big problem:

Google can’t understand ’em!

That’s why I recommend adding plenty of text to go along with your infographic, podcast or video.

For example, here’s an infographic that I published on my site earlier this year:

On-page SEO – Infographic

But I didn’t stop there.

As you can see, I also added lots of high quality content underneath my infographic.

On-page SEO – Content under infographic

And this text content helped search engines understand what my infographic was all about.

8. Update Old Pages

Do you have a bunch of blog posts on your site collecting dust?

If so, you can probably improve your rankings by updating that post.

Let me show you how this works with a real life example…

A few months ago I noticed that this post from my blog wasn’t performing as well as I’d hoped.

SEO Checklist – Old

Despite the fact that the content was really good…

…my page was bouncing between the first and second page for my target keyword: “SEO Checklist”.

SEO Checklist – SERPs change

Not good.

So I decided to give this post a major update and upgrade.

Specifically, I added more external links to authority sites:

SEO Checklist – External links

I also organized the content into sections to make the steps easier to follow:

SEO Checklist – Contents

And wrote a new title and description:

SEO Checklist – SERPs

(Note: As long as you publish your updated content on the same URL, you don’t need to worry about duplicate content)

And those 3 simple changes quickly shot my page up to the top of Google for my target keyword:

SEO Checklist – SERPs position

Which led to a BIG bump in that page’s search engine traffic:

SEO Checklist – Search engine traffic jump

9. Speed Up Your Website

Having a slow website can hurt your Google rankings. Google’s “Speed Update” specifically downranks pages that load slowly on mobile devices.

Page speed in mobile search

Which is why you want to eliminate anything that slows down your page speed.

Well, we recently ran a large-scale page speed study.

Backlinko – Page Speed Stats post

And we found that, in many cases, using a CDN actually hurts loading speed.

Use of CDN correlates with worse desktop page speed

So if you do use a CDN, I recommend testing your website speed with it turned on and off.

We also discovered that 3rd party scripts (like Facebook’s pixel) slows things down significantly.

Third-party scripts negatively impact page load times

You can see all of the 3rd party scripts on your site using a tool like BuiltWith.com.

Builtwith report for Backlinko

And if you find any scripts that aren’t super important, delete them.

10. Use the Google Search Console

This is one of my favorite SEO tips.

Here’s how it works:

First, login to the Google Search Console.

And head over to the Performance Report:

Google Search Console – Performance report

Next, hit “Pages”:

Google Search Console – Performance report pages

This will show you which pages bring you the most traffic.

Google Search Console – Performance report pages close

Here’s where things get interesting:

If you click on one of the pages, you can see all of the keywords that page already ranks for.

Google Search Console – "increase website traffic" keywords

And if you dig deep, you’ll find LOTS of keywords that you didn’t even know you were ranking for.

For example, when I ran this report on this page from my site, I found 3 keywords that I had no clue I was ranking for.

Three surprise keywords

Why is this important?

Well, if I’m ranking for these 3 keywords by accident, imagine if I actually tried!

So to get more traffic from those search queries, I’d just need to sprinkle those terms into my post.

And now that Google sees those keywords in my content, they’re probably going to boost my rankings for those search terms.

Sprinkled keywords

Easy peasy.

11. Create Content Around Shoulder Niches

Publishing high-quality content is one of the most important SEO tips.

But what if you’re in a so-called “boring” niche? Isn’t it impossible to create content that people will link to or share on social media?

Fortunately not..

All you need to do is create content around “Shoulder Niches”.

Shoulder Niches are closely-related topics that you can easily create awesome content around.

For example, Mike Bonadio used Shoulder Niches to boost his client’s organic traffic by 15%:

Mike Bonadio client traffic increase

How did he do it?

Well, Mike was in a niche that couldn’t be more boring: pest control.

Now, you might be wondering:

“How do you create an interesting piece of content about pest control?”

You don’t.

Instead, go after closely-related niches that are actually interesting.

(In other words: “Shoulder Niches”)

In fact, that’s what Mike did:

Mike Bonadio shoulder niches

And this ultimately led him to create an excellent infographic on the related topic of: “pest control for gardeners”.

infographic animated gif

Because Mike’s infographic got featured on a handful of authority blogs…

descriptive anchor text

…his client’s traffic skyrocketed:

Google Analytics referral traffic

12. Get Backlinks From Your Visual Assets

In a perfect world, website owners would link back to you when they use your chart, visualization, or infographic.

But we don’t live in a perfect world 🙂

On the bright side, I’ve found that most people are happy to link to you when given a friendly nudge.

So if you tend to publish a lot of visual content, spend an afternoon executing this technique.

And I can almost guarantee that you’ll come away with a handful of backlinks.

Here are the exact steps:

First, find a visual asset on your site.

For example, here’s the on-page SEO infographic that I mentioned earlier:

On-page SEO – Infographic

Then, right click and “copy image address”…

Copy image address

…and paste the filename into Google “Search by image”.

