Onsite seo from the wizard of moz
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Transcript of Onsite seo from the wizard of moz
Rand Fishkin, Wizard of Moz | @randfish | [email protected]
SEO in a Two Algorithm World
bit.ly/twoalgoGet the presentation:
Remember When…
We Had One Job
Perfectly Optimized Pages
The Search Quality Teams Determined What to Include in the Ranking System
They decided links > content
By 2007, Link Spam Was Ubiquitous
This paper/presentation from Yahoo’s spam team in 2007 predicted a lot of what Google would launch in Penguin Oct, 2012 (including machine learning)
Even in 2012, It Felt Like Google Was Making Liars Out of the White Hat SEO World
Via Wil Reynolds
Google’s Last 3 Years of Advancements Erased a Decade of Old School SEO Practices
They Finally Launched Effective Algorithms to Fight Manipulative Links & Content
Via Google
And They Leveraged Fear + Uncertainty of Penalization to Keep Sites Inline
Via Moz Q+A
Google Figured Out Intent
Rand probably doesn’t just want webpages filled with the word
“beef”
They Looked at Language, not Just Keywords
Oh… I totally know this one!
They Predicted When We Want Diverse Results
He probably doesn’t just want a
bunch of lists.
They Figured Out When We Wanted Freshness
Old pages on this topic probably aren’t relevant
anymore
Their Segmentation of Navigational from Informational Queries Closed Many Loopholes
Google Learned to ID Entities of Knowledge
Brands Became a Form of Entities
These Advancements Brought Google (mostly) Back in Line w/ Its Public Statements
Via Google
During These Advances, Google’s Search Quality Team Underwent a Revolution
Early On, Google Rejected Machine Learning in the Organic Ranking Algo
Via Datawocky, 2008
Amit Singhal Shared Norvig’s Concerns About ML
Via Quora
In 2012, Google Published a Paper About How they Use ML to Predict Ad CTRs:
Via Google
Susan Wojcicki, Google SVP, at All Things Digital, 2012
“Our SmartASS system is a machine learning system. It learns whether our users are interested in that ad, and whether users are going to click on them.”
By 2013, It Was Something Google’s Search Folks Talked About Publicly
Via SELand
As ML Takes Over More of Google’s Algo, the Underpinnings of the Rankings Change
Via Colossal
Google is Public About How They Use ML in Image Recognition & Classification
Potential ID Factors(e.g. color, shapes, gradients,
perspective, interlacing, alt tags, surrounding text, etc)
Training Data(i.e. human-labeled images)
Learning Process
Best Match Algo
Google is Public About How They Use ML in Image Recognition & Classification
Via Jeff Dean’s Slides on Deep Learning; a Must Read for SEOs
Machine Learning in Search Could Work Like This:
Potential Ranking Factors
(e.g. PageRank, TF*IDF,Topic Modeling, QDF, Clicks,
Entity Association, etc.)
Training Data(i.e. good & bad search results)
Learning Process
Best Fit Algo
Training Data(e.g. good search results)
This is a good SERP – searchers rarely bounce, rarely short-click, and rarely need to enter other queries or go to page 2.
Training Data(e.g. bad search results!)
This is a bad SERP – searchers bounce often, click other results, rarely long-click, and try other queries. They’re definitely not happy.
The Machines Learn to Emulate the Good Results & Try to Fix or Tweak the Bad Results
Potential Ranking Factors
(e.g. PageRank, TF*IDF,Topic Modeling, QDF, Clicks,
Entity Association, etc.)
Training Data(i.e. good & bad search results)
Learning Process
Best Fit Algo
Deep Learning is Even More Advanced:
Dean says by using deep learning, they don’t have to tell the system what a cat is, the machines learn, unsupervised, for themselves…
We’re Talking About Algorithms that Build Algorithms(without human intervention)
Googlers Don’t Feed in Ranking Factors… The Machines Determine Those Themselves.
Potential Ranking Factors
(e.g. PageRank, TF*IDF,Topic Modeling, QDF, Clicks,
Entity Association, etc.)
Training Data(i.e. good search results)
Learning Process
Best Fit Algo
No wonder these guys are stressed about Google unleashing the Terminators
Via CNET & Washington Post
What Does Deep Learning Mean for SEO?
Googlers Won’t Know Why Something Ranks or Whether a Variable’s in the Algo
He means other Googlers.I’m Jeff Dean. I’ll know.
The Query Success Metrics Will Be All That Matters to the Machines
Long to Short Click Ratio Relative CTR vs. Other Results
Rate of Searchers Conducting Additional, Related Searches
Metrics of User Engagement on the Page
Metrics of User Engagement Across the Domain
Sharing/Amplifcation Rate vs. Other Results
The Query Success Metrics Will Be All That Matters to the Machines
Long to Short Click Ratio Relative CTR vs. Other Results
Rate of Searchers Conducting Additional, Related Searches
Metrics of User Engagement on the Page
Metrics of User Engagement Across the Domain
Sharing/Amplifcation Rate vs. Other Results
If lots of results on a SERP do these well, and higher results outperform lower results, our deep learning algo will consider it a success.
