Tag Archives: seo content writing

Do keyword research before writing content

The image shows an iPad with the Google homepage on the text says importance of keyword research before content writing

Importance of keyword research before content writing

Although your keywords shouldn’t dominate your content writing, they are an important part of the entire writing process especially when you are targeting search engines.

For me, keywords keep your writing focused. When you know what words to use, you know what to write and you don’t deviate from that.

Focus is very important when you are writing content to attract targeted traffic from search engines. Keywords keep you focused.

Sometimes clients send me a long list of keywords to be included in a single document. Although, with little bit of creativity, scores of keywords can be incorporated into a single document – provided you have a big document of more than 3000 words – normally I don’t recommend this.

Focus on a single phrase – most of the searches these days are based on phrases rather than keywords – and in that one single phrase, try to include the main things that you’re going to cover in the current blog post or web page.

Also keep in mind that an increasing number of searches are voice searches – people use devices they can talk to, to look for information, for example Google Assistant or Amazon Echo.

Nonetheless, it is important that you do keyword research before writing content.

Why keyword research is important before content writing?

The concept of keyword has changed over the years. In terms of SEO, it doesn’t mean a single word, though, people get confused and assume that they should focus on single words rather than complete phrases.

For SEO and content writing, when you talk of keywords, you can safely assume that they mean even complete sentences.

Back to why keyword research is important…

It tells you what language people use when they are trying to find your service or your product or even when they’re talking to each other on various online forums and social media platforms while talking about your service or product.

Search engine algorithms are becoming intelligent by the day. They are fast moving towards a state of being when even if you don’t use your keywords, provided you stick to the topic, they will be able to make out what you are saying and then accordingly, rank your content.

In fact, this is already happening. When SEO experts and content marketing professionals talk about “searcher’s intent” this is what they are basically saying – your keywords don’t matter much, what matters is, whether you’re solving people’s problems or not, especially problems for which they are searching for solutions.

Nonetheless, keywords matter, and they will go on mattering simply because the words that people use to find you on Google, can be distinct for distinct requirements.

For example, if you’re looking for a content writer for your business, you will not be looking for “content writing” or “how to write content”.

Although, these two phrases do have something to do with content writing, for your particular need, you may look for “content writing for my boutique business” or “content writing service for SEO”.

If you’re looking for a writer to write your product descriptions, you’re not going to search for “professional copywriter”. You may search for “writer for writing product descriptions” or “looking for someone to write product descriptions for me”.

These may seem very obvious observations, especially when you are reading this blog post, but when you need to target scores of keywords because your business depends on traffic originating from those keywords, you need to do comprehensive research.

Again, the purpose of keyword research is not to prepare a long list of keywords and then use these keywords to write content (unless you’re using Google AdWords), the purpose is to use these keywords as a guiding force.

You enjoy better search engine rankings if you write in the language that your prospective customers and clients use.

Why before content writing?

As I have written above, the purpose is not to stuff keywords into your writing, the purpose is to use your keywords as a direction towards creating highly purposeful content in a language that people use, especially people who can be your prospective customers and clients.

When you write content, you should ask yourself, “Why am I writing this blog post?”, or “Why am I writing this webpage?”

Of course, you don’t just want to generate search engine traffic from your content writing because search engine traffic by itself means nothing. If your content can draw people from Google and other search engines but people simply leave your website without doing anything, it is an exercise in futility. This happens when you solely focus on SEO.

The primary purpose of your content must always be to provide information people are looking for so that they can decide whether they want to do business with you.

Take for instance this current blog post. Here I’m explaining to you why it is important to do keyword research before writing content. You may say that by merely reading this blog post how am I conveying that I’m a professional content writer and you should hire me?

Through a search engine or through another website or through Facebook or Twitter, when you come to this blog post and you read, you will know that I understand a few things about keywords and writing content based on those keywords.

The layout of my website/blog is such that you easily know that I provide professional content writing services and if you’re looking for a content writer who can focus on your keywords and despite that, also write high-conversion content, you may like to contact me.

If you don’t get such a feeling (despite requiring a competent content writer) then I’m not doing a good job.

Similarly, the ultimate aim of your content writing is to convince people that you are open for business and doing business with you is a good decision.

Hence, when you’re writing content, your aim must be converting people.

Now, this is where it becomes difficult for content writers who are not experienced. They can either focus on keywords to improve your SEO (which is not a big deal) or write conversion-centric content which, though, does not attract traffic, but if people land on that webpage or blog post, they are convinced.

