Tag Archives: seo content

5 SEO improvements you can make through content writing

5 SEO improvements with content writing

5 SEO improvements with content writing

Over the years I have developed some insights into the workings of SEO. I’m not an SEO expert but when people contact me for my content writing services, they mostly want to improve their search engine rankings.

Since I’m constantly trying to improve my rankings, whenever I have to implement non-content writing SEO features into my website, I do some reading, I develop an understanding, and then I implement the changes.

Nonetheless, on this blog, whenever I talk about SEO improvements and search engine optimization in general, I talk in terms of content writing – how to write and publish your content in such a manner that it improves your search engine rankings.

It gets you targeted traffic.

Why targeted traffic from search engines is very important

Targeted content writing

Targeted content writing

You don’t want traffic from search engines. You want targeted traffic. Traffic that converts.

I have seen entrepreneurs and individual businesspersons trying to generate traffic no matter what. This doesn’t help.

I often like to cite my own example.

I had a web design business website in the early 2000’s. I built most of its traffic through content writing for my own website and for other websites (which then linked back to my website).

The problem was that I filled my website with “tutorials”. Instead of attracting businesses who wanted someone to design their websites, I was attracting aspiring web designers who were looking for some good tutorials.

I was good at writing tutorials. They were educational and funny at the same time. People enjoyed my tutorials. But they didn’t give me work.

Initially I was happy that I was getting lots of traffic. But then, with every passing month, the number of assignments kept coming down.

Personally, for me, it was a blessing in disguise. Although web design, both design and programming, came easy to me, my soul was into writing. That was the reason why people enjoyed reading my tutorials.

Hence, in 2004, I wrapped up my web design business and started providing professional content writing and online copywriting services.

This time I didn’t commit the same mistake. Although I routinely published content on my website and blog, I focused on getting clients, B2B clients, rather than people who wanted to learn content writing and copywriting.

This entails knowing what your customers and clients are looking for and then writing and publishing content based on your findings.

With this out of the way, below I list 5 SEO improvements that you can implement through your content.

1. Write content catering to the searcher’s intent

Write content for searcher intent

Write content for searcher intent

I have written about searchers intent multiple times on my blog.

Whenever you use Google, whenever you search for something, we always have an intention. You don’t search for time pass.

When something is wrong with your mobile phone, you try to find out if someone else faced the similar problem, talked about it and found a solution, so that you can solve your problem.

When you’re working on a school assignment, you want to research about your topic. You are looking for information.

When you want to buy an appliance, you want to know which model or which brand is the best choice for you.

In the times of the Coronavirus outbreak, you want to know how fast it is spreading, where it has slowed down, what are the latest dos and don’ts during social distancing, and how to make sure that you and your loved ones don’t get infected. You search accordingly.

When you need quality content for your website or blog, you search for something like “content writer for my business” or “content writing service for my business”, or something similar.

Hence, there is always an intent.

Intent can be of the following nature:

  • Navigational intent: Someone searching for “credible content” to find the URL of the website.
  • Commercial intent: Something like “need a content writer for SEO”.
  • Informational intent: Something like “can I improve my rankings with SEO content writing?”.
  • Transactional intent: Something like “how much does quality content writing cost?”

You can write and publish content based on different intents.

Searcher’s intent for your industry may be different.

Do you need to target every intent? It depends.

Even if people are not buying from you right now, you need to increase your brand visibility. So, it is always better to target all intents: navigational, commercial, informational and transactional.

But, maintain a balance.

As I have explained above, when I was promoting my web design services, I was mostly targeting people – unintentionally – who themselves wanted to become web designers.

There is nothing wrong in targeting those people, but I shouldn’t have focused mainly on those people.

2. Compile a list of keywords for creating content writing titles

Importance of keywords in SEO content writing

Importance of keywords in SEO content writing

Keywords are very important.

You may like to read Importance of keyword research before writing content.

Although there are many SEO experts who discount the role of keywords in your search engine rankings, I’m pretty sure even they secretly use keywords when producing content for their clients.

In terms of writing content, keywords are the search terms, or the search phrases people use trying to find information about your business.