We’ll Be Optimizing Lessfor Ranking Inputs
Unique Linking Domains
Keywords in Title
Anchor Text
Content Uniqueness
Page Load Speed
And Optimizing More for Searcher Outputs
High CTR for this position?
Good engagement?
High amplification rate?
Low bounce rate?
Strong pages/visit afterlanding on this URL?These are likely to be the criteria of
on-site SEO’s future… People return to the siteafter an initial search visit
OK… Maybe in the future. But, do those kinds of metrics really affect SEO today?
Remember Our Queries & Clicks Test from 2014?
Via Rand’s Blog
Since then, it’s been much harder to move the needle with raw queries and clicks…
Case closed! Google says they don’t use clicks in the rankings.Via Linkarati’s Coverage of SMX Advanced
But, what if we tried long clicks vs.
short clicks?
Note SeriousEats, ranking #4 here
11:39am on June 21st,I sent this tweet:
40 Minutes & ~400 Interactions Later
Moved up 2 positions after 2+ weeks of the top 5 staying static.
70 Minutes & ~500 Interactions Total
Moved up to #1.
Stayed ~12 hours, when it fell to #13+ for ~8 hours, then
back to #4.
Google? You messing with us?
Via Google Trends, we can see the relative impact of the test on query volume
~5-10X normal volume over 3-4 hours
BTW – This is hard to replicate. 600+ real searchers using a variety of devices, browsers, accounts, geos, etc. will not look the same to Google as a Fiverr buy, a clickfarm, or a bot. And note how G penalized the page after the test… They might not put it back if they thought the site itself was to blame for the click manipulation.
The Future:Optimizing for Two
Algorithms
The Best SEOs Have Always
Optimized to Where Google’s Going
Today, I Think We Know,Better Than Ever, Where That Is
Welcome to your new home, the User/Usage Signals + ML Model Cabin
We Must Choose How to Balance Our Work…
Hammering on the Fading Signals of Old…
Or Embracing Those We Can See On the Rise
Classic On-Site SEO(ranking inputs)
New On-Site SEO(searcher outputs)
Keyword Targeting Relative CTR
Short vs. Long-Click
Content Gap Fulfillment
Amplification & Loyalty
Task Completion Success
Quality & Uniqueness
Crawl/Bot Friendly
Snippet Optimization
UX / Multi-Device
5 New(ish) Elements of Modern SEO
Punching Above Your Ranking’s Average CTR#1
Optimizing the Title, Meta Description, & URLa Little for KWs, but a Lot for Clicks
If you rank #3, but have a higher-than-average CTR for that position, you might
get moved up.
Via Philip Petrescu on Moz
Every Element Counts Does the title match what
searchers want?Does the URL seem
compelling?
Do searchers recognize & want to click your
domain?
Is your result fresh? Do searchers want a newer
result?
Does the description create curiosity & entice
a click?
Do you get the brand dropdown?
Given Google Often Tests New Results Briefly on Page One…
It May Be Worth Repeated Publication on a Topic to Earn that High CTR
Shoot! My post only made it to #15… Perhaps I’ll try again in a few months.
Driving Up CTR Through Branding Or Branded Searches May Give An Extra Boost
#1 Ad Spender
#2 Ad Spender
#4 Ad Spender
#3 Ad Spender
#5 Ad Spender
With Google Trends’ new, more accurate, more customizable ranges, you can actually watch the effects of events and ads on search query volume
Fitbit has been running ads on Sunday NFL games that clearly show
in the search trends data.
Beating Out Your Fellow SERP Residents on Engagement#2
Together, Pogo-Sticking & Long Clicks Might Determine a Lot of Where You Rank (and for how
long)
Via Bill Slawski on Moz
What Influences Them?
Speed, Speed, and More Speed
Delivers the Best UX on Every Browser
Compels Visitors to Go Deeper Into Your Site
Avoids Features that Annoy or Dissuade Visitors
Content that Fulfills the Searcher’s Conscious & Unconscious Needs
An SEO’s Checklist for Better Engagement:
Via NY Times
e.g. this interactive graph that asks visitors to draw
their best guess likely gets remarkable engagement
e.g. Poor Norbert does a terrible job at SEO, but the simplicity compels visitors to go deeper and to return time and again
Via VoilaNorbert
e.g. Nomadlist’s superb, filterable database of
cities and community for remote workers.
Via Nomadlist
Filling Gaps in Your Visitors’ Knowledge#3
Google’s looking for content signals that a
page will fulfill ALL of a searcher’s needs.
I think I know a few ways to figure that out.
