Tag Archives: SEO

The importance of understanding user intent in content writing

Importance of understanding user intent for content writing

Importance of understanding user intent for content writing

In India there is a famous Bollywood song sung by the legendary Kishore Kumar: Hum the wo thi aur sama ranged samajh gaye na? Jaate the Japan pahunch gaye cheen samajh gaye na?

Roughly translated, it means, I was there, and she was there, and the weather was magical, but, while trying to reach Japan, we reached China (means, I meant to say something else, but I said something else).

The second expression of the song, trying to reach Japan but reaching China, often happens in SEO, and due to faulty content writing.

When writing content for SEO, it is very important to understand the user intent: exactly why a person is using a search term to find information he or she is looking for.

If you haven’t optimized for the right search terms, you may get lots of traffic, but the traffic won’t convert, and then you will wonder why it’s not happening.

It’s like, you run an art gallery where people should come and buy, but they think it is a museum, so they simply visit, admire the art, and leave.

There was a time when the sole purpose of search engine optimization was increasing traffic.

Businesses even used banners with animated monkeys and asking users to click on the monkey and then when people clicked on it, they were taken to a website. Such was the level of directionlessness and desperation.

As the dust settled and “SEO experts” as well as website owners realized that more traffic didn’t necessarily mean more business, greater stress was laid on conversion.

Understanding user intent and then writing content accordingly, is the best way of improving your conversion rate.

In terms of SEO, what is user intent?

What is the intent for searching?

What is the intent for searching?

What is the intention of the user? Why is he or she using the search engine at this very moment?

Is he or she looking for information to increase general knowledge or he or she is looking for something to buy?

Suppose, someone searches for “content writing”.

Now, merely by looking at the phrase “content writing” you cannot make out whether someone looking for this term wants to learn about content writing, is researching about the topic, or looking for a content writing service?

If someone searches for “what is content writing” it is clear that the person wants to know what the term means.

If someone searches for “content writing services” it becomes clear. The person is looking for a content writing service.

If someone searches for “how to set up a content writing service” the intent is completely clear. The person wants to learn how to set up a content writing service.

If a person searches for “content writing service for my web design business”, again, the intent is completely clear. This person is looking for a content writing service for his web design business.

This HubSpot blog post explains the concept of understanding the user intent with the example of a pizza. The author is a Google rater. The author explains how to use the experience of a Google rater to understand the importance of user intent and then create content accordingly.

Recommended reading: How to write content for Google’s human quality raters

How to understand user intent for your own business?

The same way: don’t go for general terms. When writing content for your business, focus on longtail keywords.

Recommended reading: How to incorporate longtail keywords into content writing

Writing your content according to longtail keywords makes user intent as clear as it gets.

Think from your own point of view. When you are searching on Google, you want to find the most appropriate information for your search.

To make sure that you find the right information, you submit a search query that is as precise as possible.

Recently my wife wanted to find a sofa repair service in the neighbourhood. It wouldn’t have been much helpful if she had simply searched for “sofa”, or “repairing sofa” or “sofa repair” or, totally skipping sofa and searching “repair service”.

She searched for “sofa repair service in Indirapuram”. Although the listing that she found was from JustDial.com, it is the most appropriate query for the job and hence, if you are a sofa repair service that wants to attract customers in Indirapuram you must target for this search term. Here, the user intent is as clear as it can be.

For your business, instead of going for generic keywords, go for the exact product or service, or the exact feature your target customer or client should be looking for.

If you are an interior design company, it would be nice if you could manage to get yourself listed on Google’s first page for the search term “interior design company”.

Realistically it might not be possible considering there might be thousands of interior design companies vying for the same position.

Instead, aim for something like “interior design company in LA” or, “interior design agency in LA” or, “interior design company for residential complexes” or, “interior design company for my reception area” – try to understand the user intent and then create/write the content accordingly.

Here is that song, very hilarious.

