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4 Old School SEO Practices And How To Counter Them

4 Old school SEO practices and how to counter them. It’s clear that ranking well in Google these days take more work than it did in the early days of the internet, when you could insert a keyword here, ask your buddy to write a Google review, and so forth. When search engine optimization (SEO) was a new discipline, companies could toss up a piece of content, such as a blog post, that included word-for-word keywords and reap the benefits.

As Google’s algorithm evolved and competitors began their own SEO efforts, companies then needed to tweak strategies, but they could still hire someone to churn out some cheap, keyword-laden content to score SEO wins. They could still post guest-written content without reviewing it for quality; they could use and be rewarded for various SEO gimmicks. It is no longer possible—not by a long shot. Here are 4 outdated SEO practices that no longer work, and what you need to do differently today to improve your website’s Google rankings

1. Vet Your Guest Post Contributors Carefully

To consistently post new content on a website, plenty of companies allow guest posts to be written—and you can still do that. Google has updated its search quality rating guidelines, though, and one noticeable change is that raters (real human beings who review websites for Google) should be looking beyond just the reputation of the website and also reviewing the reputation of the content creators.

So, who are these guest posters on your site? How are you vetting them? What else are they publishing online? Is it content you’d be proud of?

Also, you can build up your own content creation reputation by writing guest posts yourself—just make sure they’re posted on reputable websites.

2.Expand Your Perception Of Online Reviews

Online reviews are crucial for local SEO; that hasn’t changed. But, the standards of what’s needed are higher than ever before. A couple of years ago, you might have worked to ensure you had a steady supply of Google Reviews being posted—steady, not a flood of them that might trigger a red flag in Google’s algorithm—and then you could check that item off your list.

Today, it’s not just about Google Reviews anymore; rather it’s important to have real diversity in review sites. Going forward, you will need consistently good reviews—and, to make that happen, you need good products, good service, and good people.

3.Optimize For Branded Terms

When Google sees a branded search query that includes your company’s name, or a search for a branded product or service of yours, the algorithm recognizes that the searcher is aware of you and is clearly searching for something only you can provide.

So, if you have a brand that people can gravitate to, optimize for your brand name. If your brand isn’t one that people are naturally gravitating to, then you’ll need to work on that this year. As I mentioned in the section about online reviews, this means you will need good products, good services, and good people—something for which no gimmicky fix exists.

4.Instead Of Short Posts, Write In-Depth, Long-Form Content

Content has been king online for quite some time now, but the rules to reign are evolving. So, it’s important to make your existing content work even harder these days.

How can you do that you might ask? Consider shifting from posting a few shorter posts to creating in-depth, long-form posts that provide relevant information to your target audience. Enhance it with images, videos, FAQs, checklists, and more. Also, enhance your services and location pages in the same way, adding informative FAQs, checklists that help people make choices, and testimonials from your best customers. Finally, don’t forget to optimize for voice search queries.

source; Content Marketing, Search Engine Marketing, Search Engine Optimization

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