Category Archives: SEO

How do I find the right keywords for writing SEO content?

Keyword research for SEO content writing

Keyword research for SEO content writing

In most of the cases, I don’t. The list of keywords is given to me by my clients. I find keywords when I am also helping a client with content strategy.

Whenever I’m writing content I advise my clients not to cram too many keywords in a single web page or blog post. That dilutes the main focus of what you’re trying to convey.

Nonetheless, when I need to find the right keywords for writing SEO content, how do I do that?

There are many tools for that, but the best tool is common sense. After that, you can take help of the Google search engine.

First, you need to know your primary keyword. For example, if your topic is “How to improve your SEO with content writing?” you have a fair idea of what you’re trying to achieve here. You want people who want to know how to improve your SEO with content writing, finds your link.

When you are trying to improve your SEO, there is a thin line that divides people who want to pay you and people who just want to learn something. The above topic, “How to improve your SEO with content writing?” is targeting people who want to learn something. They may also want to hire someone who knows how to improve SEO with content writing, but as far as the topic goes, it is being written to target those people who want to learn how to improve SEO with content writing.

This is a big phrase. Targeting big phases longtail keywords is always beneficial. Not many people may use them but they definitely help you improve your search engine rankings by zeroing in on those people were using exactly the phrase.

After that, there are two more keywords you can focus on, namely, “improve your SEO” and “content writing”.

You may also like to include “improve your search engine rankings” and “website content writing”.

Google also makes its own suggestions. Search for the term “how to improve your SEO with content writing” and see what other suggestions Google comes up with. Here is what I have found:

  • best practices for SEO content writing
  • how to write SEO friendly articles
  • SEO writing for beginners

and some unrelated keywords.

I also have a browser plug-in called “Keywords Everywhere”. It uses the Google database and some other sources to throw up related keywords and also the keywords other people may have used for the same sort of search. Right now, for the search term used above, it is not giving me much different options than what Google has displayed, but for many other keywords, it definitely gives more options.

There are many commercial SEO keyword research tools such as Ahrefs, Serpstat (this, I have used the paid version), SEMRush (more of a content ideas finder rather than a keyword finder), LongTailPro (have used the paid version for a few months but then discontinued) and even Moz.

I have never used the paid keyword research tools for my clients because there are very few clients who actually want to pay me for keyword research. Yes, they do want me to find the keywords, but when it comes to paying for the time that I may spend, they prefer to do their own keyword research, which is fine. So, most of the tools mentioned above, I have used for myself, to improve my own search engine rankings.

Many people heavily recommend the Google Ads keyword tool. Previously it was also called the Google AdWords keyword tool. Since it allows you to find keywords you can bid on, so naturally, Google presents you with an extensive list of alternative keywords to your main set of keywords.

To find keyword alternatives, you can enter 3-4 keywords and then it generates a big list. To novices it may be confusing because you don’t want to use all the keywords. Since Google charges for every click, it is but natural that the company would want you to bid on as many keyword combinations as possible, this is just to get some ideas for your own content writing needs. You need to make your own judgement regarding this.

Sometimes I use Google Analytics to find what keywords people are using when they find my website or my blog. This tells me what sort of traffic I’m attracting. If I’m attracting traffic for all the wrong keywords, I make changes to my content accordingly. Hence, Google Analytics can tell you if you’re targeting wrong keywords through your content.

This is pretty much how I find keywords for SEO content writing.

 

 

How To Optimize Content Writing For Google Discover?

Optimizing content writing for Google Discover

Optimizing content writing for Google Discover.

Want Google Discover to find and showcase your content?

Google Discover is not exactly a new feature. Until recently it was called Google Feed. People have been using it for curation and content discovery.

What is Google Discover?

What is Google Discover

What is Google Discover?

Do you use the Google app whose bar appears on the home screen of your mobile phone? If you tap on it and then tap on the Google icon at the top left corner, you enter the Google Discover area.

This is what Google has to say about Google Discover:

Discover new information and inspiration with Search, no query required.

In the same post (published in September 24, 2018) Google says that 800 million people are using this feature.

