HOW TO GET HIGHER GOOGLE RANKING FAST AND EASY.
In fact, one of my visitor recently used the checklist from this
post to increase his organic traffic by 88.3%. The place where marketers turn
for higher rankings and more traffic. In this video, you're gonna see the
checklist that I use for all of my SEO clients. You'll also learn why you might
want to delete, yes delete, half the pages on your website. And a simple trick you
can use to improve your Google rankings fast. Keep watching. (soft electronic
music)
A few months ago, I sent out a newsletter to my email subscribers. This
email listed out some of my all-time favorite traffic hacks. Out of the blue,
the founder of Proven.com, Sean Falconer, replied to that email.
He said,
"Dude, I've tried all of these techniques before, "and they helped us
get more traffic." When I looked at Sean's site, I saw that he was doing a
solid job with his content marketing and SEO. But, I also noticed a few
mistakes that were holding him back from Google's first page. That's when I
sent him this message. A few hours later, Sean got back to me. After executing
the checklist that I'm about to show you, Sean's organic traffic shot up by
nearly 50% in 21 days. And once the checklist had time to kick in, Proven's
traffic increased by a whopping 88.3% three weeks after that. With that, let's in to the checklist
that Sean used to get higher Google rankings.
Your first step
is to find and
eliminate what I call zombie
pages. I used to think that Google rewarded sites that publish lots and lots of
unique content. But I was wrong. Today, I know the truth. The truth is that
Google doesn't want you to publish content just for the sake of publishing content.
In fact, a Google employee recently stated that they prefer websites that
publish fewer high quality pages. This quality over quantity approach is one of
the secrets behind my blog's success. In fact, Backlinko gets over 150,000
unique visitors per month. Unlike most blogs, I only publish every four to six
weeks. But when I do, I make sure each and every post is awesome. In fact, at
the time of shooting this video, Backlinko only has 37 total blog posts.
Fortunately, Sean only published high quality content on his blog. So, that
wasn't an issue. The problem was his site had lots of zombie pages. So, what
are zombie pages? Zombie pages are pages on your site that don't provide any
value. For example, zombie pages are pages like old and outdated blog posts and
press releases, category and tag pages, search results pages, eCommerce product
pages that don't get any sales, thin content pages, and pages with duplicate
content. In theory, Proven.com shouldn't have a ton of pages. After all, Proven
is an online job board where job postings come and go. Despite that, they had
nearly 50,000 pages indexed in Google. That's a lot. As it turned out, Proven
didn't automatically delete their old job postings. So, these pages stuck
around even though the job had been filled years ago. To make matters worse,
Google was indexing their google search result pages which are classic zombie
pages. So, I recommended that they erase their old job postings and add the no
index tag to their search results.ls Sean quickly took action. Thanks to these
changes, Proven now only has around 4,000 pages indexed. Which is 40,000 less
than they had before.
Step number two
is to fix any technical SEO issues that
your site has. There are literally hundreds of technical problems that can
impact your SEO. Fixing them is one of the fastest ways to get higher Google
rankings. That said, here are some of the most common technical issues that I
see during SEO site audits. How can you find these technical SEO issues on your
site? I recommend using the Raven tool Site Auditor or SEMrush's Site Audit
tool. They'll crawl your site and let you know about technical problems that
might be hurting your site's SEO. Fortunately, Proven didn't have too many
technical SEO issues. That's mostly due to the fact that we deleted so many
zombie pages. Fewer pages equals fewer problems. The only problems I could find
were some missing ALT text on images and a handful of duplicate titles. Not a
big deal but worth fixing. As expected Sean quickly took care of all these technical
SEO problems. Now that we've fixed shopnobari.com’s technical problems,
it was time to optimize their content. I probably don't need to tell you that
on-page SEO can make or break your site's rankings.
That's why I dedicate an entire step
of my SEO checklist to on-page SEO. Because Proven had thousands of
pages, I knew I couldn't optimize every single one. So, Sean sent me his top 10
most important pages. Now, some of Sean's most important pages were blog posts
and others were commercial pages that sold his services. So, let's look at a
quick example of a page that I optimized for Sean. A blog post called Best
Questions to Ask References, The Complete List. Sean's target keyword for this
post was questions to ask references. So, I added that keyword to the top of
the page. Why? Because Google puts more weight on words that appear in the
beginning of your content. So, it's important that your keyword shows up there.
I also sprinkled in a few LSI keywords like business tips. LSI keywords are terms
that are closely related to your target keyword. When you include these LSI
keywords in your content, you'll get a rankings boost. In fact, my recent
analysis of one million most Shows search result page that LSI keyword-rich
content tended to outrank content that didn't contain LSI keywords. So, how can
you use LSI keywords to get higher rankings? Well, let's say you just wrote an
article about coffee. LSI keywords for coffee would be things like mug,
caffeine, and Starbucks. So, you want to make sure that you include those terms
in your content.
