Wednesday, 11 September 2019

Evolving “nofollow” – new ways to identify the nature of links

Two new link attributes that provide webmasters with additional ways to identify to Google Search the nature of particular links. These, along with nofollow, are summarized below:

  • rel="sponsored": Use the sponsored attribute to identify links on your site that were created as part of advertisements, sponsorships or other compensation agreements.
  • rel="ugc": UGC stands for User Generated Content, and the ugc attribute value is recommended for links within user generated content, such as comments and forum posts.
  • rel="nofollow": Use this attribute for cases where you want to link to a page but don’t want to imply any type of endorsement, including passing along ranking credit to another page.

Now some important points summarized in bullet form:
  • Nofollow has changed to be a hint, a hint today for ranking, a hint in March 2020 for crawling and indexing
  • Rel=sponsored was added for more granular attribution of the type of link
  • Rel=ugc was added for more granular attribution of the type of link
  • You don't have to use those new attributes if you do not want to
  • You at least need to have nofollow on sponsored links, you can also just have rel="sponsored" on those links as well
  • No ranking changes expected, Google said, from this change.
  • You can combine these new link attributes if you want.
  • Google does not think this will result in more comment spam

Can I use more than one rel value on a link?

Yes, you can use more than one rel value on a link. For example, rel="ugc sponsored" is a perfectly valid attribute which hints that the link came from user-generated content and is sponsored. It’s also valid to use nofollow with the new attributes -- such as rel="nofollow ugc" -- if you wish to be backwards-compatible with services that don’t support the new attributes.

If I use nofollow for ads or sponsored links, do I need to change those?

No. You can keep using nofollow as a method for flagging such links to avoid possible link scheme penalties. You don't need to change any existing markup. If you have systems that append this to new links, they can continue to do so. However, we recommend switching over to rel=”sponsored” if or when it is convenient.

Do I still need to flag ad or sponsored links?

Yes. If you want to avoid a possible link scheme action, use rel=“sponsored” or rel=“nofollow” to flag these links. We prefer the use of “sponsored,” but either is fine and will be treated the same, for this purpose.

What happens if I use the wrong attribute on a link?

There’s no wrong attribute except in the case of sponsored links. If you flag a UGC link or a non-ad link as “sponsored,” we’ll see that hint but the impact -- if any at all -- would be at most that we might not count the link as a credit for another page. In this regard, it’s no different than the status quo of many UGC and non-ad links already marked as nofollow.

It is an issue going the opposite way. Any link that is clearly an ad or sponsored should use “sponsored” or “nofollow,” as described above. Using “sponsored” is preferred, but “nofollow” is acceptable.

Why should I bother using any of these new attributes?

Using the new attributes allows us to better process links for analysis of the web. That can include your own content, if people who link to you make use of these attributes.

Won’t changing to a “hint” approach encourage link spam in comments and UGC content?

Many sites that allow third-parties to contribute to content already deter link spam in a variety of ways, including moderation tools that can be integrated into many blogging platforms and human review. The link attributes of “ugc” and “nofollow” will continue to be a further deterrent. In most cases, the move to a hint model won’t change the nature of how we treat such links. We’ll generally treat them as we did with nofollow before and not consider them for ranking purposes. We will still continue to carefully assess how to use links within Search, just as we always have and as we’ve had to do for situations where no attributions were provided.

When do these attributes and changes go into effect?