So, how does one balance between keywords and conversion-oriented content writing?

Use your keywords (phrases, sentences, search expressions) to steer your language so that both search engine algorithms and visitors know what you’re talking about. Don’t simply use them to improve your SEO because that is counter-productive.

Again, take for example this blog post. It talks about why it is important to research keywords before content writing. At the time of writing this, I’m not sure whether people will be able to find this link for the right keywords or search terms, but this is what my intention is – if someone searches with a combination of keywords and content writing and maybe also SEO, he or she should be able to find this link.

But once he or she is on this blog post, only good content writing matters, not what or how the keywords have been used.

How to create your best SEO content in 2019

Creating best SEO content in 2019

Creating best SEO content in 2019

In this blog post you are going to learn how to create or write your best SEO content in 2019.

Why focus on 2019?

I think by now you clearly understood the indisputable importance of content when it comes to marketing your business online.

When it comes to the Internet, there is no marketing without content.

A big part of content marketing, although, I always suggest that you shouldn’t mix up content marketing and SEO, is search engine optimization.

This is a reality as a content writer I have accepted long time back: most of the businesses want to use content marketing to improve their SEO.

Search Engine Journal has just published 9 tips for creating your best SEO content in 2019.

Nothing is new in the post. No offence to the author, but there is nothing you can do in 2019 that you couldn’t have or shouldn’t have done in 2018. But yes, it is always better to keep revisiting these concepts.

The above-linked post lists the following tips if you want to create your best SEO content in 2019:

Use your targeted keywords when writing content but write for the right people

The blog post suggests that before writing your content you must first understand:

  1. Who your audience segments are.
  2. What kind of information they need.
  3. Why they need that information.
  4. Which keywords they are using to find it.

Why is it important?

Because your content marketing must be relevant.

Segmentation can help you.

Some people are just looking for information and they may do business with you later on. You need different type of content for them.

Some are interested in doing business with you but can’t make up their minds. You need different content for them.

You also need to know what keywords they are using to find your business (or your business category).

For better SEO it’s very important that you know what search terms people are using. Once you have found that out, use those search terms and keywords to create high-quality relevant content.

Keep your content writing readable

Remember that artificial intelligence is after all, machine-based analysis.

Rumor has it that there are at least 10,000 human evaluators working at Google to manually review websites.

But millions and millions of web pages and websites are being evaluated by some search engine ranking algorithm every second.

These algorithms cannot make sense of very complicated language structures and expressions.

Use simple words as much as possible.

Keep your sentences very short.

Avoid having more than two sentences per paragraph.

Use every opportunity to use headings, sub-headlines and bullet points to organize your thoughts and format your text for better readability.

Create in-depth content, longform content

Google these days loves lengthy pieces of content, preferably 2500-4000 words, and even more.

A good thing about in-depth content is that it provides all the information a person is looking for right in a single web page or blog post.

If someone has found everything what he or she is looking for, he or she doesn’t have to carry on the search again.

This tells Google that you have relevant content, and this further improves your SEO.

In fact, if you want to create your best SEO content in 2019, I think this is an advice you should follow.

Improve your page speed

Though, this has got nothing to do with writing content to improve your SEO, but the success of your content depends a lot on how fast your website loads and how individual web pages and blog posts load.

Search engines like Google take page speed seriously because people mostly use mobile phones to access websites these days and on mobile phones they are very impatient.

If a web page doesn’t load within 10-20 seconds, people leave.

When people leave, it sends all sorts of wrong signals to Google and in the ensuing confusion, Google ends up lowering your search engine rankings.

Keep your pages light.

Use attractive graphics for better SEO content

This might sound like a contradiction to the above point (keeping your pages light), but you can create very light graphics these days.

Images are easier to note, especially on social media and social networking websites.

If you simply post your title and link to your blog or web page, people are going to miss it. But, if you also post an attention-grabbing image, people will be drawn to your update and then they will click your link.

The above Search Engine Journal blog post refers to a Skyword study that reveals that articles and blog posts with relevant images draw 94% more views compared to articles and blog posts with no images.

So, if you want to create better SEO content in 2019, include images in your budget.

Provide facts and statistics

Numbers are always impressive. In the above point, you read that articles and blog posts with relevant images get 94% more views compared to those that don’t. This figure is reassuring.

