SEO tip #4: The 11 most important factors that will help you to get higher rankings in Google

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The 11 most important factors that will help you to get higher rankings in Google

1. Page speed

Some time ago Google has officially confirmed that page speed is an important ranking factor and has been included in the ranking algorithm. In 2018 a website should load in 500 milliseconds up to 2 seconds at most. (Google). But, let’s forget Google for a moment. What is much more important for you, the loading time of your website has a massive impact on user experience, too. According to Kissmetrics, 40% of people abandon a website that takes more than 3 seconds to load, and 1 second delay in page response can result in a 7% reduction in conversions! Do you really need any more arguments? No, you don’t.

2. Mobile friendliness

Mobile friendliness. Another buzzword in the SEO industry. And another vital component that can’t be ignored while we are talking about the whole “how to get higher ranking in Google” topic. Not so long ago mobile friendliness was just some sort of good-to-have factor, but today is one of the biggest ranking signals. With over half of searches coming from mobile devices, Google’s continuously increasing focus on improving mobile search results is completely understandable. According to Hubspot 27% of consumers will leave a site if it is not mobile-optimized.

3. Link quality

The most SEO experts will agree: is still one of the most important ranking factors for Google. According to Neil Patel The amount of links to a specific page composes 22.33% of Google's ranking algorithm. Many experts think that is the single biggest component in the algorithm. Obviously, I don’t know how much the percentage is … What I know: if you really want to learn how to get higher ranking in Google, pay a GREAT attention to this factor! Prior the Penguin algorithm link-building was dominated by spam, and quantity triumphed over quality. Today, when our beloved and feared Penguin is barely 6 years old, link quality apparently has become one of the biggest algorithm components. High quality links will increase your site’s link score and your rankings. Low quality inbound links will hurt your business. More than that, they can get your site penalized or even removed from the SERPs completely.

4. Link relevance and link diversity

The next very important factor is the relevance. I guess it’s pretty obvious, you need inbound links from pages whose topic is related to that of the page you are optimizing.

This time the logical question is this one: how can Google identify and evaluate the relevance? The answer: from the backlink’s anchor text. Understandably, the concept of relevance is closely connected to that of diversity. What does it mean? In plain English: it’s normal (even expected) to have semantically relevant inbound links, but too many similar anchor texts will awake the Penguin. Your goal is to get a diverse mix of link types (text links, image links, etc) coming from different kind of sources (blogs, review sites, forums, etc). The truth is, that nobody exactly knows where is the point where you can get a Penguin penalty, therefore there is no such thing as “golden ratio” for different kinds of anchor texts. If you really want a rule of thumb: the best idea is to rely on the link profiles of your most successful competitors …

5. The number of inbound links and linking domains

Not so long ago the so-called link count was a literally vital ranking factor. A major one. Over time the algorithm has evolved and nowadays quality comes before quantity.

Having said that, the number of your backlinks and linking domains still represents an important factor, one that has a big impact on your final rankings. The only difference: the quantity is not enough anymore … What I am trying to say: more links will result in a higher link score as long as they are not low quality links. And don’t forget the already mentioned link dilution! To many links coming from the very same domain won’t help you at all. In fact, Google will often only count one of those links …

My favorite rule of thumb is always applicable … Want to know how to get higher ranking in Google? Well, spying on your main competitor’s link profiles is the best possible starting point to discover what link scores you are competing against.

6. Title tag and meta description

When it comes about relevancy, the title tag of your page is the strongest, most important signal to search engines, therefore your best keywords must be included in your title tag along with other, important, semantically related terms. The closer the main keywords are to the beginning of your title tag, the better. The second element that can give you an additional – smaller – ranking boost for the targeted terms and keywords is the meta description tag.

7. Keywords in your website copy

In these days there is a lot of buzz out there about the increasing importance of the semantic search. It’s true, Google is rightfully shifting towards it, but that doesn’t mean that keywords are not important anymore. Sadly, many SEO “experts” are insistently buzzing around this topic, trying to convince you that your content keywords have become almost irrelevant for the search engines. Well, my advice is this: do yourself a favor and forget these fake prophecies! Including your main keywords in the heading tags and in your page’s body text, is still a strong and very important ranking signal for the search engines!

8. The content itself

If you want to crack the “how to get higher ranking in Google” mystery, you’ll have to pay a great attention to another crucial factor: the content itself. We need to analyze three content-related issues: length, relevance and uniqueness. Let’s take a closer look at each factor:

a. the length of your content

The SEO industry is overwhelmed with endless debates regarding the ideal content length. I’ll accept, each and every concept or argument may have its ground, but in my opinion the whole issue is ridiculously overcomplicated and overemphasized. Why? Well, first of all, in my opinion the optimal length should vary from niche to niche, from communication channel to communication channel, from content type to content type, etc. Second: in its guidelines, Google has stated clearly the fact, that the length of the content is an important ranking factor. According to QuickSprout The top 10 results for any keyword on Google are occupied with articles that are, at least, 2,000 words long. More is simply better.

