Showing posts with label seo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label seo. Show all posts

Top 5 Tactics for Local Enterprise SEO

Local SEO is not just for ‘Mom & Pop’ businesses. Ever since Google’s Pigeon Update, any business can take advantage of showing up in Google’s search results for search queries that have local intent.
Being visible in local search is an incredible way to attract people who are ready to buy. Local search queries have a much stronger intent to buy (as opposed to non-local search queries).
According to the Google Think Study on Local:
  • Consumers search with their location in mind. Four out of five consumers use search engines to find local information.
  • Fifty percent of consumers who conducted a local search on their Smartphone visited a store within a day, and 34 percent who searched on computer/tablet did the same.
  • Local searches have higher purchase intent; 18 percent of local searches on Smartphones led to a purchase within one day versus seven percent of non-local searches.

Enterprise local SEO is similar to local SEO, but it also requires a deep knowledge of scaling SEO practices for companies with hundreds or thousands of locations.
Enterprise local SEO Strategies are hugely dependent on a number of factors: industry, number of brick and mortar locations, budget, current market placement, agility, aggressiveness or risk tolerance, existing infrastructure and multi-team stakeholder buy-in.
With that said, these are the top five enterprise local SEO strategies that apply to a good proportion of enterprise-class websites.
1. Accurate Location Data
When working with millions of pages, it’s important to leverage dynamic content.
Consider the insurance industry: home and auto insurance companies understand the need to have and maintain content that describes their services. This is a small amount of content that should be easy to both create and maintain.
However, this industry also has a huge amount of region-specific searches. Take the following phrases for example: “Condo Insurance in New York” or “Car Insurance in Fort Lauderdale.” How does one create powerful, persuasive, and useful pieces of content that will pull in that aspect of the insurance market?
For each service and location pages, such as “Condo Insurance in New York,” you need to have unique content that meets the need of the user. In this example, having access to data sources is key. This allows the location page to answer questions such as:
  • How much have condo or homeowners in New York paid in damages in the past 10 years?
  • How many natural disasters have occurred?
  • Has the cost of condos and condo maintenance been rising? Is that cost high comparable to other cities within the state?
  • How common is theft in New York?
  • Is incidence of theft rising?
  • Is the city more at risk than other cities within the state?
  • What kinds of cost savings can a New Yorker get through government programs?
  • Have local users left positive reviews for us?