Instead of searching, you let Google “discover” quality content for you. Just so that it doesn’t completely take over, Google Discover allows you to enter topics in the Settings area.

It gives you suggestions based on your search history and you can also enter topics manually.

Once you are done with that, it automatically discovers new content according to your preferences.

It acts like your social media feed. You come across interesting content instead of actively finding information.

It reminds me of Flipboard. In Flipboard in the Settings section, you can add topics that you would like to track.

It is a passive information consumption. Google calls it “queryless search”.

People mostly use it to find latest news. I used it on some occasions for the same purpose.

Gradually I have also started using it to find content writing and content marketing related information.

Google Discover is available on all Android devices through the standard Google app.

If you’re logged into your Google account, you can also use Google Discover through your browser by going to google.com.

How does Google Discover work?

Google Discover uses AI and machine learning

Google Discover uses AI and machine learning.

Google Discover uses two mechanisms to find what content you want to find without searching for it:

The basic thought process behind these mechanisms is that over a period of time Google traces your behavior on the Internet – what type of content you consume and what type of search queries you use on Google – and then tailors your feeds on Google Discover.

This is a highly advanced technology that Google has been working for many years.

The basic idea seems to be like this: for information you would proactively like to find, you can use the search function, otherwise, let Google find useful and interesting content for you based on your content consumption history.

You can further help the Google artificial intelligence to streamline your feeds by selecting “show more” or “show less” content from certain publishers.

Some also say that Google wants to keep the conventional search activity for advertising purposes (mostly promoted results show up) whereas for other content needs, it finds the content for you.

Content visibility on Google Discover may have a shorter shelf life

Remember that it’s a feed. A feed tends to have the latest information.

For how long your content remains visible on the feed also depends on the amount of content being published in your niche.

For example, news articles are constantly being updated. Hence, if you are a news publisher, your content may stay in front of your users for, let’s say, a couple of days.

But, if I’m tracking something like content writing or content marketing and if Google cannot find content worthy of showcasing, this sort of content may stay longer on the feeds.

How do you increase your chances of being featured on Google Discover through quality content?

You may wonder, if people are merely stumbling into interesting content without looking for it, why bother?

After all, when you target searcher intent, you want to write content for people who are actively looking for your business rather than those who are passively just looking for information.

As someone who is writing professional content all the time, I feel when your content gets featured in Google Discover, it increases your visibility for informational search intent.

If I want to look for a content writing service or a professional content writer, it doesn’t make sense to go to Google Discover and assume that Google is going to find a content writer or a copywriter for my business.

For this, I need to actively query the search engine with my specific requirement, something like “looking for an SEO content writer”.

On the other hand, if I simply want to find interesting content on the topics of content writing or SEO copywriting, instead of going to the trouble of entering the query and sifting through scores of results, I would rather leave it to Google to find the best content for me.

At least I won’t be encountering spammy content.

There is no need to underestimate Google Discover. Condé Nast in America claims to get 20% of its traffic from Discover these days.

So, how do you encourage your chances of being featured on the Google Discover feed?

Here are a few things you can take care of when you are writing and publishing content:

Publish content keeping the mobile readers in mind

Google Discover is on mobile apps. Hence, write your content accordingly.

Write short, crisp sentences. Be to the point. Organize your content in a manner that it is easy to read on a mobile phone.

Write and publish content that is easy to categorize

Remember that the feeds in Google Discover are based on the topics that people ask Google to track.

For example, “content writing”, “copywriting”, “SEO”, “content marketing” or “space exploration”. These are well-defined topics.

If you are writing something on content writing and you want it to be featured in Google Discover, make sure that your entire narrative revolves around the topic of content writing.

Write and publish useful, purposeful content

This advice also applies to general SEO, but it is more important if you want to feature on Google Discover. There are 2 reasons.

Suppose your content gets featured on Google Discover for a day. People tap on your link but then within a few seconds, come back to Google Discover.

Google assumes that you don’t have valuable content and kicks off the process of removing your content from the feed.