Whenever you’re making a claim, use numbers.

If you say, “These many businesses use content marketing,” don’t just say it, show the numbers. If you don’t have your own numbers, quote an authoritative link.

Format your content for featured snippets

People have different views on pros and cons of featured snippets but it always gives you an ego boost when you see one of your snippets appearing at the top of the search results.

Some say they are also very good for your SEO.

A snippet is the featured listing at the top of the search results page. You don’t pay Google for this position. The algorithm figures out that your link contains the most important bits of information for the question being asked, and then features it at the top.

Read this for more information on featured snippets: Google’s Featured Snippets: How to rank at #1 with strategic content writing.

Become an expert or an authority figure in your field

People easily trust authoritative figures.

If I tell you content marketing is good for your business and if Joe Pulizzi tells you that content marketing is good for your business, whom are you going to believe? Of course, Joe, because he is an authority figure in content marketing.

Becoming an authority figure in your business doesn’t mean having written books or conducted seminars or attended workshops.

In terms of having a website, list your capabilities. Have an about us page. Display the capabilities of your team, individual team members. Let people know what all you can do.

Do original research

Find some data about your profession that the others haven’t found yet.

Original research is not easy, but this is also its strength: not everyone goes for it.

For bigger businesses it’s easier to do original research because they have the needed traffic, they have a bigger audience, and they also have the manpower needed to carry out surveys, polls and research.

For a small business, it might be difficult but not insurmountable.

Suppose you are a fast food restaurant serving a local clientele.

You can carry out a study and find out which food item is purchased the most.

You can further go deep and make it gender-based.

You can also research on which food item is favorite in particular months.

Although it may not have an impact on people’s decision on what food they buy (it may, actually), but it will be an interesting bit of research information that people will like to share on their social networking profiles.

How to optimize your content writing for DuckDuckGo SEO

Optimize content writing for DuckDuckGo

Optimize content writing for DuckDuckGo

In this blog post you will learn how to optimize your content writing for DuckDuckGo SEO.

According to this MediaPost update in 2018 the DuckDuckGo search engine served more than 9 billion searches.

Here is what DuckDuckGo recently tweeted:

I keep writing on my blog that Google is very competitive about its ranking algorithm and it doesn’t rest on its laurels. Just because there isn’t a significant search engine in sight doesn’t mean the search engine giant start serving lousy search results.

Google knows that before it, there were many “search engine giants” including Yahoo!, Lycos and AltaVista. They can easily be one to take its place at the helm.

Microsoft has half-heartedly tried to capture some portion of the market with Bing, but very few people take it seriously although, as a search engine, you should definitely make sure that your links feature in its search results.

A search engine that can pose a threat to Google’s dominance is the DuckDuckGo search engine.

Why are more people using DuckDuckGo, bypassing Google?

Privacy concerns.

DuckDuckGo does not track your information

DuckDuckGo does not track your information

When you use the DuckDuckGo search engine, it does not store your personal information.

It does not store your search history. It has no intention of using your search pattern for retargeting and for advertising.

With data breaches happening almost on every platform including even Facebook and Google, many people who are cautious about their privacy, have started using DuckDuckGo because they openly claim that they don’t store your private information and your search history.

And even the search results aren’t bad too. It finds the information you are looking for. In fact, off late I have observed that its results are better than Google.

Should you seriously optimize your content writing for DuckDuckGo SEO?

Although 9 billion searches in a year don’t match with Google’s 1.2 trillion searches per year worldwide (source), sooner or later DuckDuckGo is going to become a force to reckoned with.

There are many reasons why this search engine is going to become the search engine of choice for many.

In Google Chrome you can set it as your default search engine.

In iOS 8 browser options, you can set DuckDuckGo as your default search engine. This means a big number of iPhone users may start using DuckDuckGo increasingly.

Just see below its growth trajectory even for January 2015.

Searches on DuckDuckGo just on January 2015

Searches on DuckDuckGo just on January 2015

You can imagine how fast it is growing.

If you start optimizing your content writing for DuckDuckGo SEO, right now you can get a headway because there aren’t many people focusing on it.

Optimizing your content for DuckDuckGo SEO

When I was doing research for writing this blog post, predictably, every good suggestion revolves around the standard advice for every major search engine these days – quality and relevance.