Each of these data points can be put into dynamic content and used to tell a persuasive story. They are available through various APIs, which allow the creation of these dynamic pages on a massive scale.
Note: Implementation can change dramatically between industries, what we’ve listed here is a general strategy.
2. Keyword & Content Mapping
From a SEO expert’s perspective, a website is a series of pages that are strategically planned. Keyword research is the act of doing the research around which ideas are most valuable and represent a market. Keyword research is considered the groundwork that provides the foundation of any website.
Enterprise websites have massive foundations. While the scope is somewhat intimidating, it’s even more frightening to consider that the foundation may have had little to no thought behind it, or that it’s old and falling apart.
In many cases, we find that the best strategy for both short and long-term results is to refine this foundation, retargeting and expanding the keyword and content map to dominate the market.
3. Unique Local Landing Pages
Every specific phrase and search query that you want to rank for should have a preferred landing page (PLP) that is targeted to that keyword. Often, we don’t see a landing page for each keyword that an organization wants to rank for or they have a thin page that does not deserve to rank for that keyword.
The strategy is to create PLPs rich in content that are scalable and still provide great UX to improve conversions.
4. Site Structure Optimization and Local Store Locator Optimization
A site’s structure is like a web where each node is a page, and each page is connected to other pages by links. Links to your pages from your website are called internal links, and links from other websites are external links.
Internal links connect the pages of a website together. This allows users and search engines to navigate through a site and discover content. These links may be website navigation, in-content links, breadcrumb links, footer links, or even pagination links. Every link on a site, whether humanly visible or not, matters for enterprise SEO.
A good rule of thumb is that your preferred landing pages should have the highest number of internal links.
Consider your site navigation: since navigation is available on every page of your site, it means that every link within the navigation is also on every page. Therefore, these navigation links must direct to extremely important pages. If your navigation links to pages that are not important, they’re stealing ranking and traffic power from other pages.
Using this thought process; we organize enterprise sites so that the most valuable pages get the most activity. Enterprise websites have complex structures and, within these structures, it’s important to ensure that the most valuable pages get the appropriate amount of internal links.
An extremely effective strategy for enterprises is to establish the priority of each page (across sometimes millions of pages), and create an implementation plan that results in each page being internally-linked to according to its search potential and ability to achieve business objectives.
5. NAP Data Syndication
NAP stands for name, address and phone and to Google it’s like the fingerprint for each location. That fingerprint must be clean throughout the local ecosystem. Incorrect information listed on any of the local data aggregators can lead to duplicate listings and confuse the search engines. It can dilute the power of any of your citations and split reviews between multiple listings. There are endless problems if your NAP data is not correctly syndicated.
The solution is to understand and control the sources of the local data aggregators so that only clean local data is syndicated. When this is done, business locations will gain better visibility, and ultimately provide a better experience for their customers.
In conclusion, understanding these key principals is just the first step towards mastering enterprise local SEO. One key thing to bear in mind is that enterprise local SEO is not a quick-and-easy endeavor and it requires patience and acumen, — but when mastered, it can become the cornerstone of your business’ marketing and lead generation strategy.
Source: - http://www.sitepronews.com/2017/07/10/top-5-tactics-for-local-enterprise-seo/