The second reason is, if people discover your content and mark it as “show less” not just your current content piece will disappear from Google Discover but even your future content pieces will have less chances of appearing in the feed.

Use good quality images when publishing content

Featured images help highlight your content. Even if your headline does not draw the audience, your image may.

Remember that Google Discover is a personalized feed. People want to see content that is highly relevant to their content consumption needs.

Don’t try to barge into the feeds simply because you want some exposure for your content hoping that it will generate business for you. This will be counter-productive.

If you want to optimize your content writing for Google Discover, focus on quality and relevance and of course, mobile friendliness.

 

The Importance Of SEO Copywriting In Search Engine Marketing

The importance of SEO copywriting in search engine marketing

The importance of SEO copywriting in search engine marketing.

Search engine marketing or SEM involves improving your organic search engine rankings and search engine advertising through PPC campaigns or other engagements.

The importance of SEO copywriting rests in the fact that it improves the quality of your SEM strategy from multiple angles.

Many businesses use a combination of organic SEO and paid search engine placements.

I have observed that if you initially pay Google for placements, even your organic search engine rankings begin to appear faster in the search results.

Hence, it is better that if you have just started publishing quality content and Google hasn’t yet started crawling and indexing your content on regular basis, you can gain quick visibility through running up few PPC campaigns.

How does SEO copywriting help you in SEM? Why is it important?

As mentioned above, how you define search engine marketing depends on your strategy.

You may want to completely depend on improving your organic search engine rankings.

You may not want to spend a lot of money and effort on high quality content, but you quickly want to increase your search engine visibility and you’re ready to pay for every click that you get.

Normally this happens when people are not aware of the benefits of improving their organic search engine rankings through strategic SEO copywriting and instead, they want to go for a quick fix.

Paid advertising is costly. You are paying for every click.

The search engine users know that since you cannot improve your rankings naturally, you are paying to increase your visibility.

Hence, trust factor is lower compared to organic SEO.

I’m not saying that you should refrain from paid search engine marketing altogether.

In fact, you can make strategic use of it.

But you shouldn’t make it into a major search engine marketing strategy.

The ultimate goal is to improve your SEO organically, and this is where SEO copywriting can help you.

Below I am listing a few reasons why SEO copywriting is important for your search engine marketing strategy whether you want to pay for your visibility you want to improve your SEO organically.

SEO copywriting reduces your PPC costs

When you pay Google for your search engine placements, you have a PPC arrangement.

There are also other modes of advertising, but this is the most prevalent one.

You pay for every click.

Your listing appears in the “sponsored” section.

Google declares it openly that you are paying for the placement and your content is not appearing in the search results because of its inherent quality and relevance.

This happens with every search engine. I’m using the name of Google because it is one of the most used search engines in the world with more than 97% market share.

So how does effective SEO copywriting reduce your PPC costs?

In two ways:

  1. Through actual reduction in the amount of money you pay per click.
  2. Through improving your ROI – you generate more business per click.

It is in Google’s interest that more people click your sponsored link because you are paying for every click.

But then, after a while, it will be counter-productive because paying for every click will prove to be so expensive that you may have to deactivate your campaign for a while.

Google doesn’t want to kill the goose that lays golden eggs.

Hence, it rewards you by reducing your PPC rate if your placement generates more clicks.

The amount of money that you pay is inversely proportional to the number of clicks you can generate.

Through efficient copywriting, you can make more people click your paid placements and as a result, end up paying less to Google.

Suppose, initially you pay $ 0.5 per click for your current placement.

The copy of your ad is really good and it encourages more people to click your advertisement.

After a while, Google begins to charge you $ 0.45 per click for the same position.

This way, Google will go on decreasing your PPC if more people click your ad.

This is one way copywriting brings down your search engine marketing costs if you are paying for your placements.

The other way is by increasing your ROI.

In a PPC campaign, you use aMr landing page.

If you get 100 clicks from Google, you expect to make at least 5 sales.

If your SEO copywriting is not convincing, you may make 2-3 sales per 100 clicks, or even less.

If your copywriting is convincing, you may make even 10 sales per 100 clicks.