All the link attributes, sponsored, ugc and nofollow, now work today as hints for us to incorporate for ranking purposes. For crawling and indexing purposes, nofollow will become a hint as of March 1, 2020. Those depending on nofollow solely to block a page from being indexed (which was never recommended) should use one of the much more robust mechanisms listed

Sunday, 8 September 2019

SEO Tactics

How to check if you’re indexed in Google

  • Go to Google, then search for site:yourwebsite.com
  • If you want to check the index status of a specific URL, use the same site:yourwebsite.com/web-page-slug

How to get indexed by Google

  • Go to Google Search Console
  • Navigate to the URL inspection tool
  • Paste the URL you’d like Google to index into the search bar.
  • Wait for Google to check the URL
  • Click the “Request indexing” button

Tactic's that is useful for website crawl by Search Engine

  • Remove crawl blocks in your robots.txt file
User-agent: Googlebot
Disallow: / 
User-agent: *
Disallow: /
  • Remove rogue noindex tags
Method 1: meta tag
<meta name=“robots” content=“noindex”>
<meta name=“googlebot” content=“noindex”>
Method 2: X‐Robots‐Tag
  • Include the page in your sitemap
  • Remove rogue canonical tags
  • Check that the page isn’t orphaned
  • Fix nofollow internal links
  • Add “powerful” internal links
  • Make sure the page is valuable and unique
  • Remove low‐quality pages (to optimize “crawl budget”)
  • Build high‐quality backlinks

Block pages from being indexed by search engines

How to rank for 1000's of keywords without link building

  • Content Gap: Creating content on the topic which competitor's rank or drive traffic.
  • Land and Expand Strategy: Find the pages and keywords that you are currently ranking & then find out other keywords on which we can rank.
  • Content cluster: Create master pages and then rank for competitive keywords.

Increase Organic CTR - EASY way to get more traffic

Titles with [brackets] and (parentheses) got 38% more clicks than titles without brackets and parentheses.
  • Example1:

A Look Inside Mashable’s Evolution [Interview]

According to the authors of the study, brackets give potential readers a “clear picture of what lies behind the headline”.

So when you let people know that your content is a video, infographic, blog post, or interview, they’re MUCH more likely to click.
  • Example2:
E-commerce SEO: The Definitive Guide

To this:

E-commerce SEO (Advanced Guide + Step-By-Step Case Study)
  • Example3:
White Tennis Shoes For Men

To this:

White Tennis Shoes For Men [Free Shipping]

Bunch of Examples to use this:


  • [X% Off]
  • (Updated)
  • [Infographic]
  • (And Why It Matters)
  • [New Research]
  • (Case Study)
  • [Interview]
  • (New Guide)
  • [+Checklist]
  • (With Examples)
  • [Video]
  • (Trusted by X Clients)
  • [Flowchart]
  • [Visual Guide]
  • (No Fees)
  • [Template]

How to rank on Google without writing content

  • Rank on google through podcast
  • Rank on google through videos
  • Use guest bloggers on the site
  • Optimize your old content
  • Create tools

Check for fake traffic and malware

  • Look at the “Valid” URLs in the Search Console Coverage report, URL-specific reports in Google Analytics (under Behavior -> Site Content -> All Pages). 
  • Audience -> Technology -> Network (change primary dimension to “hostname”) to check for content that doesn’t belong on the site or hostnames that aren’t real.
  • Referral spam can show up on valid hostnames, too, so also check Acquisition -> All Traffic -> Source/Medium for traffic sources with very little or no time on page and pages per visit.
  • Looking at Audience -> Geo -> Location and Language can also help identify spikes in traffic from bots or referral spam from locations and languages that don’t normally visit the site that much.
  • Also perform a “site:yourdomain.com” search in Google and dig deep into the deepest pages of search results.

6 Steps to Find Your True Ranking Factors

  • Step 1: Make an Observation
  • Step 2: Do Your Research
  • Step 3: Form a Hypothesis
  • Step 4: Conduct an Experiment
  • Step 5: Analyze Your Data
  • Step 6: Report on Your Results

SEO Techniques to Drive Huge Traffic

  • Optimize for RankBrain
  • Research for keywords
  • Continue updating the old content
  • Gain quality backlinks
  • Longer the content, the higher the ranking
  • Find broken links opportunities on Wikipedia:
There are 2 kind of Wikipedia you can get i.e. Citation needed and Dead link.
  1. Citation needed links means that the one, who edited a Wikipedia article, mentioned statistics and facts without linking them to a source.
  2. Dead links are those links that were earlier connected to but no longer exist for whatever reason. 
Use the below mentioned search terms:
Site: wikipedia.org “Keyword phrase” “dead link”.