Content Marketing and SEO: Why You Need Both

Subhead: No, You Don’t Have to Choose Just One
 “Content marketing vs. SEO – the best choice”
“SEO and content marketing – which is best for your business?”
“Should you invest in SEO or content marketing?”
I’m sure you’ve seen tons of headlines like this. And I have and I decided I’ve had enough!
I’ve also heard this question from a lot of my agency’s clients during the onboarding process. “Yeah, content marketing sounds good, but I’ve read that SEO is better.”
Yes, that happens in 2017. Shoot me now!
Such questions and headlines have clearly shown me there is a serious shortage of education on the matter. More people need to understand that the two aren’t mutually exclusive. At all! Quite the opposite actually. I would go as far as saying that they are interdependent and crucial to a coherent digital strategy.
Much like peanut butter and jelly are for a really good sandwich.
Let’s see why.
Defining the terms
According to the Content Marketing Institute, “Content marketing is a strategic marketing approach focused on creating and distributing valuable, relevant, and consistent content to attract and retain a clearly defined audience — and, ultimately, to drive profitable customer action.”
Search Engine Land tells us that SEO (search engine oOptimization) “is the process of getting traffic from the “free,” “organic,” “editorial” or “natural” search results on search engines.”
There is something that the two clearly have in common: “attract (…) a clearly defined audience” and “getting traffic” or attracting traffic.
Does this mean that they do the same thing and that you have to choose between them? Absolutely not.
A battle that’s artificially fueled
The type of headline cited above is only designed to “help” you allocate your resources where the publisher of the article needs you to.
For instance, let’s say your budget is $4,000 per month and you have the same dilemma: should you invest it in SEO or content marketing. When you Google your question you’ll get quite a few results. Each article you read declares a winner.
Some will tell you that you can get nowhere without SEO in this competitive world. Others will argue that all the recent Google algorithm updates killed SEO and you have to move your budget to content marketing.
Guess what? In most of the cases, the first ones are selling SEO services, while the latter are content marketers. There is an incredible scarcity of unbiased articles that advocate the need for the two to coexist.
The case for BOTH SEO and content marketing
Imagine this scenario: you put all of your $4,000 in SEO and you get lots of traffic. More than you’ve ever dreamed of. But no conversions.
You may have gained some brand recognition (and certainly some ego-massage from the vanity metrics displayed by Google Analytics), but what about cash? You know, the thing that keeps businesses going.
Enter content marketing.
The techniques used by content marketers are designed not just to keep users on your website and reduce your bounce rate, but also to turn them into paying customers. Perfectly optimized content is of no value if those who see it don’t make a purchase or an inquiry, as well.
In today’s world, the Internet-savvy shopper or client isn’t easy to convert. You need to provide him with relevant, valuable and informational content before you can convince him to even consider your brand. A poorly written, keyword-stuffed article doesn’t do that. It just annoys potential customers and scares them away from your website (and business).
Aside from valuable, informational content, good copywriters spend hours crafting the perfect call-to-action to complement your optimized copy so that your organic visits turn into actual cash. What good is a page that ranks No. 1 in all searches if it sells nothing?
The argument works both ways, actually.
What good is a perfect, stunning call-to-action if no one discovers the content it accompanies? This is why you need to pair up content marketing and SEO, not choose between them. If someone tells you to make that choice, run and never look back.
How SEO and content marketing can work together
Whenever I hire SEO copywriters for my agency, I make sure they have at least basic knowledge of content marketing. In fact, I’ve found that inbound and content marketing experience is much more valuable than SEO knowledge.
That’s because you can easily teach someone to optimize his or her content. You can tell them which tools to use to find relevant keywords, what density they should use and how to choose the right LSI keywords. But teaching them the importance of a proper CTA and a compelling headline from scratch is harder. Not impossible, but harder.
Experience has also taught me that there is such a things as the golden ratio between SEO and content marketing.
Let me explain that.
Of course you want all your texts optimized. Organic traffic is a gold mine for any type of business – no one can dispute that. But you don’t want to sacrifice your content marketing strategy for it.
You want to find the right balance.
In other words, don’t just write articles for the sake of boosting your page rankings. Write because you have something to say. Write because your buyer persona wants or needs that information. Make sure that everything you write has tons of research behind and that it’s in the right tone of voice for your audience.
Your potential customers love that. And, according to the latest Google algorithm updates, so do search engines. So, if you don’t believe me that content marketing and SEO should go together, take Google’s word for it. It has made it quite clear that websites that write for human readers will always rank higher than those that try to impress Google too hard.

Bottom line: SEO and content marketing have some value on their own. Together, they are unstoppable.

Source: - http://www.sitepronews.com/2017/07/05/content-marketing-and-seo-why-you-need-both/

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Search Engine Optimization


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SEO & website design: Everything you need to know

SEO is important to any business that operates online, and many don't realize it needs to be built into the web design process -- not added in later. Here, columnist Marcus Miller has provided a comprehensive guide to SEO and web design.

Your website is the center of your digital marketing world — the place that all digital rivers run toward. And of course, the largest of its traffic sources is generally organic search.
Yet all too often, businesses don’t think about SEO until after having a website designed (or redesigned), and these sites are often sadly lacking on the SEO and digital marketing front. They may look shiny, but if the marketing smarts are not cooked in at design time, then you will be running the marketing race with a wooden leg. Or at the very least, faced with going back to the drawing board and wasting a whole load of time and money.
We have been thinking about the SEO and web design connection a lot recently at Bowler Hat and have just published a website design planning guide to help in what can be a complicated process. This is a companion piece to that guide that really covers the SEO considerations in far more granular detail.
In this post, I have a look at how SEO should be an integral part of your website design (or redesign) process. We are going to look at what you need to consider to have a site that is built for search marketing and lead generation — and how focusing on happy users keeps the Google gods on your side.
We will also take a look at some of the common pitfalls that can befall businesses looking to build a new website that is central to your digital marketing efforts.
In brief, I am going to help you ensure your next site is a lean, mean SEO and digital marketing machine.

