Category Archives: Content Strategy

Why it is important to publish fresh content regularly on your website

Why it is important to publish fresh content regularly

SEO experts and content marketers are constantly advising you to publish new, fresh content regularly on your website and blog.

Whenever this is suggested people think that a content marketer or an SEO expert is making such suggestions so that a client needs to spend more money on getting new content.

Of course, repeatedly publishing fresh content brings more money for the content writing and the content marketing company, but this is just one side of the story.

Recently a prospective client had submitted a query from my contact form and she said she found my website by first searching for the term “creating content clusters” and then further filtering the results for the last 30 days.

“Creating content clusters” is a competitive phrase and in normal search results my website doesn’t appear  even among the top 40 results on the search engine results page.

But since I have just recently published a blog post on the topic, it appears when someone filters the search results for the past 30 days, at number 2.

screenshot-of-topic-cluster-search-result-page

This made me think that having fresh content isn’t just good for your normal SEO, it also increases your chances of getting found on search engine results for the narrowed searches based on time frames. Especially when you aren’t ranking otherwise.

What if someone wants to search for web pages and blog posts published within the past 4 months? If you have published something during this period it will definitely show up.

I’m not saying you should publish regularly just because some people might be searching for information within certain date ranges, since there is an option to narrow down searches based on time frame it means there might be many people using this feature. It means there are many people looking for fresh content.

What are the benefits of publishing fresh content on your website or blog?

Even if you are not much bothered about being found by people who are looking for you within a particular date range, publishing fresh content regularly increases your chances of getting ranked higher by Google.

This is because Google prefers fresh content to stale content.

Given a choice between ranking a website that rarely publishes and ranking a website that regularly publishes and given that the quality of content being somewhat similar, Google ranks the website that publishes regularly higher.

This is because Google wants to present fresh content to its users. It looks for similar content, and if in terms of quality it finds fresh content, it chooses that content for better rankings.

Most of the search engine crawlers are designed in such a manner that they are continuously scouring the web for fresh content. They mark the websites that publish content regularly, taking note of the frequency with which the new content appears.

Then they automatically visit these websites at set intervals and if they publish new content, it is quickly crawled, indexed and ranked. This way, their content becomes visible on search engine results pages, sometimes within seconds.

This is something I have experienced personally: since I publish fresh content regularly on my blog, many of my blog posts and web pages start appearing in Google search within seconds. I’m not saying it metaphorically, my posts and pages actually start appearing within seconds.

In fact, this is one of the biggest reasons why I advise my clients to publish content regularly – to help the search engine algorithms draw up pattern of publication on their website or blog so that whenever they post something, it is quickly, almost immediately, indexed and ranked.

Another, a serious reason for publishing fresh content regularly on your website is that it gives a reason to people to visit your website repeatedly.

Normally, when someone visits your website and goes through all the present information, there is no reason for the person to come back again.

Unless you are amazon.com people are not going to buy from you on their first visit. They buy from you on their third or fourth or fifth visit. But since, you don’t give them a reason to visit your website, very soon, after having visited it once, they forget about it because there are hundreds of other such websites to attract them.

There are just two options for you: send them ineffective marketing messages by email that they very soon start redirecting to the spam folder, or you publish high-quality valuable content that informs them, educates them, or at least engages them.

Something that they appreciate.

A good thing about publishing fresh content regularly on your website is that you can then use the same content for your email campaigns and even for social media and social networking updates.

Publishing fresh content regularly should never be seen as a hassle. When you are constantly interacting, when you are constantly publishing fresh content, it shows to the people that you are active and you are eager to engage.

What are topic clusters and pillar pages and how they improve your SEO?

What are topic clusters and pillar pages

Neil Patel has published a nice blog post on the concept of creating pillar pages, improving their SEO and in the process improving the overall SEO of your website.

In the beginning of the blog post he has also referred to an older Hubspot post that explains in detail how they have been able to help one of their clients improve their search engine ranking for their chosen keyword through a pillar page in particular and topic clusters in general. I had come across this Hubspot blog post a couple of months ago and had been wanting to write about it but somehow, lost the thread while trying to handle other topics on my blog and website.

The Hubspot blog post explains why creating topic clusters are important due to the way people use search queries these days.

Content marketers and search engine optimization experts believe that, due to the complexity and quantity of content available on the web, search engine users don’t use single-word queries. An average query these days consists of 4-5 words.

