Basics of SEO - For Beginners
The internet is flooded with 100-to-200-point checklists for SEO. To be honest, as a SEO beginner, I found these lists too overwhelming and difficult to understand leave aside follow them in totality. After being in this field for a while, I thought of writing this article – “Basics of SEO – For Beginners” to help all those who are entering in this domain to find an easy to understand, comprehend and follow lists which can help one to make an efficient and effective start in SEO. I am making a detailed SEO guide “Ilizien.com- Guide for SEO – 2021” which contains SEO glossary and only the verified SEO points in form of a Guide for SEO enthusiasts to follow as a ready-reckoner. Do follow https://ilizien.com/blog/ for other articles on SEO and digital marketing.
Table of Contents
Table of Contents
- But How Much Does A Search Engine – Actually Search?
- So How does a Search Engine Rank Pages then?
- And Finally – How Do We Optimize Our Page – SEO?
4.2 Choose Long tail Keywords.
4.3 Optimize Keywords in content –Not less than 3% & not more than 3.5%
4.12 Website Performance & Speed
1. Ranking of a Webpage by Search Engine?
How a search Engine ranks a page can be summarized in three distinct phases of activities.
Web Crawling
What is published out on the World Wide Web if found by search engines using automated programs. This action of searching the World Wide Web by the program also called crawling. The programs which do this work are called bots /crawlers /spiders / web crawlers. Essentially, crawling is copying what is on web pages and repeatedly checking the multitude of pages to see if they are changed and make a copy of any changes found. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_bot)
Indexing
Next comes storing of this copied data by crawlers in search engine data centers. The repository of web pages is referred to as the ‘Index’. Indexing is the process of organizing the masses of data and pages so they can be searched quickly for relevant results to your search query.(Ref https://www.business2community.com/seo/how-search-engines-work-using-a-3-step-process-0322639)
1.2 Search Algorithm
Next comes returning these stored webpages in order of relevance when a search is made. This requires ranking of webpages to ensure that one gets the most relevant pages first in the result of a search. The search engines use inbuilt algorithms to rank pages.
2. But How Much Does A Search Engine – Actually Search?
- As of 2020 there are over 1.74 billion websites on the internet.
- Google processes over 7 billion search queries every day worldwide.
- 15% of queries are absolutely new.
- There are over 600 million blogs in the world in 2020.
- More than 5,760,000 blog posts are published on the Internet every single day.
- 7 million people regularly publish blog posts.
(Ref – https://www.websitehostingrating.com/internet-statistics-facts/)
3. So How does a Search Engine Rank Pages then?
It does it by evaluating the pages against certain inbuilt queries, in fact over 200 of them! These queries are built into the algorithm. Typical queries are – Does this page contain your keywords? Are the keywords in title or URL? Is the page from a quality website? What is this page’s page-rank? How many outside links does the page have and how important are they? And many more…
Answers to all the questions give a page its overall score and the search engine returns our search with a result according to the overall scores. The fact that 75% of people never scroll past the first page in search results makes it important for business owners / digital marketeers / content writers to make sure that their page has a good overall ranking.
4. And Finally – How Do We Optimize Our Page – SEO?
Keywords & Key-Phrases
The words and phrases that searchers enter any search engines, are called “keywords” or “key-phrases”, also called “search queries”. A search engine matches the search with the key words with which it has indexed the pages. To ensure that more search traffic is directed by the search engine to a website, it is imperative that the keywords on the page are relevant to what people are searching for, so they have a better chance of finding the content among the results.
It yields the best result if the URL, a heading or H1 tag on the page, the meta description, and alt attributes of images on the page contain the keywords. This will emphasize the content of the page to the search engines.
A focus keywords / key-phrase should be used only once. The main reason why one should not use the focus key-phrase more than once is to avoid competition within the pages for a position in Google. This phenomenon is called keyword cannibalization. If one optimizes two different articles for the same focus key-phrase, it is like telling Google that both are suitable for people searching for that keyword!
Choose Long tail Keywords.
Keywords can be broad and far-reaching (these are usually called “head keywords”), or they can be a more specific combination of several terms — these are often called “long-tail keywords.” Long-tail keywords usually have more clearly defined intent. Also, the long-tail keywords have less competition, with room for a smaller site to break in and make their mark on the SERPs. Long keywords are what serious searchers use to find products / services. Almost 70% of searches in search demand curve are for long tail keywords.
https://moz.com/blog/illustrating the long tail
Optimize Keywords in content –Not less than 3% & not more than 3.5%
More the frequency, the more relevant the page is to the keyword. Term frequency–inverse document frequency (TF-IDF) measures the importance of a keyword phrase by comparing it to the frequency of the term in a large set of documents. Search Engines use this to gauge relevance of page to the keyword. However, use of keywords more than 3-3.5% of total words is called “Keyword stuffing.”
“Keyword Stuffing…. results in a negative user experience, and can harm your site’s ranking.” Google Webmaster Guidelines,2020 ge relevance of page to the keyword.
4.2 URLs
A Uniform Resource Locator (URL), colloquially termed a web address, is a reference to a web resource that specifies its location on a computer network and a mechanism for retrieving it. It is good idea to write URLs in a manner that contains relevant text to the post or page content. Also, including keyword terms in URLs is a good idea. Doing as such will helps one rank higher for keywords related to the content and it gives visitors another visual to let them know what kind of content they can expect from the page. Underscores should never be used in URLs.