Improve SEO of web pages and blog posts with higher engagement levels

Improved search engine visibility of web pages with higher engagement levels

Improved search engine visibility of web pages with higher engagement levels

On web pages and blog posts with higher engagement level, people stay longer. For example, if someone stays more than 30-40 seconds on a web page or blog post on your website, this web page or blog post has a higher engagement level compared to web pages and blog posts that people leave within five seconds.

A point on this NewsCreed blog post on content marketing KPIs caught my attention (although, all the points are worth reading):

Some articles may receive many pageviews but have low engagement rates, which indicates that you may want to revise those pieces to capture people for longer amounts of time. Other stories may have low pageviews and high engagement, indicating that you should reallocate distribution resources and re-optimize them for SEO to get those pieces in front of more people.

This makes great sense, and although it is a natural thing to do, we often ignore such steps.

You can use Google Analytics and Google Search Console to know how much time people are spending on individual web pages and blog posts on your website.

Your statistics give you lots of insight. There might be many web pages or blog posts that get lots of traffic, but people don’t stay on these web pages or blog posts for long.

In terms of SEO, these web pages or blog posts might be great, but they are not performing much in terms of eliciting a positive response from your visitors.

I repeatedly mention on my blog that traffic doesn’t matter much if it doesn’t get you business. Without business, more traffic is just ego massage or an illusion.

There might be many web pages or blog posts that don’t get much traffic, but when people land on these web pages or blog posts, they stay there longer. When they are on these web pages or blog posts, they even feel encouraged to explore other parts of your website or blog. This tendency of these web pages or blog posts helps you increase your conversion rate.

So, shouldn’t you try to get more traffic to these web pages or blog posts? You should.

If you have lots of web pages and blog posts on your website, prepare an Excel spreadsheet (or Google spreadsheet) and enter all the URLs you would like to track, over there. If you are using WordPress to manage your website, there is a nice plug-in that allows you to make a list of all the URLs in your WordPress database.

Some study of Google Analytics can tell you how you can find out how much time people are spending on your web pages and blog posts.

Once you have discovered that there are many web pages and blog posts that have a higher engagement level but don’t get much traffic, you can start promoting these web pages and blog posts.

Note down their current rankings, traffic and the amount of time people are spending on them in separate columns of the spreadsheet.

You can start with trying to improve their search engine rankings.

How to improve the SEO of web pages and blog posts with higher engagement levels?

Do you feel that if you tweak the content of web pages and blog posts with higher engagement levels may bring down their engagement levels?

Sure, this can happen, and this is where an experienced content writer can help you.

Anyway, as long as you are clear about why these chosen web pages and blog posts have a higher engagement level, you can optimize the content to increase their search engine rankings without meddling with their current engagement level.

You will need to be patient. My website gets crawled almost daily, and even multiple times a day sometimes. This way, I can find out quickly whether certain changes have had some sort of impact on their search engine rankings or not.

That might not be the case with your website. If it takes a while for Google to crawl and index your new and updated links, then you will need to wait and see how your recent changes are improving SEO of your chosen links and how it is affecting the engagement levels.

Make small changes. You must have clear idea of what keywords and search terms bring targeted traffic to these web pages and blog posts. See if you can incorporate more instances of these keywords and search terms into your existing content.

Maybe you can include a couple of more points with headings having your keywords?

Maybe you can increase the number of words?

But don’t add text just to increase the number of words; have something relevant to say. Make sure that you are adding value rather than creating extra noise to increase the size of your web page or blog post. This will cause more harm than good.

If right now you have got nothing to add, then don’t add. Do some research. Do some more reading. Take more time. This is not some job that you should do in a hurry.

Make a list of changes that you would like to incorporate and then wait for the new data to emerge in the Google Analytics dashboard.

As a content writer my advise would be to make very small changes in the existing text and then if possible, add more text where the original text ends. This way, the material that gives you a higher engagement level won’t be pushed down or diluted.

You can also promote links with higher engagement levels directly without resorting to improving their search engine rankings. You can encourage people to link to these web pages and blog posts. You can link to them from your own LinkedIn, Quora and Medium posts. You can repeatedly share them on social media. You can frequently share these links through your mailing list.