One reason is, as mentioned above, there is plenty of useless content available on the web and hence, users want to make sure that they give the search engine as much information as possible to zero-in on the right search results.

After all, as this blog post suggests, if you run a query on Google, you may come across billions of search results. But frankly, not many people go beyond the second or the third search results page unless he or she is doing some really important research and there is no other option but to scour through as many search results as possible.

The point is, if you are competing with “billions of search results”, you need to do something exceptional, something that is not possible for most of the people to achieve, to move your rankings to the first page or at least the second page.

The second reason is that more and more people are using voice to search, mostly on their mobile phones. So, when people speak into their mobile phones, they mostly use phrases, day-to-day expressions, to carry out the search instead of single keywords. Something like, “find the best barber near me” or “where is the nearest eating joint selling vegan food”.

I have written multiple times on my blog that writing to improve your SEO is just one aspect of content publishing and content writing. The other aspect is, writing for your ideal persona. The search engines will be ranking your content, but it will be the human beings who will be reading it and then basing their decisions on how they react to your content.

Creating and maintaining topic clusters allows you to gather relevant and interrelated bits of information around a single source and hence, increase the subject-authority of your website or blog.

What are topic clusters?

A cluster means, a sort of a grouping. It’s coming together of different components of an environment or a topic. The same applies to topic clusters.

Topic cluster and pillar page explained

Google is constantly looking for authoritative, specialized content. It wants its users to be able to find as much information as possible through a single source, through a single link. For this, Google wants to showcase authority content.

How does it know that you have “authoritative, specialized” content?

One way of finding that out is, of course when your content is being referred to and responded to by lots of people on the Internet in general and social networking websites in particular.

But when it comes to on-site SEO, it means having lots of good quality content around your chosen topic.

Let’s take an example of my website. Suppose I want to increase my search engine rankings for the keyword or key phrase “SEO content writing services“.

The normal route would be creating lots of web pages and blog posts on my website including the search term “SEO content writing services” – I’m still using this method and I need to explore the concept of creating topic clusters more. I will share my progress on this later.

So, I will create lots of blog posts and articles talking about the various aspects of SEO content writing including

  • What is SEO content writing
  • Why SEO content writing is important
  • SEO content writing doesn’t mean low quality content
  • How to write SEO content
  • How to target different markets with SEO content
  • How does Google deal with your SEO content
  • What type of SEO content writing services I provide
  • How I can help you improve your SEO with my content
  • What is my SEO content writing methodology
  • How much I charge for my SEO content writing services

The list can go on and on.

The problem with the traditional method is that all the blog posts, articles and web pages that you create around your chosen keyword or search term are isolated and scattered. They’re not connected with each other. They’re not part of a cluster. The search engines will crawl them and index them as separate entities.

This sort of content arrangement gets lost in all the hubbub that fills up the Internet.

This sort of content management worked previously because there wasn’t lots of content on the Internet and not many businesses were using content marketing to promote their businesses. Now that content marketing has gone mainstream every business and individual want to use it and hence, your content authority needs to stand out. This you can achieve by creating content clusters, or topic clusters.

The important components of a topic cluster are

  • The web page containing an introduction to the main topic, in my case that would be “SEO content writing services”
  • A cluster of blog posts and webpages – on my website as well as on other websites like Medium, Quora and LinkedIn – that lead to the main web page and to each other

Hence, it becomes a cluster.

What is a pillar page?

A pillar page is the main web page to which every other web page, blog post and article links. This is the web page or blog post you want to optimize.

As explained above in the topic cluster section, pillar page exists at the center of your topic cluster. It is the main topic you want to cover. Everything else links to it and it links to everything else. It becomes an Oracle of knowledge about the topic or the search term.

How does creating topic clusters and pillar pages improve your search engine rankings?

Search engines like Google are constantly looking for authority content. They want to provide high-quality information to search engine users.

Since search is becoming very complex Google prefers sources that are packed with very useful and relevant information.

The information doesn’t just have to be useful and relevant, it also needs to be arranged in such a manner that it is easier to consume and understand.

Modular information is easier to consume and understand.

When you create topic clusters you create lots of content pieces and then join them around your pillar page. Your pillar page becomes a sort of a hub for all the information relevant to that particular topic.

Creating topic clusters solves two purposes:

  • It makes you write/create/gather lots of information around a single topic covering every possible subtopic
  • It makes it easier for users to navigate through the entire spectrum of the topic through hyperlinks

This further boosts your SEO.