In this Search Engine Land blog post, Neil Patel has made the following suggestions for optimizing your content for the DuckDuckGo search engine:

Create a great website

Great website in terms of usability, quality of information and ease of use. The website must be accessible on all devices, especially mobile phones. It should be a fast loading website.

Focus on your users

Every search engine aims to provide the best possible answers to the questions people pose them. When writing content for your website or blog focus on providing the best value to your users.

Write valuable content so that people naturally link to you

Just like backlinks are important in Google, they are also important for DuckDuckGo SEO.

So, high-quality content isn’t just good for your conversion rate, it also earns you backlinks from authority websites and this in turn helps you improve your DuckDuckGo SEO.

Optimize using semantic keywords

Semantic keywords are the related keywords. Suppose I’m trying to optimize a web page for “content writer”.

Google also does that – DuckDuckGo, when analyzing my web page, don’t just look for “content writer”; it may also look for “web writer”, “web content writer”, “website writer”, and so on.

Similarly, when optimizing a web page for “phone reviews” it may also decide to rank the web page for “phone comparisons” and “phone recommendations”

Concluding remarks on optimizing your content writing for DuckDuckGo SEO

A good thing about DuckDuckGo is that it does not use people’s search behavior to filter results or customize results. It indexes and ranks different links according to its own unique method or algorithm.

Relevance and quality rules the roost. Create very topical content. Although longer blog posts are good, try to focus on the subject without stuffing too much information that might be unrelated.

Personally, I wouldn’t suggest that you do something extra for DuckDuckGo. Just follow the best practices for all the mainstream search engines like Google, Bing and DuckDuckGo and your rankings will improve even in this latest search engine.

Why quality content writing improves your SEO

Quality content writing improves your SEO

Quality content writing improves your SEO

In this blog post you will learn how quality content writing improves your SEO.

Text is everywhere. All the home automation devices like Amazon Echo and Google Home, although powered by voice commands, in the background, work on text.

Search engine rankings are based on the textual content on your website or blog.

Even cryptic information residing in the deep artificial intelligence lives and breathes in the form of text.

What I’m saying is, content writing isn’t going anywhere despite big push towards video and imagery.

Read this detailed article from The Atlantic on how many major publications were pushed to the brink of collapse (including Facebook) when they fired their writers in favor of videographers.

Yes, every form of content has its importance but ultimately, everything boils down to writing.

Try publishing just videos or just images on your website and blog, and see what happens to your SEO.

Quality content writing and SEO are interlinked.

Vis-à-vis SEO, what does quality content writing mean?

What does quality content writing mean in terms of SEO?

What does quality content writing mean in terms of SEO?

The quality attribute is multifaceted when it comes to writing for the web, especially to improve your SEO.

I’m using the example of search engine optimization because this is the focal issue of this particular blog post, otherwise, I never advise you to solely aim for SEO. Aim for quality content and SEO is automatically taken care of.

Quality here means it solves your purpose. What is your purpose?

Get more business, of course.

But, there are many stages in between – from someone realizing that he or she needs what you have and then that someone not just finding you, but deciding to do business with you. Many stages.

These are the stages when most of the business is lost.

The job of quality content is to convince people into believing you and then deciding to pay you for what you are offering.

For that, you need to improve your conversion rate.

Your conversion rate can only be improved when you are able to convince people.

Since you cannot convince 100% visitors who come to your website, you have to somehow figure out the maximum number of visitors you can convince into doing business with you.

Suppose, 5%.

This means, if 100 visitors come to your website, 5 of them become your customers or clients.

With the same conversion rate, if you want to get 50 customers or clients, you need to get 1000 visitors.

How do you get these 1000 visitors? You have 3 options:

  1. Improve your SEO for your targeted keywords
  2. Become active on social media
  3. Use paid advertising

If you want to use paid advertising, it must be in your scheme of things.

But if you don’t want to use paid advertising and you would like to go for a more sustainable mode of generating targeted traffic to your website, you will improve your SEO and you will become more active on social media, and for both these activities, you need quality content.

The quality of your content writing began to matter first on social media – nobody would care for you if you didn’t provide value – and then even Google began to change its algorithm to rank only quality content.

So, it isn’t important what you write and what you publish, what’s important is, how people react to it.

If they don’t react to it properly, even the search engines ignore it.

Quality content writing improves your SEO – explained

Your SEO these days solely depends on how valuable, purposeful and relevant your content is.

Why?

Why must people find your content when they look for a certain keyword or search term?

