If you wanted to
write for yourself, you could keep a journal. You blog because you want other
people to connect with what you have to say, or because you know it’s a
valuable way to promote your website. Either way, you need other people to find
you.
You alreadyknow the SEO basics – to include keywords in your titles and headings, fill
out your meta description, and promote your work on social media.
But to truly
stand out in the competitive world of online content, you need to move toward
more advanced SEO tips. Here are a few important advanced SEO tips to start
including in your blogging strategy.
Regular bloggers
know how important it is to plan a calendar out in advance. If you don’t take
the time to plan out topics and deadlines for yourself, you’ll have a hard time
staying consistent in your publishing. Each time you sit down to plan out your
calendar for the coming weeks, spend
some time doing
keyword research to see what topics your audience
is thinking about, and the language they use when looking for information on those topics.
There are a
number of useful tools you can use for this. Google’s Keyword Planner is free and
uses the data the company collects on what people are searching for in the most
popular search engine in the world. It supplies both information on roughly how
often people search for specific keyword terms and similar keywords people use
to the ones you provide.
You can also
find phrases people commonly use by paying attention to the similar searches
Google provides in the “People also ask” and “Searches related to” sections on
the search engine results page.
Focus on Long-Tail
Keyword Opportunities.
Obviously, you’d love to rank for the general
keywords that broadly
describe what you do on your
blog. If you provide health
advice, then showing
up when people search “health
advice” would mean so many people
find you. But if you do a search for that term, you’ll notice you’re competing
with some serious bigwigs. Your blog probably isn’t going to unseat Harvard
Health, WebMD, and Healthline for those top
spots.
But when you think about it, a lot of the people searching for health advice aren’t going to
use that sort of general
term – they’re looking for specific information, like “best exercises for high cholesterol” or “foods
to improve digestion.”
These more
detailed, specific searches are called long-tail keywords and for the vast majority of websites seeking
to improve their
SEO, they’re the most important keywords to focus on targeting in your efforts.
They’re less competitive, so you have a better
chance of showing up on page one and actually grabbing
some of the traffic for that term.
Not all search engine
results pages look the same. With the recent rise in rich results, some searches produce a
simple list of links, some include answer boxes up top, some have product ads
at the top of the resultspage, and some have a map of local results that
dominate the page.
Knowing what the
search results page looks like for the term you’re targeting is crucial for
knowing how best to optimize your blog posts to land the best spots on the page
and make sure your content stands out once you do.
1.
If your SERP research reveals keywords that do bring up rich results, the approach you take when optimizing your content should be based on the specific type of results that win that page. In some cases, that will mean using schema markup to help your content stand out in the main list of results, in other cases it will mean optimizing your blog post to aim for the featured snippet.
Either way, you have to know what you’re targeting in order to know how to take the best approach to achieve it.
Optimize Your
Images for SEO.
Guest
Post on Relevant Blogs.
Add Internal Links to Your Old Posts.
Update Old Posts to Keep Them Current.
Update Old Posts to Keep Them Current.
Blogs can’t be
all about text. Every blog post you publish should include at least one image,
and sometimes more. For people better with words than visuals, that can be a
challenge, but it’s important
that you not only take time to find good images for your blog, but that you also
use them as an opportunity to do further
search engine optimization on your page.
Every image you include
in a blog post gives you extra opportunities to add your keyword to the page. You can use the alt text, the
image file name, and possibly the caption text (if you can do so naturally and
in a way useful to visitors) to insert uses of your keyword onto the page. That’s a few more ways to signal to Google
what the page is about.
The hardest
part of SEO is getting
other websites to link back to yours.
One of the best ways for bloggers to build links back to
theirr blog is to create valuable content for related websites. It can require
a lot of work (you already know good content takes work), but it gives you a way to reach
a new audience and improve
your website’s SEO authority.
Identify a few
blogs that cover topics similar to or complementary to what you write about and find out if they accept
guest posts. Then take some time to get familiar
with the types of
posts they publish and topics that are most popular with their readers, before
coming up with a blog post idea to pitch and write for them.
Be prepared
to get some rejections, particularly if you’re targeting
blogs that have a huge readership. But every guest post you land will introduce your blog to a new audience and provide you with linking
opportunities back to your own blog. Just make sure you don’t overdo it so your post doesn’t
look spammy – stick with one or two relevant
links back.
Internal links
aren’t as valuable as external ones, but they’re still an important SEO tactic.
Most bloggers know by now to look for opportunities to link back to old posts when you’re
writing new ones, but how often do you think to revisit your old posts to look
for opportunities to link to new posts that have been published since?
Now and then,
search your website for the main keywords you had in mind for your recent
posts. Anywhere in old posts where you used those keywords or similar ones, add
a link to the newer posts with the keyword as anchor text. It’s a pretty simple
step that can make a real difference.





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