Since all the pages and blog posts are interconnected, even if a single link gets an SEO boost it has a trickle-down effect on all the connected links.

Also, since lots of web pages, blog posts and articles – on your website and outside of your website – are connecting to your pillar page, Google begins to think that it is a very important page about your chosen topic and hence, begins to improve its search engine rankings.

Is there a definitive way of ranking in Google’s featured snippets

Ranking in Google’s featured snippets is one of the best ways of getting a ton of traffic to your website, provided you get ranked for the right keywords and there is another link of yours appearing somewhere on the same page.

Nobody knows exactly why Google decides to rank your link. I have had some success getting some of my links ranked in this section; for example, look at this:

credible-content-showing-up-in-Google-snippets

This blog post contains lots of statistics and graphs to show how many more links Google has started including in the featured snippets section and how much more traffic these featured links draw from Google compared to those links that are not featured.

What are  upchart showing how many links are included in the featured snippets of Google

Google’s featured snippets

Just like any other content-based platform, Google is constantly coming up with ways to present relevant content attractively as well as purposefully.

Since more than 99% of the times people are asking questions and looking for useful information on Google, it makes sense that when Google feels that a particular answer satisfies a particular question, that answer is featured as a snippet.

As you can see in the above image (from my website), the featured snippet stands out compared to other links on the search results page.

You don’t get snippets all the time. Snippets are usually triggered by queries that contain, “what is”, “how is” or “how much”.

A relevant part of the text is picked from your link and featured in the snippets section. It is like, while analyzing the question asked by the search engine user, Google finds the traces of the right answer on your link, picks up the relevant portion, and then puts it in the featured snippets section.

Many webmasters believe that being featured in Google’s featured snippets can be counter-productive because then the search engine users have no reason to visit the link.

It depends. It can also increase the chances of the search engine users visiting your website more if they like the answer presented in the snippet. A big part of your answer appearing in the snippet also makes a strong impression on search engine users because they think that if Google is highlighting your answer then your link must have relevant information.

Is there a way you can get your links ranked and featured in the Google featured snippets section?

Over the years since Google started featuring links in this section various SEO experts and content marketers have been trying to figure out how to pinpoint the qualities or attributes that get your link featured in the section.

Ahref has done a comprehensive study on how many links are being featured in the snippets section on exactly what are the benefits of getting featured there.

The Ahref study has found that there is a decline in the number of clicks when your link is featured in the snippets section.

image chart showing that the CTR declines for the snippet-featured links

You can see in the above graphic that when a link is featured in the snippets section it gets approximately only 8.6% of clicks but when it is not featured it gets 19.6%.

It proves the apprehension of some webmasters that if your link is listed in the snippets section then people have less motivation to click it because they have already found the information they are looking for.

If I can remember my own search pattern I think I agree with this conclusion. Sometimes when I’m looking for an answer and when I find the answer in the featured snippets section, there is no reason for me to visit the actual link or, it prompts me to visit another link because I don’t seem to be able to find the right answer within the snippet.

But there is another finding in the same above Ahref link: the overall clicks on the remaining links appearing below the featured snippets link tend to fall down.

This might be because Google has become so efficient in digging out the appropriate answer and featuring it on the snippets section that after having viewed the snippet, users have no reason to check the other links.

On the other hand, detailed analysis of Google’s featured snippets on this link shows that if the link that appears in the featured section is followed by another link from your website, the CTR increases tremendously, sometimes by a whopping 516%.

How to make your content appear in the Google’s featured snippets section

Most of the SEO websites suggest that there is no definitive way of ranking in Google’s featured snippets section, but still, there is a pattern that emerges as more and more people study it.

which words in the query make it easier to rank in Google featured snippets section

Personally, I wouldn’t advise you to go crazy about getting your content featured in the snippets section. What matters the most is, what benefit you derive out of the various positions you get on the search engine result page.

Anyway, if you want to get featured there, you should take some clue from the way people ask questions on Quora.

You can follow the same pattern while writing content for your own website.

Create your blog posts, articles and web pages in QA form: ask a question in the title of your link and then provide an answer in the body text.

Remember that Google should be able to find a complete answer to the query submitted by the search engine user. The answer to this query can manifest in the form of

  • A small paragraph that can fit into a snippet
  • A bullet list of different parts of the answer
  • Data presented in a tabular format

As you can see in the featured snippet from my own website, it is a paragraph.