You may say that they must find you so that you get a chance to promote your products or services to them, once they are on your website or blog.

Fair enough. Even I want that.

But what about those people who are searching? What do you give them?

Now, if you didn’t face much competition, you could easily say that if someone is looking for a web designer, he or she should come to your website because you provide web design services.

In my case, if someone is looking for a professional content writer, he or she should come to my website because I provide professional content writing services.

There are thousands of web designers. Also there are thousands of content writers.

People who appear for “web designer” and “content writer” on the first top 10 search engine results, have definitely done something to appear there.

They must have gotten scores of quality back links.

They must be quite active on social media to elicit lots of positive response from their followers.

The must have lots of quality content on their websites so that their bounce rate is very low (a high bounce rate is bad for your SEO).

They must have been in the game for quite some time – the age of their domains must be very old.

People searching for products, services and information have no personal interest in finding your website or blog.

Even Google doesn’t have any personal stake in your website. The search engine solely depends on the algorithm and it’s the algorithm that decides the rankings of your individual links.

Now, this algorithm is constantly evolving.

For a machine, no matter how evolved artificial intelligence gets, it is very difficult to gauge the true value of a piece of content.

This is why Google heavily relies on the reaction of people.

I’m writing this blog post on “why quality content writing improves your SEO”.

Based on my existing rankings Google may rank this blog post in whichever manner.

Then it begins to gather data about how people interact with this piece of content on the Google search engine itself, and also on other websites and social media platforms.

People retweet my tweet with this link – good, Google notches up my rankings perceptibly or imperceptibly.

People like my update carrying this link on Facebook and they also leave comments and they may even share my update. Another boost to my rankings.

When people find my link in search results they come to this blog post and read it.

The more time people spend on this link, the more Google gets convinced that this link solves the purpose of the search query that was used to find this link. Hence, improve its rankings.

If most of the people no longer search for the same query after accessing my link, Google assumes that my link solves the purpose of the query and further improves its rankings.

The cycle goes on and my link keeps moving up.

Now, why would people react positively to this particular link?

They are not emotionally attached to me or my website. Most of them don’t even know me. They couldn’t care less about my SEO.

The only reason they retweet or share my link is because they like it and they like it only because I provide quality content to them. This can only be achieved through quality content writing.

Again, why would people spend more time on this link?

Because they have a reason to go on reading the matter. They find the content useful. This brings down the bounce rate of this link or blog post.

They have no personal interest in lingering on the blog post without reason. The only reason is, they are getting what they were looking for.

Best possible scenario: they don’t go back to Google with the same search query. They don’t check out other links for the same search query.

This indicates to Google that the link solves the purpose of the search query and the user no longer has to check out other links.

These things can only happen if you provide quality content, relevant content, content that is engaging, useful and solves the purpose.

If you focus on providing value to your visitors, you don’t have to worry about your search engine rankings because search engine rankings these days depend less on how you use your keywords, and more on how people react to your content.

Their reactions decide your SEO.

So, when writing content, simply focus on getting positive, constructive reaction from your visitors. The rest is taken care of on its own.

How to write content for the Google RankBrain System

Content writing for Google RankBrain

Content writing for Google RankBrain

For a couple of years now Google has been using its RankBrain system to rank your content.

RankBrain is a machine-learning artificial intelligence system that helps the Google algorithm in ranking various links and websites.

Although it hasn’t totally taken over the Hummingbird algorithm (the current ranking algorithm that Google uses) many SEO experts are claiming that the Google ranking algorithm derives almost 30% of its influence from RankBrain.

What exactly is Google RankBrain?

What is Google RankBrain?

What is Google RankBrain?

It’s an artificial intelligence system, and just like any contemporary artificial intelligence, it learns itself. It sometimes writes and modifies the ranking algorithm on its own.

The overall ranking process at Google is handled by the Hummingbird algorithm. RankBrain is a component of that algorithm that contributes towards assigning ranks to different links according to their relevance to the searcher’s intent.

Just like RankBrain, there are multiple components in the Hummingbird algorithm that analyze content.

Panda, Penguin and Payday components are used to fight spam. Pigeon is used to improve local search results.

Then, there is a Top Heavy component of the Hummingbird algorithm that assigns negative marking to ad-heavy pages.

To reward you for your mobile-friendly pages, the ranking algorithm uses the Mobile Friendly component.

Copyright infringement is taken care of by the Pirate component (source).

