You searched for SEO Guides - LinkGraph https://linkgraph.io/ High authority link building services, white hat organic outreach. Tue, 29 Nov 2022 22:40:10 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.1.1 https://linkgraph.io/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/cropped-LinkGraph-Favicon-32x32.png You searched for SEO Guides - LinkGraph https://linkgraph.io/ 32 32 14 Content Upgrades That’ll Skyrocket Your Lead Generation https://linkgraph.io/blog/content-upgrades/ https://linkgraph.io/blog/content-upgrades/#respond Wed, 23 Nov 2022 14:41:12 +0000 https://linkgraph.io/?p=23477 Lead generation is vital when it comes to getting customers interested in the goods and services you’re selling. One of the best ways to do this – […]

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Lead generation is vital when it comes to getting customers interested in the goods and services you’re selling. One of the best ways to do this – as you probably already know – is to write consistent blog posts ending in calls to action (CTAs). However, it doesn’t have to stop there. You can utilize your already existing blogs to increase lead generation by offering content upgrades to your articles if a user signs up for email content. These content upgrades can come in many different forms, and encourage readers to submit their email addresses and other information about themselves in exchange for exclusive content. 

Here are 14 ways to upgrade your content alongside your blog posts to increase lead generation 👇

Content Upgrade #1: Use CTAs in Blog Posts

As mentioned in the introduction, if you’re not already putting CTAs in your blog posts, you really should be. CTAs compel readers to take action once they’ve read your blog to either find out more about the topic or to engage with your goods and services. Include links to other internal blog posts, or to a relevant service you can provide which is connected to the topic of the blog.

This is especially important when we consider that inbound links are one of the most important factors Google takes into account when ranking your website, and play a critical role in SEO.

Content Upgrade #2: Continued Content

Continued content is a type of exclusive content where you simply continue the blog post for email subscribers only. This increases lead generation by getting users to input their email addresses to read the full article. Sometimes, it’s a simple case of instead of writing a top 15 blog post, write a top 10 but include an extra 5 points in the email marketing campaign sent out to subscribers.

To do this effectively, you’ll need to include a CTA at the end of your blog post with an email subscription box informing readers they can have the rest of the blog sent directly to their email address.

Content Upgrade #3: Exclusive Discounts

If you have a landing page where your ultimate CTA is to sell a product, offering exclusive ‘members only’ discounts to email subscribers is a great way to increase lead generation.

The discounts don’t have to be huge – even 5-10% will be enough to get a portion of your readers to sign up with their email address. Nowadays, this is a common practice even in large companies to improve lead generation.

Content Upgrade #4: Cheat Sheets

Cheat sheets are an excellent form of content upgrade because it provides a huge amount of value to both you and your subscribers. These are especially useful for blogs surrounding practical topics such as coding. For example, you could create a cheat sheet of simple commands for a particular language such as Linux, meaning subscribers can use your simple cheat sheet in their day to day lives. Connecting this to a blog post about the topic it’s attached to is a great CTA and should drastically increase lead generation.

Content Upgrade #5: Checklists

Checklists, like cheat sheets, are a great way for your subscribers to practically engage with your content and to make their own lives easier. It also gives your audience an opportunity to keep themselves on track with whatever they’re working on with a list outlining every step they need to complete to achieve their goals.

Checklists are also a great way to show off your creativity and visual flair to customers by making an aesthetically pleasing piece of content which matches the style of your brand.

Content Upgrade #6: Taster Courses

If you’re offering some kind of course or service alongside your blog posts, why not curate a small, free course for your email subscribers to increase lead generation towards your paid courses?

The course could really take the form of anything – from e-books and video tutorials to an entire email series. You can also take this into account when thinking about what your course actually offers. For example, if your blog posts or company provides advice for start-ups you may want to offer a free email course on how to use social media marketing.

Content Upgrade #7: Printable PDF Guides

A great way to get your subscribers to practically engage with your brand is by sending printable planners, worksheets or goal trackers for them to fill in using pens and pencils. Although this may not be for everyone, if your business provides advice, goods or services for creatives it may just be the best option. 

The best place to start when creating a printable and downloadable PDF guide is to think about what people enjoy writing down or crossing off and how this could relate to your blog content. You can create even a basic Google Doc that they can print and use.

Content Upgrade #8: Audio Blogs

Multiple newspaper websites have already taken to providing audio options for readers who may be hard of sight or who need their eyes elsewhere while they listen. Giving your readers the option of listening to your blog posts rather than reading them is an excellent way to both boost inclusivity and capitalize on those who would rather listen than read.

Additionally, if your organization holds livestreams or webinars these can be re-uploaded and distributed to your customers via email. The easiest way to do this would be by uploading the content as an unlisted video to YouTube, meaning only those with the link from the email would have access to it.

Content Upgrade #9: Scripts Templates

Scripts are great for anyone looking to send out mass emails, or who email the same types of people very frequently. This could be super helpful for PR managers reaching out to journalists, or anyone who is struggling to find the right words for certain situations. 

A great way to implement this would be as a CTA on articles which are designed to target people who are new to a certain employment status, e.g. new PR managers or anyone else who needs to get to grips with the basics of their job.

Example: Prowly

Content Upgrade #10: Case Studies

Case studies are a great way to connect simultaneously with both customers and those on your email list. Showcasing your product or service’s success is a great way to increase lead generation, since it shows customers exactly how your product or service could be used in situations that may be similar to their own. 

Example: LinkGraph

Case studies are usually accessible on an organization’s website, but using them as a way to generate leads is also a really smart idea.

Content Upgrade #11: Challenges

Another interactive way to improve lead generation is through challenges. This could be through email or done via avenues such as Facebook groups so everyone can participate and interact with one-another. This works great as a CTA in a blog post dedicated towards a certain goal, such as increasing your email list to X amount of people or creating a certain amount of content within a certain time. 

This simultaneously allows your readers to connect with you as a creator whilst creating a fun and productive challenge to generate new leads and email signups. As a challenge reward, your readers can also get bonus content such as free templates or checklists.

Content Upgrade #12: Infographics

Creating infographics might sound a bit daunting, but infographics can be made relatively easily using certain graphic design tools such as Canva or Visme. Infographics are great for providing statistics and quotes in a visually appealing style, and the format is easy-to-understand and digestible. 

Infographics can also be used for data visualization using charts and graphs to share significant numbers and data points. These can be shared as a CTA at the end of a blog post, telling the reader that if they sign up to the email newsletter they can find all of the statistics behind your blog post in one place.

Content Upgrade #13: Ebooks

Free ebooks are an excellent way to provide further information on a relevant topic covered in a blog post. As a CTA, they can be useful in persuading people who want to learn more about the topic to subscribe to your email list. The great thing about these is they can be as long or as short as you want – there really is no standard length for an ebook (you can also write a mini ebook 🙂

Example: Leadfeeder

Content Upgrade #14: Free Trial

Free trials are used ubiquitously across all industries, and for good reason. Giving customers a sneak peek into content they could have access to for a monetary fee makes them more likely to pay for the full experience. Even if your organization offers a free version of the paid product, giving email subscribers access to the full experience is a great way to increase your conversion rate and convert free users to paid users.

Increasing your Business’s Lead Generation with Content Upgrades

These 14 content upgrade ideas should be enough to give your business all it needs, get more lead magnets and improve lead generation efforts. Better CTAs in your blog posts combined with more people signing up to your mailing list should drastically improve your organization’s lead generation abilities.

 

About the Author: Romana Hoekstra is a Content Marketing Lead at Leadfeeder, a B2B visitor identification software that tracks and identifies companies that visit your website. Currently, she is leading the remote-first content marketing team and crafts high-performing content marketing strategies with a focus on organic growth, SEO, high-quality content production & distribution. You can connect with Romana on Linkedin.

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Law Firm SEO – A 20 Step Action Plan for Attorneys https://linkgraph.io/blog/law-firm-seo/ https://linkgraph.io/blog/law-firm-seo/#respond Wed, 09 Nov 2022 01:17:20 +0000 https://linkgraph.io/?p=3053 By applying an effective law firm SEO strategy, you’ll leap ahead of most of your competitors. To help your law firm rank #1 in Google, here's a step-by-step guide to putting together your SEO campaign.

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Are you trying to win new clients for your law firm? Prospective customers are already using search engines to find you, and having an effective SEO (search engine optimization) plan for your law firm is the best way to take advantage of this!

Need proof? Check out these stats

  • 96% of people use a search engine to seek legal advice.
  • 38% of people use the internet to find an attorney.
  • 62% of legal searches are non-branded (for example, Miami car accident attorney).

Additionally, your law firm website is a great spot to generate new leads for your firm. 74% of consumers who visit a law firm’s website end up taking action, such as contacting the firm by phone.

Also, the lawyer SEO competition doesn’t necessarily reflect the legal market you’re in. Only 35% of law firm websites have been updated in the last 3 years, and 40% of law firms don’t even have a law firm website.

In short, by applying an effective law firm SEO strategy, you’ll leap ahead of most of your competitors.

To help you put together your own SEO campaign, I’ll show you how to rank your law firm #1 in Google – step-by-step.

ARTICLE CONTENTS

TECHNICAL SEO
Step 1. Determine Website Structure
Step 2. Setup Your GMB Listing
Step 3. Improve Your Site Speed
Step 4. Mobile Optimization
Step 5. Implement SSL
KEYWORD RESEARCH
Step 6. Understand Search Intent
Step 7. Find the right keywords
PAGES & CONTENT
Step 8. Identify User Content Goals
Step 9. Format Your Pages Properly
Step 10. Optimize Your Home Page
Step 11. Create Practice Pages
Step 12. Rank Better with Blog Posts
Step 13. Fix Zombie Pages
DOMINATE LOCAL SEARCH
Step 14. Tailor Pages to Markets
Step 15. Legal Directory Citations
Step 16. Claim & Manage Reviews
LINKS
Step 17. Outbound Links
Step 18. Inbound Links
MEASURE RESULTS
Step 19. Tools to Use
Step 20. KPIs

TECHNICAL SEO FOR ATTORNEYS

Step 1. Determine Your Website Structure

Structure your own website so your users (and Google) can find everything. Your website needs to have a defined structure. Without one, it’s difficult for users to navigate and difficult for search engines to crawl and discover your web pages.

Structuring your site for your users

Users need to be able to easily find what they’re looking for. This means that you need to understand what information people seek out when visiting your law firm’s website and put that important information  on the homepage or make it easy to access from the navigation bar.

