SEO Tips to Improve Organic Traffic in Under 10 Minutes
SEO can take a long time to
get any kind of meaningful results. And while you can't "force" Google
to rank you high and fast, there are actually a ton of very quick things you
can do to improve SEO for your website.
So today, I'm going to show you some
low-hanging SEO tips that will hopefully give you a boost even if you're not an
experienced SEO. What's up SEOs? Sam Oh
here with Ahrefs, the SEO tool that helps you grow your search traffic, research
your competitors and dominate your niche. This tutorial is all about quick wins
so I'll cut the intro short and get straight to the tips. One of the easiest
things to do is improve page speed with lazy load. Lazy loading basically means
to defer the loading of non-critical resources at page load time. In other
words, things like images or videos will only load when they're visible on the
page. This will reduce initial page load time, initial page weight, and system
resource usage, all of which should positively impact perpend is a so-called "ranking factor," faster
loading pages provide a better user experience for your visitors and as a
result, can reduce metrics like bounce rate. If you're a WordPress user,
there's a free plugin called "A3 Lazy Load" which is basically
plug-and-play. And, if you're not using WordPress, you can use the intersection
observer API or search for plugins made for your CMS.
The next thing I
recommend doing is improving clickthrough rate for pages ranking on page one. I'd
say it's widely accepted in the SEO community that pages with a higher
clickthrough rate can help increase rankings. But even if that was all a myth,
it doesn't really matter because more clicks equal more visitors. So improving
CTR... never a bad thing. Now, since 75% of users never scroll past the first
page of search results, I recommend focusing on improving CTR for your
first-page rankings. To do this, log in to Google Search Console and go to the Search Results or Performance
report. Make sure to click on the
Average CTR and Average Positions boxes, which will add additional data points in the table below. Next, set a Positions filter to only show
keywords with a ranking position of 10 or lower. Finally, I'll sort the table by impressions
in descending order, and also change this filter to show at least 100 keywords per page. From here, just skim through the list, and look
for keywords that a) make sense, b) are
not branded terms for other company names,
c) have a reasonable number of impressions, and d) have a lower than average clickthrough
rate. Alright, so here you'll see that
we rank for "SEO strategy" with an average position of around 6 and an average CTR of just 1%. According to AWR's CTR curve for this
position, CTR should be around 2.8 to 3.5 percent. So I'd probably want to focus on possibly tweaking
the title tag to get more clicks. Now,
it's important to note that when optimizing your title tags, you should be
looking for the primary keywords you're
targeting. For example, SEO strategy is
clearly the keyword we're targeting for this page. We wouldn't change our title tags to
"SEO marketing strategy content template" because that's not what the article is about. Another key point to take note is that the Search
Console only shows you average positions.
This data can sometimes be misleading since positions can jump in and
out of the top 100 or anything in
between at any time. You can get more
precise keyword ranking positions using Ahrefs' Rank Tracker tool. Alternatively, you can use Ahrefs' Site
Explorer to see data on any website. Just
enter the domain or subfolder you want to research. Then I'll go to the Organic Keywords report. Next, I'll set a filter to only show pages ranking
in the top 10. And just like that, we
have a list of keywords with exact ranking positions based on these dates and also have the option to see historical ranking
positions for any keyword.
The next tip
is one of my favorites and that's to send emails to everyone you link to. With link building, you need to find prospects,
vet them, find their emails, and somehow naturally ask them to link to you. But by using this simple 10-minute outreach
strategy, it cuts out a lot of steps in
the link building process. Now, while
the intent of the email isn't to actually build links, it's a great way to
passively earn them and grow your
network while you're at it. Here's how
it works in two steps. Step 1 is to take
note of all the sites you're linking to. After all,
you'll probably only link to pages when you respect their content. Step 2, find their email addresses and just
send them a quick note just to let them
know that you've linked to them. Now,
while this doesn't usually result in immediate links, it helps you start a
conversation, and it can open up
opportunities to have influencers recognize your work. For example, you'll see in our SEO tips post that
Josh wrote that Buzzstream is the best tool in the industry for managing, and keeping track of scaled outreach
campaigns. In this case, he could reach
out to the blog editor, marketing manager or social media manager and say something like Hey [name],
Long-time Buzzstream user and superfan of your tool. I just recommended y'all as the best outreach tool
in our SEO tips article. I hope it sends
some well-deserved customers your way. Cheers,
Josh From my experience, sending
conversation starters without an ask is a great way to increase reply rates. And hey, if your content is unique and
well-written, you'll often get compliments, which can open up natural opportunities for you to guest post
or work together on another level. If
you plan to try this technique, I recommend watching our video on using
negotiation and persuasion when building
links. Next up is to add internal links
to your new pages. Internal linking is
important. It improves crawlability,
gets your pages indexed faster, improves topical relevance, and distributes PageRank to other pages so
you can rank higher in Google. So what I
recommend doing is looking for topically relevant pages on your site that you
can link from immediately after you
publish your new post. Just go to Google
and search for something like site: your domain and then add a keyword that's related to your new page. So in this case, you'll see that the search results
show pages from our blog that mention
the phrase "link building." Then
visit relevant pages and look for places where you can add links to your new
posts. Now, if you want to take a little
bit more of a strategic approach, I recommend using Ahrefs' SEO toolbar, where you can see the
URL rating for each page. And URL Rating
is an Ahrefs' metric, which represents the overall strength of a page's backlink profile. Since Google doesn't provide public PageRank scores
anymore, it's kind of our own way to measure page-level authority, which we've found to correlate with search traffic
quite nicely. If you want to learn more
about funneling PageRank through internal links, I recommend watching our SEO strategy video using the
middleman method. The next tip is to
become a power skimmer of HARO using Gmail filters. HARO stands for "Help a Reporter
Out." It's a free service where
journalists can ask questions, and anyone can respond and be a source for mega publications like The
New York Times and Forbes. HARO is one
of my favorite ways to build authority links and it's something I recommend to
everyone at any stage. The thing with this service is that they
usually send three emails per day which can be quite overwhelming, considering 90% of the queries probably won't
be relevant to you. So a quick hack to
make sure opportunities don't get missed is to lighten the load with Gmail filters. After you've created a HARO account, just go
to your Inbox and click on the caret to
bring down Gmail's search options. Next,
set the From field to haro@helpareporter.com.