Hence, the success of your PPC campaigns depends on how convincing and well written the copy on your landing page is.

SEO copywriting organically improves your rankings for your main keywords

You need to resort to paid advertising on Google because you don’t have good organic search engine rankings for your main keywords.

If your links naturally appear in the SERPs, then there is no need for you to pay for the placements.

Just imagine – if you go for paid placements, you are paying for every click.

Referring to the above example, if you are paying $ 0.5 per click, for 100 clicks, you will be paying $ 50. For 1000 clicks, you will be paying $ 500. And so on.

But what happens if you organically improve your search engine rankings?

People can find your links among the top results and when they click your links, you don’t pay for those clicks.

Hence, whether you get 100 clicks or 10,000 clicks, your cost doesn’t increase.

In fact, it is free traffic.

Can you easily increase your rankings for your primary keywords?

Not if you have great competition.

For example, if I want to improve my search engine rankings for “SEO copywriting services”, it may be very difficult because top content writing and copywriting services are already ranking quite high compared to my website.

So, what do I do?

This brings us to the next topic…

SEO copywriting organically improves your rankings for longtail and related keywords

While you continue with your effort of improving your rankings for primary keywords, you should first focus on improving your rankings for longtail and related keywords.

Hence, instead of aiming for “SEO copywriting services”, I may aim for “The top 10 benefits of SEO copywriting”.

If you’re running a real estate business in Mumbai, instead of trying to just improve your rankings for “real estate business in Mumbai” you can write content around “Why it makes sense to work with a local real estate business in Mumbai”.

Longtail keywords may not directly bring your business, but they increase your visibility and then this visibility brings you business.

If you publish informative content covering your longtail keywords, other websites and blogs have a reason to link to your website or share your link on their social media timelines.

This brings you the much needed visibility.

When people link back to you, it also improve your search engine rankings for your primary keywords.

Effective SEO copywriting brings down your bounce rate

Your bounce rate has a direct impact on your search engine rankings.

Your bounce rate tells Google whether you have valuable content on your website or not.

If people immediately leave your website after finding your content in search results, it tells Google that people are unable to find what they’re looking for, for the keyword they are using and finding your content.

Here is a small video that explains the relationship between your bounce rate and search engine rankings:

Hence, your content begins to lose its current rankings for the keyword.

Again, I will give my own example.

If someone searches for “best SEO copywriting services in my area” and comes to my website and within a few seconds goes back to Google to carry on the same search, Google downgrades my current rankings for the search term “best SEO copywriting services in my area” because it assumes that my website doesn’t have relevant information for the topic.

On the other hand, for the same search term when someone finds my link and goes to my website and spends some time going through my web page and even explores other webpages for a few minutes, it tells Google that my website has relevant information and consequently, it upgrades my rankings for the same search term.

This is how your bounce rate affects your current search engine rankings.

Relevant SEO copywriting gets you more backlinks

Getting authoritative backlinks is an inalienable part of your SEM.

What motivates people to link to your content?

Relevance. Value. Engagement. Topicality. Authority.

All these attributes can be incorporated through relevant SEO copywriting practices.

Concluding remarks

SEO copywriting is a big part of your search engine marketing strategy.

It renders a direction to your SEM.

It brings down your costs.

It gives you lasting search engine visibility once you have been able to convince Google that your content is relevant for particular keywords and search terms.

7 Copywriting Mistakes That Can Immeasurably Harm Your SEO

7 copywriting mistakes that can harm your SEO

7 copywriting mistakes that can harm your SEO.

Main copywriting mistakes covered in this blog post:

  1. Writing without having a central vision.
  2. Ignoring search intent or buyer intent.
  3. Not doing methodical keyword research.
  4. Using too many complex and compound sentences and big paragraphs.
  5. Not using the main keyword synonyms and LSI alternatives.
  6. Not writing the copy from the user’s perspective.
  7. Using main keywords when linking to internal links (something new that I have learnt).

SEO copywriting is intended to improve your search engine rankings.

Want to know which SEO copywriting mistakes to avoid so that you don’t harm your SEO?