The text taken for the Google’s featured snippet can appear anywhere in your body text. Just make sure that the words contained within the question also appear within the text that you would like to present as a snippet candidate.

Of course, the usual conditions need to exist, such as, you should already be enjoying good or comparatively better search engine rankings. Your links should already be ranking for you to appear in Google’s featured snippets section.

So, if you want to publish content specifically for the featured snippets section, first focus on improving your general SEO

Use curated or aggregated content to improve your SEO

SEO with curated content

You need high-quality content to improve your SEO.

You need high-quality content on an ongoing basis to improve your SEO.

Sometimes it becomes difficult to come up with great content ideas.

Then, curated or aggregated content can come to your rescue.

Sometimes, even if the ideas are there, it is very difficult to write full-fledged blog posts and articles around those ideas.

Such situations can be stumbling blocks. They can stunt your content marketing efforts and they can even discourage you from publishing quality content on your website or blog.

How do you overcome such stumbling blocks?

By publishing curated or aggregated content.

I am not suggesting that you carry out your entire content marketing strategy on the strength of curated or aggregated content, but when it has become difficult to publish full blog posts, it is better to publish curated content rather than posting nothing.

When you stop posting for a long time, it begins to have a negative impact on your existing search engine rankings.

Even the search engine crawlers begin to visit your website less often when they observe that you are not publishing as regularly as you used to, a few months or a few weeks ago.

Yes, it is important to publish original content for long-term branding and even for better SEO, publishing aggregated content is far better than publishing no content at all.

What is curated or aggregated content?

Read Difference between content writing and content curation

We often complain that there is lots of junk content on the Internet. This is true.

But a great thing about the Internet is, there is also lots of great content.

There are many blogs, websites, and even social networking accounts, that are constantly publishing awesome content.

Since you might already be tracking scores of such websites and blogs, it might be easier for you to keep track of the various blog posts and articles they publish.

But your visitors and your social networking followers may not have access to a big repository of updates.

They will really appreciate if you can find excellent content on other sources and then mention them on your own website or blog with a little bit of your input.

There are two ways of curating and aggregating content from other sources: you either link to an individual blog post or article along with your view, or you can create a list of, something like, 10 best articles of the month on a particular subject.

How to find quality content to aggregate?

As I have written above, if you are routinely publishing content around your subject, you might be tracking many blogs, websites and social networking profiles to keep track of what the others are writing.

If you are not, you can track your favourite experts on Twitter, LinkedIn and Facebook.

You can use Flipboard, Medium, Pocket and Feedly to track your favourite subjects.

Even while doing day-to-day research you come across lots of valuable content that you may not use immediately, but sometime in the future. You can create a repository of such links using the notetaking app like Google Keep, Evernote or OneNote (both Evernote and OneNote have web clipper add-ons that allow you to save information immediately).

Then, later on, you can come back to the links that you have saved, and then use them to create curated or aggregated content.

How curated or aggregated content helps you improve your SEO

A big part of SEO is publishing high-quality content regularly.

Regularity is very important because search engines, especially Google, are constantly looking for new content to index and rank.

Your competitors are constantly pumping new content into the search engine indexes to stay ahead of you.

So, it is very essential for your SEO that you publish content regularly.

But constantly coming up with new content writing ideas can be a Herculean task.

You may require a dedicated person just to come up with great content writing ideas.

If you don’t have a dedicated person, the second-best thing is to curate or aggregate the best content from the web.

Curating content not only helps you publish content regularly, it also gives you new content writing ideas.

When you are constantly curating or aggregating content on a specific topic, you become a repository of knowledge about the topic.

Google begins to consider you as the go-to destination for the subject.

For example, if I start aggregating lots of content on content writing and content marketing, Google begins to think that I am managing some sort of an online directory or forum with lots of information on content writing and content marketing, and hence, starts giving me preference over other websites.

Can you completely depend on curated or aggregated content for SEO and marketing?

Read Can you use content curation as a viable content marketing tool?

It depends.

If you want to create your own brand, you need to publish original content. You need to come up with  original thoughts and ideas.

Sure, you can curate lots of focused content, but then you will be known as a curator or an aggregator rather than a thought leader.

Ideally, people should be curating your content.

So, what I suggest is, use curation and aggregation as a break from your routine publishing original content.