There is no use targeting keywords with high competition. For example, if I want to optimize my website for “SEO content writer” it may be difficult because there are thousands of other people and businesses who are aiming for the same search term.

Instead, I may try to optimize for “SEO content writer for my web design agency” or “SEO content writing service for my dental implants clinic”, and such.

These are also called long-tail keywords. They are very precise. They may generate less traffic and they may be less competitive, but the traffic that they generate is more targeted and converts better.

Create a list of such keywords and come up with interesting and engaging (also informative) content topics.

You can use a service like Ubersuggest and Answer the Public to find the search terms you should be targeting through your content writing. For a very long time I have also used services like Serpstat and LongtailPro.

A good thing about a service like Ubersuggest is that it also shows you what topics the other websites are covering using the same keywords as yours.

Whatever service you use, the basic idea is to compile a list of topics based on your targeted traffic and then routinely start writing web pages and blog posts centered around those topics.

3. Use headings, subheadings and bulleted lists at every opportunity

Use headings and subheadings when writing content

Use headings and subheadings when writing content

On web pages, headings and subheadings means using HTML tags such as <h1>, <h2>… and so on. When you use your primary keywords within these tags, Google takes them very seriously. It assumes that since you have used your keywords or search terms within heading tags, they must be very important to you and for your content.

Just because Google takes text within these headings very seriously, it doesn’t mean you should overuse them.

On a web page or on a blog post, the <h1> tag should only be used once, preferably as the page header. If you use it multiple times, its importance begins to diminish.

What about the <h2> tag? Although you can use this tag multiple times on a web page, if you repeatedly use your keywords within this tag, even then it can send wrong signals to Google.

Remember that headline tags are for organizing your content under appropriate sections so that your content becomes scannable.

When working in MS Word you must have observed that you can expand and contract your sections under headings. This is so that it becomes easier for you to read long documents.

The same logic is applied when organizing content on long web pages and blog posts. The heading tags are for organizing ideas. If they happen to use your keywords, it’s icing on the cake, but don’t use them just for the sake of using them.

Bullet lists is another great place where you can use your keywords. When trying to make sense of your content, aside from the title and the headings, the Google algorithm also looks for important pieces of information in your bullets list section.

4. Don’t just use your primary keywords when writing content for your website or your blog

Use a diversity of keywords when writing content

Use a diversity of keywords when writing content

When you are writing content for your website or your blog, whom are you writing the content for? You are writing for people.

Hence, you should focus on delivering value.

It is understandable that to improve your search engine rankings you want to use your keywords and search terms, but if you are creating content just to use your keywords, it doesn’t solve purpose.

The artificial intelligence used by Google’s ranking algorithms takes into account the way people interact with your content while deciding your rankings.

If people don’t positively interact with your content, your rankings begin to deteriorate.

Google takes notes of how much time people spend on your website (inferior quality content doesn’t hook people).

If people carry on the same search for which they found your link it means they didn’t find the information they were looking for on your web page or blog post and hence, your link shouldn’t have the rankings it currently has.

Therefore, it is very important that your focus remains on providing value and then within that focus, you adjust your primary, secondary and long-tail keywords.

5. Write content in mobile friendly format

Write mobile friendly content

Write mobile friendly content

By 2019, 42% people in the world used voice search in one way or another. By 2025 72.6% people will be accessing the Internet just on the mobile phone.

This means most of your customers and clients will be accessing your website from their mobile phones. They should be able to consume your content easily on their mobile phones.

What does writing content in mobile friendly format mean?

  • Write shorter sentences.
  • Use simple yet professional language.
  • Avoid using multiple sentences in a single paragraph.
  • Avoid using compound sentences.
  • Make your content as scannable as possible.

Basically, people should be able to easily read your web pages and blog posts on their mobile phones.

Google has developed a technology to find whether your web pages and blog posts are mobile friendly or not and if they are not, it negatively impacts your search engine rankings.

SEO has majorly shifted towards your content these days. How you format your content and what value you deliver leave a big impact on your search engine rankings.