Reasons Your Website Isn’t Showing Up On Google (and How to Fix It)

  • Your website is too new
Example:
  1. site:yourwebsite.com
  2. site:yourwebsite.com/a-page-you-want-to-show-up-in-google/
  •  You’re blocking search engines from indexing your pages
Example:
  1. Disallow: /blog/
  • You’re blocking search engines from crawling your pages
Example:
  1. Disallow: /
  2. User-agent: * User-agent: Googlebot
  3. Disallow: /blog/
  • You don’t have enough high-quality backlinks
  • Your page is lacking “authority”
There are two ways to boost the authority of a web page:
  1. Build more backlinks;
  2. Add more internal links.
  • Your website is lacking “authority”
  • Your web page doesn’t align with “search intent”
  • You have duplicate content issues
  • You have a Google penalty
There are two types of Google penalties.
  • Manual
  • Algorithmic

Tips to Optimize your Website to Rank in Mobile Search

  • Website Design
  • Page Speed
  • Site Structure
  • Local SEO

Google evaluate links through a handful of patents:

  • Boilerplate: links found in boilerplate site elements like the footer and sidebars are less valuable than one found in the body.
  • Reasonable Surfer: links found higher up the page carry more weight.
  • PageRank: links from popular pages carry more weight than from pages with few links themselves.

Bounce rate grading system:

  • 25% or lower: Something is probably broken
  • 26-40%: Excellent
  • 41-55%: Average
  • 56-70%: Higher than normal, but could make sense depending on the website
  • 70% or higher: Bad and/or something is probably broken

Reasons Your Website Can Have a High Bounce Rate

  • Slow-to-Load Page
  • Self-Sufficient Content
  • Disproportional Contribution by a Few Pages
  • Misleading Title Tag and/or Meta Description
  • Blank Page or Technical Error
  • Bad Link from Another Website
  • Affiliate Landing Page or Single-Page Site
  • Low-Quality or Under Optimized Content
  • Bad or Obnoxious UX
  • The Page Isn’t Mobile-Friendly

Pro Tips for Reducing Your Bounce Rate

  • Make Sure Your Content Lives Up to the Hype
Also, make your content readable:
  1. Break up your text with lots of white space.
  2. Add supporting images.
  3. Use short sentences.
  4. Spellcheck is your friend.
  • Keep Critical Elements Above the Fold
  • Speed Up Your Site
  • Minimize Non-Essential Elements
  • Help People Get Where They Want to Be Faster

CTR breakdown for Google’s first page organic results (Aug 2019):

  • Spot #1 - 31.73%
  • Spot #2 - 24.71%
  • Spot #3 - 18.66%
  • Spot #4 - 13.60%
  • Spot #5 - 9.51%
  • Spot #6 - 6.23%
  • Spot #7 - 4.15%
  • Spot #8 - 3.12%
  • Spot #9 - 2.97%
  • Spot #10 - 3.09%

Voice Search SEO: How To (Step-by-Step Guide)

  • Add Conversational Text
  • Target Question Phrases
  • Aim for Featured Snippets
  • Work on Titles and Descriptions
  • Focus on Local SEO

Content Marketing Formula

  • Step #1: Optimize your headline
  • Step #2: Add 3 internal links
  • Step #3: Share your content on the social web carefully
  • Step #4: Message everyone you link out to
  • Step #5: Send an email blast
  • Step #6: Send a push notification

Highly important components of technical and on-site SEO

  • Crawl/indexability
  • Site speed
  • Site structure/architecture (and strong internal linking)
  • Schema 
  • Canonicals
  • Proper redirects
  • Mobile-friendliness
  • Good meta content