4.3 Headings
Headings help users and search engines to read and understand text. For example, they act as signposts for the readers and make it easier for them to figure out what a post or page is about. Headings also help readers to understand the important parts your content and show how they are interconnected. Using headings creates texts of higher quality that are also easier to read. A better text is better for users, which is better for SEO. Search engines use headings to identify the most relevant parts of a posts, as well as indexing the general structure and content of a site or blog page. (Ref (https://yoast.com/how-to-use-headings-on-your-site/), https://ilizien.com/7-best- ways-of-writing-headings-of-posts-email/). Tips: –
- Include modifiers like “best”, “2016” etc. to stand out and to pick up long tail searches.
- Keep title tags 55 characters or less or they will appear truncated in search results (Ref https://www.udemy.com/course/learn-digital-marketing-course/).
4.4 Meta Description
The meta description is an HTML attribute that provides a summary of a web page. Search engines such as Google often display the meta description in search results, which can influence click-through rates.
However, while it is true that Meta Descriptions do not contribute to Search Engine Optimization – SEO directly, they do help in higher click through ratios by searchers. In addition to the title tag, meta description is an especially important factor to consider. The content of meta description provides an opportunity to “advertise” content to searchers, and searchers’ chance to decide whether the content is relevant and contains the information they’re seeking from their search query. Tips: –
- Highlight the benefit of your post or product compared to competitors who already appear in the search results.
- Keep meta descriptions 160 characters or less or they will appear truncated in search results.
4.5 Image Alt Attributes
Adding images to articles encourages people to read them, and well-chosen images can also back up the content and yield a good ranking in image search results. The alt and title attributes of an image are commonly referred to as alt tag or alt text and title tag. But technically, they are not tags, they are attributes. The alt text describes what is on the image and the function of the image on the page. alt text strengthens the content of the articles with search engine spiders and improves the accessibility of website.
4.6 External Links
Search engine ranking factor survey data has shown that getting external links is the single most important objective for attaining high rankings. This stems from the idea that external links are one of the hardest metrics to manipulate and thus, one of the best ways for search engines to determine the popularity of a given web page. External Links are hyperlinks that point at (target) any domain other than the domain the link exists on (source). In layman’s terms, if another website links to other, this is considered an external link to the website. Similarly, if one website links out to another website, this is also considered an external link. Today, the major search engines use many metrics to determine the value of external links. Some of these metrics include: –
- Trustworthiness of the linking domain. Popularity of the linking page.
- Relevancy of the content between the source page and the target page. Anchor text used in the link.
- Number of links to the same page on the source page. Number of root domains that link to the target page.
- Ownership relationship between the source and target domains.
4.7 Internal Links
Google follows links to discover content on websites and to rank this content in the search results. If a post or page gets a lot of links this is a signal to Google that it is an important or high-value article. This counts for internal as well as external links. Internal linking is something in control of a site owner. With the right internal links, the site owner can guide the page visitors and Google to the most important pages.
4.8 Text Length
There are higher chances of a ranking in Google if the content / post is long; of 1000 words or more. When the text is longer, Google has more clues to determine what it is about. The longer is the text, the more likely is that the focus key-phrase appears. Also, if a page consists of few words, Google is more likely to think of it as thin content. Thin content is content that has little or no value to the user. Google considers doorway pages, low-quality affiliate pages, or simply pages with truly little or no content as thin content pages. All search engines want to provide the best answers to the queries people have. Thin content is less likely to offer a complete answer and satisfy the needs of the public. Consequently, it will probably not rank very high. (Ref https://yoast.com/text-length)
4.9 Improve Content Quality
Readability is important to your users and to search engines. Articles that have compelling headlines, easy structures, and a creative use of images, videos, or infographics are more likely to be seen as valuable to other webmasters as well.
https://linkgraph.io/content-length-and-seo-does-it-really-matter 11.
Comprehensive content with a high “Content Grade” significantly outperformed content that didn’t cover a topic in depth.
https://backlinko.com/search engine ranking
4.10 Website Performance & Speed
Google – support.google.com › webmasters has indicated site speed (and as a result, page speed) is one of the signals used by its algorithm to rank pages. And research has shown that Google might be specifically measuring time to first byte as when it considers page speed. In addition, a slow page speed means that search engines can crawl fewer pages using their allocated crawl budget, and this could negatively affect your indexation.
Page speed is also important to user experience. Pages with a longer load time tend to have higher bounce rates and lower average time on page. Longer load times have also been shown to negatively affect conversions. A one second delay in page loading speed can cost you 7% of your ecommerce conversions. Analyze your site with Google Page Speed Insights. Aim to score 80+. (https://moz.com/learn/seo/page- speed)
4.11 Mobile-Friendly Test
The internet searches on mobiles has overtaken desktop searches. See graph. It is extremely important as now Google’s algorithm favors mobile friendly sites. Pages that take a long time to load tend to have higher bounce rates. According to Google, 53% of mobile users leave a page if they are waiting 3 seconds for it to load, and if this number rises to 5 seconds, the chances of the visitor bouncing off increases by a massive 90%!
5. Conclusion
SEO is a continuous process. The ways to improve a page ranking is an ever-evolving process with Search Engines owners periodically modifying their algorithms for best customer experiences and SEOs around the world trying to improvise and understand the best they can of the algorithm. Internet is full of articles that list up to 200 of such measures to improve page ranking. While each of the steps can contribute to the page ranking, however, each of the measures will not yield equal results. The measures listed in this article are the measures that rank the highest in each of these articles and if t followed, will ensure a high page ranking.
Keep looking at this space for more updates. https://ilizien.com/blog/