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14 Effective SEO Steps for Blog Post Optimization & Inbound Marketing

 

Blog Post OptimizationBlog post optimization gives your posts the best chance for showing up in Google for a predetermined keyword phrase.  The below SEO steps represent tried and true inbound marketing techniques I’ve deployed for years now.  They’re also the steps I coach my clients and writers with.  If your blog is new don’t expect your first post utilizing these steps to rank well.  It’s possible, but unlikely.  You’ll need to develop a readership and/or social media community centered on your blog’s topics first.  This will make Google take note of your blog as a whole and will allow it to compete with more popular blogs.

  1. Page Title:  Always include the primary keyword phrase in the page title.  Keep the title less than 70 characters in length.
  2. URL:  If you have control of the trailing URL include the primary keyword phrase. (http://www.yourblog.com/blog/primary-keyword-phrase/)
  3. Header 1 (H1) Tag:  Most blog CMS’s automatically assign an H1 tag to the blog post’s title.  When using one that doesn’t make sure to have an H1 tag with the primary keyword phrase in it on the post.
  4. Images File Name & Alternative (Alt) Text:  Always make sure to have at least one image on every blog post.  Also, include the primary keyword phrase in the image file name and the image alt text.
  5. Bold the primary keyword phrase at least one time in the post and always include it in the first sentence.
  6. Inbound & Outbound Links:  It is recommended to link the primary keyword phrase to a page on your website domain with the intent of helping that page rank for that word.  Additionally, if you have any other web properties (including social media) consider including a link on those domains with the anchor text “primary keyword phrase” and point that link to the blog post.
  7. Tip:  When trying to saturate the primary keyword phrase in a post consider ending a sentence with the beginning of the phrase and beginning the next sentence with the ending of the primary keyword phrase.  Search engines recognize it the same as if the words were in the same sentence. (The first sentence should include the primary keyword.  Phrase should be included in the next sentence.)
  8. Header 2, 3, 4, etc. (H2, H3, H4, etc.) Tag:  Include the primary keyword phrase in as many relevant header tags as possible.
  9. Ordered & Unordered lists are good to use for organizing information and for adding a few primary keyword phrases when the post is short a few.
  10. Target Keyword Saturation Rate:  The recommended saturation rate for blog posts is 3% - 9%.  Keep in mind, all of the words on the page matter in the calculation of the saturation rate.  This includes the navigation and footer content.
  11. Include the primary keyword phrase in the last sentence of the post.
  12. Blog Tags:  Blog tags are a way to organize similar posts and each tag represents a separate RSS feed that visitors can subscribe to and Google can index.  These feeds contain posts that should be optimized for the phrase in the tag. (primary keyword phrase, primary keyword phrase variation1, primary keyword phrase variation2, etc.) 
  13. Meta Description:  Always include the primary keyword phase in the post’s meta description.  
  14. Meta Keywords:  Include up to 10 phrases to include the primary keyword phrase and relevant variations.

All of the optimization steps above are great, but if your content is written for search engines instead of people, which is considered a bad practice and creates poorly written content, the likelihood of consistantly ranking high on Google is slim.  If your content is good at solving people's problems and people like to read it the steps above will help your posts get ranked while improving your inbound marketing.



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Comments

Great seo advice, thanks. One thing I have not been doing was including the keyword phrase in the last sentence of the blog post. Love the tip on splitting the keyword phrase between two sentences, never would have thought about that, thanks.
Posted @ Wednesday, March 23, 2011 3:07 PM by Eric Baum
Eric: 
 
I'm glad you liked the post. Over the years I've ran into lots of little tips like that that make optimization easier. I'm sure I'll learn new ones and when I do I'll make sure to share those as well. 
 
@CPollittIU
Posted @ Wednesday, March 23, 2011 3:40 PM by Chad H. Pollitt
Haha, love the tip to end a sentence with part of a phrase, then finish the phrase at the beginning of the next sentence. 
 