What currently matters most in the world of SEO are these two things

  • High-Quality Content & Strategy
  • Site Authority

Most Complex SEO Problems

  • Problem 1: Improper Indexing of Your Pages
  • Problem 2: Keyword Cannibalization
  • Problem 3: Wrong Page Structuring for Its Target Topic
  • Problem 4: Incoherent Internal Linking
  • Problem 5: Low Page Speed, Especially on Mobile

Difference between changing content and updating content

  • Changing content does not make it more up to date. It’s simply rearranging words.
  • Updating content means making it up to date. That results in content that is relevant in a topic that is changing.

Possible Reasons Why Your Site Traffic Dropped

  1. You’re Tracking the Wrong Rankings
  2. Lost Links
  3. Broken Redirects
  4. Manual Actions
  5. Algorithm Changes
  6. Natural Changes in Search
  7. UX Changes in Google
  8. Geolocation Discrepancies
  9. Competitor Improvements
  10. Page Speed
  11. Server Issues
  12. Other Web Vitals
  13. Internal Navigation
  14. Bad Quality Link Penalties
  15. Recent Website Changes & Redesign
  16. Simple Technical Issues
  17. Server Overload
  18. Meta Information
  19. Source of Traffic
  20. Time on Site
  21. Duplicate Content
  22. You’re Using Old Clickbait Techniques

Advanced SEO Techniques to Double Your Search Traffic

  • Complete An SEO Audit On Your Website
Check #1: Do all your website’s pages have SEO meta titles and descriptions?
Check #2: Is each page on your website optimized for SEO keywords?
Check #3: Is your URL structure optimized for search engines?
Check #4. Is each page and blog post formatted properly?
Check #5: Do all your images have keywords in their ALT tags?
Check #6: Are you using links in your content?
  • Learn What Your Users Want
  • Create SEO Optimized Landing Pages
Step 1: Use Long Tail Keywords
Step 2: Use Compelling Copy to Share Useful Information
Step 3: Use a Professional Design
Step 4: Build Links
  • Make Your Website is Mobile-Friendly
  • Grow Your Traffic With Infographics
Step #1: Get Your Stats
Step #2: Create the Infographic
Step #3: Write a Blog Post Based on Your Infographic
Step #4: Submit Your Infographic to Directories
  • Optimize Content for RankBrain
  • Write at Least 1,447 Words
  • Write a Roundup Post
Step #1: Pick a Topic and a Good Question
Step #2: Make a List of Experts and Reach Out
Step #3: Write and Publish the Post
  • Post Valuable Content on Social
  • Use Advanced SEO Internal Deep Linking
  • Send Link Juice to Lower-Ranked Pages
  • Link to External Sites with High Domain Authority
  • Snag Broken Link Opportunities on Wikipedia to Build Links
  • Find and Use Competitors’ SEO Keywords
  • Use Multiple Keywords in SEO Page Titles
  • Monitor Google Search Console Stats
  • Update Old Content
  • Revamp Old Articles With More Organic Traffic Potential

19 Most Common SEO Errors That Hurt Your Rankings

Accessibility & Indexation
  • Duplicate Content
  • Forgotten Noindex Tags
  • Using iFrames
  • Low Word Count
  • Flash

AMP
  • Deprecated Elements
  • CSS & JavaScript Errors

HTTP Status Code
  • Server Status Code 4xx
  • Server Status Code 5xx

HTTPS Certificate & Server Parameters
  • Mixed Content
  • Insecure Password Input
  • Common Name Mismatch

Links & Redirects
  • Orphaned Pages
  • Links to Redirected Pages
  • Links From Bad Pages

Page Speed
  • Not Using Browser Caching
  • Not Enabling Compression

Hreflang Attributes
  • Hreflang Page Source Conflicts
  • Invalid Hreflang Values