In fact, once you have taken the basic steps to optimize the structure of your website including, including correct information in the meta tags, all you have to do is, make sure that your content solves its true purpose.

When writing and publishing content, follow these guidelines and watch improving your search engine rankings right in front of your eyes.

Tackle the Coronavirus outbreak with strategic SEO

Work on your SEO during the coronavirus outbreak

Work on your SEO during the coronavirus outbreak

At the cost of sounding opportunistic, I’m getting multiple updates in my email and all over the web that digital marketing may get a boost during the coronavirus/covid-19 outbreak.

I know, marketing budgets are being slashed. Businesses are still recovering after the initial shock.

Everybody is adapting to the new reality that is going to manifest for a long time.

Social distancing has magnified the importance of the digital environment.

Although, no longer a novelty, the world had resisted fully adopting the digital and had been existing in an avoidably physical environment with people needlessly rushing to their offices and contributing to vehicular pollution.

No matter how worse the situation gets, people will need to get on their feet, even if mostly digitally.

This is going to throw up a new marketing opportunity.

The way people search is changing fast. People are looking for new ways of earning a livelihood and even carrying on their lives.

SEO can play an important role in this. This blog post titled Marketers find SEO vital to facing coronavirus challenges refers to an SEO research that has thrown up the following highlights:

  • 64% respondents say that there are going to be drastic cuts in the marketing budgets.
  • 86% say that meeting annual goals due to the coronavirus outbreak seem like a distant dream.
  • 63% say that search engine optimization (SEO) is more important than ever.

The last point is important from the perspective of what I am writing.

Why SEO is very important in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak?

One, everyone is scrambling for whatever is left of the business opportunities.

Two, it is often very difficult for bigger organizations to adapt and adopt. This is an opportunity for smaller businesses.

Also, bigger businesses are less courageous and agile than smaller entrepreneurs.

Bigger businesses are cutting short their marketing budgets and this is also having an adverse effect on their search engine rankings.

You can use this opportunity to work on your SEO and improve your search engine rankings vis-à-vis other big and small businesses.

You can also write and publish content according to change in the paradigms.

Find out what people are looking for in the altered reality and then write and publish content accordingly.

The above-linked blog post rightly says:

Most media investments are fleeting. You buy an impression, you get an impression. You buy a click, you get a click. Your content and SEO are like bonds. You invest today. You begin to get yield today, and if you execute well, you continue to drive value for many years – without making any more investments. This is like a high-yield bond fund, not a lot of risk, and it just grows and grows and grows.

SEO, underpinned by targeted content writing, is a long-term investment that, once it starts paying, pays for a very long time.

You may like to read 10 SEO content writing tips for your small business.

I will share my own observation of the recent coronavirus-ridden times.

My traffic hasn’t reduced. In fact, there have been very small spikes.

It means, people are either exploring content writing and content marketing opportunities for themselves, or they are aware of publishing high-quality content for SEO.

Going by the effort that I put in, I would also like to go to the extent of saying that even the number of queries hasn’t gone down although, the conversion rate isn’t as good as it used to be.

It means people are realizing the importance of quality content writing vis-à-vis SEO, but they are finding it hard to make financial decisions. Which is understandable.

Anyway, this is a good time for you to work on your SEO. Multiple factors are in your favor:

  • Bigger businesses are spending less on marketing and SEO.
  • Many small businesses are still coming to terms with the new reality.
  • Many businesses think that the situation is going to pass quickly (which is not the case) and by the time the reality dawns upon them, you can get a head start.

These are difficult times. Many businesses are being closed down. Many have already closed. People have lost their livelihoods. Lap-up every opportunity you get.

How to hire the best SEO content writer to improve your rankings

How to hire an SEO content writer to improve your rankings

How to hire an SEO content writer to improve your rankings

Here is an interesting and informative post on Moz.com titled “How to screen and recruit the best SEO content writers“.

As someone who provides professional content writing services, SEO content writing and online copywriting, on daily basis I am dealing with clients who are looking for a writer for their website or for their blog.

