Download - Organic SEO Tips
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Organic SEO Tips to Grow
Traffic, Sales and Rankings
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There is nothing I love more than researching a market,
unearthing lucrative keyword verticals and building out a site.
Crash Course in Organic SEO
Sure, there are a million and one ways to accomplish the
same task, but despite the fundamental differences in
approach there is a sequence that is repeatable,
evergreen and transcends topical search engine
algorithm revisions and works time and time again
regardless of the topic, market or competitors.
All techie SEO jargon and nomenclature aside, I will
attempt to keep this as straightforward as possible to
ensure that there is something for everybody from newbie to SEO expert.
These are the annals of tried and true methods I have
used over the past 14 years to conquer competitive
verticals time and time again. So, I hope you appreciate
them as they represent years of testing and over the
years, these methods have made millions for us and our clients, and it can do the same for you.
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LEGAL NOTICE: Before you scroll down and read anything in this guide, you need to be made fully aware of the following things... Rankings and Page Rank Disclaimer: This document contains business strategies, search engine strategies and other business advice that, regardless of our results and experience, may not produce the same results (or any results) for you. We make absolutely no guarantee, expressed or implied that by following the advice below you will make any money or improve current profits, increase page rank, increase search engine rankings. There are multiple factors and variables that come into play regarding any given business and the competitive landscape. Primarily, results will depend on the nature of the product or business model, the conditions of the marketplace, the experience of the individual, and situations and elements that are beyond your control. As with any business endeavor, you assume all risk related to investment and money based on your own discretion and at your own potential expense. Liability Disclaimer: By reading this document, you assume all risks associated with using the advice given below, with a full understanding that you, solely, are responsible for anything that may occur as a result of putting this information into action in any way, and regardless of your interpretation of the advice. You further agree that our company cannot be held responsible in any way for the success or failure of your business as a result of the information presented below. It is your responsibility to conduct your own due diligence regarding the safe and successful operation of your business if you intend to apply any of our information in any way to your business operations. In summary, you understand that we make absolutely no guarantees regarding search engine rankings as a result of applying this information, as well as the fact that you are solely responsible for the results of any action taken on your part as a result of this information.
Terms of Use, Personal-Usage License This document is FREE – if you have paid for this Ebook, please send us the details in an email to: [email protected] so we can send this information to our attorneys. Furthermore you cannot use this Ebook in whole or partial as; a bonus offer, blog post, or anywhere online or offline without our expressed written consent. We will ensure appropriate legal action shall be taken to preserve our brand, and to ensure that we preserve the exclusive nature and value of this product in the interest of our proprietary information.
Brought to you by: Jeffrey L. Smith http://www.seodesignframework.com/ SEO Design
Solutions, Inc. Copyright © 2015 All Rights Reserved
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Preface
You should put as much work into finding your market
or niche as you do building it out. Neither should be
taken lightly since time, energy and money are at stake and ROI is the ultimate objective.
Remember, you are creating a potential long-term asset
for passive recurring revenue. So just keep in mind,
based on what you put in, you will get out. The key is
efficiency and repeatability and to work smarter not harder on the way up.
Realize that nothing happens overnight for a new
domain. Search engines are programmed to ignore
websites that lack the proper ingredients of trust, citation or relevance.
However, if you give search engines what they want
(content, strong site architecture, internal links, deep
links, citation from multiple sources), they respond in
kind with keywords rising on the horizon sprouting into
the top 10 results (which is the proving grounds for
continuity, message match, user engagement and conversion).
But first, you have to build it, so here are the steps
involved.
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Steps to Optimizing for Search Rankings
1. Keyword Selection: the language of conversion.
2. Site Architecture: Mapping the Nodes of the
Website Silo Architecture.
3. On Page SEO: Determining on page internal link
thresholds.
4. Off Page SEO: Determining off page backlink / deep
link thresholds.
5. Timing: Allowing for website theme synergy, trust
and buoyancy.
6. Analytics: Observation, tracking, testing,
refinement.
7. Content Development: Staggered content creation
and content syndication.
8. Evolution: Finding lucrative effective keywords and integrating them into additional branches.
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Keyword Selection:
Keywords, aside from being the
language of conversion, are the
gatekeepers traffic from search engines.
Keyword or vertical online market
analysis / research is the most critical
step which can either make or break
any of the following steps. If you fail to comprehend the
language your prospects are using when engaging a
search engine, then you may miss the boat entirely when
it comes to crafting expert solutions, pre-sell pages or
authoritative industry solutions that differentiate your web property from your competition.
Similarly, if you fail to understand which keyword phrases
have semantic connectivity and share a high citation or
relevance score to search engines, then your website will
never truly enjoy the cohesion or develop the authority
necessary to rank competitively against other websites that do understand this vital keyword DNA.
There are different types of keywords, or rather, as
Russell Wright from ThemeZoom has coined them, “the 9
species of keywords” which you can use to entice your audience and facilitate conversion.
