Google's SEO Advice For Your
Website: Content
The web pages actually at the top of
Google have only one thing clearly in
common: good writing. Don't get so caught
up in the usual SEO sacred cows and
bugbears, such as PageRank, frames,
and JavaScript, that you forget your
site's content.
I was recently struck by the fact that
the top-ranking web pages on Google
are consistently much better written
than the vast majority of what one reads
on the web.
Of course, that shouldn't be a surprise,
considering how often officials at Google
proclaim the importance of good content.
Yet traditional SEO wisdom has little
to say about good writing.
Does Google, the world's wealthiest
media company, really ignore traditional
standards of quality in the publishing
world? Does Google, like so many website
owners, really get so caught up in the
process of the algorithm that it misses
the whole point?
Apparently not.
Most Common On-the-Page Website Content
Success Features
Whatever the technical mechanism, Google
is doing a pretty good job of identifying
websites with good content and rewarding
them with high rankings.
I looked at Google's top five pages
for the five most searched-on keywords,
as identified by WordTracker on June
27, 2005. Typically, the top five pages
receive an overwhelming majority of
the traffic delivered by Google.
The web pages that contained written
content (a small but significant portion
were image galleries) all shared the
following features:
* Updating: frequent updating of content,
at least once every few weeks, and more
often, once a week or more.
* Spelling and grammar: few or no errors.
No page had more than three misspelled
words or four grammatical errors. Note:
spelling and grammar errors were identified
by using Microsoft Word's check feature,
and then ruling out words marked as
misspellings that are either proper
names or new words that are simply not
in the dictionary. Does Google use SpellCheck?
I can already hear the scoffing on the
other side of this computer screen.
Before you dismiss the idea completely,
keep in mind that no one really does
know what the 100 factors in Google's
algorithm are. But whether the mechanism
is SpellCheck or a better shot at link
popularity thanks to great credibility,
or something else entirely, the results
remain the same.
* Paragraphs: primarily brief (1-4
sentences). Few or no long blocks of
text.
* Lists: both bulleted and numbered,
form a large part of the text.
* Sentence length: mostly brief (10
words or fewer). Medium-length and long
sentences are sprinkled throughout the
text rather than clumped together.
* Contextual relevance: text contains
numerous terms related to the keyword,
as well as stem variations of the keyword.
SEO Bugbears and Sacred Cows
A hard look at the results shows that,
practically speaking, a number of SEO
bugbears and sacred cows may matter
less to ranking than good content.
* PageRank. The median PageRank was
4. One page had a PageRank of 0. Of
course, this might simply be yet another
demonstration that the little PageRank
number you get in your browser window
is not what Google's algo is using.
But if you're one of those people who
attaches an overriding value to that
little number, this is food for thought.
* Frames. The top two web pages listed
for the most searched-on keyword employ
frames. Frames may still be a bad web
design idea from a usability standpoint,
and they may ruin your search engine
rankings if your site's linking system
depends on them. But there are worse
ways you could shoot yourself in the
foot.
* JavaScript-formatted internal links.
Most of the websites use JavaScript
for their internal page links. Again,
that's not the best web design practice,
but there are worse things you could
do.
* Links: Most of the web pages contained
ten or more links; many contain over
30, in defiance of the SEO bugbears
about "link popularity bleeding."
Moreover, nearly all the pages contained
a significant number of non-relevant
links. On many pages, non-relevant links
outnumbered relevant ones. Of course,
it's not clear what benefit the website
owners hope to get from placing irrelevant
links on pages. It has been a proven
way of lowering conversion rates and
losing visitors. But Google doesn't
seem to care if your website makes money.
* Originality: a significant number
of pages contained content copied from
other websites. In all cases, the content
was professionally written content apparently
distributed on a free-reprint basis.
Note: the reprint content did not consist
of content feeds. However, no website
consisted solely of free-reprint content.
There was always at least a significant
portion of original content, usually
the majority of the page.
Recommendations
* Make sure a professional writer,
or at least someone who can tell good
writing from bad, is creating your site's
content, particularly in the case of
a search-engine optimization campaign.
If you are an SEO, make sure you get
a pro to do the content. A shocking
number of SEOs write incredibly badly.
I've even had clients whose websites
got fewer conversions or page views
after their SEOs got through with them,
even when they got a sharp uptick in
unique visitors. Most visitors simply
hit the "back" button when
confronted with the unpalatable text,
so the increased traffic is just wasted
bandwidth.
* If you write your own content, make
sure that it passes through the hands
of a skilled copyeditor or writer before
going online.
* Update your content often. It's important
both to add new pages and update existing
pages. If you can't afford original
content, use free-reprint content.
* Distribute your content to other
websites on a free-reprint basis. This
will help your website get links in
exchange for the right to publish the
content. It will also help spread your
message and enhance your visibility.
Fears of a "duplicate content penalty"
for free-reprint content (as opposed
to duplication of content within a single
website) are unjustified.
In short, if you have a mature website
that is already indexed and getting
traffic, you should consider making
sure the bulk of your investment in
your website is devoted to its content,
rather than graphic design, old-school
search-engine optimization, or linking
campaigns.
About the author:
[Formatting: for web, please use "website
content provider" as the link's
anchor text (visible link text)] Joel
Walsh's archive of web business articles
is at the website of his business, UpMarket
Content, a website content provider:
http://UpMarketContent.com
|