For example, if a prospective client is looking for a personal injury attorney in Miami, they may search your firm’s website for practice areas, office location, reviews, and the about section.

Look at how this law firm’s website quickly addresses those needs with their navigation bar.

Putting critical items in the navigation bar makes them quick and easy to access. Take a look at these three examples of law firms ranking on the first page for “personal injury attorney” in NYC, and you’ll notice they include each of the items above in their main nav.

EXAMPLE 1

EXAMPLE 2

EXAMPLE 3

For any practice area, it’s a good idea to have these items in your navigation menu :

  • Practice areas, either directly on your navigation menu or as a dropdown if you have multiple services. This gets your law firm’s services based keywords on every page of your site, sending strong relevancy signals to Google crawlers.
  • Location information, either directly on your navigation menu or as a dropdown if you have multiple locations. This gets your location-based keywords on every page of your site, sending strong relevancy signals to search engine algorithms about the geographic area you serve.
  • A link to your attorneys or about page, which should give an overview of the years of experience of your whole legal team.
  • A link to your reviews or testimonials page – to build trust.
  • A link to your “Contact Us” clearly labeled with a unique color where visitors can contact you via phone number, email, or an embedded contact form. This is a call to action.
  • Your phone number. This is another call to action. Even if you already have a “contact us” button that links to a contact page, 74% of people who land on a law firm’s website are likely to contact you via phone, so making this form of contact as simple as 1 click is to your advantage.

If you’re unsure about what users are likely to look for on your website, search Google for your practice areas and look at the top ranking competitors sites to get ideas for your navigation and site layout.

Finally, it’s important to make sure your navigation menu is usable both on desktop and mobile.

In fact, 31% of all law firm related website traffic comes from mobile, so a large amount of your leads are likely to come from a mobile device.
Take a look at how this law firm’s website made their navigation menu easy to access and use on mobile phones.

You’ll notice that the area between the buttons is large enough that everything is easy to touch – even if you have a small screen and big fingers.

This is referred to as the “tap area” of a button and is a key component of converting on mobile devices. Make sure this is sized appropriately for phones and fingers of all sizes. Users can become easily frustrated if they have a difficult time tapping the correct button on a mobile device and may leave your site.

Structuring your site for Successful SEO

Google also uses your law firm’s website structure to determine what website content is important and relevant information. Here are a few ways to help Google crawl your law firm website in a more effective way.

Use proper page and URL Structure

Ideally, your website as a whole should be structured like a pyramid, with your home page at the top, your category pages (the ones in your navigation menu) beneath that, and your individual pages beneath your category pages.

Not only does this make it very easy for users to find relevant content on your site, but also makes it easier for search engines to index each page of your website.

When formatting your URLs, this means that any pages linked to in the main navigation menu are only one folder deep from the homepage.

This means that they should only have one slash after the .com, .net, etc (aka. the “top-level-domain”).

So, your about page should look like https://yourdomain.com/about

Any individual pages that are a subset of your category pages, like blog articles, should only have two slashes after the top-level-domain.

For example, blog articles would look like this: https://yourdomain.com/blog/how-to-hire-a-personal-injury-lawyer

Clear URL structure makes it easy for search engine crawlers to find pages on your law firm website.

Clear linking and navigation titles

The placement of navigation items is an important factor for users and search engines alike. While users are more likely to pay attention to navigation titles, search engines use the anchor text of these navigation items to determine the topical relevance of a page.

What is anchor text?
Anchor text is the clickable text in a hyperlink.
Here’s what it looks like in your site’s code

With this code in place, the anchor text “Jon Wye’s Custom Designed Belts” would link to the URL “https://www.jonwye.com.

If we inspect the code on Harell & Harell’s site, we can see this in action. Here’s the navigation menu item’s anchor text for the user.

And here is the URL structure for the link the navigation menu item points to.

The anchor text of your navigation items is important because it sends “link signals” to search engines that tell them “Hey, these pages are very important!” By having these links on every page of your law firm’s website, you’ll be sending strong link signals to search engines and helping them understand what these pages are about – because of the anchor text.

These same link signals can be leveraged in the footer of your law firm website as well. Adding links to pages such as to your blog, privacy policy, or sitemap in the footer can help boost the link signals to these pages without taking up space in the main navigation menu.

Proper use of H tags – How to use H tags for SEO

Header tags (commonly called H tags) outline the structure of your page. Often times, an H tag is used as the title displayed on the page, while the page title is what’s displayed in the organic search results.

These tags are often followed by a number – H1, H2, H3, etc. This is to show where they lie in the hierarchy of your page structure.

Common H tag page formatting looks like this:

See how they outline the hierarchy structure of a page? H1 would be the page title, H2 would be a subtopic of the page, and H3 would be a subtopic of the H2 header.

Notice the difference between these 2 articles. One is using H tags properly, while the other is writing their headlines in plain text.

Header Tags Used Properly

Header Tags Not Used Correctly

Using H tags for your headlines helps search engines understand the structure of your page and makes it easier for your users to find what they’re looking for more quickly.

When writing your H tags, keep a few things in mind:

  • Only use 1 H1 tag on your page.
  • Use H2, H3, and other H tags to segment out the content of your page.
  • Use related keywords in your HTML tags.

Step 2. Create and optimize your law firm’s Google My Business listing

85% of people use online maps, such as Google Maps, to find legal services.

Google Maps is a huge part of local SEO. If your firm largely targets local clients, then getting listed on Google Maps is a must.

How to add your law firm to Google Maps

So, how do you get listed on Google Maps?
By creating a Google My Business listing.

Here’s how.

Google My Business best practices

Google uses information from Google My Business to display information for searches that have local area intent.

Not only that, but rather than listing information from your website on search results, Google often pulls business information from your Google My Business listing as well.

The information for Morgan & Morgan in the above screenshot is coming from their Google My Business listing.

Clearly, it’s important that this information is up-to-date, accurate, and fully optimized.

How to optimize your law firm’s Google My Business listing

Here’s how to optimize your firm’s Google My Business account:

  • Enter your business information correctly on the map so users can easily find you.
  • List the official website of your law firm.
  • Include your opening hours.
  • Make sure your business name, address, and phone number is EXACTLY the same as listed on your website. Google aggregates this information from across the web.
  • Choose the most appropriate and specific category for your firm so that you show up in the right search terms.
  • Add photos of your office, staff or anything else you’d like that’s relevant and professional.
  • Describe your law firm. Include links and relevant keywords in the introduction.

If you’re interested in seeing how users behave with your listing, check out Google My Business insights.

Step 3. Make your law firm website as fast as possible

Google is now mobile-first, which means they assume users are accessing your site with a 5G connection.

They want to provide users with a great page experience. Presenting users with slow websites doesn’t accomplish this, so if you want higher rankings, your website needs to be fast.

Due to its impact on user experience, website speed is one of the most important SEO ranking factors.

If a website takes a long time to load, the user will click back to Google to find a better choice. Google will simply think the user didn’t find what they were looking for and your website rank will drop.

Amazon found clear correlations between page speed and bounce rate. Just a few seconds too long, and your users are 32% more likely to leave.

Google takes page speed and bounce rate into consideration when ranking your website, so it’s important to make your site as fast as possible.

To make your site as fast as possible, use Google’s PageSpeed Tool to see how your site loads on desktop and on a 5G connection. This tool is a simple way to discover any issues that you can address to make your site faster.

Step 4. Make sure your site is mobile friendly

Consider this – you’re a personal injury attorney, and a potential client just got into a car accident.

They try to access your site to call you, but they have a poor mobile connection.

Or worse, they’re nervous – their adrenaline is pumping – and they’re having trouble tapping their screen with accuracy.

Your website takes too long to load, and when it finally does, the user pushes the wrong button on accident, so they move on to the next listing in Google.

This is why mobile optimization is important for attorney websites.

At a minimum, you should make sure that:

  • Your website loads quickly on mobile.
  • Your buttons are sized well enough that people with small screens or big fingers can tap them without accidentally tapping a different button.
  • Keep important information above the fold – i.e. keep your call to action visible without requiring users to scroll down.
  • Have a click to call button for mobile.

Check out Lawrence Law Group’s site as an example of doing this correctly.

Finally, you should make sure your design is great. 57% of users won’t even consider your firm if the website is poorly designed on mobile.

This, and Google prioritizes mobile experiences when ranking websites.

Step 5. Secure your law firm’s website with SSL (Secure Socket Layer)

Ever come across a website and see something like this?

Or worse, this?

Do these websites encourage trustworthiness or make you feel that your data would be safe?

As an attorney, you know that trust between you and your target audience is important, so why would this be any different online?

This is what happens when a website isn’t secured with an SSL certificate.

SSL stands for Secure Sockets Layer, and is essentially a form of validation for your website that confirm there aren’t any intermediaries between a page and the web host that could potentially steal a users information.

Basically, an SSL certificate proves that a website is who they say they are. This is shown by a site having https instead of http at the beginning of their domain.

Google has also confirmed that it is, in fact, taken into consideration for rankings.

Often times, you can get an SSL certificate through your web hosting provider. They’re usually available for an annual fee, and will fix all of the issues associated with “website not secure” popups or messages.

If you prefer to go the route of free, or would rather have your SSL certificate not tied to your web hosting provider, you can use a service like Let’s Encrypt instead.

Once you get your certificate set up, plug your homepage https URL into Why No Padlock? to have their tool crawl your site and make sure it’s implemented correctly.

A few things to note about getting your site SSL certified:

  • Google will treat this as if you’re moving your site to a new domain name, which means you may temporarily lose search rankings and organic traffic until Google crawls your site again and reindexes your new https pages.
  • You could end up with a lot of broken links, so it’s important to make sure you properly 301 redirect your http links to your new https links when migrating to https.

KEYWORD RESEARCH

Find out how to get #1 on Google rankings and beat the competition
Book a Call

Step 6. Understand searcher intent and keyword types

Before you start optimizing your law firm’s website, you need to know what kind of keywords you’re going to go after.

In attorney SEO, as in all SEO, a keyword is really just a search term that Google’s users type to find what they’re looking for.

What they’re looking for is described as searcher intent – and can be broken down into three categories:

  • Awareness
  • Evaluation
  • Purchase

Searcher intent addresses the question “what are the searchers really looking for?”
Let’s assume a musician is trying to copyright their music. Here are some search terms they might use in each stage.