I’m sure you may say that I’m targeting the wrong audience and hence I’m attracting wrong clients, but most of the clients first want to know how much my SEO content writing services are going to cost.

Hence, cost is a major worry for them.

Do they want quality?

They claim that they do, but I can understand by the way they talk they think that writers are available “a dime a dozen”, and I don’t blame them.

Nonetheless, when you are hiring a content writer seriously, and by seriously, I mean that you know that you will have to pay money to a good SEO content writer, the suggestions listed in the above link are good.

I am rehashing some of them below.

Why do you need an SEO content writer?

SEO-friendly content writing

SEO-friendly content writing

Personally, I believe you need a good content writer or a good writer who understands your topic and understands what your readers are looking for.

If your writer can take care of these two aspects, he or she is a good SEO content writer.

Anyway, you need an experienced writer to improve your search engine rankings because ranking these days is not as easy as it used to be.

There are many reasons.

Millions of pieces of content are being added to the web on daily basis.

In the beginning of the Internet there weren’t many people vying for the top positions.

To add to the difficulty, Google is also constantly improving its ranking algorithm.

In the past decade, three major algorithm updates done by Google are Panda, RankBrain and “Fred”.

There was also a Penguin update which the article hasn’t mentioned.

A long time back I wrote a blog post on it for Content Marketing Institute, titled, “How to survive the Google Penguin update with effective content writing“.

Panda was a major reshuffle in the early parts of the previous decade and it annihilated the rankings of many websites.

RankBrain uses searchers’ intent to decide your rankings.

A related blog post: Do you know how Google actually ranks your content? ()

Fred weeds out content pieces that don’t add any value.

So, basically, Google is trying its best to keep your content away from top rankings if your content is not of good quality and doesn’t provide any value.

This is why you need an SEO content writer.

An SEO content writer can take care of three things simultaneously:

  1. Write high-quality content.
  2. Write content according to your keywords and key phrases.
  3. Write content that is relevant to your readers.

What to look for in an SEO content writer when you are hiring one?

This is, what is explained in the above Moz.com link.

Here are a few things to consider when hiring an SEO content writer:

Knowledge of on-page SEO and writing optimized content

Although I have written above that it basically takes a good writer to help you improve your rankings, certain on-page SEO factors are important when writing content.

Can your SEO content writer

  • Write content based on your keywords and key phrases?
  • Come up with optimized titles knowing that your title plays a crucial role in deciding your rankings?
  • Utilise internal linking?
  • Write longform content of 2000+ words, if need be?
  • Write web friendly and mobile friendly content?
  • Show a good track record of ranking content for important keywords?

On my website you can find all this information even before having to contact me.

There is a great chance that you have come on this blog post through Google or another search engine.

You can also see plenty of interlinks on my blog and on my website.

All my blog post and web page titles are completely optimized.

Although I use important keywords to write my content, I don’t needlessly stuff them.

Knowledge of user experience and authoritative content

Your SEO content writer must know the importance of writing and publishing authoritative content.

Authoritative content is very crucial for your search engine rankings because it tells Google that your content can be trusted and valued.

Also, the SEO content writer that you hire must be able to write search friendly content.

It means, the content must be arranged under appropriate headings, subheadings, bullet points, and sentences and paragraphs.

Learn to value a good and experienced SEO content writer

Improving your SEO is a two-pronged process: just as an SEO content writer is supposed to understand your needs and the needs of your customers and clients, you must also understand the value of a good and experienced SEO content writer.

It’s true, you can find content writers a dime a dozen, but it is very difficult to find SEO content writers who can really deliver.

The fault lies on both the ends of the spectrum: content writers started offering their services dirt cheap and now most of the clients expect them to deliver their services dirt cheap, heavily compromising the quality in the process.

Hence, the first step towards hiring a capable SEO content writer is recognizing the fact that just like any other service, you will have to pay for high-quality content.

5 SEO myths that may be reducing the effectiveness of your content writing

5 SEO myths making your content writing less effective

5 SEO myths making your content writing less effective

SEO does not have a well-defined manual or an instruction book. Most of it happens through guesswork.