What usually happens…

A phone rings at Bowler Hat HQ.
Marcus: “Hey, Bowler Hat here. How can we help?”
Caller: “Hi there. We have just had a website built and… we seem to have lost a considerable amount of traffic.” OR “… we don’t rank for the keywords we used to be visible for.” OR “… we are just not getting any inquiries.” OR “… we want to look at what we can do to improve our SEO.”
Marcus: “Ah, okay. If you can let me know your URL and a number to call you back on, I can take a look and make some suggestions.”
There is a problem here. SEO is not some band-aid you can just plaster onto an existing site. Website SEO is fundamental to succeeding online for the majority of businesses. And the same concepts that fuel solid SEO help with paid search, social and any other inbound marketing efforts. Get this wrong and you will certainly fail to hit your digital marketing goals.

Developing an SEO-friendly website

At a fundamental level, an SEO-friendly site is one that allows a search engine to explore and read pages across the site. Ensuring a search engine can easily crawl and understand your content is the first step to ensuring your visibility in the search engine result pages.
A search engine utilizes a web crawler for this task, and we are trying to work with the search engines rather than against them. Unfortunately, there are many ways to make a website, and not all technologies are built with search engine optimization in mind.
Building an SEO-friendly site requires careful planning and a structured approach to representing your business and the services you provide. For many businesses, this can be complicated — it’s not always easy to document exactly what you do.
As a marketing tool, your website should be built upon a solid digital marketing plan with a clear business model and value proposition. If that’s unclear, then you need to revisit that first.
Assuming you have all that good stuff in place, let’s dive in.

Fundamentals

There are a few core elements that set the stage for a well-optimized website design process.
Domains
Your business may use example.com as the primary domain. But you may have others. Ensuring your domain makes sense and relates to what you do is super-important. Ensuring that all variations and subdomains correctly point at the main site and redirect to a single canonical version of the site is important.
Our business is called Bowler Hat. We operate in the UK. We are a web-based business. It naturally follows that our domain is www.bowlerhat.co.uk. All subdomains 301 redirect back to the main URL www.bowlerhat.co.uk. We have few domain variations that 301 redirect back to the main URL. This all makes sense.
Don’t be fooled into thinking that having-my-keywords-in-my-domain.com helps. It just looks daft. It can help a little for local businesses, but ensure you are mapping to the real world. Be sensible.
Hosting
Your hosting is also important. A slow site makes for unhappy users. Your hosting should follow common-sense rules. Be situated where your audience is situated. Be fast. Be platform-specific, if necessary. WP Engine is a great example, as it provides a platform tailored to WordPress websites.
CMS
The CMS (content management system) you choose for your business can hugely influence how successful you are. WordPress is a great option in many situations, but it’s not the only one. It certainly is wired up at a basic level in a way that Google can understand. This is not to say it is the best choice for all situations, but certainly, it’s a good starting point for most businesses. Just be sure that the CMS you choose is the right one for your situation, rather than the one your chosen web company prefers to work with.

Crawling & accessibility

The first step is ensuring a search engine can crawl your site and understand what it is that you do (and where you do it).
Indexation
To understand your site, they have to be able to read the content of the page. This means that the main content of your site should be text-based behind the scenes. Not images. Not flash or video. Even in this ever-advancing world, your main content should still be text-based. There are some great tools, like web fonts, that mean you can still look the part, and your images have a place, but be sure to talk in clear language about what it is you do so the search engine can read and understand your offering.
Images, videos, PDFs and content are also important and can be a source of search engine traffic. Again, these need to be discoverable and indexable.
Link structure
To index your content beyond the home page, you need internal links that the search engine can crawl. Your primary navigation, search engine directives and tools like XML sitemaps all help the search engine crawl your site and discover new pages. Tools like Screaming Frog can help you ensure that your site can be easily crawled by a search engine.