There is a complete branch dedicated to such writing.

There are numerous blogs that teach you how to improve your search engine rankings through targeted web copywriting.

The problem with pursuing web page writing mainly with the objective of improving your search engine rankings can be a double-edged sword.

Standard SEO copywriting process

Standard SEO copywriting process.

Normally, people who want to improve their SEO do the following

  • Create a list of keywords and search terms they think people should be using to find their websites.
  • Create titles and topics around those keywords and search terms.
  • Write and publish content based on those titles and topics.

In theory there is nothing wrong in this approach but then there may be something completely wrong in it.

Remember that the purpose of optimization is not to get traffic for your keywords.

The purpose of optimization is to help people find your useful content so that they can find the information they are looking for.

Hence, if you’re using copywriting just to improve your SEO, you may be harming your search engine rankings instead of improving them.

Fortunately, most of the copywriting mistakes are easily avoidable and you just need to make some tweaks and keep in mind certain aspects when preparing the copy of your web page.

I’m listing below some copywriting mistakes that are bad for your SEO.

1. Not having a vision for your

In my profession, content writing and copywriting are often interchanged so for the purpose of this blog post, you can assume that whatever I’m writing about SEO copywriting, I’m also writing about content writing.

Although, in terms of advertising and sales copy writing, copywriting is different from content writing, but when it comes to writing for the web, many people use this term interchangeably.

You may like to read Difference between copywriting and content writing.

With this minor detail out of the way, whenever you’re writing the copy of a web page or blog post, it is very important to have a vision.

What does “vision” mean here?

What is the purpose of writing that web page?

What do you want to achieve with this blog post?

What am I trying to achieve with this blog post?

The simplest answer would be, I’m trying to improve my search engine rankings for the phrase “SEO copywriting” and even “copywriting mistakes” and I won’t deny that.

But, better search engine rankings for these phrases will be a byproduct.

In the video below, I have explained this concept by comparing your higher search engine rankings with the money that you earn by providing a product or a service.

My primary aim is to provide you the best possible content on this subject.

After reading this blog post, you should have a list of copywriting mistakes that you can avoid to improve your search engine rankings.

Instead of just talking about this copywriting mistakes and listing them, I’m also suggesting improvements.

Similarly, for every web page and for every blog post, you must have a clear vision, a clear purpose, of what you’re trying to achieve, not just in terms of improving your SEO, but also in terms of providing the best possible value to your readers.

2. Ignoring search intent when copywriting

This is one of the most important SEO copywriting mistakes to avoid.

Search intent is gaining importance with every passing day.

What intention do people have when they search for your content?

Here is a small video I created to explain what is search intent.

For example, what intent would there be, when people are looking for this blog post?

They want to improve their search engine rankings.

They want to avoid content writing and copywriting mistakes so that they don’t inadvertently harm their search engine rankings instead of improving them.

They want to learn from the mistakes of the others.

Knowing the search intent helps you take the right direction.

Your copywriting must always be focused on a particular search intent.

Do you simply want to educate and inform (like this blog post)?

Do you want people to buy from you after reading your web page or blog post?

Do you want them to download your e-book or white paper or case study?

Do you want them to subscribe to your newsletter?

Search intent is also known as “buyer intent”.

3. Not doing proper keyword research

All said and done, keywords are still matter.

Google, when analyzing your text, looks for patterns to make sense of what you’re trying to say or convey to the reader.

It analyzes every possible combination.

For example, for me, what matters is the keyword “copywriting mistakes”, but to Google, in the above paragraph, even “when analyzing your text” is as important as “copywriting mistakes”.

The Google algorithm is least bothered with what you think is your important keyword.

It goes through every single word and every single phrase and does its computations.

Hence, the words that you use when you are writing your copy are very important.

It is an age-old advice: choose your words carefully.

The same applies to selecting your keywords when copywriting.

Not making a list of the right keywords may send you on a tangent and you may end up optimizing your copy for all the wrong keywords.

Wondering why your traffic is increasing but your business is not?

It is because you are attracting traffic for all the wrong reasons.

You may be optimizing your content for the wrong keywords.