Then, you'll want to set the subject to HARO within square brackets
since all of their emails include that
in the subject line. Finally, set the
Has the words field to any keyword you want to monitor. And you can also use the OR search operator to
include multiple keywords or phrases. Then
click Search to see the results your search filters would include and check out
some of the emails to ensure you're
getting relevant results. If everything
looks good, click on the caret again and then click Create filter. You'll then have options to apply labels, mark
it as important, or forward it to another team member to take care of. The
next tip is to perform an annual content audit.
A content audit is where you analyze the performance of all content on
your site to see whether it should be
kept as-is, updated, deleted, consolidated, or redirected. And it's not uncommon to get impressive
results. For example, we did a content
audit on Ahrefs' blog and got a seven and a half percent increase in traffic after deleting 31.7% of our pages. Siege Media saw around a 50% traffic increase
for one of their clients after cutting around 15% of the content from the site. And I've personally seen a traffic increase of
80% after deleting 74% of my pages. Now,
content audits can take several hours to do,
but we've actually created a spreadsheet that automates a good chunk of
the process for you, so you can identify
action items in under 10 minutes. So
rather than explaining everything again, I'll link up our content audit video
which should help you get started in no
time. Finally is something we practice a
lot at Ahrefs, and that's to repurpose
your best-performing blog posts to videos, and your best videos to blog posts. Now, there are a couple of great reasons to repurpose
your content. First, people enjoy
different content formats based on nothing more than personal preference. Some people I've met at conferences, they
tell me that they always read the blog, but
have never seen a single one of my videos.
And the same happens for people who've watched all of my videos but
haven't read a single post. People go to
channels which they prefer and having both an active blog and YouTube channel, allows us to reach more people in the place they
want to learn. On top of that, we're
able to consistently reach a ton of new people every single month through both channels, allowing us to
passively generate new leads and customers for our tools. Second, you can own multiple spots in Google
Search. Since videos are showing up more
in Google's SERPs, we often try and own
as much real estate as possible. For
example, if you search for "SEO tutorial," you'll likely see my
videos as well as our blog post. Search
for "how to do keyword research," and you'll see our image result,
three of our videos, and our blog post. Now, the actual work of repurposing content can
take quite a bit of time, but strategically identifying the topics to repurpose can be done fast. To put this into perspective, when I started creating
videos for Ahrefs, aside from some initial
product-related videos, eight out of my first 12 videos were repurposed from
our blog. Now, there are generally three
ways I decide on which content to repurpose.
The first way is to repurpose blog posts that are already getting
consistent traffic. The reason being, you
can almost guarantee that you'll get views on your videos. For example, we get a good amount of traffic to
our post on free keyword research tools.
So we embedded our video there just after the introduction. And since we only have the video embedded on
one page, we can attribute over 10,000 engaged
views from this post alone. Another way
to choose repurposable content is based on search demand on both Google and
YouTube. For example, you'll see in
Ahrefs' Keywords Explorer that the query "youtube SEO" gets around 12,000 monthly searches on
YouTube. So I repurposed the video into
a blog post since it gets searched around 17,000 times per month on Google. And today, we rank #1 on YouTube for that
keyword, own a spot in the video carousel on Google, and have a top 10 ranking for our blog post. The final way is by using some common sense. A couple of months ago, I repurposed our SEO checklist
from our blog. There's decent search
demand on Google, but basically no searches on YouTube. But by analyzing other competing videos on
that topic, I saw that this one was able
to generate a ton of views likely
through other traffic sources, like suggested videos and browse features. So after a few months, we've racked up over 35,000
views on this video. A blog post we
probably wouldn't repurpose is something like this one on meta robots. YouTube is both an entertainment and
educational marketing medium. And no matter
how hard I try to make it super-entertaining or actionable, I don't think there's much I could do. One final tip on repurposing content is to give
the repurposed version a twist rather than
directly copying it. What I generally do
is look at the subheadings of the blog post, then put my own spin and angle on the topic. So what you read on our blog won't be the exact
same as what you see in our videos and
vice versa. Now, I'd love to hear from
you.
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