The string of thoughts that made me write this post was triggered by the suggestion that one should try to improve the SEO of web pages and blog posts that enjoy a higher engagement level so that more people can come to these web pages and blog posts, to get you even higher engagement level and consequently, improve your conversion rate.

Do you know you can improve your CTR by 200% by tweaking your title?

Improve your CTR with web page and blog post titles

Improve your CTR with web page and blog post titles

Your web page and blog post titles are very important. I have lost a new client who insisted that I create titles for his blog posts for the same amount he was paying for writing the blog posts. The titles are so important that I charge extra for coming up with them.

Your web page and blog post titles are so important that they come under content marketing and content strategy because they can pretty much define the direction of your entire content marketing approach.

What are your title tags and why they are important?

Although your page heading and title tags can be the same, they can also be different. The heading is something that you enclose within <h1> and </h1>.

The title tag is something that you enclose within <head><title></title></head>.

Both are important. It is your heading, or the headline that hooks people to your web page or blog post when they come to your link. But, on search engine result pages, it is your title tag that matters.

It is your title tag that appears as a hyperlink when people search for your business:

Web page title as hyperlink in search results

Web page title as hyperlink in search results

Your web page and blog post titles are not just important for CTR (click-through ratio), they are also important for your SEO.

Google re-ranks your content according to your CTR. If your appearance in the search results does not attract many clicks, Google lowers your ranking for that link. If it attracts more clicks, it increases your rank for that link.

This blog post on Seige Media gives an in-depth analysis of how to test which web page and blog post titles perform the best through A/B testing, with the help of Google Search Console (previously known as Google Webmasters Tools). The writer also says that if you improve your title, you can experience a click-through increase of 20-200%.

Good web page titles can increase your CTR by 20-200%

Good web page titles can increase your CTR by 20-200%

A/B testing, as explained in the above link, can be a time-consuming exercise but it is worth your effort if you really want to make sure that you create optimized web page and blog post titles for maximum CTR.

It basically involves

  • coming up with the best title you can think of in the beginning,
  • publishing your web page or blog post with that title,
  • and noting down when your link begins to appear in the search results.

This is assuming that you are using Google Search Console to track your search engine appearance and your clicks.

Let things happen for two weeks.

Start noting down values such as number of clicks, click-through ratio and impressions for that particular link in the past two weeks.

Then, change the title and resubmit the link. Make sure the link has appeared in the search results.

Repeat the above process after two weeks.

This way you can create a detailed analysis of how various titles perform.

How do you write web page titles and blog post titles for maximum CTR?

Aside from the main keywords in the search terms that you should use within your title, the intent is also very important. What moves people to click your link?

The most commonsensical way of knowing what matters the most to people is, addressing their main concern within the title.

If you are looking for a blog writing service, then obviously something about a blog writing service is going to attract you towards a certain link.

But you are not just looking for a blog writing service, you are looking for a blog writing service that can help your business in a certain way.

This is where longtail keyword optimization can help you. Try to pack as much information as possible without making things too complicated.

“Blog writing service” may get me a good CTR, but “blog writing service for my car repair service” may get me even better CTR.

So, if people have a question, provide an answer. If people have a problem, provide a solution. If someone asks for “how many?”, give him or her “these many”.

Neil Patel suggests that you can use emojis in your titles to improve your CTR. This is something I didn’t know. Of course, if all the links on the search engine result page are without emojis and there is a single link that is with emojis, people will tend to click it.

Neil also suggests that mention numbers when you are creating titles for your blog posts and web pages.

“77% increase in CTR after this” gets more clicks than “awesome increase in CTR after this”.

Be more specific when writing titles

Be more specific when writing titles

This Hubspot blog post on creating web page and blog post titles people cannot resist clicking suggests that you make your titles very specific. For example, if your web page contains an interview, then mention it somewhere in the title. If it contains a podcast or infographic, mention it. The post claims that titles that contain specific information that says exactly what the web page or the blog post contains get 38% more clicks than those titles that don’t.