This is why there are lots of myths and “urban legends” surrounding SEO. Most of the so-called “SEO experts” sell snake oil in the name of helping people improve their search engine rankings.

Sure, there are some fundamentals – good quality content, strategic use of keywords and alt tags for images, for example – most of the perceptions and opinions about SEO are based on trial and error.

People do something, if it has positive impact, they share it with the world in general, and if it has negative impact, they also share that.

This is how knowledge about SEO grows.

Today I came across this blog post on the Content Marketing Institute website: 7 SEO Myths that Could Limit Your Google Keyword Rankings.

I tried to think in terms of content writing. How do these myths impact your content writing?

When my clients send me content writing guidelines just a single glance tells me that their primary concern is optimizing their content for their keywords.

On many SEO-related blog posts and articles I have read that you shouldn’t concern yourself much about the keywords.

As long as you are publishing good quality content, your SEO for the related keywords is going to improve.

As a content writer who sells and promotes his services on the basis of the quality of content he writes, I tend to believe that it is quality that is of utmost important.

The above CMI link says that although quality matters, you cannot ignore your keywords. The link talks about the overall keyword optimization but in my blog post, I’m mainly focusing on content writing and how these myths may have a negative impact on it.

Myth 1: Quality content writing matters, not how you use your keywords

I will sound hypocritical if I say that keywords don’t matter, especially when repeatedly on my blog I have mentioned that I’m using a WordPress SEO plug-in (SEOPressor) to optimize my content.

When my new clients enquire if I can write SEO content, I tell them that by default I write optimized content.

When I say “optimized content writing” what I mean is, using the keywords in such a manner that it’s easier for search engine algorithms to understand what is written on your webpage or blog post, but at the same time, keeping the writing interesting and relevant for human readers.

Quality content writing automatically means focusing on your core topic and delivering maximum value to your readers.

When you focus on your core topic and write based on searcher’s intent you automatically cover your keywords.

It’s just that, if it is normally suggested that you should use your main keyword or search term within the first 100 words of your blog post or web page, then try to do so.

Use your mix of keywords in headings and subheadings. Use them in your main navigation bar. Use their variations (LSI words) in hyperlinks and bullet points.

Google, when crawling, indexing and ranking, looks for patterns to detect what you’re talking about. These patterns are your keywords and search terms.

It’s better to use them and help Google (and other search engines) understand what you’re trying to say and whether your content writing is related to the keyword or the search term being used by the search engine user.

Myth 2: Keyword stuffing when writing content can get your website penalized by Google

Frankly, I wouldn’t take the risk. But the article says that there is no definitive proof that Google penalizes websites that use keyword stuffing.

Keyword stuffing just for the sake of it is useless if it doesn’t make sense.

For example, if I want to optimize one of my webpages for “professional content writing services”, it doesn’t mean that I have to use this search term in every sentence or in every paragraph.

Use your keywords as is the need. Let your writing flow. Don’t repeat the keywords just because you think that the repetition will improve your SEO. It won’t.

Having said that, don’t stifle your writing fearing that if your keyword density is 10% whereas it should be 3%.

Myth 3: Duplicate content can harm your SEO

Again, there is no definite proof of whether Google penalizes you for duplicate content or not.

Many SEO experts believe that the problem of duplicate content mostly happens on e-commerce websites where hundreds of products may end up having the same description and even the same title.

On normal websites with just a few hundred webpages and blog posts, this isn’t much of an issue.

Does it mean if I already have an optimized webpage for “online content writer” I should create a duplicate page and simply change the heading and the text string to “online copywriter” and I will have another page?

Remains to be seen.

Again, what matters is delivering value to your visitors. Your content writing must inform and educate your visitors so that they are convinced of doing business with you.

Myth 4: Your web page titles must be less than 60 characters, including spaces

Since I’m using a WordPress SEO plug-in and it doesn’t give me the “green signal” unless I stick to all the conditions, which also includes creating a webpage title that is less than or equal to 60 characters, this is something difficult for me to check.