  • Awareness – This is where the musician is looking for answers, resources, educational material, and insights. Example search terms (or keywords) may include:
      • How can I protect my music?
      • Do I copyright or trademark a song?
      • How to copyright a song
  • Evaluation – This is the middle stage where the musician knows what needs to be done and is researching options. Example search terms (or, again, keywords) in this stage may include:
      • Music lawyers near me
      • Who are the best copyright lawyers in Nashville
      • Copyright lawyer reviews
  • Purchase – This is the final stage where the musician is figuring out what it would take to become a customer. Keywords used in this stage are likely to be very specific:
    • Law firm name contact info
    • Lawyer name contact info

In this example, the musician wanted to protect their music, learned more about what’s involved, then narrowed down the options until they found the best one for them, then took steps to contact the appropriate firm.

The closer a user gets to a purchase, the longer the keywords usually are. This is where the phrase long-tail keywords comes from.

Step 7. Find the right keywords

Now that you understand searcher intent and know about how people use Google to make purchases, let’s dive into some keyword research.

To find new keyword phrase ideas, just head over to Google’s Keyword Planner, log in, and click “Discover new keywords.”

Next, enter your website or a keyword of your choice to get started. For this example, I’m going to enter a keyword.

Finally, click “Get Results” and you’ll be able to browse a huge list of keywords Google’s tool has generated for you!

You’ll notice that you have columns that show you the monthly search volume and the cost-per-click bid range if you were to run ads.

If a keyword has a high bid, that means advertisers are bidding high amounts for that search query in PPC advertising campaigns –likely because it drives sales.

That means these keywords are likely to have high purchase intent. These are the keywords that you’ll likely want to target with pages that have lots of call-to-actions.

If you want more keyword ideas, you can leverage Google. Just take one of your chosen keywords, plug it into Google’s search box, and look at the “People also ask” section.

If you click one of the questions, Google automatically generates more of them.

It can literally be an endlesssupply of keyword ideas!

When you find your keywords, remember to use your primary keyword within the H1 and title tags of your page. This gives the search engines a clear indication as to what the page is about. For more information on keywords and keyword research check out Keywords 101: A Beginner’s Guide.

PAGES & CONTENT

Step 8. Understand Google’s content preferences

Google prioritizes pages based on how it views search intent for different terms. You won’t be able to effectively rank a product page for an informational search.

Google often prioritizes long-form content, but content that meets a user’s need always wins out.

It’s the difference between “how to find a good accident lawyer” and “accident lawyer near me” searches. One will land on a blog post/long form content, the other on a directory or services page.

Think about it like this – someone with a broken faucet is looking for contact info for an available plumber, not a long-form article on plumbing.

Step 9. Format your pages properly

When formatting your page, there are a few things that need consideration.

  • Formatting your titles
  • Using H tags
  • Writing meta descriptions
  • Formatting your content

Let’s go over each of these.

How to write your page titles for SEO

The page title is the clickable headline of your page that appears on search engine results pages (commonly referred to as SERPs).

It also appears in browser tabs, like this:


In the HTML code, these are usually surrounded by title tags, which look like this:

In most website editors, including WordPress, you won’t need to actually access or write the code. They’ll automatically apply the title tags for you when you write the title of your page.

When writing your title tags, keep a few things in mind.

  • Keep your titles about 55-60 characters long. Too short and they aren’t detailed enough, but too long and they’ll be cut off at the end in search engines, meaning people won’t be able to read them.
  • Use your target keyword in the title as close to the beginning as possible.
  • Describe your page content in the best way possible.
  • Keep your titles unique to the specific page. Otherwise, multiple pages may compete for the same keyword.
  • Use your brand name wisely. In most cases, your brand name should be left to the end of the title.

Here are some examples of well formatted page titles, and one that’s not as well formatted:

While Gunster, Morgan & Morgan, and Dunlap Bennett & Ludwig, follows the above guidelines, Gibney Law made a few mistakes:

  • Their title is too long, which made it cut off at the end.
  • They didn’t use a searchable keyword in the beginning of the title. Instead, they used their brand name.

How to write your page descriptions for SEO

Page descriptions are the short paragraph of text placed in the HTML that describe the contents of a page. These are known as “meta descriptions” and will show under your page in the organic search results.

In your code, it will look something like this:

If you use WordPress or any other website editor, you won’t need to edit the code itself. You can easily control the meta description with plugins like Yoast SEO.

Google has specifically stated that they do not use the meta description as a ranking signal. However, the number of people who click on your website vs. others is a ranking signal, and the meta description influences a user’s decision to click on your website.

Because of this, the meta description indirectly influences your rankings.

So, when writing your meta descriptions, do so with the goal of convincing users to click on your listing rather than stuffing keywords in there.

Here are a few things that can accomplish this:

  • Keep your description between 135-160 characters so that it doesn’t cut off at the end.
  • Don’t duplicate your meta descriptions. Write unique ones for every webpage.
  • Use your keyword in the description. This is important not because search engines use this as a ranking signal, but because the keyword is often highlighted in bold, which can draw attention to your organic listing.
  • Treat the meta as an advertisement for your page. Make it compelling and relevant. It should match the contents of your page while being as appealing as possible.

Step 10. Create a winning home page

Your homepage is the most valuable page on your site. Here are some ways to make it have a better chance of securing top rankings.

Optimize for the most competitive terms

As far as search engines are concerned, your home page carries the most weight in terms of value. Because of this, it’s best to optimize the page for your most competitive keyword.

Boyd Law does this very well.

It’s clear what their target keyword is.

Your page may not rank right away, but as you build your domain authority and visibility, it will climb closer to the top of the search results.

Feature reviews to build trust

You need to establish credibility and trust as quickly as possible. The best way to do this is featuring reviews or testimonials on your homepage.

Take a look at how Morgan & Morgan features powerful video testimonials on their homepage.

Use images or videos to boost engagement

Google uses dwell time as a ranking factor, so it’s in your best interest to keep users engaged on your homepage as long as possible. Using videos or other visual graphics accomplish this.

Look at how The Law Offices of Peter C. Bronstein does this.

In your video, address the key pain points of your target audience and how you can help with those.

Craft a compelling call-to-action (CTA)

A clear, consistent call-to-action is what generates leads.

When writing your CTA, you want to keep 3 things in mind.

  1. Use action words and be specific – Phrases that encourage users to do something are much more powerful than generic phrases. A CTA like “Call Now for a Free Consultation” is much more compelling than “Click Here to Call.”
  2. Create a sense of urgency – By simply telling users to do something now or that time is running out, suddenly your CTA seems more urgent. You can accomplish this without hard-selling by using the word “Now” or pointing out that users can “reap the benefits today.”
  3. Use contrast in your design – If your CTA is the same color as the rest of your website, it isn’t going to stand out. Use a contrasting color so users are quickly drawn to it.

Let’s look at an example of a good CTA vs. one that could use some work.

Notice how May Personal Injury Lawyers uses actionable language and tells users what they get from calling – a free consultation. The colors of the CTA contrast the rest of the design.

Contrast that with Law Offices of Peter C. Bronstein and you’ll notice that, while he has a compelling call to action, the CTA button doesn’t contrast the rest of the design.

Step 11. Create practice area pages

After your homepage, your practice area pages are going to be the next most valuable in your SEO efforts.

It’s important to make individual pages for each practice area because it gives you more opportunity to go after keywords related to those practice areas by addressing the specific needs of that audience.

If we look at Morgan & Morgan’s website, we’ll see that they have a dropdown listing all of their practice areas.

For each of those practice areas, they have a unique page.

On your practice area pages, you want to include the following:

  • The purchase intent keyword related to this practice area as identified in your keyword research (discussed above in steps 6 and 7).
  • Page titles and meta descriptions with the keyword’s searcher intent in mind (discussed above in step 9).
  • Answers to common questions about this practice area. You can identify common questions by typing your target keyword into Google and looking at the “People also ask” suggestions. Each question you address on this page should use an H tag so that search engines understand the structure of your page.
  • Testimonials from clients that you’ve helped in this specific area of practice.
  • A call-to-action that’s specific to this area of practice.

Step 12. Become an authority with epic blog content

You already have lots of legal info in your head from your experience. Creating high-quality content on your site that communicates this effectively to potential clients positions you as an authority in your legal space.

Consider your practice areas and think about how you can create great content and super-detailed blog articles that help potential clients.

Things like step-by-step guides, simplifying otherwise complex topics, or even simple blog posts on key pain points your audience may face are great examples of this.

Look at how Peterson Watts Law Group does this with their music copyright article.

You can come up with content marketing ideas by:

  • Looking into your clients most commonly asked questions.
  • Reviewing Google’s “People also ask” questions for related search terms.
  • Reviewing questions on Quora in your space.
  • Using tools like Google Trends to find topics that are trending online.

When you create your content, keep in mind that you’re writing for the internet – which means you should make your content easy to skim. Here’s how:

  • Write short, concise sentences using simple language. Try and keep your writing at a 10th grade reading level or less. Tools like Hemmingway can help you determine the readability of your content.
  • Use lots of white space by keeping your paragraphs 1-3 sentences long.
  • Use the right font size. A 22 point font provides the best reading experience online.
  • Use bullet points whenever possible.

When writing your content, while it is important to intersperse your keywords throughout, Google algorithms are getting better at understanding language and will understand synonyms related to the topi. It’s more important that the topic is covered in full, and keyword stuffing won’t work. The primary objective should be that your content fully addresses the needs of its audience.

Step 13. Fix zombie pages

What are zombie pages, and why are they bad for SEO?

Zombie pages are those that exist on your website but provide no value whatsoever – meaning they don’t bring you any traffic.

They usually take on one of the following forms:

  • Duplicate content (ex. News stories copy and pasted from other sites – don’t do this. It can actually make your site appear more spammy and can cause your rankings to drop.)
  • Outdated blog posts
  • Aging press releases
  • Pages that shouldn’t be indexed
  • Archive pages
  • Category and tag pages (often found on WordPress blogs)
  • Search result pages
  • Old press releases
  • Thin content (<50 words)
  • Boilerplate content

These pages are often indexed by Google, but rank poorly because they provide no value to users.

Because search engines use metrics like pages viewed per session and dwell time on a page, thin pages and zombie pages can give Google the impression your site is low-quality.

Should you delete zombie pages?

If you can’t bring a zombie page to life by improving the content and making these pages useful to users, then redirecting the page to more useful content may be the best alternative.

Redirects are especially important if a page your are deleting has any links pointing towards it from other websites.