That's awesome, especially for phrases that would look awkward otherwise.
Posted @ Wednesday, March 23, 2011 3:47 PM by Chris
This is great insight for any brand/company that wants to leverage a blog and/or web site content via SEO and content best practices. Well done and thanks for sharing.
Posted @ Wednesday, March 23, 2011 3:54 PM by Lee Traupel
Chris: 
 
I'm glad you like the end/beginning sentence trick. You're absolutely right, it definitely helps when the phrase looks awkward in a sentence. 
 
Lee: 
 
Thanks for the comment. I try to help as much as I can with every post I publish. 
 
@CPollittIU
Posted @ Thursday, March 24, 2011 7:01 AM by Chad H. Pollitt
The Meta Keywords tag hasn't been a ranking factor in Google for almost 2 years now. Many websites eschew it entirely. Saturation rate or keyword density is also thought to no longer be important...while it's important to mention the keyword a few times, the specific % isn't significant. Focus your energy on circulating your blog post and getting backlinks instead.
Posted @ Thursday, March 24, 2011 10:43 AM by Taylor Gould
Taylor: 
 
Ahh, you bring up some good points. . .  
 
Meta keywords are not specific ranking factors for Google. That is indeed correct, but Google is also not the only search engine. Besides, there are many different websites with sharing capability that pulls those keywords for tags. If my post gets bookmarked or submitted to one of these sites I want my meta keywords in order. In addition, they may not help you in Google, but they can hurt you. If you fail to put them in or they are all identical your site will get dinged. 
 
The saturation comment you made comes from SEOmoz research. I read that PDF. If you look closely at the document the indexable content has been manipulated for keyword saturation. Why would they do that if it's not true? It obviously took a lot of work on their part to sculpt the keyword saturation. Just sayin'. . . 
 
As far as focusing on distribution and backlinks. . . I couldn't agree more on the importance of doing that. However, if the proper words aren't in the proper places the post may not come up for relevant phrases. I would argue that it's the combination of both on-page and off-page factors that maximizes organic success. 
 
Don't believe me? Type in "Internet Marketing Expert" into Google. Look at the backlinks for all ten sites. You'll notice my name #2 & #4. My page rank and backlink numbers are no where near the others on the page. How'd that happen. . ? The above steps. . .  
 
@CPollittIU
Posted @ Thursday, March 24, 2011 11:48 AM by Chad H. Pollitt
@CPollittIU 
 
Thanks for the reply. I had not considered how meta keywords might be pulled in in other ways outside of search engines, good point. However, looking at your #2 result for [internet marketing expert], I see that the meta keywords tag is "Web Design, Fort Wayne, SEO, Chad, Pollitt" 
 
No [internet], no [marketing], no [expert] 
 
In addition, Google has specifically stated that meta keywords is not a ranking signal and is not factored into SERs in any way - http://www.mattcutts.com/blog/keywords-meta-tag-in-web-search/ 
 
 
I'm not sure which SEOmoz pdf you are referring to, but in multiple articles over the past 3 years they have referred to Keyword Density as an "SEO Myth" - e.g. http://www.seomoz.org/ugc/seo-myths-that-persist-keyword-density 
 
Obviously on-page optimization is important, but IMO its most important to focus on title tag, h-tags, a few body text mentions, alt and titles for images, and then focus on both internal and external links.  
 
I enjoyed the blog post, just disagreeing on a few points.
Posted @ Thursday, March 24, 2011 12:26 PM by Taylor Gould
Taylor: 
 
Yes indeed, the meta data is poor on that particular page (a project I started messing with almost 4 years ago). However, I'm in total agreement with you that meta keywords aren't a direct ranking factor for Google - as Google has stated. Today I focus on them for other search engines and the reasons I stated above. 
 
Here's the PDF from SEOmoz I'm talking about http://www.seomoz.org/beginners-guide-to-seo 
 
This is one of many PDFs sculpted in the way described above. I noticed the indexable content sculpting when I got to the part on keyword saturation. I was floored to say the least. 
 
I would say we agree much more than we disagree. Always feel free to join our discussions. It's nice engaging with a fellow SEO :) 
 
@CPollittIU 
 
Posted @ Thursday, March 24, 2011 1:09 PM by Chad Pollitt
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