ML models may note that the presence of certain
words, phrases, & topics predict more successful
searches
e.g. a page about New York that doesn’t mention Brooklyn or Long Island may not be very comprehensive
If Your Content Doesn’t Fill the Gaps in Searcher’s Needs…
e.g. for this query, Google might seek content that includes topics
like “text classification,” “tokenization,” “parsing,” and
“question answering”
Those Rankings Go to Pages/Sites That Do.
Moz’s Data Science Team is Working on Something to
Help With This
The (alpha) tool extracts likely focal topics from a given page, which can then be
compared vs. an engines top 10 results
In the meantime, check out
Alchemy APIOr MonkeyLearn
Earning More Shares, Links, & Loyalty per Visit#4
Pages that get lots of social activity & engagement, but few links, seem to overperform…
Google says they don’t use social signals directly, but examples like these make SEOs suspicious
Even for insanely competitive keywords, we see this type of behavior when a URL gets authentically “hot” in the social world.
Data from Buzzsumo & Moz show that very few articles earn shares AND that links & shares have almost no correlation.
Via Buzzsumo & Moz
I suspect Google doesn’t use raw social shares as a ranking input, because we share a lot of content
with which we don’t engage:
Via Chartbeat
Google Could Be Using a Lot of Other Metrics/Sources to Get Data That Mimics Social Shares:
Clickstream (from Chrome/Android)
Engagement (from Chrome/Android)
Branded Queries (from Search)
Navigational Queries (from Search)
Rate of Link Growth (from Crawl)
But I Don’t Care if It’s Correlation or Causation;I Want to Rank Like These Guys!
BTW – Google Almost Certainly Classifies SERPs Differently & Optimizes to Different Goals
These URLs have loads of shares & may have high loyalty, but for medical queries, Google has different priorities
But If the Competition Naturally EarnsThem Faster, You’re Outta Luck
4 new shares/day
2 new shares/day
3 new shares/day
10 new shares/day
And Google Probably Wants to See Shares that Result in Loyalty & Returning Visits
New KPI #1: Shares & Links Per 1,000 Visits
Unique Visits
÷
Shares + Links
Via Moz’s 1Metric
New KPI #2: Return Visitor Ratio Over Time
Total Visitor Sessions
÷
# of Returning Visitors
Knowing What Makes Our Audience (and their influencers) Share is Essential
From an analysis of the 10,000 pieces of content receiving the most social shares on the web by Buzzsumo.
Knowing What Makes them Return (or prevents them from doing so) Is, Too.
We Don’t Need “Better” Content… We Need “10X” Content.
Via Whiteboard Friday
Wrong Question:“How do we make something as
good as this?”
Right Question:“How do we make something 10X
better than any of these?”
10X Content is the Future, Because It’s the Only Way to Stand Out from the Increasingly-Noisy Crowd
http://www.simplereach.com/blog/facebook-continues-to-be-the-biggest-driver-of-social-traffic/
The top 10% of content gets all the social shares
and traffic.
Old School On-Site Old School Off-SiteKeyword Targeting Link Diversity
Anchor Text
Brand Mentions
3rd Party Reviews
Reputation Management
Quality & Uniqueness
Crawl/Bot Friendly
Snippet Optimization
UX / Multi-Device
None of our old school tactics will get this done.
Fulfilling the Searcher’s Task (not just their query)#5
Broad search Narrower search
Even narrower search
Website visit
Website visit Brand search
Social validation Highly-specific search
Type-in/direct visit Completion of Task
Google Wants to Get Searchers Accomplishing Their Tasks Faster
Broad search
All the sites (or answers) you probably would have visited/sought along that path
Completion of Task
This is Their Ultimate Goal:
If Google sees that many people
who perform these types of queries:
Eventually end their queries on the topic after visiting Ramen
Rater…
The Ramen Rater
They might use the clickstream data to help
rank that site higher, even if it doesn’t have
traditional ranking signals
They’re definitely getting and storing it.
A Page That Answers the Searcher’s Initial Query May Not Be Enough
Searchers performing this query are likely to have the goal of
completing a transaction
Google Wants to Send Searchers to Websites that Resolve their
Mission
This is the only site where you can reliably find the
back issues and collector covers
Welcome to theTwo-Algorithm World of 2015
Algo 1: Google
Algo 2: Subset of Humanity that Interacts With Your Content
“Make Pages for People, Not Engines.”
Terrible Advice.
Keyword Targeting Relative CTR
Short vs. Long-Click
Content Gap Fulfillment
Amplify & Return Rates
Task Completion Success
Quality & Uniqueness
Crawl/Bot Friendly
Snippet Optimization
UX / Multi-Device
Engines People
Optimize for Both:
Algo Input & Human Output
Bonus Time!
#1) I’ve Been Curating a List of “10X” Content Over the Last 6 months… It’s All Yours:
bit.ly/10Xcontent
FYI that’s a capital “X”
#2) Not all content earns links… Buzzsumo & Moz collaborated to find out what does:
bit.ly/sharesvslinks
No capitals in this one!
Rand Fishkin, Wizard of Moz | @randfish | [email protected]
bit.ly/twoalgo