The Hubspot post also has some rules of thumb on how to come up with clickable titles. Even small things matter.

Some title formats that always work

“How to” titles seem to work quite well, especially with search engine and social media users:

“How I increased my website traffic by 200% with just this simple SEO trick”

The title clearly tells that you are going to reveal what SEO trick you used that increase your traffic by 200%. Such titles draw lots of clicks.

“10 ways you can sell your old mobile phone online within 24 hours”

“Painstakingly learnt 25 content marketing lessons that are 100% failsafe”

“If this method doesn’t give you an 8-hour peaceful sleep, nothing will”

“Why” and “how” seem to do quite well because they trigger a sense of curiosity and also provide some valuable information in a concrete form.

Conclusion

Your web page and blog post titles need to cater to a strong desire, or need. They should also give concrete information. Something like “Get 1500 leads in 3 weeks” will always be more convincing than “Get more leads faster”.

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

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

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

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

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

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

Google’s featured snippets

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

How content marketing actually improves your SEO

content marketing improves SEO

Content marketing and SEO are intertwined these days.

Ever since Google released the Panda and Penguin updates people have come to understand that SEO doesn’t just mean using the right keywords while writing content.

Although keywords are important, they are not the sole factors in determining your search engine rankings, the way they used to be 10 odd years ago.

Somewhere along, Google realized that it had to crowdsource its ranking algorithms. Merely depending on the machines was open to exploitation.

Hence, social validation and acceptance of your content became as important as the way you used the keywords.

These days, your search engine rankings depend on

  • The overall quality of your content
  • The ease of reading
  • The number of people sharing your content on social media and social networking websites
  • The number of people linking to your website or individual links
  • The relevance of your content
  • The bounce rate on your website or blog
  • The number of times you update and refresh your content

Although Google (and other major search engines) don’t let people know how actually the search engine ranking algorithms work, the above-mentioned attributes of your content can ensure an improved SEO.

As you can see, a big part of your search engine rankings depends on how people perceive your content.

Google has incorporated these attributes because even if you can use black hat SEO tactics to trick the machines, it is practically impossible to trick humans.

Therefore, SEO these days depends a lot on content marketing.

Why SEO and content marketing are interconnected

The basic nature of content marketing is, publishing high-quality content and then making sure that people who need to access that content, can easily access it.

Read Can content marketing improve your SEO?

Once you have published high-quality content and made it easy for people to access it, since people these days love to share content on social media and social networking websites, they start sharing your content too.

The beauty of this is, they won’t share your content if they don’t find it useful.

If they don’t like your content, your content will not earn social validation.

You may find it nagging that you always have to publish and then distribute high-quality content for better SEO, but look at it logically…very few business owners can publish content that can earn social validation.

If you can improve your SEO with better content marketing, it creates a level-playing field for everyone.

People cannot force their way into better search engine rankings simply because they can spend more money.

SEO these days is not about quantity.

It’s about quality.

And quality comes with knowledge, wisdom, experience, and a strong desire to keep your prospective customers informed and educated.

Well-executed content marketing automatically improves your search engine rankings.

As mentioned above, content marketing can succeed only when you publish valuable content, content that people appreciate.

When you focus on your core topic, you are naturally creating content around your keywords.

Content marketing means providing compelling content on an ongoing basis.

The more you refine your content marketing the better focused you are when publishing useful content.

Being better focused means, focusing on the right questions and the right answers.

Content marketing also means making your content available on all possible distribution channels, which means more people can access your content.

When people can access your content there is a greater possibility of them sharing your content and linking to it from their own websites and blogs.

So, all the steps that you follow to execute a good content marketing strategy, are also the steps needed to improve your SEO.

Better SEO means publishing relevant content in as friendly a manner as possible.

Better SEO also means a greater number of people responding to your content and linking to it.

Consequently, better content marketing means improved SEO.