Information architecture and structuring your site

I have always like the filing cabinet analogy for website structure. Your site is the filing cabinet. The major categories are the drawers. The subcategories are the folders in the drawers. The pages are documents in the folders.
  • Cabinet: your website
  • Drawer: high-level category
  • Folder: subcategory
  • File: individual document/page
Context is indicated not only by the site it exists on but also by the position within that site. Our own site has a drawer for services, and each service has sub-services in folders. Your site will be largely the same.
If we consider the following structure of the Bowler Hat site as an example:
Home
– Services
– – Service Area
– – – Individual Service
Home
– Services
– – SEO
– – – SEO Audits
So, there is a page in this information architecture that is simply /audits/.
The /audits/ page exists in the SEO folder in the services drawer. Nice and organized. This can follow through with other SEO elements to clearly indicate context far beyond that which can be indicated by the document alone.
This is relevant to blog posts, articles, FAQ content, services, locations and just about anything else that is an entity within your business. You are looking to structure the information about your business in a way that makes it understandable.
Some sites may take a deep approach to structuring content. Others may take a wide approach. The important takeaway here is that things should be organized in a way that makes sense and simplifies navigation and discovery.
A three- to four-level approach like this ensures that most content can be easily navigated to within four clicks and tends to work better than a deeper approach to site navigation (for users and search engines).
URLs
Context is further indicated by the URL. A sensible naming convention helps provide yet more context for humans and search engines.
Following are two hypothetical sets of URLs that could map to the Services > SEO > SEO Audit path laid out above — yet one makes sense, and the other does nothing to help.
www.example.com
www.example.com/services/
www.example.com/services/seo/
www.example.com/services/seo/audits/
www.example.com
www.example.com/s123/
www.example.com/s123/s1/
www.example.com/s123/s1/75/
Of course, the second set of URLs is a purposely daft example, but it serves a point — the first URL naming convention helps both search engines and users, and the second one hinders.
Navigation
Your navigation is equally important. When a site is well-structured, the navigation works with the structure, the URLs and other components, like XML sitemaps, to help solidify what each page or piece of content is about.
Navigation is more than just the menu at the top of your website. It is how you signpost users to the most relevant part of your site. Navigation can be a tool to raise awareness of additional services and includes not just text links but content on all pages and in the templated design elements of your site.
I have always liked the signpost analogy. I walk into a supermarket and look for the signs to find what I need. Your website is no different. If a user is referred and searches for your brand name, then they will land on your home page. They then need a signpost to get them to the relevant service. And it had better be easy to find!
It is very easy to get this wrong, and careful thought must be applied — before you build the site — regarding the needs and wants of your users. A website is a digital component that should execute the strategy from your marketing plan. Understanding users here is crucial so you can ensure you are meeting their needs.
Navigation should not need any real cognition — it should not make the user have to think. The following image is a sign from my local home improvement store. Which direction takes you to the car park and which direction takes you to the deliveries entrance?

My brain follows the “customer car park” line from left to right, so I of course turn right. However, the customer car park is to the left. There is nothing there to clearly illustrate which is right or wrong.
I have to think. Or in practice, I go in the wrong direction a few times before I learn. However, if users don’t find what they are looking for on a website, they will return to the great ocean of competition that Google search results represent.
Ensure your navigation is crystal-clear — if one user can make a mistake, many others can, too.
Common problems
There are many potential issues with content that can’t be found or can’t be understood by the search engine that can work against you. For example:
  • Orphaned content that can’t be found
  • Content only available via site search
  • Flash files, Java programs, audio files, video files
  • AJAX* and flashy site effects
  • Frames — Content embedded from another site can be problematic.
  • Subdomains — content split into subdomains rather than sub-folders
* Google has gotten a lot better at reading AJAX pages, but it is still possible to obscure content with pointless effects.
Be sure that important content is easily discoverable, understandable and sits in the overall structure of the site in a way that makes sense.
Summary
If everything is done well, a human and a search engine should have a pretty good idea what a page is about before they even look at it. Your typical SEO then just builds on this solid foundation that is laid out by your information architecture and site structure.

