Why don’t planes crash more often from mechanical failure? With all the moving parts inside a plane, it seems that something would break fairly easily. So, why doesn’t that happen? One primary reason: checklists.
Before pilots push the button
for taxiing and take-off, they perform an extensive pre-flight checklist to
make sure everything is functioning exactly as it should be.
Entrepreneurs hoping for
strong SEO (search engine optimization) rankings might take a lesson here.
They can create a checklist of their own to make sure everything is
perfect for their next website article. No, an SEO checklist won't protect
you from crashing and burning. But it will help ensure that your post has
the best chance it needs to rank high in Google.
So,
before you publish your next piece of web content, run it through the following
9-point checklist for the best SEO tips.
1. Pick a good keyword to
focus on.
The first step is to simply
pick the search term or phrase you want the post to show up for. If I
am writing about the best dog toys for small dogs, I'll want to find out
what people are actually searching
for.
The easiest way to do this is
use a free tool that will
show you an estimate for any search phrase. (Although Keyword Planner is free,
you may need to set up an AdWords account to gain access.)
For example, I noticed that
"small dog toys" receives 590 monthly searches -- higher than any
other related combination of words. However, I'm still not totally ready to
start writing about this topic. First, I need to do some research.
2. Research the
competition.
Now that I have a term I want
to try to rank for, I'm going to go undercover and do some recon!
Jump over to your
"private browsing" mode on your web browser ("Incognito" in
Chrome, "Private" in Safari and Firefox, "InPrivate" on
Internet Explorer) and head to Google.com. (At my company, we do "private
mode" because we don't want Google to use our past search history to
influence what we see on the search results page.)
Take a look at all the
content on page one of Google, ignoring any ad results at the top. The
10 (or so) results are your competition! What are they missing? Can you do
better?
3. Write the best
content.
Now that you know what your
competition looks like, it's time to create the content that is going to blow
those folks out of the water. This is perhaps the most difficult part, but
it's the most important. It needs to be amazing.
I don't care if you are
creating a blog post, ecommerce store page or sales-landing page. It
needs to be better than the rest, or else neither Google nor your audience will
ever take note.
For
an example of an article I recently wrote -- with just this
goal in mind -- check out . My goal with that post was to write superb
content about that topic. How did I do?
4. Put the keyword in your page title.
This should be a no-brainer,
but I'll say it anyway: Your page title should contain your keyword, but
that doesn't mean it has to be exact (though it can be).
Additionally, the title must
also be interesting enough that people will actually want to click on
it! A good example of this would be PT from PTMoney.com, who wrote a
great post about "making extra money." However, rather than a boring title,
like "Make Extra Money," he titled it. Now that is something I would want to read.
5. Put the keyword in your
header.
You can organize most
webpages by having a large title at the top, followed by several sub-headers
throughout the page (like the sub-headers in this post).
This organization is helpful
not only for people in skimming blog-post articles, it's helpful in showing
Google exactly what your blog post is about. Therefore, be sure to use your
exact keyword phrase at least once in your sub-headers.
6. Put the keyword in the
name and alt-tag of your image.
Next, if your blog post
contains images, you can use those images to cement the idea to Google
about your post's topic. There are two ways to do this:
1.
The
image name
2.
The
image alt tag
To change the image name,
simply change the name of the image on your computer before uploading. Instead
of a file called "2831274.jpg," you can re-name it something like
"small dog toys 1.jpg."
The "alt tag" is
something you designate after you upload the photo to your website. Without
getting too technical, the alt tag is simply the text that the web browser will
show if the photo can't load for some reason.
7. Use the keyword in the
URL and in the post.
Another way Google is able to
determine what your blog post is about is the URL. In other words, we're
talking about what comes after the ".com" in your url (or .net, .org,
or whatever you use). For example, which of the following URLs do you
think Google will like better when deciding whether or not to show a certain
page?
- www.ExampleDogToyWebsite.com/9124824834-1
- www.ExampleDogToyWebsite.com/small-dog-toys
You're right if you guessed
the second one. While the former might not completely kill your SEO
efforts, the latter definitely helps show Google exactly what the post is
about.
8. Insert internal links.
If you aren't talking about
your best content, why should anyone else care? For this reason, it's important
that your best SEO content be linked to internally by
other pages on your website.
Yes, this means you may need
to go back and edit some older posts to include links to the new, incredible
content.
9. The most-important SEO
tip: Get external links.
Okay, finally we're finally
at the big one: external
links.
External links are links from
websites other than your own. Google relies heavily on
external links to determine how good a post is. And this makes sense, doesn't
it? You can talk about yourself and your own skills all day long, but no
one will believe you. But as soon as other people begin bragging about you,
others take notice.
While producing incredible
content may get you some links,
the truth is, you are going to have to do some "link building." This
means reaching out to other website owners in the space to ask for links.
For some great tips on getting these links, I like to read.
The above nine-point
checklist may not include everything a person could know about SEO, but by
simply following this checklist, you'll be miles ahead of the competition and
will likely see your posts get significant SEO traffic.

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