In other words: Google doesn’t like short content. And it’s perfectly understandable. Search engines need more and more new content to deliver better and more relevant answers. Of course, the value is much more important than the length, but a value-packed long content is much more valuable for Google than a value-packed short content. This is the only rock solid golden rule, so focus on creating long, value-packed content for your target audience (not for search engines!), without literally counting your words just because you have seen another “the ideal length is 3,000 words” article …

Finally, if you really want a somehow “realistic” reference, you can always use my usual rule of thumb: check out your biggest competitors or some other well-ranked pages for the keywords you are targeting!

b. the relevance of your content

The term “relevant content” is often misinterpreted, so let’s get everything straight … Doesn’t even matter what your page or website is about, what really matters is to create in-depth content (length matters again!) that carries real, unique vale. In plain English: if you only scratch the surface instead of fully covering a topic – no matter what the topic is – Google will consider your page less relevant.

c. the uniqueness of your content

I guess is pretty straightforward: you need to be original! It may sound as a cliche, but we are talking about a cliche which can literally and completely eliminate your website from the search engine results. The not so beloved Google Panda bear is always watching, and believe me, you’ll be penalized for every single piece of duplicate content or plagiarized copy.

9. Sitemap(s)

Literally speaking the sitemap itself has no ranking value at all. Still, it’s an important factor that – indirectly – will influence your results helping the search engines to crawl and index your website quickly and easily.

10. Social signals

The impact of the social signals is another highly debated issue in the SEO industry. As far as I know, Google never confirmed it officially, but whether if it’s included in the algorithm or not, but I can tell you this: pages with more social share will rank better.

According to a QuickSprout case study, when a site got 100 Google+ followers, its rankings jumped by 14.63%. When another site got 70 shares and 50 likes on Facebook, their ranking went up by 6.9%.

11. CTR

Here is another fact for you: the SERP click-through rates will have a massive impact on your future rankings. In case of every search query Google “expects” an assumed CTR in a certain range for each of the listings. Let me give you two examples: for branded keywords the #1 result usually gets 50% of clicks, and for non-branded searches the expected CTR is around 35% for the #1 result. Now, if a given listing gets a very different and “unexpected” CTR, Google will usually re-rank the results accordingly.

Again, these average values can vary from query type to query type, from keyword type to keyword type, etc, but you should have around 30-50% for the #1 result, 15-30% for the #2 result and at least 10-15% for the #3 result. Of course, obtaining these much-coveted positions is one thing, and earning actual clicks from real users with appealing, click-worthy links, is a horse of another color.

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Recent Comments

23

I love everything you written. A big problem with a lot of blogs is that talk over their audience . Sometimes having a PHD in a certain topic is the worst thing you could have. Speaking from the heart, sharing an idea like your talking to a friend, in a vocabulary that is easy to understand is important. There are reasons why tweeter with their 40 word rule and Instagram with it's one minute limit on live video are there. People have a short attention span esp. if they are on a mobile device. 2000 words is sometimes to long, think you have to mix it up. Also heard that Google+ is shutting down it's social platform in 2019, so don't know if it makes sense to post blogs to it anymore.

Thanks for your input David!

While exists, G+ is still a relevant "information source" for the Google search engine too. Don't forget, it's the same company

Hi Zed

Thank you very much for this interesting and informative post!

Everything was very valuable, but I found the linking strategies most helpful and Hubby enjoyed what you had to say about the content itself and the keywords.

Thank you for what we could learn from you! ;-)

Have a great day, Zed!
Sharlee (Chocolate) + Vanilla IceCream

Thanks Sharlee!

I just love hot Chocolate :)

Hi Zed
Awwww, THAT is just the perfect idea for this cold, rainy evening - hot chocolate! Not quite sure why the hot chocolate didn't get much love lately... Thanks for the reminder, Zed, will set that straight tonight. ;-)
Sharlee (Chocolate IceCream)

Good stuff but a lot of it. I will have to read it over a few more times.

Thanks for your time Louis!

Excellent post, with some goof tips in it

Thanks Dave!

Thanks Zed. I'm still a little bit confused about site maps. I understand that they're used by Google to crawl and index my web site. But I'm not sure if WA have them automatically installed or if I have to do something.

I won't lie to you ... I haven't created a WA hosted site yet, so I really don't know it works at WA

Still, I've seen some WA tutorials about using sitemap plugins, so I guess isn't an "automatic" thing.

Jkulk, if you follow the training and have YOAST installed on yourblog, then that does a lot of heavy lifting and takes care of sitemaps and such like

Hi Jim
Just type "Sitemap" into the search bar at the top. I know MarionBlack has a good training about it, but there are probably a few. It is set-up in All-In-One SEO.
Hope it helps!
Sharlee (Chocolate IceCream)

My site load speed is very slow. I think I have too many plug-ins.
Someone at WA said these can be deactivated when not in use.
Is this true and if so can you give an example of a plug-in that one can deactivate without it negatively affecting the site?

Yes, too many plugins can definitely slow down your site. But is really easy to find out.

Simply deactivate them one-by-one and run a new speed test after each deactivation. And if you find out that you have a really "heavy" issue, you should try to find a lighter plugin for that task.

Zed

Thank you - that makes a lot of sense

You're welcome!

This might help you

Thank you

I need to read this six times (maybe seven)
Very in depth indeed - thank you

Take your time :)

It is but relevant and helpful

Thanks again!

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