Once you grasp the function of the different species and
what they represent to your business, you won’t have to
guess which phrases to use, you will KNOW which types
of keywords fit in their respective segments of your site
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architecture and how to maximize them for both (a)
destinations and (b) supporting articles to chip away at
the more competitive, lucrative, traffic-bearing
behemoths that are the apex, i.e. Industry-defining
keywords, that all competitors in the space seek to capture and wield as their own.
While markets differ, the approach is very similar. The
way I view this is simple. I use competing pages and
daily search traffic as a barometer to assess (1) the
barrier to entry and (2) a rung in the ladder on the way up the vertical.
Also, each phase of your website’s roll-out represents
certain thresholds that you can feasibly tackle. For
example, while we have conquered top 10 results in 6
weeks or less for keywords with 1.5 – 2 Million competing
pages in “exact match” in competitive markets, it is not
always the case and may take months to accomplish the
same (depending on the market, climate and competition).
The solution involves using a more tactful approach.
Rather than targeting keywords outside your reach
(which is only temporary) on the contrary, you have to
build the topical base of your web property through
creating a solid semantic foundation (content) using both
educational and commercial queries while paying
attention to whether they are long-tail queries, mid-tail
more competitive popular queries or industry defining keywords (as they take more time to get ranked).
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Those primary phrases are what we call the low-hanging
fruit or less competitive keywords and that is where you
start using intelligent, cohesive content creation coupled
with on page and off page optimization (more on that later).
Regarding the first steps of keyword research and how to
implement cohesive site architecture, you can read more
about this approach here in a post called “how to SEO
your website” which I wrote previously, but the gist is simple.
Start with less competitive keywords you can rank for
using citation (these are keywords that rarely require
links, but just the presence of other similar keywords in a
cohesive category structure). As you create those
primary articles, blog posts, etc. you sprinkle in the more
competitive keywords (from the rung above it) as
secondary, tertiary phrases so you can augment them
with internal links from those “supporting articles” by
linking from those supporting articles to the more competitive keyword / landing pages.
The supporting articles serve a dual purpose (a) to
increase spider activity to your website and (b) to provide
internal linking opportunities for your “big picture” keyword/ranking objectives.
Once you have conducted your research and understand
the hierarchy, then you take that data and map your site
architecture to augment the ascent through assigning
tiers based on competing pages, search volume and time to rank/ barrier to entry and ROI.
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The more competitive the keyword, the more supporting
content, internal link citation and deep links (backlinks)
you will require from other websites to cross the tipping
point. However, the more keywords you work on
simultaneously exponentially expedites the entire process
to toggle what we call keyword stemming where the
website gains its own momentum and starts to rank for
dozens, hundreds and eventually thousands of keyword
variations based on the synergy of signals gleaned from the methods we are about to share.
Site Architecture
Using the analogy of tiers simply
envision a cascading progression of
champagne glasses stacked on atop
the other with one on the top, two
under that, three under that row and so on.
Tier 1: The first tier represents your websites theme.
This is the homepage and often will serve as the apex for
your most challenging industry keyword. There is a
reason for this (1) the homepage will garner the most
link-flow and link-equity naturally as a result of being
included in any other URL for any other page
(yourdomain.com/page.html) as a result of being in the
root or rather being the root of the website, it naturally
has the potential to magnify any of the topics stacked under it.
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Page Rank and link-flow always move up from sub folders
into the root folder, so, you will always want to keep your
tier 2 pages (primary landing pages) in or as close to the root folder as possible.
Tier 2: Tier 2 pages (as mentioned briefly above) are
your category / silo landing pages. They serve as the
designated landing page for your most competitive
keywords. Each competitive keyword should have its own
landing page. This way, when the website becomes an
authority site, you can have a specific page ranking for
the keyword of choice rather than something generic (like your home page ranking for it).
Since rankings are by the page, it is much easier to
develop dozens of tier 2 landing pages to capture
keyword-specific rankings from internal links and deep links from other websites.
To provide an example of a tier 2 page for a website
about health that houses multiple topics would be
domain.com/diet-tips where there may by multiple topics
in the site like domain.com/sleep-disorders or
domain.com/healthy-eating-habits in either case, the
landing page in the root folder would be the recipient of
any internal links for the keywords (diet tips, sleep
disorders or healthy eating habits) from any other page in the site.
Then, since each of those phrases is competitive, they
will still require layers of nested supporting articles. So,
while they are landing pages, they also represent
categories for nested content such as domain.com/diet-
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tips/5-foods-to-avoid.html domain.com/diet-tips/4-
healthy-meat-alternatives.html, etc. By adding this
nested content in layers under the category/silo, then
buoyancy occurs for the more competitive apex / terms
the silo is based on. That silo landing page (in the root)
then using contextual links and navigational links to tie
itself to the tier one primary home page and the home
page reciprocates by linking to the tier 2 landing pages either through navigation of contextual links.