4. Not using simple sentences when preparing your copy

A few years ago, I read that the processing power of a supercomputer is less than the processing power of the brain of an earthworm.

No matter how smart machine learning becomes, it gets confused when you use compound sentences.

I often come across webpages and blog posts containing complex sentences.

People use lots of ands, alsos and buts.

Compound and complex sentences may make you sound smarter and intelligent, to the search engine algorithm, they are confounding.

For better SEO, it is always advisable to use simple sentences.

Don’t use multiple sentences in a paragraph.

Try to limit your sentences to 5-10 words and not more.

Of course, it is not possible all the time, but whenever you are talking about the central theme, for example, the biggest benefit of doing business with you, use single, simple sentences in every paragraph.

5. Ignoring to use synonyms and LSI keywords

Instead of saying “I want to improve my SEO” every time you need to use this expression, sometimes you can also use “I want to improve my search engine rankings”, or even, “I want to improve my Google rankings”, or even, “I want higher rankings for my web pages”.

You need to dominate your copy with the central theme, and this may require you to use your keywords repeatedly.

Hence, instead of “harm your SEO”, I can also use “hurt your SEO” or “adversely affect your rankings”.

This is because if you keep on using your main keywords Google may take it as keyword stuffing, which it actually is.

If you repeatedly use your keywords without alternating between LSI keywords and actual keywords, it will harm your SEO instead of improving it.

LSI stands for “Latent Semantic Indexing”.

It is a natural language processing technology that helps Google understand the context of your content rather than merely analyzing keywords.

For example, when you search for “what are the benefits of having an apple everyday” through LSI Google knows that you’re talking about the fruit and not the company.

There is another benefit of using LSI as well as synonym keywords.

Not everyone uses the same search term when looking for information.

For example, instead of someone searching for “copywriting mistakes”, he or she can also search for “bad copywriting” or “copywriting blunders” or “what makes my copywriting harm my SEO?” or “what makes my copywriting suck?”

Hence, accommodating different keywords and search terms increases the scope of your content being rank for different keywords without diluting the central topic.

6. Not writing from user’s perspective

Again, one of the most common SEO mistakes to avoid.

This is important for your rankings as well as conversion rate.

Why does your content exist, after all?

It exists to serve your readers.

Why do search engines like Google exist?

They are there to help you find the information you’re looking for.

From every angle, it is a human angle.

If you ignore the human angle and write your copy only to cater to the algorithms, the entire purpose of SEO is defeated.

The Google search algorithm depends a lot on how people perceive the quality of your content or copywriting.

For more clarity, you may like to read Relationship between quality content writing, bounce rate and SEO.

In the above post I have also used a small video to explain the concept with animation.

So, whether you use your keywords or not is secondary, the most important thing to keep in mind when copywriting is writing for your audience.

If you ignore your audience, nothing else matters.

7. Using your main keywords in hyperlink text

Actually, this is something that I have learned recently.

You should not use your keywords as anchor text for internal links.

When writing copy for your web pages and blog posts, you’re often encouraged to link to other inner pages of your website and even external pages when you want to link to the source of your information.

Google sees this as an act of manipulation.

Since you cannot control how people link to your website, Google doesn’t penalize you if your main keywords are used as anchor text from other websites, but for interlinking (linking to your own web pages and blog posts within your domain), instead of using something like SEO copywriting as anchor text, use a long phrase.

Until a few years ago, I remember this was a prevalent advice that you should use your primary keywords as anchor text when linking to different parts of your website or blog, but it remains no longer kosher.

You can read in the above link, you can get penalized for this.

Concluding remarks the most common SEO copywriting mistakes to avoid

Whenever you are copywriting there is a 99% chance that you are doing it to improve your search engine rankings.

There is nothing wrong in that.

The biggest mistake I have come across is that when clients approach me for my copywriting services, they are less concerned about providing value to the readers and more concerned about “the keyword density must be around 3-5%”.

It rarely happens that a client says that I should first focus on quality and then, if possible, I should include the main keywords.

