Showing posts with label Page title. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Page title. Show all posts

Saturday, September 16, 2017

On Page SEO Optimization and its Techniques

On Page SEO Optimization

On page  SEO  is one of the most important processes that you can use, not only for achieving better rankings of your blog or website in a SEARCH ENGINE  but also for running successful Internet marketing campaigns.

Every SEO campaign has your website in focus and if it’s not properly optimized for both search engines and users, your chances of success are minimized.

Your ultimate goal with on-page SEO, is to speak the ‘search engines language’ and help crawlers understand the meaning and context of your pages.




Techniques of On Page SEO :

1. Content comes first

A website with brilliant content can do great with or without SEO, a website with bad content will not survive with or without SEO, a website with good content can become even better with SEO!

So, what is considered good content?

Original Content (articles, text, images, videos, presentations, infographics, comments etc.) – No copies or rewrites of existing articles.

Content published on your website first – Even if it’s your own content, if you have already published it on another website then it’s not good for your site.

Content that includes text as well – Try to have text to accompany your non-text content. For example, if you post videos on your website try to add a text description as well. If you add images try to describe in words what the image is all about.

Content that is useful – Don’t publish content for the sake of publishing. Before hitting the publish button make sure that what goes live adds value to your website.

Content that is well researched – Users don’t want to read quickly prepared posts and neither do search engines.

If you are writing about a certain topic or answering a question make sure that what you write is justified and covers both sites of a story.

Long articles are proven to rank better than short articles.

Posting frequency – 2 things are important when it comes to posting frequency. First is to have fresh content on your website and second to establish a publishing strategy and stick to it.

2. Page titles, description and formatting

This is SEO 101 but very important for on-page SEO. When search engines are ‘reading’ your pages, among the things, they check the page title, the description of the page, the headings and content (text, videos and images).

They do so because they need to understand what the page is all about and then based on other factors (off page SEO, domain authority, competition etc.), they will rank your page (for various keywords) in a position in their index.

Page titles – Each page must have a unique title that will help both search engines and users understand what the page is about. A page with title “On Page SEO Tips” is better than a page with title “index.html”.

Descriptions – The page description is what the searcher will see in the search engine results page. It has to be descriptive, up to 150 characters and unique for each page.

It’s your opportunity to advertise your page and convince the searcher to click your link and visit your website rather than selecting one of the other links.

Read SEO Tips for Beginners, for examples and guidance on how to write good titles and descriptions.
Formatting – A page needs to be properly formatted. Think of it like a report which needs to have a heading (h1) and sub headings (h2).

Important parts of the report are highlighted with bold, underline or italics.

Do not just throw text on the page but make sure that it is readable.

Besides the formatting practices explained above, you also need to use a good size font (at least 12px) and split the text into small paragraphs (max 4-5 lines).

Images – Images are important for presentation purposes but they should not increase the loading time of the website. Best practices for using images:

Use original images. If you need to use an existing image from the web you need to reference the source.
Optimise the size of the images – the smaller the size (in bytes) of the image the better.
Use an ALT tag to describe the image – This helps search engines understand what the image is about.
Use descriptive filenames – Don’t just name your image ‘image1.jpg’ but try to use descriptive filenames, for example ‘man-doing-push-ups.jpg’.
Use a Content Delivery Network – If you have a lot of images in a single page you can use a CDN service that will make your page load faster. In simple terms, your images will be hosted and served by a number of servers and this speeds up the loading process.

3. URL Structure

The URL structure is an important part of on-page SEO. Whenever I talk about URL structure, I prefer to split it into 4 major parts:

Permanent links – A permanent link is the unique URL of each page. Good URLs should be less than 255 characters and use hyphens to ‘-‘separate the different parts.

For example a good URL is: https://www.reliablesoft.net/diy-seo-tutorial-for-beginners/

A bad URL is:

https://www.reliablesoft.net/p?165 or

https://www.reliablesoft.net/seotipsforbeginners/ or

https://www.reliablesoft.net/123131/publish/data2/seo_Tips.html

Categories – Group your pages into categories to help users and search engines find what they want faster.

It’s like having a warehouse with lots of uncategorised items versus a warehouse with all the items assigned to a dedicated category.

You can have sub-categories as well but my advice is not to go over one level. For example a good category structure is:

Reliablesoft > Social Media > Facebook

and not

Reliablesoft > Social Media > Facebook > Tips

Breadcrumb – A breadcrumb is also important for all your pages because it allows users to navigate your website in a structured way since they always know where they are and how deep below the home page.

User Sitemap – One of your options in your menu (either top or bottom) should be the User Sitemap.

This is an html file that represents the structure of your website. Visit my sitemap as an example.

4. Internal linking

Linking to pages within your website is very important for SEO because:

It’s like building your own web: If you watch this nice tutorial by Google on how search works, you will see that the first step a search engine spider will do is follow the links they find.

So when they arrive at your page, if you don’t have any other links within the text they will read your page and go but if you have links pointing to other pages within your website they will take those into account as well.

It’s a way to let search engines know about your other pages: As explained above when search engines find a page with links, they will go and read those pages too, so you can use this technique to tell search engines about pages of your website they have not yet discovered.

It’s a way to tell search engines which are your most important pages: Every website has some pages that are more important than others. Internal linking is one of the ways to pinpoint the most important pages by sending them more internal links.

It’s a way to increase the users spend on your site – A user that is reading your post is more likely to click on a link to read more about a certain subject and thus increase both the time spend on your website and the number of pages per visit.

Best practices for internal linking:

Don’t use keywords only for your internal links
Add internal links when they are useful for your reader
No more than 15 internal links per page (this is my opinion and not based on any research or studies)
When possible, add the links in the main body of your webpage (not in the footer or sidebar)

5. Speed and Mobile

Last but not least, 2 SEO techniques that are becoming more and more important are Speed and Mobile friendliness.

Speed: Google is investing a huge amount of money to make the web faster. In every Google I/O someone will talk about the importance of speed and their desire to include the fastest websites in their index.

In order to ‘force’ web site owners to take speed into account they have officially added speed as one of the ranking factors.

So, we know for sure that website speed does matter when it comes to SEO and ranking.

As a webmaster your job is to make sure that your website loads as fast as possible by taking into account Google’s recommendations.

Mobile Friendliness: Almost 60% of the searches in Google are now coming from mobile devices (Updated December 2016).

This means that if your website is not mobile friendly, you are already losing half of the potential traffic. What should you do?

As a first step, make sure that you website is mobile friendly and as second step consider accelerated mobile pages, which is the new way of building super fast mobile friendly pages.