When you feel stuck, but you still want to publish content, resort to curating and aggregating.

Otherwise, there is nothing like publishing original content.

5 benefits of auditing your website content regularly

benefits-of-auditing-your-existing-website-content

Surprisingly, very few businesses and individuals realize the overwhelming benefits of auditing website content regularly. A big reason is that content isn’t yet considered as a valuable asset. It simply exists because, well, every website needs some text, some images and in many cases, some videos.

Or, people get website content for better search engine rankings. They hire an SEO writer or a regular content writer, get content written for their chosen keywords and search terms, and then move on. End of the story.

They don’t realize that they need to audit their website content regularly. Just like they need to take care of other business assets like machines, software applications, computer hardware, stationery and even human resources, they need to take care of their website content. They need to make sure that it is up-to-date, relevant and topical.

What is content auditing and how to do it on your website?

What is content auditing and how to do it on your website

Content auditing means going through your existing content and streamlining it according to your content marketing needs.

You have been publishing a business blog for many years now, right? Even if not a blog, you must have created many webpages for your business website in order to describe your various products and services.

You have your homepage.

Then there is a company profile.

Even an FAQs section.

You may also have the testimonials page.

And maybe many more pages talking about various aspects of your business and the sort of projects you have undertaken.

The basic point is, there might be lots of existing content that needs to be revamped.

Content auditing means creating a list of things that you need to do in order to bring your existing content up to the mark.

Is content auditing needed for every website and blog?

It depends.

If you have always been careful about your content, then perhaps you don’t need content auditing.

The need arises when you have been creating content without paying much attention to exactly what you are trying to achieve, what sort of audience you are trying to target and what sort of results you are striving for.

If you take your content marketing seriously it doesn’t matter whether you have 5 pages, 50 pages or 500 pages, you need content auditing.

Unless you have audited your existing content, you cannot claim to be taking your content marketing seriously.

Is there a precondition to auditing your content?

Totally understanding your content marketing is a precondition to auditing your existing content.

For this purpose, documenting your content marketing strategy is of extreme importance because once you have started documenting your thoughts you know

  • What sort of audience you’re going to target
  • What sort of content you’re going to produce and distribute in order to target that particular audience
  • Which content distribution channels you’re going to use

Once you know what sort of content you need in order to make your content marketing effective you know what changes to carry out in your existing content.

What is the procedure of carrying out a basic content audit of your website?

What you need:

  1. Google Analytics
  2. A Spreadsheet Tool (Microsoft Excel, Google Docs or Zoho)

Although you can do content auditing on your website without using any tools, if you have got many pages and blog posts, using tools definitely helps and it also gives you a sense of things that need to be done.

You can begin with Google Analytics.

Of course, if I suggest Google Analytics I assume that you have been using its tracking script on your website for some time and there is sufficient data in your Google Analytics dashboard to give you a picture of what sort of traffic your website is getting.

What if you don’t use Google Analytics?

Install the script onto your website and let it gather some data for at least a month.

Assuming you have some data in your Google Analytics account, go to the website that you need to audit (in case you are tracking multiple websites from your account). On the left-hand side, you need to go to the following section:

This will give you a list of the page views of all the pages.

If your pages are arranged in descending order, you will be able to see which pages are getting the maximum traffic on your website.

These are the pages that you need to audit first.

In the “Page” column click the pop-up window link:

The page will open in a new window from where you can get the URL and then copy/paste the URL in the Excel sheet.

This way, one by one, you can transfer all the URLs to the Excel sheet. Mind you, if you have many URLs it may take lots of time so if possible, get someone else involved.

Once you have transferred all the URLs to your Excel sheet, you can start auditing them one by one. Again, it makes sense to audit the content of those pages that get the maximum page views.

Here are a few things you can change while auditing individual webpages and blog posts:

The web page title

Your web page title should preferably contain your primary keywords and it should be within the recommended length.

For example, the Yoast SEO plug-in suggests that your title should not contain more than 70 characters.

Remember that it is your web page title or your blog post title that people see appearing as a hyperlink on search engine result pages and even on social networking websites updates.

Make your web page title compelling enough.

The web page description

The description of your web page must be around 157 characters.

Try to include your main keywords in the beginning of the description but make your description, logically, is as descriptive as possible.

The body text

Is your body text over-optimized?

Is it under-optimized?

Is there too little text on the web page or blog post?

Can you include more links to other pages?

Can you create more sections?