Links pointing to your site from others are referred to as backlinks. We’ll touch more on these later, but in short, Google counts links as votes of confidence to your site and uses them to help determine rankings for a page or pages of a domain. Any high ranking web page likely has lots of links pointing to it.

You can check backlinks to a page with tools like Ahrefs, SemRush, or Majestic.

In most cases, since zombie pages provide little to no value to your users, it’s unlikely you’ll find any backlinks pointing to them.

However, if you do, you should redirect these pages to another relevant page on your site to retain whatever search equity the page had acquired.

How to redirect pages

The best way to redirect pages on your site is using 301 redirects.

A 301 redirect is a permanent redirect from one URL to another. They essentially send visitors and search engines to a different URL than what they clicked on from a search engine page or typed into their browser.

Let’s put this into practice.

If you click on either of these URLs, you’ll be directed to www.google.com:

That’s because google.com 301 redirects to www.google.com, since Google wanted that to be their primary domain.

Here’s a step-by-step video showing you how to set up 301 redirects in WordPress.

How to properly delete pages

If you don’t have any pages on your site that you can redirect your pages towards, and the page in question has no backlinks, then deleting those pages may be your best option.

When you delete a page, make sure you set the HTTP header to “410 content deleted.”

This tells users – and search engines – that you intentionally deleted the content, and will result in Google removing it from their index sooner.

You can use this plugin to do this on WordPress.

Use Lawyer SEO to dominate local search

Step 14. Create pages for specific markets

71% of people looking for an attorney believe it’s important to have a local one.

This means that they’re likely looking for lawyers within their specific geographic area using the name of a town or county that may otherwise be underserved.

If other law firms aren’t targeting these smaller towns or counties, this could be a great opportunity for you.

Just look at how Morgan & Morgan creates specific pages for the small town of Tavares just outside of Orlando, Florida.

You won’t receive as much traffic for these pages as you will on your homepage, but if you target enough areas, it adds up.

Just look for nearby cities, counties, or towns and create pages tailored specifically to each of them with a customized page title, meta description, and page copy.

Do this with 5 surrounding areas for 10 practice areas and that’s 50 new pages that can attract a very targeted audience!

Finally, make sure other pages on your site link to these pages to help improve their link signals. For example, if you write a blog post about car accidents in Los Angeles, California, link to your “Los Angeles Car Accident Attorney” page.

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Step 15. Get citations in popular legal directories

If you serve local clients, quality citations – mentions of your business name, address, and/or phone number – are important.

Google considers citations from relevant, reliable websites when as an important ranking factor in local search results.

Not only that, but lots of people still find lawyers through online directories.

In fact, legal directories often rank for competitive search terms in the legal industry.

Getting citations from targeted directories add credibility, context, and authenticity to your law firm, and allow you to be found by search engine users who click the directory listings in the search results.

How to find citation sources

The best places to get cited in are prominent legal directories and data aggregators.

Legal directories

A good way to think about directory placements is to go after ones that you think you can actually get clients from.

The best way to find these directories is to type all of your target keywords into Google and simply look at the directory listings on the first page. Anything here is worth getting listed in because you can potentially grab second-hand search traffic – i.e. people will click the directory listing in Google, then find your firm

Some of the most popular legal directories worth getting listed in are:

  • Avvo
  • FindLaw
  • Lawyers.com (paid)
  • Justia
  • Hg.org
  • Nolo

For a full list of directories, check out this page from Moz that organizes citation sources by city. Remember to look at nearby cities as well

Data aggregators

You also want to make sure your information is correct with all key data aggregators because search engines pull data from these sources.

Most search engines get their data from:

…who pull their data from:

So it’s important to make sure your information is always up-to-date in these sources. Otherwise, your rankings can drop if any out-of-date information is passed along.

Step 16. Get reviews on Google, Yelp, and law directories

Reviews are important for Google rankings, click through rates, and creating a perception of trust.

This is true for your Google listings and your law directory listings.

According to Bright Local’s Customer Review Survey:

  • 85% of people trust online reviews as much as a personal recommendation.
  • 73% of people trust a business more because of a review.
  • Yelp and Google are some of the review sources people trust most

Needless to say, reviews are an essential part of your law firm’s SEO strategy

Here are some ways you can get reviews on Google, Yelp, and law directories of your choice.

Ask your clients

If you’ve given excellent service to a client, a great way to earn reviews is to simply ask!

Amazon does this through email, so why not do this with your clients as well?

Just send them an email explaining how you want to hear more about their experience with a link to your preferred review source. If you’ve given them great service and have developed a strong relationship with the client, they’ll see your request as a good thing and be more than happy to do this.

Keep in mind that you want to make sure you ask happy clients for reviews since they’re more likely to leave good ones.

Add review links to your site

In some areas of legal practice, clients are likely to revisit your website frequently

In these cases, leaving links to your preferred review sources can encourage repeat clients to share their experiences.

Take a look at how Johanson Law Group does this.

Just link the “write a review” button on your site to Google, Yelp, Avvo, or whatever your preferred directory is.

Use review generation tools

There are tools that can help automate the customer feedback process to make it easier.

These tools handle client follow-ups on your behalf via text or email which frees you up to handle more important things.

While these are great, if your firm is relatively new, I’d recommend calling or emailing each client individually until you have a consistent inflow of clients to ask for reviews.

LINKS

Step 17. Link to authority sources from your site

Linking out is a great way to show Google that you’re interested in providing value to your users.

When Google analyzes links, they look at them like neighborhoods. If you’re linking out to lots of high quality, high domain authority sites in your industry, and lots of high quality sites are linking to you, Google considers your site as part of a good “link neighborhood.”

The opposite can also be true. If you link out to low quality sites and lots of low quality sites are linking to you, this is a bad “link neighborhood.”

Linking to non-competing legal sites can help enhance a reader’s understanding of a topic you may be writing about on your own site.

This will improve user experience on your site – which will lead to better SERP rankings.

For example, Yavitch & Palmer’s site links out to a number of legal resources related to their areas of practice.

The rel=“nofollow” tag

The rel=”nofollow” tag is a value that can be added to a URL that tells search engines not to follow the URL.

In the code for a URL, it looks like this:

This was introduced in 2005 by Google to stop people from blog comment spamming in an effort to get links to their site that would influence their rankings.

This tag should only be used if a link is paid for or can be easily added by the public (such as in comments or reviews).

Otherwise, you don’t really need to worry about it.

Increase dwell time with outbound and internal links

If people can find what they’re looking for on your site, they’re more likely to stick around.

This includes when you give them what they’re looking for by linking to it.

So if you’re writing a blog article and mention a resource that readers may want to learn more about, link to it!

Peterson Watts Law Group does this regularly in their blog articles.

When you do link out, make sure the pages you link to open in a new browser tab when clicked so users can easily come back to your site. Here’s how to do this in WordPress

Follow these same guidelines with internal links – links from one page on your site to another – to help search engines better understand the structure of your site and rank it on an ongoing basis.

Step 18. Increase your rankings with backlinks

One of the best ways to increase your Google search results is to get other sites to link to yours.

Google counts links as votes of confidence. If other reputable sites are linking to you, Google trusts your site more and pushes you up in the search results pages.

These are known as backlinks (i.e. another site is “linking back” to you), and the process of trying to get these backlinks is known as “link building.”

A lot of sites pay for backlinks, but this is against Google webmaster guidelines and is known as “black hat” SEO.

“White hat” link building is done leveraging methods that follow google’s guidelines. Often, these methods require a lot of time and hard work, like creating new content like guest blogs or long-form articles that includes links back to your website, and then pitching that content to other webmasters to publish on their site. This is the safest way to build links, and even more so when working with a reputable SEO agency.

Two of the best ways to get high-quality backlinks for your site are guest posting and HARO.

Guest Posting

Guest posting is the easiest way to get other sites to link to you. It basically works like this.

  1. You find other sites that accept guest articles.
  2. You pitch them an idea.
  3. You write it and send it to them with a link to your site in the body of the content.

Simple, right?

Let’s break down the steps.

Find other sites that accept guest posts

To find sites that accept guest posts, we’ll use Google.

Simply enter search terms like these:

  • Your keyword + “write for us”
  • Your keyword + “guest post by”
  • Your Keyword + “contribution by”

Make sure you maintain the “”. This tells Google to only find pages that contain this exact phrase.

When you find a site that looks like a good fit, you’re ready to craft your pitch.

Pitch 3 article ideas

For each of the sites you find, look around at the types of articles they write and come up with 3 similar ones that they haven’t covered yet.

Once you have your article ideas, send them an email that looks something like this:

Hi [Name],

My name is [Your Name] and I’m [Your Company and Role]

I’m contacting you because I’d love to contribute a guest post on [Website].

Here are some ideas I’ve come up with that I think your readers would get a ton of value from:

[Idea #1]

[Idea #2]

[Idea #3]

I’ll make sure the piece overflows with information that can’t be found anywhere else.

To give you an idea of the quality I’ll bring to your site, here’s a link to a guest post that I recently published on [Other Website].

Cheers,

[Your First Name]

Once you hear back from a site, the next step is to write and send your article to them!

When you write your article, make sure it provides real value to their readers and isn’t just an article written in an attempt to get a link. Any good site will see right through this and will reject your article once they get it.

Make sure you link to your site within the body of the content – ideally to a blog post you have. Most sites will link to your site in your bio, but Google usually doesn’t count these.

If you do a good job, they may ask you to contribute content about your main practice area or a specific topic on a monthly basis. This means lots of long term SEO success for your law firm website and elevating you and your team of lawyers as industry experts.

HARO

HARO (or Help A Reporter Out) is a great source of links and press mentions.

Basically, they send you 3 emails each day with a list of topics reporters are writing about for news sites and need some help with – like this:

All you need to do is scroll through the list of topics, pick one out where you can offer value, and write your reply.

Here’s an example of one that’s fit for attorneys.

Just click on the query to be taken down to the section of the email where you can read it in full.

Finally, just click the email address listed with the query and draft your response!

Remember, with HARO, the more helpful information you can provide, the better. Often times, reporters will take only part of what you say, so giving them more to work with gives you more of a chance at landing a placement. In some cases, they may include a website link with your comments.

MEASURING RESULTS

Step 19. Make sure you have the right tools.

In order to measure your SEO results, you need to install the correct analytics tools.

Google Analytics is important because that lets you see how much organic traffic you’re getting and gives you insight into how your users are using your website. You can leverage this data to make improvements to your user experience.

Here’s a video that walks you through how to set up Google Analytics for your website.


The second tool you’ll need is Google Search Console or LinkGraph’s Google Search Console Tool.