Anyway, the purpose of writing this blog post was to throw some light on the issues that can negatively impact your search engine rankings while in the sincerity of your heart, you are trying to improve it with certain copywriting practices.

Ummm… yes, I know, the above sentence is not good for SEO.

Relationship between quality content writing, bounce rate and SEO

Relationship between quality content writing bounce rate and SEO

Relationship between quality content writing, bounce rate and SEO.

While writing web pages and blog posts I have multiple times explained this concept – the relationship between quality content writing, bounce rate and SEO.

All these are so tightly intertwined when you want to improve your search engine rankings, that any topic on one of them automatically invokes the importance of the others.

Hence, I have created a small video to explain the concept in an animated form.

Let me first quickly explain the three concepts.

Quality content writing

When you are publishing content on your website or blog, don’t publish it just for the heck of it – just to improve your search engine rankings.

I won’t pretend.

Everyone wants to improve his or her search engine rankings because unless you get targeted traffic, nothing much is happening.

After all, there is a reason why the SEO market is worth more than $ 80 billion.

Even when I’m publishing content on my blog or updating my website, my aim is to improve my SEO.

So, yes, when you are writing content and publishing it, you’re mostly doing it for your search engine rankings.

But if your sole purposes to somehow show up on the SERPs, you will get yourself trapped in a self-defeating loop.

Just as you cannot be famous just for the sake of being famous (unless you are Paris Hilton or Kim Kardashian) and you can’t make money just for the sake of making money, you cannot have good search engine rankings for the sake of search engine rankings.

You need to offer something valuable.

Your rankings are the currency and the recognition that you get for providing value, for providing something people are looking for.

This is where quality content writing helps you.

Money is a byproduct of the value or the service you deliver.

Your search engine rankings are the byproduct of the value you deliver through your content.

Search engines like Google want to make sure that the users can find the best possible content for the searches they are carrying on.

Hence, if someone searches for “what is the relationship between quality content writing, bounce rate and SEO”, she finds my link only when Google can make out that I’m actually describing the relationship and not simply stuffing the keywords.

Initially, Google simply crawls, indexes and then uses its own AI and logic to rank my content.

After that, it begins to use human intelligence – it observes how people react to your content once they find it on Google.

Hence, the following topic…

Bounce rate

Bounce rate has different meanings in different contexts, but in terms of SEO, it means how much time a user spends on your particular piece of content after arriving from Google.

For example, if you come to this blog post from Google and leave within a few seconds and go back to Google, this blog post has a higher bounce rate.

It doesn’t offer you what you’re looking for.

Google assumes that this link doesn’t contain valuable information for the search term for which it is showing up on the SERPs.

For every such bounce, Google reduces my rankings for this link.

The converse is also true.

When you come to this blog post from Google and read a big portion of the blog post and even check out other parts of my website, Google assumes that this blog post in particular and my website in general, contain valuable, useful information.

Consequently, Google improves my SEO for this link for the search term that was used.

Hence, to reduce my bounce rate, it is very important that I provide quality content writing for this blog post.

This brings us to…

SEO

Search engine optimization.

It is the dream of every person who has a business on the web to get his or her website featured on the first page of Google, preferably among the top three search results.

People are literally ready to sell their souls for this coveted position.

This is what different SEO experts say you need to improve your search engine rankings organically, naturally and legitimately:

  • High-quality content containing your keywords.
  • Efficient use of meta tags.
  • The number of quality back links (people linking to your website or particular URLs).
  • The quality of interaction people have with your link once they find it through your existing search engine rankings.
  • Social sharing your link enjoys.
  • The age of your domain (the older, the better).
  • The frequency with which you publish fresh content on your website.

Now, except for the age of your domain name, every other aspect that Google uses to improve your SEO is attached or related to quality content writing.

The Google guidelines say that you should regularly publish high-quality content.

Your content must take care of your keywords while it delivers value and engages the readers.

Unless there is something worth linking to, why would people link to your website for individual blog posts and web pages?

Unless there is worth sharing, why would people share your content on their social media timelines?

Hence, Google has connected everything with quality content.

I have explained this whole concept in the above video.