Can you describe your products or services in a better manner?

Is your content badly written?

Are there typos, spelling mistakes in grammar mistakes?

The use of keywords

No matter what people say, the keywords still matter.

So keep your list of keywords nearby while auditing your content.

Make sure that your primary and secondary keywords are used in the body text strategically.

Create multiple sections under headings and subheadings and make sure that these headings and subheadings contain your keywords.

Create bulleted lists and make sure that these bulleted lists contain your keywords (at least a couple of times).

Use your keywords in the hyperlinks.

Make sure you don’t over-use your keywords.

The most important thing is readability and quality of your content.

Alt tags for your images

Alt tags are very important – to make your website and blog more accessible to people with visual impairments, and also to tell search engines what these images contain.

If you have omitted including alt tags with your images, now is the right time to go through all the images and add alt tags, while you are auditing your content.

Interlinking of webpages and blog posts

Interlinking means linking to webpages and blog posts that add more value and description to your existing web page or blog post.

Suppose I’m writing this about content auditing.

Above, I have mentioned that in order to audit your content, you also need to document it.

Recently I wrote a blog post documenting your content marketing strategy, which is a totally different topic.

So instead of explaining it again, I have simply hyperlinked to it.

It is not just good for usability, it also directs the search engine crawlers to this link in case this link hasn’t been crawled yet.

When the search engine crawlers crawl your links, they also crawl the links present on those links.

Auditing your existing content can be a lengthy process so be mentally prepared for it.

It is not something that you can do in a day or two.

If there are 100s of pages of content on your website or blog, you may need months to go through individual links and audit them.

You may also need to hire external help.

Go ahead, do it. Before you hire a content writer to write new content for you, it’s better to hire someone to audit your existing content first.

6 ways to audit your content

From time to time you should audit your existing content.

You don’t always have to write new content because after a while, it is difficult to come up with original and compelling content writing ideas.

I’m not saying that you altogether abandon the thought of publishing new and original topics, but you can make a mix of new content and existing content and keep on giving fresh content to Google.

Google doesn’t like stale content.

It can make out if you posted something a year ago and ever since then you haven’t updated it or refreshed it.

Auditing your existing content allows you to do that.

What does auditing mean?

Auditing doesn’t just mean updating your existing content (web pages and blog posts, and sometimes even videos and images, that you have already published).

It means individually going through different pieces of content and analysing them to find out whether they are still relevant or not or whether they’re solving the purpose for which they were originally created and published.

Auditing is an exercise that is carried out to find whether something complies with conditions or parameters for which that thing was created.

In terms of your existing content, you may want to find out

  1. Does it enjoy higher search engine rankings for relevant keywords?
  2. Was it fully optimized or is there still some scope for optimization?
  3. Does the content need to be rewritten because in its current state, it doesn’t read well?

… so on and so forth.

You may like to read Improve your SEO with content auditing that I published just a few weeks ago.

As I have mentioned in the above-linked post, while auditing I was trying to find out whether my web pages are search engine optimized or not, and if not, using the SEOPressor plug-in I have been trying to optimize them.

Along the way I have learnt something else and hence, changed my approach, but that’s another topic.

This Content Marketing Institute blog post suggests 6 questions that you should ask yourself to be able to audit your existing content meaningfully.

To be able to properly audit your existing content, the CMI blog post suggests that you should ask the following questions:

  1. Is the content still relevant?
  2. How many people visit the post?
  3. What engagement is the post receiving?
  4. How strong are the SEO indicators?
  5. Is the post converting?
  6. What content is missing?

Let’s quickly go through these questions and try to find some brief answers.

Is the content still relevant?

Your content grows old.

This is especially applicable to those blog posts and web pages that were relevant to the time during which they were created.

Remember there used to be a time when getting featured on the homepage of Digg used to be a big thing, to the extent of launching new businesses with just a single instance of getting featured?

Prolific Diggers were in big demand and sometimes they were paid heavily just to share links among themselves.

What about StumbleUpon?

Just as we have share buttons for Twitter, Instagram, LinkedIn and Facebook, we also used to have share buttons for Digg and StumbleUpon.

Now, these two services are almost gone. As websites they may exist, but very few people know about them or care about them.

So, if you have written a blog post on how to promote your content on social media and you have taken these content sharing platforms as one of your central points, you may want to revisit your blog post and make it more relevant by removing what is not used these days and adding what is used.