Whereas conventional SEO is based on the type of keywords you have used when writing your content and the quality of backlinks, RankBrain calculates the relevance of your content according to its own interpretation, according to what it thinks should be ranked rather than according to how the web page of the blog post has been “optimized”.

You must have read it at multiple places – even I have mentioned it multiple times on my blog – that when you are writing content, focus on the “intent” of the searcher instead of simply creating content based on your keywords.

The intent is what matters to RankBrain.

Unlike conventional ranking methods, RankBrain doesn’t rank web pages according to predefined formula.

It modifies the rank according to the interpretive need of the user.

It practically thinks like the human brain. It interprets meaning and gives you the best search result according to your particular need.

For example, if someone searches for “what are the best shows this week on Amazon Prime?” RankBrain will show the latest results no matter how well an article or blog post you wrote on the topic last month and how many people have linked to it.

Even if in terms of SEO practices your link should show up on page 10 or page 20 of the search results, if it is fresh and fresh content needs to be shown, your link will appear on the first page, even at the top.

So, how do you write content according to the Google RankBrain system?

How to write content for Google RankBrain

How to write content for Google RankBrain

To be frank, there is no particular way you can optimize your content for the RankBrain system.

As mentioned above, RankBrain doesn’t rank your content according to some predetermined parameters.

But it doesn’t mean you cannot benefit from RankBrain.

Content writing for RankBrain is very matter of fact: does your content solve a purpose? If it does, it will enjoy good search engine rankings.

The age-old wisdom that your content should provide the needed information to your human visitors still stands as in fact, such systems are developed by Google and other search engines to make sure that content creators create content that is relevant to people rather than machines.

When content is specifically created for machines it is open to manipulation. This is why Google has incorporated multiple algorithmic components to make sure that people don’t try to game the system.

How to make sure you enjoy good rankings in the times of artificial intelligence?

Search engine companies like Google aren’t creating sophisticated algorithms to stop your content from ranking well. They’re creating the sophisticated algorithms to make sure that content that deserves to rank well, does rank well.

So, instead of worrying about getting good ranks, focus on the quality, the relevance and the purposefulness of your content.

Do keywords matter when you are trying to optimize your content for the Google RankBrain system?

Not necessarily, but it doesn’t mean you stop neglecting them.

What are keywords after all? They are part of the language that you use to write your content.

Take for example this blog post. I’m writing about RankBrain, so I’m referring to it repeatedly, not purposely, but contextually. I’m not trying hard to use it repeatedly. It’s just happening.

Another focus of this post is content writing. I’m trying to explain to you how to write content that can convince the RankBrain ranking system.

Obviously these two terms are going to occur in my writing more than once, even multiple times. This tells Google that the foci of my blog post are RankBrain and content writing. There is nothing wrong in that.

But don’t just focus on your primary keywords. Use LSI keywords. Use semantic keywords. Even use the trending keywords if they are related to your topic.

Keywords matter when you’re writing content, but just make sure that they are there naturally and not stuffed. Quality, is what matters the most.

Focus on a better user behavior vis-à-vis your content writing if you want to make RankBrain happy

Since RankBrain avoids depending on conventional SEO benchmarks, it depends more on user behavior vis-à-vis your content. It observes the following while ranking your content:

What is your bounce rate?:

How many people stick to your website after finding your links on Google?

Do they immediately leave your link and come back to Google or do they linger on your website because they find useful information on it?

If your bounce rate is low RankBrain likes your content and improves its rankings.

How many people interact with your content?:

If your content is useful people engage with it.

They link to your content. They share your content with their followers and friends on social media and social networking websites. They even sometimes re-purpose your content.

The more people interact with your con tent, the better rankings it gets through RankBrain.

How in-depth is your content?:

The days of highly narrow content pieces are gone.

Remember when people used to create dedicated web pages and blog posts for every keyword combination for the same phrase? It is no longer acceptable.

You need to cover all your keyword combinations through a single web page or blog post, and this means, writing in-depth content pieces.

When you’re writing on a topic, cover practically every aspect of the topic within a single blog post or web page.

Is your content writing conversational?:

Conversational content writing is important because a greater number of people are using voice search and when people use voice search, they normally use a conversational tone.

Write shorter sentences. Avoid writing very complicated paragraphs. Try to capture just one thought in a single paragraph.

All in all, the more human friendly content you write, the better it is suitable for Google RankBrain.