Recently, We were asked a question from a online store business owner, and it was such a good question that we wanted to share the answer with our blog readers. The question is as follows...
I am trying to get a better handle on our SEO. I'm being asked by other people in our company what is being done monthly in terms of SEO and I can't answer the question. I see blog articles and Facebook posts, but why can't you show me that I am ranking better for the specific keywords that I want to rank higher for? It gets frustrating when it seems everything I search, whether a specific item or generic (but relevant) term, we are either several pages deep or not at all.
To best answer your question, let's start by saying that we need to remember that even from the early days of search engines, they always tried to rank websites based on "popularity", "authority" and "trust".
This is still true today, but the playing field is different because technology and consumer behavior has changed.
Back in the early days, "authority and popularity" were determined by how many people linked to you and shared your content, and "trust" was determined basically by the "honor system". The search engines trusted that you were writing good content, using proper meta tags, and had a user friendly site structure.
It didn't take long for people to start gaming the system. Websites popped up that sold links to help in your quest for authority, and people started using tools to count the number of keywords on their pages. Merchants learned that they could game the system by basically being an "untrustworthy blow hard". You could build a page that sounded like it was written by a three year old, put a hyperlink on it, and it had value.
SEO firms came out of the woodwork that would promise that you would rank number one for a given keyword or keywords, and guess what - for the most part, they were right. After a few months of building content laden with hyperlinks and anchor text, they were able to achieve this goal. People in foreign countries, countries with much lower costs of labor, became paramount in building these trashy websites. Merchants were excited - just coughing up a few hundred dollars to buy these garbage links was enough to allow them to now dominate the keywords that are targeted to their niche, easy to rank for, and are 100% free..
Time moved on, technology got better, consumer's behavior has changed, and these merchants quickly saw their stronghold on Google and Bing disappear. The search engines were able to create algorithms that were able to expose link farms (i.e. - websites that little to no value other then to provide links). The search engines were also able to determine the "grade level" at which an article or block of text was written. No longer would a link from a website of pure gibberish work to help accellerate your keywords. People began to embrace "social media", and browse the internet while logged in to Google, Facebook, Bing, etc. This was the beginning of the search engines ability to determine real human behavior, instead of that of someone just hoping to game the system.
So what does this all mean for SEO today? Here are 10 tips and suggestions... (of course, there are hundreds, if not thousands of points to consider, but here are a few to get you started)...
If this post helps even one person understand that in order to be successful on the web, you need to be patient and work hard - We've done our job.