Mobile-friendly design

The most popular device used to conduct internet searches and to browse websites is the mobile phone. We live in a mobile-first age. Sites optimized for search engines should give equal consideration to the mobile layouts of their websites (rather than just bolting on simple responsive website design).
Yet, in 2017, responsive design is not enough. We were talking about the importance of responsive website design in 2012. Five years later, with massive technological progress and greatly improved mobile data networks, your future customers are using mobile as the first, and often only, device to interact with your business.
To create a truly mobile-friendly design and maximize results from mobile search, you must think of the needs and wants of mobile users. What a user will do on a phone is often far different from what they will do on a computer. And even if your conversions tend to be on a desktop, that crucial first touch may well be on mobile.
A few months back, I looked at 28 key factors in creating mobile SEO-friendly websites that will help you move beyond simple mobile-friendly responsive design.
From an SEO perspective, it is worth noting that mobile-friendliness is a confirmed ranking factor for mobile search, and it is the mobile version of your site that will be used by the search engine to review and rank your site. However, far more important, mobile is how your prospective customers are searching for and browsing your site.
Work hard on optimizing the user experience for mobile users and you will reap the rewards for your efforts in terms of traffic and user engagement.

Page speed

Another key consideration in the mobile era is page speed. Users may be impatient, or they may not always have a great mobile data connection. Ensuring your pages are lean and mean is a key consideration in modern SEO-friendly website design.
A great starting point is Google’s mobile-friendly testThis tool will give you feedback on mobile-friendliness, mobile speed and desktop speed. It also wraps everything up into a handy little report detailing what exactly you can do to speed things up.
I went into a little more detail on how to optimize for speed in a recent column on mobile optimization. Suffice it to say, page speed is yet another important consideration that spans how your site is built and the quality and suitability of the hosting you use.

Usability

Web usability is a combination of other factors: device-specific design, page speed, design conventions and an intuitive approach to putting the site together with the end user in mind.
Key factors to consider include:
  • Page layout. Important elements should have more prominence.
  • Visual hierarchy. Make more important elements bigger!
  • Home page and site navigation. Clearly signpost directions for users.
  • Site search. Large sites need a sensibly positioned search option.
  • Form entry. Make forms as lightweight and easy to fill as possible.
  • Design. Great design makes everything easier.
This is just scratching the surface here, and usability really has to be customized to the individual site. A couple of resources I would check out would be the book, “Don’t Make Me ThinkA Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, by Steve Krug and my mobile optimization checklist.

The content marketing funnel

Your website has a hell of a job to do: it must help your business get in front of prospective customers on search engines, and then it has to engage and convert those customers.
Your site needs content to help with all of these stages of the customer journey. Content and SEO is an important combination here, as you may get in front of a customer as they look for similar services from another company they are already considering.
A structured way to consider the content you need here is a typical marketing funnel:
Awareness — top of the funnel
Awareness content will typically be your blog and informational articles. We are helping your prospective customer understand the problems they face and illustrating your experience and credibility in solving them.
  • Blog posts
  • Informational articles
  • Webinars
  • Comprehensive guides
  • FAQs
Consideration — middle of the funnel
The content at the consideration stage helps your prospect compare you against the other offerings out there. This tends to be practical content that helps the customer make a decision.
  • Case studies
  • Product or service information
  • Product demonstration videos
  • User guides
Conversion — bottom of the funnel
Bottom-of-the-funnel content drives conversions and should gently encourage a sale or lead.
  • Reviews
  • Testimonials
  • Free trial
  • Free consultation
Remember that customers will search across this entire spectrum of content types. Therefore, ensuring all of these areas are covered aids discovery via search engines, consideration and conversion.