Once you break away into a category/silo, those page
can have their own navigation structures that are more
conducive to the topic (health, diet, exercise, etc.) and
then they are all tied back through the home button in
primary navigation, sitemaps or contextual links (so
getting to any category from any other category is possible within 3 clicks).
Tier 3: Tier 3 pages are unique articles (in the case of a
content rich site), blog posts, or products in the case of
an eCommerce site. While you can create additional
cascading tiers of relevance and site architecture, keep in
mind that the further you go from the root, the more diffused the ranking factor becomes.
This is ideal if you want to tactfully create more buoyancy
for your more competitive keywords, then keep adding
nested content in the category and build internal links
contextually (link from the editorial portion of the page)
instead of through navigation, sidebars, images, etc.
while accruing deep links from other websites to those
tier 2 silo landing pages with a mixed semantic theme of
anchor text.
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On/Off Page Thresholds - Panda and Penguin
If you have control over your link
building (which you should or will need
to in order to compete) you’ll want to
limit the use of the “exact match” anchor
text to not more than 5-10% of your
backlinks. (It becomes more or less
important to keep this anchor % low
based on the level of (over) optimization
present on the website, so educate yourself about over optimization.)
To establish and/or maintain the theme (topic), 20-30%
of your anchors should be a shingle or variation of the
primary phrase (an overlapping keyword variation) or LSI
(synonyms and other related terms), and the rest a mix
of your brand name variations, and/or generic keywords, such as “Click here” or “More information”.
By doing this, you make your link building efforts appear
more natural and will avoid tripping any filters and
getting punted back several pages in search engines as a result of over optimization.
Aside from mapping each category according to its
purpose, and for all of you visual types, feel free to read
more about that here in a post called how to easily create
silo site architecture, you will need to understand simple on page requirements such as:
Put your keyword first in the title.
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Keep titles short
Use the H1 tag for the keyword that page is
designed to rank for.
Use H2 tags for close cousin synonyms
Mirror the keyword in the URL (so if the page is
about diet tips, don’t call it page1.html name it
domain.com/diet-tips.html).
Create at least 400-750 words of “unique content for
each primary tier 2 landing page”.
Limit the number of outbound links on pages, the
less links leaving the page (internally or otherwise)
the more concentrated each link becomes.
Vary navigation on themed categories to avoid
boilerplate templates.
Remove navigation on pages with less content and
use contextual links to get link flow in or out of those pages.
Aside from this, you should understand what internal link
thresholds keywords have and how many deep links you need to provide buoyancy for that keyword.
Be Realistic About Timing
Like anything, quality takes time, so,
invest in your websites and
understand the matrix of frequently
asked questions (FAQs) you should
address, “should ask questions”
(SAQs) you should have covered,
and span commercial and
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educational queries to garner social media engagement
to “get more shares” rather than using dry, lackluster content to build out your website.
Remember, after the Panda update, Google can read and
it knows quality (algorithmically to some extent) as a
document classifier. If your pages score a dud as far as
quality score and relevance, the game is over before you even get started.
As an example, you can use this guide as a barrier to
entry for exact match typing a keyword “in quotes” in a
Google search to determine how many competing pages
you have in phrase match to compete with. From there,
the timeline looks like this (using competing pages as a barrier to entry).
Competitive Keyword Index Ranking / Timeline
0-50K (easy to rank) long-tail keywords 1 month
50-100K Competing Pages Popular Keywords 2-3 months
100-300K Competing Pages Category Keywords 3-4 months
300-500K Competing Pages Mainstream National Keywords 4-6 months
500-1MM+ Competitive Keywords that Require
Development 6-8 months
While you could use baseline metrics such as this, you
also have to take other factors into consideration such as
the age of the website, Page Authority (PA) and Domain
Authority (DA), as well as the trust of the links coming to
the site, Trust Flow (TF), Citation Flow (CF), and most
importantly, Topical Trust Flow (TTF).
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These factors will impact the SERPs and individual
keywords based on their relative values. For example, as
a site becomes more authoritative, the need for off page
ranking factor diminishes. Also, the correlation between
indexation and these other factors flows through the
connectivity of the site architecture.
Content Development
Content development and managing
content development is an ongoing
endeavor. Try to drip at least one
page or post a day for new sites for
the first 4-5 months 120-150 posts.
This will help the site to (a) increase
spider and ranking activity and (b) gain more trust and authority.
Once you have trust, you can see posts get indexed and
rank in minutes rather than weeks or months and all the
while, each internal link aid on page and each new page
is a new opportunity to syndicate and gain new backlinks with.
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Evolution
Evolution is the goal and by
using analytics, seeing which
keywords convert and staying
active with content
development, syndication
(such as RSS aggregation,
social media and editorial links) ROI will eventually start to roll in.
Building sites in this manor will ensure that authority is
the result and it is scalable, hence the bigger the budget,
the more nodes you can fire at the same time to devour your market or niche.
If you like what you read, pass it along and share with
other. As always, we appreciate you taking the time to
stop by the SEO Design Solutions Blog where you will
find SEO tips, tactics and strategies to define your website in search engines.