Maybe Instagram didn’t exist at that time but now it’s a big thing. So, you can replace StumbleUpon with Instagram and write something about it.

Similarly, if you think there are some issues that were relevant in 2008 but are not relevant now, you can rewrite those blog posts and web pages to make them relevant and then resubmit them to Google as fresh content.

How many people visit the post?

Google Analytics can tell you that.

GA, through appropriate filtering, can tell you how many visitors you are attracting from Google and other search engines and how many from social networking websites, or even directly from other websites and blogs.

For some web pages and blog posts, you don’t want the traffic to go down.

For example, Website Content Writing Services is one of my main web pages and I don’t want its traffic to go down no matter how old it becomes.

I should regularly audit this page and keep a tab on what type of traffic it is attracting and then make changes accordingly.

What engagement is the post receiving?

What is engagement vis-à-vis the relevance of your content?

The engagement level tells you how important or relevant people find your content.

Are they still sharing it?

During the past month, how many people have shared this particular piece of content, let’s say, on Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter?

How many comments has it generated?

How many times has it been shared on various social media and social networking websites?

How much time are people spending on this blog post and what is its bounce rate?

Then, if this piece of content is found wanting, you can take appropriate steps to make improvements.

How strong are the SEO indicators?

As I mentioned in my own blog post on content auditing, I have been reviewing my individual web pages for SEO indicators or to find out how well they have been optimized.

The SEOPressor WordPress plug-in that I have installed on my website and my blog immediately tells me my SEO score.

The SEO indicators may include:

  1. The presence of your primary keywords and phrases in your blog post or web page title.
  2. The presence of your primary keywords and phrases in your blog post and web page description.
  3. The ALT text of your images.
  4. The number of images in the blog post.
  5. Keyword density (under-optimized or over-optimized).
  6. Content length (the more the merrier, preferably more than 1200 words).
  7. The readability score.

These indicators tell you how well you have optimized your existing content.

Is the post converting?

Different blog posts and different web pages may have different metrics for measuring conversion.

For example, the purpose of your blog post might not be increasing your sales.

It can be getting more subscriptions for your newsletter or encouraging more people to download your e-book or increase your social media engagement (how many people are sharing this blog post or web page).

Again, in Google Analytics you can set conversion goals and track the conversion rate of your individual blog posts and web pages and if you think that certain blog posts and web pages are not converting well, you can make changes as you deem fit.

What content is missing?

Sometimes you want to incorporate more keywords. For example, the SEOPressor WordPress plug-in allows you to optimize your content writing for three keywords or search phrases.

To accommodate extra keywords and phrases you may like to add more content.

Is auditing your existing content absolutely necessary?

If your content matters, if content marketing matters, then I must say, it is important.

Whether it is absolutely necessary or not depends on your ambition and your ability to take care of your content assets.

The more blog posts and web pages you have, the harder it is to audit repeatedly.

It is always better to have a dedicated content writer, or even a team of content writers who regularly audit your existing content.

If this is something you cannot afford right now, then there is a big chance you don’t even have those many blog posts and web pages.

It means your existing content can be audited within a week or two and you can hire someone for that period, or if you have time, you can audit yourself.

Why does a website audit seem like a daunting task?

website-content-auditing

We like new things. New things are full of possibilities. New things are free of judgments. This is why we continuously want to create and publish new content while totally disregarding existing content.

Another reason why a website audit may seem like a daunting task is that normally there are too many web pages and blog posts to audit.

If you have been publishing content, in whichever manner you have been publishing it, over a period of years, you must have published hundreds of them. As you publish more, their number increases.

So, the mere thought of revisiting all those web pages and blog posts that you have published over all these years seems daunting. You know that it may take weeks, even months, to audit all those web pages and blog posts.

Undoubtedly, the process can be tedious and time-consuming. But given the fact that it can tremendously improve your organic search engine rankings and on-site conversion rate, not auditing your website content is a big waste of the opportunity that is lying right in front of you. You need to take the plunge. The benefits overwhelmingly outweigh the effort involved.

How to kickstart your website content auditing plan?

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First of all, you have to get hold of all the URLs present on your website. If you are using WordPress to manage your website or blog, you can use a plug-in that exports all the URLs onto a web page or into a comma separated file.

For a non-WordPress website, you can try the various URL crawling tools available on the Internet.

Then you can save these URLs into a spreadsheet.