But then, I’m not using the plug-in to analyze every piece of blog post or web page that I publish. There are many blog posts and webpages that I don’t analyze using SEOPressor and in those webpages and blog posts, I don’t mind if my title is beyond 60 characters.

The logic behind keeping your webpage title less than or equal to 60 characters is less about SEO and more about usability.

How?

When Google shows the search results, the hyperlinked text is your webpage title. Google shows around 60 characters and after that it shows just the three dots “…”.

So, what makes more sense is, whatever important that you want to mention in your webpage title, mention it within those 60 characters.

Myth 5: SEO is a one-time affair

This is undeniably the most important myth that needs to be busted: just because you have published a few webpages and blog posts and you see some improvement in your SEO it doesn’t mean the job is done.

Just as you want to improve and maintain your search engine rankings, so do your direct and indirect competitors.

Millions of webpages, blog posts and social media updates are being crawled, indexed and ranked by Google on hourly basis. Search engine rankings are constantly being reshuffled.

Also, Google doesn’t like stale content. Even if your webpage is a few months old, if newer, seemingly better content is available, your webpage is going to be pushed down in the rankings to make space for newer content.

You either have to go and publishing your content or you need to update your existing content. You always need to outdo your competitors when it comes to maintaining your SEO.

Why you need constant content writing to maintain SEO?

Your SEO depends on many factors. But high-quality content is the bedrock of your entire SEO strategy. Search engines constantly need fresh content to crawl and index. People in social media and social networking websites constantly need new information to share and enrich their timelines.

Nobody wants to share a blog post or an article that is six months old or a year old unless the information is still relevant. But that’s beside the point.

In terms of search engine rankings, if you don’t publish regularly or if you don’t update your content, the search engines stop crawling or crawl rarely (once a few months) depending on the frequency of the new content found on your website.

The frequency increases if you publish regularly. There was a time when I was publishing 5-6 blog posts every day on a technology blog. Google used to crawl and index the new posts within minutes. The number of times Google crawls your website is directly proportional to the number of times you publish new content.

This is why, it is very important for your SEO that you write and publish content on a regular basis.

Improve your SEO with content auditing

Improve your SEO with content auditing

Improve your SEO with content auditing

For the past week I have been auditing my existing webpages.

In a hurry to build every section of the website, we often, quickly, build webpages without giving much care to the SEO aspect of those webpages.

These pages may be complete in themselves vis-à-vis delivering your core business message and conveying to your visitors how you can serve them, but in terms of SEO, you haven’t taken care of all the aspects of your content.

I exported the entire list of my main Credible Content business website webpages into an Excel sheet and now I try to rewrite the content of at least two webpages everyday.

Then, with color coding, I mark them done.

Is it improving my SEO?

For more than 1-1/2 months, I was bedridden.

I could only take care of client assignments and I couldn’t publish new content on my blog.

The content writing field is very competitive because practically, everyone can provide content writing services because most of the clients are unmindful of what is quality content.

Anyway, that’s an altogether a different issue, but one tends to lose search engine rankings very fast if one doesn’t publish new content regularly.

Since I couldn’t publish new blog posts and webpages on my own website, I lost search engine rankings for many of my top ranking keywords.

Even when I resumed my regular routine, I couldn’t focus on publishing your blog posts.

But I started rewriting my existing webpages – making them current and adding more sections and images.

I’m also optimizing these webpages for long tail keywords.

At least I have regained the rankings that I had lost.

What is content auditing?

What is content auditing?

What is content auditing?

Is there a content audit definition?

Is there a content audit tool you can use?

Is there any content audit criteria?

What exactly does webpage content audit consist of?

If you have had a business website you must have lots of webpages and blog posts that you have been adding over the years.

Many of these webpages and blog posts have old, outdated information that is not relevant to the current context.

You may have also lost their rankings because fresh content on the same topics or even on the related topics, have been crawled and indexed by Google and other search engines.

As I have written above, my search engine rankings suffered even when I couldn’t add new content for a couple of months.

Google is constantly looking for fresh content.

Content auditing means going through your individual webpages and blog posts (they already exist I presume) and then updating them.

