FE: SEO, in the know

Date Published: 7/08/2021

SEO used to be a buzz phrase, a concept that stuffed web pages in hopes of higher ranking. Some users may call SEO a necessary evil, describing a constant uphill battle against updates and algorithms. Others might say SEO is obsolete, citing Google’s shift to Natural Language Processing and disdain for over-optimized websites.

SEO could be viewed as a vital brand-building resource – if not the ultimate resource – thanks in no small part to the ever-growing possibilities for reaching new audiences. Overall, SEO still gives you control over your brand’s online presence.

Learn about Google’s Core Web Vitals https://developers.google.com/search/blog/2020/11/timing-for-page-experience, which continues to roll out an update for page experiences now through August 2021.

Use strategic SEO for brand recognition across multiple touchpoints, build loyalty by meeting content expectations, and you might just become someone’s new favorite brand. DYK that 60 percent of people say they discovered their favorite brand while doing something other than shopping online, like scrolling search results or watching videos (https://www.thinkwithgoogle.com/consumer-insights/consumer-journey/discovery-ad-campaigns).

Read on for SEO wisdom and context…

1. Google loves top of funnel content

Google’s job is to answer questions and queries. Other than a few exceptions (many of which contain branded terms), most search queries are informational. These users want search results with general answers and ideas – perfect for top-of-funnel content.

Choose long-tail keywords highly relevant to your brand’s expertise and create comprehensive long-form content around each one. Include semantic keywords and questions as subheadings. Add some branded graphics, and you’re ready to start brand building with SEO.

Start from scratch. Audit your current ranking pages to make sure they fall under your expertise and supply comprehensive answers.

2. Almost any page can rank in Top Stories after Google’s May update

We shouldn’t be overly confident about how Google’s May Core Web Vitals update (or any update) will affect overall rankings and SEO. However, we do know that Google plans to make non-AMP pages eligible for rankings in Top Stories.

Those are the results in a snippet pulled from Google News when someone runs a general Google search on a newsworthy topic. Just submit your website to Google News, optimize your digital experience, and enjoy instant brand building for relevant Top Stories.

Related: 13 Fun Facts That Will Make Your ‘About Me’ A Lot Less Boring

3. Low-competition image searches play well with branding

Publish and optimize high-quality branded images now, and your SEO will be prepared to evolve with Google’s long-term plan. AI-powered visual searches are improving across other apps every day, so we should expect major shifts here from Google soon too.

Plus, Google pulls relevant images for certain types of snippets. Optimize all your images to squeeze the most potential from SEO as a brand-building tool.

4. People trust organic results – not paid ads

An estimated 27 percent of peopleuse adblockers, and another 70 to 80 percent actively ignore paid search results instead of going straight for organic results. People don’t trust ads because they know anyone can pay to put them there.

From that standpoint, what looks better for branding: paying to show up at the top of the results or organically ranking for the same keyword? That’s why you see leading brands prioritize organic SEO even though they have the budget for PPC ads.

5. Google’s Core Web Vitals update could level the field

Google gave websites and marketers a six-month warning to prepare for the Core Web Vitals update. Plus, Google also revealed surprisingly detailed factors it will use to rank websites for digital experience along with a new real-time report in Search Console.

This transparency is highly out of character for Google, so we should all take it seriously. Websites that fall short could vanish, providing some room for websites with awesome digital experiences to solidify their branding.

Related: Can You Find the Hidden Images in These 40 Brand Logos? (Infographic)

6. SEO lets you build authority within relevant keyword groups

How does Google decide what to rank? Honestly, we shouldn’t dwell on the details so much except for this one key point: Google EAT aka. Expertise, Authority, and Trustworthiness.

By publishing authoritative and trustworthy content consistently for topics within your expertise (and only within your expertise), you’ll get Google’s attention.

Once you prove your expertise and trustworthiness through content engagement, Google could elevate your brand to an authority across whole keyword groups. That’s how brands dominate the organic search results in their industry–and it all starts by sticking to your main expertise.

Refine your brand “why” with these pro tips: https://thewishwallfoundation.org/desideri/champion-choices.

Thank you to our millions of readers! Best wishes and we welcome your comments below.

Akasha Lin

Akasha Garnier for #TheWishwall

Author, Brand Expert, Filmmaker

http://www.akashagarnier.com

photo: AkashaLin #ShineThroughtheNoise

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FE: SEO, in the know