In WordPress, there is also a plug-in that gives you a ready-made interface for content auditing but I prefer tracking your auditing progress in a spreadsheet because it is more flexible and you don’t have to install a dedicated plug-in for that.

Although you may have your own way of organizing data in your Excel sheet, I prefer that for every auditing exercise you create a separate worksheet in a single spreadsheet. For example, if you decide to start your content auditing in January 2018, you can have a “January 2018” worksheet.

In this worksheet you can have the following columns:

  • URL title (page title or blog post title)
  • Complete link
  • SEO keywords – keywords for which this particular link should be ranking high or is already ranking high
  • Conversion goal – why was this webpage or blog post created
  • Suggested changes – more content to be added, more optimization to be incorporated, old information to be updated, more or new images to be added, SEO tweaks to be done, and so on
  • Audit status – to be audited, being audited or audited, or whatever
  • Audit date – when the current audit is complete
  • Recheck date – decide the date on which you should check whether the changes that you have made are showing up or not. For example, whether this link is ranking for the right keywords or not or whether its conversion rate has improved or not

Having such a spreadsheet will allow you to track individual links, and also their progress.

If multiple employees or multiple content editors will be working on your content auditing project, you can also have another column titled “Assigned to” where you can put the names of people responsible for that particular link.

5 benefits of auditing your website content

website-content-auditing-benefits

Benefits are a great motivation. Unless you understand the true motive of a thorough website content audit, you won’t be able to carry it out in its true spirit.

Listed below are 5 benefits of auditing your website content:

1. Make your content up-to-date

Are you still giving examples of MySpace and Google Wave? Are you still suggesting your clients to blog using Blogger.com? Are you still giving examples from companies that no longer exist? Is one of your web pages still telling people that Obama is the President? Is your web page copy still making references to Blackberries?

Then it’s time to update your content. The world these days changes very fast. The information that you used a couple of years ago doesn’t matter. The business tools you referred to 5 years ago are no longer available or they have gone through monumental changes.

2. Resubmit to Google

When was it the last time Google crawled and indexed your important links? Although most of the search engine crawlers do this automatically, you are never sure when your website’s turn is going to come.

When you audit your website content and make changes you can manually resubmit your link through the Google search console. This shouldn’t be done without making changes because if you try to submit content that has already been indexed, Google begins to ignore your resubmission requests.

3. Optimize your content for targeted keywords

Perhaps originally when you were creating/writing your content you didn’t pay much attention to its optimization aspect. Maybe now you have gained more experience. Your new links are faring well. You can use that experience to optimize even the older links.

Or maybe you have over optimized.

The Google ranking algorithm has gone through many changes over the years and SEO practices that were legit 5-6 years ago can get your content penalized now.

Maybe you have, unintentionally, overused your keywords. Maybe you have done lots of interlinking. Maybe you have used some black hat SEO tactics to gain better search engine rankings – back then you didn’t know that those were black hat SEO tactics.

Recently when I was auditing my own website content I realized that on many web pages I had stuffed my content with keywords even without realizing it. A few changes, some inclusion of LSI keywords, and suddenly my rankings began to improve for the same keywords.

4. Improve the overall quality of your content

Maybe you hired an ill-trained content writer back then because of budgetary constraints. Or you didn’t have much time to pay enough attention to the quality of your content.

When you audit your website content – provided you have assigned enough time to it – you get the opportunity to improve the overall quality of your content.

You can take care of grammar and spelling mistakes. You can simplify over-complicated sentences. You can organize various bits of content under headings, sub-headings and bullet points. You can link to other web pages and blog posts that can provide additional information.

You can also update the images. Is there a scope that you can reduce the size of the images? Can you use better images? Did you forget to insert the ALT tag information the first time?

5. Get new content ideas out of existing content

Getting new content ideas on an ongoing basis can be a big problem. Around 60% of content marketers re-purpose existing content. According to statistics present on this Smart Insights blog post, 60% content marketers find it very difficult to publish engaging and good quality content on an ongoing basis.

You may also like to read 15 ways you never run out of blogging ideas.

So, these are the 5 basic benefits of auditing your website content on a regular basis.

How regular you want to be, depends on your content marketing strategy, your budget, and the resources that you can employ to audit your existing content.

Having said that, auditing doesn’t always mean you need to change every single web page or blog post. You can also quickly check whether a particular link needs to be updated or not and you can leave it as it is if it does not need any sort of update.