SEO nuts & bolts

As you can see, there is a lot to consider before we even look at the more familiar elements of optimizing your site and pages. We should only really start to think about keywords and basic on-page optimization once we have this solid foundation in place. And hopefully, if we have structured everything correctly, then the actual optimization of the pages becomes far easier.
Keyword targeting
Nailing your keyword strategy is so much easier once you have a solid structure without internal duplication. If we look at our previous examples for site hierarchy and structure, then adding keywords is relatively straightforward (and is something we would often do in a spreadsheet pre-design).
– Services
– – SEO
– – – SEO Audits
www.example.com/services/
www.example.com/services/seo/
www.example.com/services/seo/audits/
If I use these pages as an example, we have a natural progression from broad keywords to more refined search terms. We can even consider basic modifiers such as location if we are a local business.
Home
– digital marketing agency
– digital marketing company
+ Birmingham
+ UK
Services
– marketing services
– digital marketing services
+ Birmingham
+ UK
SEO
– SEO
– Search Engine Optimization
+ Company
+ Agency
+ Birmingham
+ UK
SEO Audits
– SEO Audits
– Technical SEO Audits
+ Agency
+ Company
+ Birmingham
The point here is that a well-structured site gets you a good way toward determining your keyword strategy. You still have to do the research and copywriting, but you can be sure you have a solid strategy to target broad and more detailed terms.
HTML title tags
The <title> tag is the primary behind-the-scenes tag that can influence your search engine results. In fact, it is the only meta tag that actually influences position directly.
Best practice for title tags are as follows:
  • Place keywords at the beginning of the tag.
  • Keep length around 50 to 60 characters.
  • Use keywords and key phrases in a natural manner.
  • Use dividers to separate elements like category and brand.
  • Focus on click-through and the end user.
  • Have a consistent approach across the site.
Even in 2017, we still see a lot of overoptimized page titles. We want our keywords in the title tag, but not at the expense of click-through and human readability. A search engine may rank your content, but a human clicks on it, so keep that in mind.
Meta description tags
Meta descriptions don’t directly influence rankings. We all know that, right? But of course, that is completely missing the point here. Your meta description is the content of your advertisement for that page in a set of search engine results. Your meta description is what wins you the click. And winning those clicks can help improve visibility and is absolutely vital in driving more users to your pages.
Meta descriptions must:
  • truthfully describe the page content.
  • advertise the page and improve click-through rates.
  • consider the user’s thought process and why they will click on this page.
  • include keywords where relevant and natural to do so.
The search engine will highlight search terms in your page title and meta description which help a user scan the page. Don’t use this as an excuse to spam the meta description, though, or else Google likely will ignore it, and it won’t lead to that all-important click!
There are also situations where it can make sense not to create a meta description and let the search engine pull content from the page to form a description that more accurately maps to a user’s search. Your brief meta description can’t always cover all the options for a longer-form piece of content, so keep this in mind.
Heading tags
Heading tags help structure the page and indicate hierarchy in a document: H1, H2, H3 and so on. Text in heading tags correlates with improved rankings (albeit slightly), but what really matters is that alignment between the structure of the site, behind the scenes optimization like page titles and meta descriptions and the content itself. Line everything up, and things make more sense for users, and we help search engines categorize our content while eking out every last bit of simple, on-page optimization we can.
Remember to align header tags with the visual hierarchy. Meaning the most important header on the page (typically the <h1>) should also be the biggest text element on the page. You are making the document visually easy to understand here and further ensuring that design and content are working together for the best end result.
Page content
The content should generally be the most important part of the page. However, we still see archaic SEO practices like overt keyword density and search terms with a lack of connective words used in the copy. This does not work. It certainly does not help with your SEO. And it makes for a poor user experience.
We want to make sure the context of our page is clear. Our navigation, URLs, page titles, headers and so on should all help here. Yet we want to write naturally, using synonyms and natural language.
Focus on creating great content that engages the user. Be mindful of keywords, but certainly don’t overdo it.
Considerations for page content:
  • Keywords in content (but don’t overdo it)
  • Structure of the page
  • Position of keywords in the content — earlier can be better
  • Synonyms and alternatives
  • Co-occurrence of keywords — what else would other high-quality documents include?
Rich snippets
Rich snippets are a powerful tool to increase click-through rates. We are naturally attracted to listings that stand out in the search engine results. Anything you can do to improve the click-through rate drives more users and makes your search engine listings work harder. Factor in possible ranking improvements from increased engagement, and you can have a low-input, high-output SEO tactic.
The snippets that are most relevant to your business will depend on what you do, but schema.org is a great place to start.