These tools let you analyze ranking data and give you a look at your position for different keywords as well as how many impressions and clicks you’re getting from search.

Here’s a video that walks you through how to set it up for your website.

Step 20. Understand how to measure SEO performance

Once you have your tools installed, it’s important to start measuring your SEO performance over time.

Specifically, you want to look at the following key performance indicators (KPIs):

  • Rankings – How many keywords and keyword phrases are you ranking for? How have your rankings changed for those keywords over the last few months?
  • Traffic – How many visitors are you getting from organic search?
  • Conversions – How many new leads are you getting from organic search traffic?

Here’s how to look at each of these.

Use Google Search Console to monitor keyword rankings

The best way to look at your keyword rankings is with Google Search Console.

If you log in to Google Search Console, click “Search Results” on the left. This will show you a report of all the keywords you rank for and your position over time for those keywords.

Don’t look at rankings over weeks – look over a period of months. Legal SEO work takes a while to kick in.

Use Google Analytics to monitor traffic and conversions

Traffic can be measured in Google Analytics.

If you open your Google Analytics account and go to Audience -> Overview, then scroll down and select the “Organic Search” option, you’ll be able to see all of the traffic that comes from search engines.

Again, make sure you measure this over a period of months – not days. The nature of good SEO is that it takes time for search engines to react to your efforts, especially in a competitive landscape or given keyword phrase like car accident lawyer, divorce lawyer, or dui lawyer.

As well as simply looking at the traffic, you’ll also want to look into a variety of factors:

  • What website pages visitors are landing on.
  • Visitor demographics.
  • What they’re doing on your site.
  • How frequently they’re revisiting.
  • Monitor site speed.
  • Check for any differences in behavior between mobile and desktop users.

CONCLUSION

There you have it – a 20 step action plan to dominate the search results! Whether you’re a car accident lawyer, divorce attorney, criminal defense lawyer, family law, or other type of attorney, lawyer SEO is the fastest way to break into competitive markets by securing top rankings for your law practice website.

Hopefully this gave you lots of valuable insight into the inner workings of search engine optimization and how they prioritize organic results for sites that give users what they’re looking for.

A solid SEO strategy is something that every digital marketing campaign should include. These strategies have worked for hundreds of other websites, so they’ll work for yours too! If you need help, working with an SEO company and SEO experts can help you build domain authority and site visibility faster through comprehensive digital marketing strategy. reach out to one of our law firm SEO experts to learn more.

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Voice Search Optimization: An Updated & Comprehensive Guide https://linkgraph.io/blog/tips-for-google-voice-search-seo/ https://linkgraph.io/blog/tips-for-google-voice-search-seo/#respond Tue, 08 Nov 2022 00:11:50 +0000 https://linkgraph.io/?p=3033 Updated 2022 Google Voice Search and voice search have changed the way people interact with search engines. Over the past few years, we’ve been able to fully […]

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Updated 2022

Google Voice Search and voice search have changed the way people interact with search engines. Over the past few years, we’ve been able to fully track how this form of search has evolved and how to best optimize websites in response to how it’s used, and how algorithms prioritize their search results. 

Voice searches now comprise 20% of online searches in the U.S., and the results of these searches often lead to sales. This unique technology gives website owners a new opportunity to optimize their sites to increase search engine traffic.

This article will help optimize for voice search through a better understanding of how people use this search format.

What Is Voice Engine Optimization?

Alexa smart speaker explaining what voice engine optimization is

Voice engine optimization or voice search optimization is the process of strategically refining your website to appear in search results for people who talk to a voice search engine. Many of the techniques for voice search optimization are similar to traditional SEO but altered to match the habits of voice searchers and voice search engine algorithms.

How Voice Search Has Change The Nature of Search

An Alexa sitting on her packaging and lit up

When it comes to how people use Google and other search engines, one thing is clear: voice search is here to stay. Over the past few years, more and more Americans and searchers abroad have been using voice search–and these numbers are projected to continue to increase. 

The adoption of voice search is in part thanks to household smart speakers, improved hands-free driving apps, and better voice-to-text recognition technology.

2022 Trends in Voice Search

According to Inside Radio, smart speaker ownership is growing faster than any other smart technology adoption. Here’s a peek at the stats:

  • Since 2018, the number of people that own a smart speaker has doubled.
  • As of 2021, 33% of the U.S. population possesses a smart speaker.
  • 49% of Americans that work from home own a smart speaker.
  • Amazon’s Alexa far outperforms Google Home and Apple speaker devices

How Many People Use Voice Search

We understand that the ownership of smart speakers and how many people use these devices and their smartphones to search the internet are two different things. But the numbers still add up to a huge increase in people searching via Voice Search. Here are the stats:

  • Almost 50% of all consumers use voice search to research their potential purchases.
  • Over $2 billion in purchases were made through voice in 2018. Experts at BusinessWire predict this figure to grow to $30 to $40 billion in 2024.
  • 11% of online shoppers used Amazon Alexa to make a purchase in 2020.

What Additional Factors Are Affecting Voice Search Trends?

In 2020, consumer habits fundamentally changed. The COVID-19 pandemic forced consumers to change how they shop. Many Americans, even those with limited technology proficiency, began ordering grocery delivery and expedited their trips to stores with pick-up-in-store options. Others began shopping more strategically by making lists to reduce their time spent in stores. 

All of these changes were streamlined by voice search technology.

Search Giants, like Google, are also investing heavily in voice search capabilities – leaning into natural language processing and deep learning algorithms (like BERT). As voice search responses improve, users are increasingly relying on the tool for hands-free searching while they drive, cook, and more.

Who Is and Who Isn’t Using Voice Search?

Latin woman lying by the pool with sunglasses and tanktop on while talking to her phone

Understanding who is using voice search is vital to correctly targeting your market audience. If you’re in a niche of primary adopters, you likely want to prioritize optimizing your content for voice search.

Like most trends in technology adoptions, not all demographics are using voice search at equal rates. Unlike many trends in tech innovation, the youngest demographic isn’t the most avid user of voice search. Who is? According to PWC:

  • 65% of 25 to 49-year-olds use voice search heavily
  • 59% of 18 to 24-year-olds use voice search heavily
  • 57% of people over 49 use voice search heavily

Does Voice Search Matter When it Comes to Driving Web Traffic?

Yes. Not optimizing for voice search is like running a race in sandals–you’d be putting yourself at a disadvantage. Why? Your competitors are likely optimizing for voice search. And if they’re not, you have a strong competitive edge.

How to Optimize for Voice Search

When it comes to optimizing for voice search (VSEO), many of the same principles of SEO apply and many do not. Knowing where and how to alter your approach are key to voice search SERP success.

1. Optimize for Bing in Addition to Google

the bing logo plus SEO in text

When it comes to traditional search, Google continues to be the reigning champion. However, when it comes to voice search most people using a home smart speaker use Alexa–and Alexa uses Bing. Ideally, you want to keep in mind that the majority of smartphone voice searches still rely on Google. However, optimizing for Bing can give you a more competitive edge in the realm of voice search.

How to Optimize for Bing

Like Google, Bing offers site owners a range of free analytics tools. Checking your numbers often and analyzing organic traffic patterns will provide you with priceless insight into how to rank on Bing.

Additionally, many SEO best practices still apply when tailoring your content for Bing. Bing tends to favor domains with longevity, sites that have more backlinks from social media, and user-friendly interfaces.

2. Target Conversational Keywords and Questions

Something unique happens when a person begins interacting with a voice search interface. They use conversational speech patterns, including the use of full questions and natural sentences instead of truncated search terms.

While traditional organic search queries usually consist of phrases such as “seattle thai food restaurants,” voice search queries are typically complete questions. For example, a voice searcher is more likely to search “What is the best Thai food restaurant in Seattle?”

How to Optimize for Questions and Conversational Phrasing

When selecting keywords, you will want to shift your approach slightly. To do so:

  1. Pay special attention to the Questions section of your SEO content assistant tool.Screenshot of question related to google's page experience from the SEO Asst tool
  2. Perform your own research using search engines. Google’s or Bing’s “People also ask” features can give you great insight into questions related to search queries people use to find your website.

An example of Google’s People Also Ask feature:

PAP screenshot from Google with the topic of jean sizing

An example of Bing’s People Also Ask feature:

Screenshot from Bing's PAP about jean sizing

3. Target long-tail keywords which mimic conversational speech patterns better than short-tail keywords. For example, targeting “shoes that support high arches” rather than “arch support shoes” will likely result in more voice search traffic.

To find long-tail keywords, use the Keyword Research tool’s list of autocomplete search query terms or suggested terms. Pick out search terms with 3+ words.

Keyword suggested by Keyword Researcher tool screenshoot

4. Create an FAQ to capture more questions. FAQs not only provide answers to what searchers want to know, but they also present a great opportunity for you to use schema and include more questions into your content. Remember to use FAQ schema when doing so.

3. Keep Answers to Common Search Queries Concise

screenshot comparing the answers to a questions about kittens and a question about hummingbirds

In addition to targeting questions and long-tail keywords, providing a direct, concise, clear answer to these queries makes your page more likely to appear in voice SERPs. On average, voice search’s audio responses are 29 words. This means you should try to keep your answers between 15 and 50 words.

4. Focus on Optimizing for the #1 SERP Position

A screenshot of a search for featured snippets

For traditional internet searches, landing in the top 10 search results is great because users can easily scroll down to explore their options. However, because voice search results are presented first by being read back by the virtual assistant, you ideally want your page to be the top result. 

75% of the time Google will pull its answer from one of the pages that appears in the top 3 SERP results.

While virtual assistants will only read the answer presented on the page in position one of the SERPs, some mobile users have the option to scroll, but rarely do they scroll beyond position 3.

How to Optimize for Position #1 in Voice Searches

The easiest way to be a contender for the top SERP position is to garner for a spot as the featured snippet. To do this, you want to employ schema markup.

Schema markup helps Google’s algorithms (and other search engines) better organize the type of content your page offers in its index. The information in the schema allows Google to use your content to populate rich snippets. Schema.org is a great resource for finding which markup is best for your content.

The SearchAtlas Schema Creator also allows users to create schema without the need to be familiar with markup languages.

Screenshot of the SearchAtlas Schema Creator tool

One of the biggest benefits of schema is that it allows you to target mobile users that often use voice searches to locate and discover businesses. Schema tells the search engine where your business is located, making it discoverable for local business searches’ since they’re geospatially relevant.