Paste into search by image

And you’ll get a complete list of sites that use your image.

All sites using an image

Now it’s a matter of finding pages that used your image on their content… but didn’t link to you:

Infographic without link

Finally, send them a friendly email asking them to add a link to the original source (you).

Ask for infographic link

13. Create Branded Keywords

Guestographics.

The Moving Man Method.

The Content Upgrade.

These are all terms that I coined.

And because of that fact, I rank #1 in Google for all of them.

Guestographics – Examples

That’s why I highly recommend creating your own terms.

How?

First, develop a strategy, technique, process or concept that’s unique to you.

This sounds hard.

But it really isn’t.

All you need to do is take something that already exists… and add a twist.

For example, a while back I noticed that lots of people were building links from guest posting.

So I simply added a twist where you pitch an infographic instead of a traditional guest post.

Infographic pitch

Next, give it a name.

This is more of an art than a science.

But in general, you want the name to be:

  • Short
  • Easy to pronounce
  • Easy to remember
  • Unique
  • Descriptive

For example, when I started guest posting with infographics, I combined “guest posting” and “infographics” into one term: Guestographics.

Finally, get the word out.

This is key.

For your term to catch on, you need to promote it like crazy.

In my case, I published a case study of Guestographics in action.

Guestographics case study – Post

Then, a few months later, I published ANOTHER case study:

SEO Strategy – Post

I also made sure to mention “Guestographics” in interviews:

Guestographics mention

It took a few months to catch on.

But before I knew it, LOTS of people were writing about Guestographics.

Guestographics examples

And whenever someone talks about that technique, they link to me 🙂

Guestographics mention

14. Add “What is X” Definitions to Blog Content

This is one of the most important SEO tips that people tend to overlook.

Here’s how it works:

When someone searches for a high-level term (like “search engine optimization”), they’re usually looking for a definition.

And as Ross Hudgens points out, results on the first page of Google for definition terms tend to answer the question: “What is X?”.

For example:

If you do a search for “inbound marketing”, 2 of the top 3 results answer the question: “What is inbound marketing?:

"inbound marketing" SERPs

So if you’re gunning for a definition keyword, make at least some of your content focused on answering the question: “What is X?”.

That’s why I always include a “What is X” section whenever I target definition keywords:

What are backlinks

You’ve probably noticed more and more Featured Snippets in the SERPs:

Featured Snippets in the SERPs

And if you’re like me, you’re asking yourself: “How can I get my content in the Featured Snippet?”

Fortunately, there’s no need to guess.

SEMrush recently did a massive Featured Snippet study (they analyzed a whopping 80 million keywords).

Featured Snippet study

And they found that adding a Q&A section to your content works really well for grabbing the Featured Snippet spot.

For example:

This page on my site is optimized around the keyword “Channel Description”.

Channel Description – YouTube Marketing Hub

Like any good piece of content on this topic, it has lots of helpful tips on writing a YouTube channel description:

Channel Description – Helpful tips

But I also made sure to include “Snippet Bait” in the form of a short Q&A section:

Q & A section

And it worked!

"Channel description" Featured Snippet

Bottom line?

If you want to get your content to show up in the Featured Snippet spot, try “Snippet Bait”.

16. Find More Guest Post Opportunities

Here’s a simple SEO tip that will help you find sites to guest post on.

First, find someone in your niche that tends to guest post a lot.

Larry Kim – Twitter

Second, grab their headshot (you can usually find this on their LinkedIn profile) and pop it into Google’s reverse image search.

Sujan Patel – Reverse Image Search

Voila! You can see everywhere they’ve guest posted:

Larry Kim – Guest posting

And you can use the same process to find interview opportunities (like podcasts).

In fact, podcasts might be the most underrated link building strategy on the planet.

Why?

Well, it’s 10x easier to hop on a podcast than pitch, write, edit and publish a guest post.

And just like with a guest post, you get a sweet link back to your site (in the show notes):

Podcast backlink

Unfortunately, finding podcasts can be a chore.

That is, unless you use Google reverse image search:

Google Reverse Image Search “rand fishkin” example search

Bingo!

17. Improve Your Organic CTR

When you improve your organic click-through-rate more people will click on your site in the search results.

Clicking in SERPs

Which means you can get more traffic… without needing higher rankings.

When we recently analyzed millions of Google search results to learn more about Google’s CTR, we found that using question title tags significantly boosted CTR.

Question titles have a 14.1% higher organic CTR .vs. Non-question titles

So whenever it makes sense, I recommend using a question in your page’s title.

Here’s a real-life example:

Question in post title

Did I Miss Anything?

Now I’d like to hear from you:

Which strategy from today’s post are you going to try first?

Or maybe I didn’t mention one of your favorite SEO tips.

Either way, let me know by leaving a comment below right now.

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