Image optimization

Image SEO can drive a substantial amount of traffic in the right circumstances. And again, our thoughts regarding context are important here. Google does not (yet) use the content of images, so context within the site and the page and basic optimization are crucial here.
As an example, I am looking for a hobbit hole playhouse for my five-year-old, and the search brings up image results:

I can dive right into those image results and find a multitude of options, then use the image to drive me to the site that sells the playhouse. Optimizing your images increases the chance of improving prominence in the image search results.
Image optimization is technically straightforward:
  • Image name — provide a name that clearly describes what the image is.
  • Alt text — use descriptive alt text to help those who can’t see the images to reinforce the image content.
  • Add OpenGraph and Twitter Cards so the image is used in social shares.
  • Use the image at the right physical size to ensure fast downloads.
  • Optimize the image’s file size to improve loading times.
  • Consider adding images to your XML sitemap.
Image optimization is relatively simple. Keep the images relevant. Don’t spam the filenames and alt text with keywords. Be descriptive.

Common problems

SEO projects at Bowler Hat often include an SEO audit as the first port of call. We can’t cover every eventuality here, but the following are the usual suspects that crop up and that web designers should be mindful of.
Duplicate content
There tend to be two kinds of duplicate content: true duplicates and near-duplicates. True duplicates are where the content exists in multiple places (different pages, sites, subdomains and so on). Near-duplicates can be thin content or substantially similar content — think of a business with multiple locations or shoes listed on a unique page in different sizes.
Keyword cannibalization
Keyword cannibalization refers to the situation where multiple pages target the same keywords. This can impact the ability of your site to have one page that strongly targets a given term.
Where the site architecture and hierarchy has been carefully planned, you should eliminate this during the planning and design stages.
Domains, subdomains and protocols
Another potential issue where duplication crops up is where the site is available on multiple domains, subdomains and protocols.
Consider a business with two domains:
  • Example.com
  • Example.co.uk
With www and non-www versions:
  • Example.com
  • Example.co.uk
  • www.example.com
  • www.example.co.uk
And the site runs on HTTP and HTTPS:
  • http://example.com
  • http://example.co.uk
  • http://www.example.com
  • http://www.example.co.uk
  • https://example.com
  • https://example.co.uk
  • https://www.example.com
  • https://www.example.co.uk
Before too long, we can get to a situation where the site has eight potential variations. Factor in the site resolving on any subdomain and a few duff internal links and we can often add things like “ww.example.com” to the list above.
These kinds of issues are simply resolved with URL redirections, but again, they deserve consideration by any web design agency that takes care of hosting and is serious about the SEO of their customers’ websites.
Botched canonical URLs
Another common issue we see is an incorrect implementation of canonical URLs. What typically happens here is that the person building the site looks at canonical URLs as an SEO checklist kind of job. They are implemented by dynamically inserting the URL in the address bar into the canonical URL.
This is fundamentally flawed in that we can end up with the site running on multiple URLs, each with a canonical URL claiming that they are the authoritative version. So the canonical implementation exacerbates rather than resolves the issue.
Canonical URLs are a powerful tool when wielded wisely, yet they must be used properly or they can make matters worse.

Questions or comments?

There are a lot of moving parts with website design and SEO. But to be forewarned is to be forearmed. My goal here was to furnish you with the key SEO elements to consider before, during and after a website design project.
"Source: - http://searchengineland.com/seo-website-design-everything-need-know-272899"