5. Be Sure Your Site Is Mobile-Friendly

If you have yet to optimize your site for mobile SEO, make it a priority. Not only does more search traffic come from mobile searches, but the majority of voice searches are performed on smartphones. 

When improving your site’s mobile-friendliness, focus on:

  • Page load speed (especially for content above the fold)
  • Responsive web design
  • Reducing layout shifts

To test your site’s mobile-friendliness, you can use PageSpeed Insights or the Lighthouse tool in your Inspection Element menu.

Screenshot of the Lighthouse tool

6. Turn Queries into Actions

Screenshot of Google Actions gif

Google Actions are user-developed applets that enhance the usability of Google Assistant.

They can be everything from using voice commands to send money to another person to full conversations with the Assistant.

While users can build Actions from scratch, it’s best to leverage items that already exist on your website so Actions simply make your content more engaging.

Instead of creating an Action just for the sake of it, try using the Actions on Google to find existing Actions and markup you’ve already initiated on your site and let Google do the rest. If you’ve got a how-to blog post, for example, and you use the how-to structured data, Google automatically uses that Action to read out step-by-step instructions.

This way, you get the extra engagement of Google Actions without having to take extra steps.

7. Create Content That Reflects Your Audience’s Journey & Search Intent

Understanding your audience is always vital to ranking. And this is no different when it comes to voice search SEO. Knowing your searchers’ intent and guiding your buyer persona through your sales funnel can help you be discovered by a wider range of voice searches.

Keep in mind that on average, most shoppers will read 2 to 3 articles while researching before they purchase a product or book a service.

Your website should have content to speak to all of these stages to capitalize on voice search:

right hand holding a yellow paper airplane with a chalkbaord in the background that explains the buyer journey

  • Awareness: The buyer realizes they have a problem that needs a solution, such as a broken phone screen. Ex: “Can I fix a broken iPhone screen?”
  • Interest: The buyer has identified their problem and is beginning to look for solutions. Ex: “Can I fix my iPhone screen myself?”
  • Evaluation: The buyer is looking to compare and contrast two or more options for a solution. Ex: “Is it better to take a broken iPhone to the Apple store or a different repair place?”
  • Purchase: Questions specifically regarding the buying process. Ex: “How much does it cost to repair an iPhone?”

There are three main types of content your website needs to help you capture buyers at all stages:

  • Informational content: Guides, how-tos, etc.
  • Navigational content: Store hours, directions, services, press releases, contact information, etc.
  • Transactional content: In-depth product guides, comparisons, product stories, videos, etc.

Making Google Voice Search Work for You

Voice Search SEO does take some extra work and requires a heavy focus on getting into snippets, but the good news is that if your site ranks for more voice searches, it’s going to rank for snippets and organic search, as well. Begin your keyword research with an eye for how people interact with their voice search devices and focus on concise answers.

The post Voice Search Optimization: An Updated & Comprehensive Guide appeared first on LinkGraph.

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The Most Effective Ways To Increase Your Website’s Domain Authority https://linkgraph.io/blog/how-to-increase-domain-authority/ https://linkgraph.io/blog/how-to-increase-domain-authority/#respond Thu, 12 May 2022 18:01:46 +0000 https://linkgraph.io/?p=13930 Why is Domain Authority Important in SEO? Domain Authority (DA) is a metric created by Moz that is used to measure the authority of a website. DA […]

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Why is Domain Authority Important in SEO?

Domain Authority (DA) is a metric created by Moz that is used to measure the authority of a website. DA is determined by looking at a variety of factors, including linking root domains, number of links, MozRank, MozTrust, and domain age. The higher the DA score, the more likely it is that the website will rank higher in search engine results pages (SERPs).

Domain Authority is important in SEO because it is a strong indicator of how well a website will rank in SERPs. A website with a high DA score is likely to rank higher than a website with a low DA score, all other things being equal. This is because a high DA score means that the website has a lot of authority and is likely to be trusted by search engines.

Domain Authority is also important because it relies on similar factors like backlinks and unique referring domains that Google uses to determine a website’s rank in SERPs. Domain authority is also determined by the number and quality of inbound links, the age of the website, and the number of pages on the website.

A website with a high DA score is likely to rank higher than a website with a low DA score, all other things being equal.

While Domain Authority is not the only factor that Google uses to determine a website’s rank in SERPs, it is a strong indicator of how well a website will rank. For this reason, it is important for SEOs to focus on increasing the DA score of their website.

What is Good Domain Authority Score?

Domain Authority is one of the most important metrics to measure when optimizing a website for SEO. A website with a high Domain Authority score will have a better chance of ranking higher in SERPs than a website with a low Domain Authority Score.

There are a number of factors that can influence a website’s Domain Authority score, including the quality and quantity of the website’s backlinks, the website’s content, and the website’s age.

How Long Does It Take to Increase Domain Authority?

The amount of time it takes to increase your Domain Authority depends on a number of factors, including the number and quality of the links you are able to acquire. Generally, if you focus on building high-quality links, you can see a noticeable increase in your DA score within 6-12 months.

Increasing domain authority is not an overnight process. It takes time and effort to improve a website’s ranking and domain authority. However, following the tips listed below will help to improve a website’s domain authority and help it to rank higher in search engine results pages.

Effective Ways to Increase DA

There are a number of ways to increase a website’s Domain Authority score, including increasing the number of backlinks, creating high-quality content, and increasing the website’s age. But more than anything else, the more high-quality backlinks a website has, the higher its domain authority will be.

Below are some SEO techniques that can be used to improve a website’s Domain Authority the right way, through high-quality, original content creation.

1. Create valuable content

Creating valuable content is key to any successful DA improvements. This means developing content that is not only interesting and engaging, but also provides real value to your audience. There are a number of ways to create valuable content, but some of the most popular methods include creating informative blog posts, creating helpful how-to guides, and developing interesting infographics.

When creating content, be sure to focus on your target audience and what they are interested in. Do some research to find out what topics are most popular within your industry, and then develop content that provides unique insights or perspectives on these topics that make other webmasters more likely to link to your content

Be sure to also make use of keyword research to help you identify the right keywords to target, and then use these keywords throughout your content to help it rank higher in search engine results pages.

2. Build high-quality links

When it comes to SEO, backlinks are still one of the most important ranking factors. But not all links are created equal, and not all backlinks will help you improve your PA or DA score.

Here are four types of links that you should focus on for your Domain Authority building:

  1. Backlinks from high-quality websites: These links are the gold standard for SEO. They come from websites with high authority and are seen as a vote of confidence for your website.
  2. Links from relevant websites: Links from websites that are relevant to your business are also valuable for SEO. They help to show Google that your website is a relevant source of information for your target audience.
  3. Backlinks from authoritative websites: Links from authoritative websites confer extra trust and authority to your website. This can help your site rank higher in search results.
  4. Links from high-traffic websites: Links from high-traffic websites can send a lot of traffic your way. This can help boost your website’s SEO ranking and increase your conversion rate.

3. Build relationships with other websites

When it comes to elevating your link profile, building relationships with other websites is key. Not only will this help you to get more links to your own website, but it will also help you to learn from your competitors.

You can use your content marketing efforts to start building relationships with other websites. Once you’ve created some great content, reach out to relevant websites and publications and let them know about it. If they like your content, they may be willing to link to it.

Another great way to build relationships with other websites is to start a blog exchange. This is where you and another website agree to swap blog posts on a regular basis. This will help you to get your content in front of a new audience, and it will also help you to build a relationship with the other website. You can also outsource this link building to a guest posting service.

Lastly, consider a link exchange, as long as you do so in a Google-compliant way. Backlink exchanges are whe you and another website agree to exchange links on a regular basis. This will help you to get more links to your website, and it will also help you to build a relationship with the other website.

By building relationships with other websites, you will be able to improve your SEO strategy and you will be able to improve your Domain Authority over time.

4. Participate in social media

There’s no doubt that social media has become an important partner of SEO experts. For businesses, social media provides a way to reach out to potential customers and create a connection with them.

But what’s the best way to use social media to improve your Domain Rating or Domain Authority?

  1. Share your old and new content on social media. The more people who see your content, the more likely they are to link back to it. Make sure the content is relevant to your customers and their interests or to other experts in your industry. You can promote any new content your create, including blog posts, infographics, images, and other types of content.
  2. Leverage social media to connect with other webmasters. Simply following or sharing content from another website owner can help you start building relationships and creating a link building strategy
  3. Use social media to drive traffic to your website. Make sure your social media profiles link to your website, and use effective calls to action on your social media posts to encourage your customers to visit your website. When the see all of the high quality content on your website, they will be more likely to see your ebsite as an authoritative site and reputable site and link to your piece of content in the future.

5. Remove Toxic Backlinks

One of the best ways to improve your website’s Domain Authority is to remove any toxic backlinks. A toxic backlink is a link from another website that is considered spammy or low quality.

Removing toxic backlinks can be difficult, but it is worth the effort. The first step is to identify the toxic backlinks. You can use a tool like Ahrefs, SearchAtlas, or different SEO tools to help you find the toxic backlinks.

Once you have identified the toxic backlinks, you need to contact the webmasters of the websites that are linking to you and ask them to remove the link. If they refuse to remove the link, you can use a tool like Disavow Links to disavow the link.

Removing toxic backlinks is an important step in improving your website’s search engine ranking. It can be difficult, but it is worth the effort.

It’s important to monitor your backlink profile and make sure you only get links from high-quality websites. Use tools like MozBar and Ahrefs to track your backlinks and see where your links are coming from.

6. Promote your content with Digital PR

There are a number of other methods of promotion you can use to get links, including email outreach and paid advertising.

But digital PR is one of the most effective and efficient ways to promote your content to earn backlinks from high authority websites. It entails reaching out to journalists and other influencers online to get them to share your content.

There are a few things you can do to make sure your content gets the most exposure:

  1. Research the right journalists and publications to target. Not all journalists are created equal. You need to do your research to find the right journalists and publications to target. Start by finding the journalists who write about the topic of your content. You can do this by using a tool like BuzzSumo. Then, look for journalists who have a large following on social media. This will help you ensure that your content will get seen by a large audience.
  2. Craft a catchy headline. Your headline is the first thing that journalists will see when they’re scrolling through their social media feeds. It’s important to craft a catchy headline that will make them want to click through and read your content.
  3. Write a strong introduction. The introduction is also very important. It’s the first thing that journalists will read, so you need to make sure it’s captivating and interesting.
  4. Send them a personalized email. The best way to get journalists to share your content is to send them a personalized email. Make sure you research the journalist you’re targeting and personalize the email accordingly.
  5. Monitor your results. Digital PR is a long-term marketing strategy, so it’s important to monitor your results. Make sure you track the number of shares your content or guest posts receive and the amount of referral or organic traffic it generates. This will help you determine whether or not digital PR is working for you as a link building tactic.

