Monday, July 10, 2017

05 Most Common SEO Myths

Myth No. 1: Blogs will help your SEO.

For some reason, everyone thinks posting a blog on your own website will magically increase your SEO presence and make your website stronger.

If you have a very strong website to begin with, internal blogs can help drive more traffic to your site. For example, I wrote a blog on The Media Captain's site about Snapchat geofilters for local businesses. We're based in Columbus, Ohio, and we received a lead from a pizza shop in Lafayette, La. This is the purpose of a blog: to drive traffic for long-tail keywords.

Here's the deal though -- I've spent seven years, day in and day out, building the SEO for our website, The Media Captain. Since we have a relatively high domain authority at this point, this allows our blog to rank well nationally, which is the reason the pizza shop in Lafayette was able to find us.

Domain authority is a score (on a 100-point scale) developed by Moz that predicts how well a website will rank on search engines. We like to use domain authority when comparing one site to another or tracking the "strength" of your website over time. If you have a website that has a high domain authority, internal blog posts can be great. If you are in a line of work where there is not a lot of competition, you can rank well with blog posts as well. 

If you website is new, however, or you have a low domain authority, just posting a blog to your site is going to have hardly any benefit from an SEO perspective. People like to think that when you post an internal blog, Google will see your website receiving "fresh content." While this is not inaccurate, on a scale of 1-100, this scores a 1 in terms of how much it will move the needle for your SEO.

Tips on succeeding with your blog strategy:

• Try and write blog content for external websites, which will link back to your website and boost your domain authority. Backlinks are the foundation of Google's algorithm.
• If you start writing content on your own blog, run a Facebook advertising campaign to promote your blog to drive traffic to the piece of content. It frustrates the heck out of me when people write a great piece of content and don't get any eyeballs on it because it doesn't have any exposure. 

Myth No. 2: All backlinks are created equal.

When I explain to prospective clients the importance of quality backlinks for their SEO strategy, some tend to think that all backlinks are created equally. They believe that if you hyperlink on Facebook, Twitter or your email newsletter, this will help you rise in the ranks of Google.

This is not the case. On powerful social media sites, the hyperlinks you include in your posts don't get counted as a link that will help improve your backlink profile. Also, on a lot of websites, they'll have what's called a "no-follow" link. According to Google, "no-follow" provides a way for webmasters to tell search engines "Don't follow links on this page" or "Don't follow this specific link." This helps websites prevent untrusted content or paid links. The backlinks you want pointing to your site are natural, authentic, industry-related and authoritative. Don't get suckered into believing that all backlinks are created equally. Spammy backlinks can actually cause more harm than good.

In a prior Entrepreneur article, I listed out a step-by-step beginners guide on "How to Build Backlinks." Make sure to read this article carefully as it will help you formulate a solid back linking strategy.

Myth No. 3: You can get on page 1 of Google for $99. 

I know that everyone reading this article has received constant email pitches and phone calls about "1st Page Google Ranking for just $99." There is a lot of B.S. in the SEO industry. There is no "quick solution" to get onto the first page of Google.

I've helped many businesses recover from Google algorithm penalties because they signed up with some oversees company for $99, and this "company" built spammy backlinks to their site, resulting in a Google penalty. (You can read a prior article on "what your business needs to avoid the wrath of Google.")

If you are really interested in improving your SEO, a strategy needs to be formulated. An expert will need to identify the services or products that drive the most revenue for your business so he can deploy an SEO strategy based on your actual business model. Keyword research is involved, as is onsite SEO optimization.

If anyone guarantees you page 1 ranking on Google within a three-month timespan, run for the hills. 

Myth No. 4: I have a contact at Google.

If any SEO professional tells you that he has a contact at Google and the conversation pertains to search engine optimization, he is full of it. 

Our agency is a Google Partner and we do have a contact at Google. This is for Adwords though, the online advertising beast that generates billions of dollars for Google yearly. 

Google doesn't have employees who can help businesses with their SEO. That's the fascinating component about this industry; you have to follow the latest trends to make sure your SEO strategy aligns with Google's constant algorithm updates.

Make sure to follow Barry Schwartz, Glenn Gabe and Marie Haynes. All are great SEO experts whose insight and opinion I highly value. There is also Gary Illyes, a webmaster trends analyst for Google, who provides best practices and insight. 

Myth No. 5: Stuffing keywords is going to help me.

Long gone are the days where you could buy a domain name like SEOCompanyDenver.com and rank at the very top of the search engines in the Mile High City. Google is looking for authoritative sites that are actual businesses that are getting legitimate visitors to their site.

If you have too many keywords stuffed into your domain, this can be viewed as a spammy tactic that Google can pick up on. Including a keyword within your company is a good practice though, if it is a natural fit, of course. Let's say I wanted to start a commercial roofing company. A name like "JP Roofing" would be a good option because it has a personal connection based off of my initials, and the keyword "roofing" will allow Google to clearly understand that I own a roofing company.

I've also seen many instances where a company will create a URL structure similar to the example below. They build out a ton of pages trying to rank for every single suburb in their area. Again, a big no-no. Google can view this as duplicative content and a deceptive practice, which can do more harm than good for your site.

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