Content auditing may include:

  • Adding fresh information.
  • Restructuring the content to make it crawler friendly.
  • Writing more content.
  • Incorporating your primary, secondary and longtail keywords.
  • Refining meta titles and descriptions.
  • Adding more images.
  • Updating obsolete information.

Content auditing can be as comprehensive as you want.

It can be an occasional exercise and it can be an ongoing undertaking.

Auditing can be full-fledged it during which you observe the following attributes of your existing content:

  • The number of clicks the link attracts.
  • First published date.
  • Author name (in case you have multiple authors).
  • Call-to-action of the webpage (what was the purpose of the webpage when you created it).
  • Page bounce rate.
  • Image alt tags.
  • URL.

Content auditing may take a few days, a few weeks or even a few months, depending on how much content you have.

Why content auditing improves your SEO?

Why content auditing improves SEO?

Why content auditing improves SEO?

When I say content auditing, I don’t mean just randomly updating your existing webpages and blog posts.

Auditing means having a serious look at them from the point of not just adding useful information, but also from the point of improving their SEO.

When for the first time you were creating those webpages and blog posts, maybe you didn’t have a clear idea of how to search engine optimize them.

Maybe you were not even aware that you should write your content keeping keywords in mind.

Or maybe you were too obsessed with the keywords and you didn’t pay attention to the overall quality and purposefulness of your content.

Or maybe you didn’t have an experienced content writer working for you and as a result, you neither have good quality content nor have optimized content.

Whatever is the reason, you should have a fresh look at your existing content and see what improvements you can make so that it not just reads well, it also improves your SEO.

Content auditing improves your SEO in the following ways

  • You use a tool like Google Analytics to know how much traffic your individual webpages and blog posts generate and which are the best performing and worse performing links.
  • You add more content – Google prefers lengthy pieces of webpages and blog posts.
  • You interlink your blog posts and webpages so that high traffic links can send references to your other blog posts and webpages that don’t get much exposure.
  • You rewrite meta titles and descriptions in terms of improving SEO.
  • You make the content fresh and resubmit the links, which Google likes.
  • You add more relevant images to give your SEO further boost.
  • You can re-share your content through your social media and social networking profiles getting more exposure to your older blog posts and webpages.

What are the benefits of content auditing?

  • Pinpoint main problem areas and rectify them.
  • Identify content for content repurposing (you may like to read How to repurpose old content?)
  • Improve quality of your content.
  • Restructure your content for better readability.
  • Incorporate primary, secondary and longtail keywords strategically and in a logical manner without compromising on the overall quantity of your content.
  • Enhance content usability.
  • Improve credibility by linking to trusted sources.
  • Improve call-to-action.

How to do content auditing?

This is something you yourself will have to figure out, but I can explain how I am doing.

I use WordPress as my CMS.

I use a plug-in that generates an HTML page of all the links that I have posted so far.

Using this plug-in I generated a fresh list and then copy/pasted the list into an Excel worksheet.

There are other tools also that can help you generate a list of all the URLs under your website, including Screaming Frog and URL Profiler.

I also use SEOPressor for WordPress to analyse my text as I write it.

I select a link and copy/paste it in the browser and then go to the WordPress dashboard to edit the link.

SEOPressor immediately tells me whether I have previously optimized the content or not.

I also check (using anonymous browsing) how the link ranks for the selected keywords and search phrases.

If SEOPressor tells me that I didn’t optimize the content the first time, I start working on it until the SEOPressor plug-in okays it.

Once I feel satisfied, I republish and resubmit the link to Google.

In the Excel sheet in the adjacent column, I enter the date on which I audited the link and then I also color code the link to mark it as “audited”.

This is how I do it.

I am an experienced content writer and I can immediately know if a certain webpage or blog post is optimized or not.

You may not have that experience.

You can hire a content writer to audit your website and then update the content.

If you have too many pages and blog posts, don’t worry about the cost.

You can select the most important pages and blog posts and hire a content writer to work on them.

However you decide to audit your content to improve your SEO, sometimes deciding to audit your existing content is better than adding new content.