Final Thoughts on How to Increase Domain Authority

Remember that Domain Authority is one of the most important aspects of search engine optimization. It is a measure of how well a website ranks in search engines. And any effort to increase domain authority through content marketing will mean positive SEO results.

Follow. the techniques above and make them a part of your link building strategy and you can help to increase domain authority and improve your website’s ranking in search engines.

The post The Most Effective Ways To Increase Your Website’s Domain Authority appeared first on LinkGraph.

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On-Page Content 101 https://linkgraph.io/blog/on-page-content-101/ https://linkgraph.io/blog/on-page-content-101/#comments Mon, 04 Apr 2022 15:26:33 +0000 https://linkgraph.io/?p=2659 How Google Determines Relevancy Search engines want to prioritize the most relevant content possible for different searches and search terms (also known as keywords). One of the […]

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How Google Determines Relevancy

Search engines want to prioritize the most relevant content possible for different searches and search terms (also known as keywords). One of the ways search engines are able to tell that content on a webpage is relevant for a particular search term, is that the term appears in the body of the content on the page. You’ll hear the terms on-page content and on-site content used in the SEO world. On-page content refers more to the content that is visible on the page itself, while on-site content can sometimes be used more broadly to include content found in meta data or schema markup.

Onsite content refers to both VISIBLE (page copy) and INVISIBLE (meta data) content.

Keywords

If you were interested in finding an italian restaurant in NYC – you might type Italian Restaurant NYC into the search bar. Google could quickly find pages that included all of those terms, but there’s going to be hundreds of pages that include the words “italian”, “restaurant”, and “NYC” (or variations on NYC – such as “new york” and “manhattan”).

To surface the most relevant results (as opposed to just a diner in NYC which has an italian sub on the menu), Google looks for additional “focus” keywords in the copy of the page to help determine that the ENTIRE page is relevant to the search term, as opposed to just one line on the page.

Focus Keywords

If I searched Italian Restaurant NYC Google would expect a relevant page to have some terms on it like pasta and parmesan, maybe burrata.

The more terms included in the copy of a page that google knows are relevant to italian restaurants, the more likely google is to prioritize that result in the search results compared to a page that has less focus keywords.

Search engines also take into account the frequency of certain terms on a page. For example, how often a terms like entree or course are used can help a search engine understand if a page with the term italian is more relevant to a restaurant search as opposed to a sandwich search.

Focus keywords help search engines determine how relevant a page is to the term that was searched.

Selecting Keywords

When optimizing content for search engines, you cannot be all things to all people. A page is unlikely to rank for both fancy birdhouses and italian restaurant in NYC, those two terms will have almost no overlapping focus keywords.

This means that sites need to optimize content for the types of users (and searches) which are most likely to bring converting traffic to a website.

Targeting Volume

For a site where the profit model functions off of advertising and/or readership, it makes sense to prioritize keywords sheerly based on their volume. The more eyeballs on a site, the more likely content is to be shared, and the more advertisements will get viewed.

However, for most sites, search intent should be taken into account before volume.

Targeting Conversions

For sites where the profit model functions off of purchase, or participation, we want to look at the exact search terms being used. When it comes to converting traffic, the intent behind keywords becomes much more important.

Targeting Search Intent

Take for example two searches one is used jeep dealers south detroit and the other is used blue cars. The first term indicates a much clearer intent to purchase, as the person already knows the type of vehicle they’re looking for, and is looking for a physical location where they could see the vehicles.

For your own site, if the goal is to attract more converting users to the site, you want to target keywords that suggest an intent to engage, purchase, donate, or otherwise complete a goal relevant to your business.

If you sell umbrellas a converting user is a user who will buy an umbrella. The term rain might be related to umbrellas, and have a huge search volume, but it’s unlikely to be the term that a user looking to purchase an umbrella would use for a search take a look at the keywords below.

Rain has the highest search volume, but not the highest CPC. The other keywords also have much clearer search intent (looking for umbrellas, specific types of umbrellas). Given the organic ranking difficulty of the keyword, the search volume, the CPC, and the search intent — custom umbrella would be the best term to target. However, if you don’t offer custom printed umbrellas, the term would not be converting for your site because the searcher would not be able to find the product they were looking for.

You should only target keywords that are likely to bring in CONVERTING traffic to your site.

Improving Content

To have your site receive more converting traffic, we want to target terms that are likely to convert for the site, and then create content that Google (and other search engines) will recognize as hyper relevant for those searches.

Four-Step Process

  • Keyword Research
  • Ranking Analysis
  • Content Optimization
  • Adding Links
Keyword Research

What terms would you want to rank for, what types of keywords or search terms would a user looking for your business put into the search bar? Selection of these keywords is done through Keyword Research*, where you look at where competitor sites are getting traffic as well as how currently converting traffic is coming into your domain.

Ranking Analysis

Look at the keyword metrics to determine how difficult it will be for your site to rank for each of the identified terms. More difficult terms (terms with more competition) will have to have longer content, with more focus keywords included, for your site to be able to make it onto the first page of search results.

*For a primer on evaluating keywords please see our previous piece Keywords 101.

 

Content Optimization

There are two parts to content optimization:

The first part is creating useful, meaningful, content that provides value to your desired audience. To get some ideas for what content might be useful to your audience, you can take a look at trending topics, frequently asked questions, and search volume for different topics or terms.

The second part is optimizing that content for search engines so that Google, Bing, and others know exactly what the content on the page is about and when to surface your content as a search result.

Adding Links

Search engines use internal links to help understand the subject matter and importance of pages within your site. The pages with the most internal links are viewed as the most important pages on your site.

Importance: Pages linked in your main navigation are linked to from every page on your site, and should be the ones you and your users consider most important.

Subject Matter: The anchor text that you use for internal links send signals to search engines telling them the subject matter or topic of the page. If you call a page “SEO Services” in your main navigation, and that text links users to a page – both the users and search engines expect that page to be about “SEO Services.”

Search engines use external links, in part, to evaluate the quality of the content you’re providing users. If you’re writing a piece on a topic, and link to sites that a search engine already knows are authoritative on the same topic, it demonstrates that you are providing good resources. This increases a search engine’s trust in the relevancy of your content.

Recap

To optimize content we need to:

  • Establish which searches you want your content to appear for – these are your target keywords you should pick 1-3 target keywords.
  • Establish the focus keywords that you need on your page to rank for each of those target keywords.
  • Incorporate those focus keywords into your page copy in a way that does not detract from the value of your original content.

Italian Restaurant Example

Let’s pretend we own an Italian restaurant in NYC and we want to capture people who are looking to select an Italian Restaurant in NYC.

Keyword Research

1. Identify Target Keywords Remember: Target Keywords should be the 1-2 search terms that get typed into Google where you REALLY want to be the result a user clicks on.

We’ll start by popping a few potential search terms into a keyword explorer (Ahrefs in this case):

The first thing to note is that we did pretty well with our initial keyword guesses! We can see we managed to include the parent topic. The parent topic is the keyword related to our search that gets the most monthly search volume.

Sometimes how YOU think about searching for something and how AVERAGE users think about searching for something will be different.

Pro-tip: Always keep an eye on the parent topic to see if there are additional keywords you could explore.

We’ll pick italian restaurants nyc because out of this set of keywords it has:

  1. High volume (4,300 monthly searches)
  2. Low keyword difficulty (8)
  3. Reasonably high CPC ($6)

 

Target Keyword Selected: italian restaurants nyc

How do we know which additional terms (focus keywords) need to be on the page for Google to recognize your content is hyper relevant for a search (target keyword)? We run that search ourselves, and then look at the top 10 results, and the content/terms on each of those pages.*

*For this example, we’re going to use LinkGraph’s FREE Content Optimizer tool.

Ranking Analysis

Once we’ve identified our target keywords, the search terms we want our page to rank for, we’ll want to analyze the pages currently ranking in the top 20 search positions for those terms.

This will help us identify the topics and focus keywords that need to be on our page if we want it to rank. Incorporating focus keywords will improve the relevancy of our page for the target keyword and, as a result, our page’s search engine ranking position (SERP).

2. Establish a List of Focus Keywordsfocus keywords are the terms that support our target keywords and help search engines recognize our page is hyper-relevant for related searches

Below you’ll find the current copy on our itallian restaurant’s home page. If we compare this copy to the copy on the first twenty search results for italian restaurants NYC we can see that our content currently only shares a few keywords with those pages (focus keywords are highlighted below in yellow).

Since the 19th century, townfolk in Vatican City used to take a portion of all food brought in from local harvests to give to the needy. In 1935, the Aribetta family opened a restaurant for dinner in the nearby neighborhood, La Decima (The Tithe) in honor of the tradition and the people who continued to maintain it. Many iterations of their family later, in 2015, the descendants of the original founders of La Decima opened a satellite location in Brooklyn. Both restaurants adhere to two principals: stay close to the roots of their traditional recipes but with refreshed presentations, and local sourcing that gives back to the community.

TIME OUT NEW YORK

La Decima offers dishes like spaghetti cacio e pepe, roasted lamb and Italian ham served with hot, crispy mozzarella, accompanied by a list of all Italian wines.

NEW YORK OBSERVER

Even the pasta, which is hard to present in a way that gives proper credit to the effort needed to produce it, comes across well. The cacio e pepe, in which pecorino and Parmesan bind themselves to thick al dente strands of homemade spaghetti, is phenomenal.

NEW YORK TIMES

Where do you eat in Rome? Is it right that you love the Trastevere district and especially the La Decima restaurant, which has now opened a U.S. branch in the Park Slope section of Brooklyn, in New York City

FODOR’S – ONLINE

Following the lead of the many lauded NYC chefs who have opened second and third restaurants here, one of Rome’s most celebrated restaurants, La Decima, just opened its first stateside outpost not in Manhattan, but in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Park Slope.

Our menus feature homemade pastas, homemade desserts, the finest Italian imported cheeses and olive oils, and farm-to-table ingredients.

*No outside bottles of wine are permitted*

3. Narrow Down to Missing Focus Keywords

Review the focus keywords already incorporated.
Out of 92 potential focus keywords, our content only uses 6, and is not going to be recognized as very relevant for our target term.