Our fourth step
is to optimize your title and description tag
for click-through rate. You probably already know that CTR is a huge ranking
factor right now. Think about it, if people searching for a keyword click on
your result more than others, it tells Google that you're the best result for
that keyword and you'll rank higher in Google. In fact, a recently published
Google research paper states that, "Click-through read data has proven
"to be a critical resource for improving "search ranking
quality." So, it's clear that CTR is an important ranking signal. The
question is, how can you optimize for it? Let me walk you through a real life
example. One of Sean's best blog posts was a huge list of job boards. Considering
how epic this content was, it should've been ranking in the top three. But,
Sean's page was stuck in the fifth spot. And I had a feeling that the page's
title and description was hurting it's CTR and rankings. Here's what I did to
turn things around. First, I looked at the ad words ad that showed up when I
searched for best job boards and other related keywords. I noticed that almost
every ad used a specific number. And none of the ads used the term niche
talent. So, I changed Sean's title tag to this and his description tag to this.
These changes boosted that pages organic click-through rate by 64.1%. And Sean
currently ranks in the top three for his target keyword. Now that I improved
Sean's click-through rate, it was time to optimize his site around another
important ranking factor, dwell time.
That's what step number five
is all
about. So, what is dwell time? And how can you optimize for it? When someone
searches for a keyword and clicks in a result, two things can happen. They can
stay in your site for a long time or they quickly click away. The amount of
time someone spends on your site is known as dwell time. As you might expect,
the longer your dwell time, in general, the higher your page will rank in
Google. Here's what I did to quickly improve Sean's dwell time. First, I moved
Sean's content up so it appeared at the top of the page. You see, Proven used
to have huge gaps that pushed their content below the fold like this. So, I cut
this gap down by about 50%. Sean's post also had giant images that pushed their
content down even more. I made these images smaller so they took up less room.
Next, I made Sean's introductions more sticky. Here's the deal. When someone
comes to your site from Google, your intro makes them stick around or click
away. In fact, intros are so important that I spend more time on my intros than
my headlines. In Sean's case, I noticed that his introductions weren't
formatted in a reader-friendly way. See how all that text is squished together?
That's really hard to read. So I formatted his intro so there was only one
sentence per paragraph. I also cut out a few lines of text that weren't
compelling or interesting. Overall, these tweaks boosted that page's dwell time
by 12.23%. Not too shabby. Okay,
so our second to last step
is to improve your
site's loading speed. Can making your site faster really improve your Google
rankings? Definitely. In fact, our search engine ranking factor study found
that faster loading pages tended to outrank slow pages. Here's how to quickly
evaluate and improve your site's loading speed. First, head over to Google
PageSpeed Insights. Just enter your site into the tool and fix the problems
that it tells you about. Next, check out GTMetrix. Just like Google's tool,
GTMetrix will show you potential issues with your pages code. But, it also
let's you know about server hosting problems that can slow down your site. For
example, in Sean's case, his images weren't compressed. So, they took forever
to load. And this single fix made a huge impact on his loading speed. Now that
Sean's site was optimized, error-free, and fast,
it was time for the last step.
Which is to publish a piece of content using the skyscraper technique. You
probably already heard about the skyscraper technique. If you haven't, here's
the deal. The skyscraper technique is where you find the best content in your
industry and then create something way better. So, I sent an email to Sean and
asked him, "Have you noticed any content that's ranking "in Google,
but isn't even that good?" He said, "Actually, everything I've seen
"written about job descriptions is pretty weak." Sean was right. Most
of the content out there about job descriptions were simple lists of links to
different examples of job descriptions. For whatever reason, they all used the
same lame stock photos. So, I worked with Sean to create something way better
than what was out there. How? First, instead of a list to links to other pages,
we listed each job description on a single page. Next, Sean added helpful
information about each job like the average salary and education requirements.
Finally, he used quality images instead of lame stock photos. Sean's post did
great. It got a short-term surge in traffic after it went live. Today, Sean's
skyscraper content currently ranks in the top five for his target keyword. And
thanks to this content and the other techniques from this checklist, Sean's
organic traffic increased by 88.39%. There you have it,
My seven step checklist
to improve your Google rankings. If you like this video, make sure to subscribe
to my YouTube channel right now. That way, you won't miss out on other
actionable SEO videos like this one. Just click on the subscribe button below
this video. Also, if you want exclusive SEO tips that I only share with
subscribers, head over to Backlinko.com and sign up for the newsletter. It's
free. Now, I want to turn it over to you. Which tip from this video are you
gonna try first? Are you gonna work on your dwell time? Or do you want to
delete zombie pages? Let me know by leaving a comment below right now. Fifth
spot. Did I say that right? What's up? I do that a lot.
All right, yeah, I did.
Oh, but it's okay. Man, my acting skills. Okay, that's a tough one. How are we
doing, shine?

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