  • New York City
  • Olive oils
  • Travel guide
  • Al dente
  • Park Slope
  • Time Out New York
4. Categorize the Missing Focus Keywords

Here are some additional terms (focus keywords) shared by a number of the pages ranking in the top 10 positions in google, that we can consider incorporating into our content:

  • Del postos
  • East villages
  • Italian restaurant
  • Via carota
  • Il bucos
  • Meatpacking district
  • Rida sodi
  • Cheap eats
  • Village restaurants
  • Midtown west
  • Romantic restaurants
  • Central park
  • Brick oven
  • Traditional italian
  • Date night
  • Italian spot
  • Tasting menus
  • City guides
  • Special occasion
  • Wine bar
  • Fine dining
  • Cocktail bar
  • Italian food
  • Times square
  • Little italy
  • Locanda Verde
  • Danny Meyers
  • Restaurants in New York

Not all of these terms will make sense for our page, but we want to incorporate as many focus keywords as possible that will fit naturally into our page. Separate the list into two categories off topic and on topic.

You may find that you see competitor brands as suggested focus terms, or terms which are not relevant for your product or service offerings. These terms will likely go into your “will not incorporate” category, unless you add them in with content or features like product comparison tables.

Content Optimization

5. Incorporate Additional Focus Keywords

Below you’ll see the same copy from before, but this time with additional focus keywords incorporated into the copy.This content is now better optimized for search.

You can see the additional focus keywords we added in BLUE.

Since the 19th century, townfolk in Vatican City used to take a portion of all food brought in from local harvests to give to the needy. In 1935, the Aribetta family opened an Italian restaurant for dinner in the nearby neighborhood, La Decima (The Tithe) in honor of the tradition and the people who continued to maintain it. Many iterations of their family later, in 2015, the descendants of the original founders of La Decima opened a satellite location in Brooklyn. Both restaurants adhere to two principals: stay close to the roots of their traditional italian recipes but with refreshed presentations, and local sourcing that gives back to the community, which have made it one of the best Italian Restaurants in New York City.

But where the original La Decima might be a bit far for your special occasion night out in NYC, if you’re looking for cozy romantic restaurants to offset the rush of a day out sightseeing in Central Park or Times Square, consider skipping Little Italy and heading out to the quieter Park Slope for authentic traditional italianwithout the rush.

See what reviewers have to say about our cozy brick oven style italian food and wine bar that make La Decima the perfect italian spot for date night.

TIME OUT NEW YORK

La Decima offers dishes like spaghetti cacio e pepe, roasted lamb and Italian ham served with hot, crispy mozzarella, accompanied by a list of all Italian wines.

NEW YORK OBSERVER

Even the pasta, which is hard to present in a way that gives proper credit to the effort needed to produce it, comes across well. The cacio e pepe, in which pecorino and Parmesan bind themselves to thick al dente strands of homemade spaghetti, is phenomenal.

NEW YORK TIMES

Where do you eat in Rome? Is it right that you love the Trastevere district and especially the La Decima restaurant, which has now opened a U.S. branch in the Park Slope section of Brooklyn, in New York City

FODOR’S – ONLINE TRAVEL GUIDE

Following the lead of the many lauded NYC chefs who have opened second and third restaurants here, one of Rome’s most celebrated restaurants, La Decima, just opened its first stateside outpost not in Manhattan, but in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Park Slope.

Our menus feature homemade pastas all perfectly al dente, homemade desserts, the finest Italian imported cheeses and olive oils, and farm-to-table ingredients. Our rotating tasting menus and full cocktail bar make La Decima the perfect place whether you’re looking for drinks, tapas, or fine dining restaurants in New York. Our brick oven pizzas are great for lunch, and you’ll be glad you got out of the east villages / west villages to sate your olive oil cravings!

Curious about our full date night recommendations New York City? Check out our neighborhood travel guide, and let us know ahead of time if you’re celebrating a special occasion.

*No outside bottles of wine are permitted* Please check out the selection from our wine bar instead.

6. Check Content Ranking Power

Once you’ve added a number of additional focus keywords to your content, run it through a content tool again and see if your copy has a higher score, and is now capable of ranking on the first page of the search results.

We have now incorporated 26 focus keywords, and this content is capable of ranking in the top 10 google search results.

Terms incorporated:

  • East villages
  • Romantic restaurants
  • Central park
  • Brick oven
  • Traditional italian
  • Date night
  • Italian spot
  • Tasting menus
  • City guides
  • Special occasion
  • Wine bar
  • Fine dining
  • Cocktail bar
  • Italian food
  • Times square
  • Little italy
  • Restaurants in New York
  • New York City
  • Olive oils
  • Travel guide
  • Al dente
  • Park Slope
  • Time Out New York
7. Add More Focus Keywords if Needed

Sometimes simple edits are not enough to incorporate relevant focus terms. In some cases, missing a large swath of focus terms is an indication that you’re missing a block of content users would find helpful.

In our Italian restaurant example, if we wanted to incorporate more terms and get ourselves into the top 3 results in Google, we would need to add a section that allows us to mention more locations in Manhattan. A great way to do this would be to add a section about how to travel to our restaurant from different areas of the city.

To rank on the first page of the search results, your page copy needs to include your target keyword AND supporting focus keywords.

Adding Links

8. Add Links

Once your content has been optimized for your target keyword(s) you should look for opportunities to insert links into your copy. You want to link internally to other pages using relevant anchor text, and externally to resources that will help your users.

For our Italian restaurant example, we might link internally to our menus and externally to our Yelp reviews or Open Table booking service.

 

Adding Links

There are two types of links that you’ll want to consider adding:

  • Internal Links: these are links that will bring a user from one page on your site, to a different page which is also on your site.
  • Outbound links: these are links that will bring a user from your site to another, different, site.

Internal Linking

We add internal links to:

  • Help users access additional content
  • Increase conversions
  • Help search engines crawl and index the site
  • Help distribute SEO value throughout the site
Help Users Access Additional Content

When adding links to a page, the first thing you’ll want to do is think of other RELEVANT content you’ve created that a user might want to access. For example, if we had a page on our italian restaurant’s website talking about how we cater events, it would make sense to link to our catering menu. Basically, you want to make it easy for a user to find all relevant content and information on your site.

Increasing Conversions

Review each page for conversion opportunities. Link to sign up forms, scheduling forms, prompt users to call you, email you, or make a purchase. Calls to Action (CTAs) should be placed wherever a user might find them helpful. For example on our catering page, it would make sense to add a CTA linking the user to a page where they could request a quote or place an order.

Helping Search Engines Index Your Site

Internal links also help search engines discover content on your site, and understand how that content is connected. Ideally all pages would be linked from the main navigation, and corresponding sub-navigations. Search engines discover site content in part by using site crawlers to map your site.

A site crawler is a program (also known as a bot) that lands on your site and then clicks into every link on the page they landed on indexing each page they find. For each now page it discovers, the crawler will repeat the same process – and clicking every link and indexing any new pages it finds. Pages linked from the main navigation, and pages which are linked to frequently are easy for crawlers to discover and index. Pages which are never linked to, may not get indexed at all.

Distributing Search Equity

Lastly, internal links help distribute search equity through your site. If a search engine ranks one page on your site very highly, any other (relevant) pages you link to will also see a boost in the search results. This is partially because if Google thinks a page is relevant to users, it assumes that the additional content you link to will also be relevant to the user.

Outbound Linking

You may have heard a theory that linking out to other sites will cause you to lose search equity. While you don’t want to go crazy with links, being associated with other quality sites will increase your search equity.

It’s like the phrase “you’re known by the company you keep” – you are judged by the people you associate with. In search this is true, good quality sites link out to high-quality resources.

It’s the difference between someone suggesting a medical procedure and giving you the results of relevant clinical trials, and someone suggesting a medical procedure and linking to their friend’s instagram page who swears it works. The better the sources you reference, the more trust search engines will have in your content.

Quality Sites Reference Quality Resources

Good quality sites reference high quality content

Search engines view this as a trust signal for two reasons, it shows that you:

    1. Know enough about the topic or area to recognize quality content.
    2. Are focused on helping the user by surfacing other quality content.

Remember! Quality content is content that provides value to a user – it can be as simple as well curated comedy clips, or as complex as the results of cutting edge clinical trials. It all depends on what will best serve the user.

Actionable Take-Aways

Get more words ON the page

You need room for copy on your pages. You’ll need enough room to include your target keyword, and enough focus keywords to get your page ranking. The more competitive the keyword (aka the higher the keyword difficulty) the more focus keywords you will need to incorporate.

Pro tips:
  • You should try to include your target keyword(s) in the first paragraph of content on your page.
  • Google prioritizes in-depth content, so if you want a page to rank well consider hitting the 2,000-4,000 word mark, or creating a series of subpages that support the main content or topic.
  • User engagement counts for more than you think, so add media, links, and CTAs that will cause users to take action (click, watch, share, buy, etc).
  • More weight is given to the content in your headers and titles than the rest of your page copy, so give them more consideration (we’ll cover more of this in our on-site technicals 101 piece)
  • If you’re posting video, consider including a transcript on the page (even if it’s in an accordion/collapsible tile).

Remember: search engines can extract meaning from the use of synonyms, the context in which the keyword appears, and the frequency with which specific word combinations are mentioned.

Link Between Pages on Your Site

Don’t go crazy, but help the user access the information they’re looking for as easily as possible.

Pro tip:
  • Remember, the only way that crawlers will find a page on your site, is if another page links to it!

Add Calls to Action (CTAs)

Calls to Action help users engage more effectively with your business and site. Prompt them to sign up, call now, email you, contact you, learn more, get started, schedule an appointment, or buy now!

Pro tips:
  • It’s good to have a CTA in your main nav, typically as a button on the right-hand side.
  • Placing a CTA at the bottom of your page gives users a clear next step when they’ve scrolled to the bottom of the page content.
  • Placing a CTA at the top of a page will help a user discover the action they should take, and gives them something to return to once they’ve read your content.
  • If you are a more sophisticated site, and have heatmap/tracking activated, putting a CTA right where you start to see a high percentage of drop-offs will help keep that audience engaged.

Keep the Content Valuable

Content on your site should be:

  • User-friendly
  • Unique
  • Authoritative and Trustworthy
  • Aligned with the search intent of your users
  • Updated regularly!
Pro tip:
  • Trends, information, and design standards change over time. You will need to review and update your content regularly to account for these changes and ensure your content continues to be valuable to your users.

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