Why Your Users Should Come Before Your SEO
In the content marketing industry,
we’re all familiar with the argument that content should be written for people
rather than search engines.
But how many of us abide by that?
As a copywriter myself, I can
remember hundreds of times I’ve been confronted with clients who want
keyword-stuffed, SEO-focused content that doesn’t do much of anything to
consider the reader. Unfortunately, this approach is more common than most of
us would like to believe.
Search engines and readers have
both become much more discerning in recent years, but this doesn’t mean that
crappy, SEO-obsessed content doesn’t still exist. And to some extent, we can’t
blame the people who create it.
While the warnings about Google
penalties and algorithm updates that penalize crappy content are everywhere,
ranking in Google is harder right now than it’s ever been. Instead of investing
in quality copy and understanding that SEO is a long-game thing, many people
get a little desperate and write their content for SEO first and users second,
thinking this will produce faster results.
Although this approach is a little
backward, it’s easy to see how people can get tied up in it.
Today, we’re going to talk about
why it’s so critical that your users always come before your SEO, and how to
use this to produce better content marketing. Read on.
The Difference Between SEO- and User-Focused Content
Sometimes, I think people who put
out search engine-focused content think they’re getting away with something.
Like nobody can tell that they’re writing for search engines rather than
people. Unfortunately, this just isn’t true.
While the best content considers
both users and search engines, material that focuses too completely on one or
the other is very obvious. Here are some of the primary differences between
SEO- and user-focused content.
SEO-Focused Content
- Targets keywords more than value.
- Isn’t cohesive.
- Doesn’t offer relevant resources and back-up material.
- Often features low-quality writing.
- Is created on a “fast and furious” basis, without the attention to detail, accuracy, or quality that it deserves.
User-Focused Content
- Takes longer to produce.
- Includes keywords, but relies on intent rather than literal interpretation of keyword phrases.
- Clusters around topics rather than terms.
- Offers outbound links and links to other internal information that will help the reader understand the topic more deeply.
- Features high-quality writing.
- Is grammatically-correct, with intense attention to detail and accuracy.
With these fundamental differences
in mind, you can see how there’s no mistaking SEO- vs. user-focused content.
The two are entirely different animals and they’re not interchangeable.
5 Smart Reasons to Focus on Readers First
We’ve always centered our content
strategy around our readers. We’ve never paid for a PPC ad and our content is
created without a thought to a sales funnel. While this may seem backward to
some people, it’s worked like gangbusters for us.
Today, we beat every single one of
our major competitors on Google by a ranking margin of five percent. We’ve also
earned upward of 4,100 Google keyword rankings and our organic traffic is worth
more than $13,200.
While we certainly target keywords
in our posts, the keyword comes after the value of the post. As in: we write a
post, and then, once it’s drafted and complete, we identify a keyword to rank
for. In other words, it’s always users-first around here.
Here are five reasons this
approach makes a whole lot of sense:
1. Trends Are More Important To
People Than They Are To Search Engines
One of the things we write about
most often is digital marketing trends: how Google is changing its algorithm,
what Facebook is releasing in the way of live-streaming, etc. While our readers
are generally really interested in these topics, search engines often aren’t
until much later.
If we were to look at these topics
from a keywords perspective, for example, we’d have a tough time coming up with
anything because the search terms surrounding those topics would be virtually
unheard-of to Google and similar search engines.
While we might get a kick-back
later, when search engines caught on to those search terms, it’s most important
in these situations to serve readers first. In addition to positioning us as a
leader in the industry, it’s also a great way to give our readers what they
want, when they want it.
2. Some Topics are Just Too
Competitive
If we approached our content from
a keyword-only basis, we probably wouldn’t write a lot of the content we do,
since the keyword phrases we’d be targeting would immediately seem too
competitive. That’s never stopped us from creating posts, though, since we
write them for our readers first, and search engines second.
When you seek to provide value
above all else, you’ll typically succeed at creating a unique, widely-read
piece that pleases both your readers and the search engines. This holds much
more weight than a piece that’s been crafted solely to fulfill the needs of
Google.
3. SEO Isn’t the Only Way
While SEO is indeed critical to a
good content marketing strategy, it’s important to remember Google isn’t the
only way people find your content. So if you’re only creating content for
Google, you’re in big trouble. In most businesses, people come to content
through a mixture of social media, links their friends and family share, media,
paid promotions, and e-mail messages.
Because of this, it’s critical to
create content that this diverse audience will find valuable when they stumble
upon it. As such, focusing on relevant, informative, exciting material is key,
because it will please all your readers rather than just the ones who find it
through a Google search.
4. Sometimes, You’re Already
Ranking Well
If you’ve done a good job of
creating targeted, relevant content that speaks directly to your readers, you
might not need to focus on SEO because you’re already ranking at the top of
Google’s SERPs. When this happens, you basically “own a keyword phrase,” as
Content Marketing Institute points out, so there’s no point in continuing to
hammer your content for SEO.
In these cases, the best thing you
can do is create quality, relevant material that appeals to your audience. In
addition to helping you maintain your spot at the top of the SERPs, it will
also go a long way toward helping you earn new rankings down the road.
5. Some High-Value Topics Have Low
Search Value
Again, if you looked at your
content creation from a SEO-only standpoint, you’d breeze right by many
important topics because they might have low SEO or search value. That doesn’t
mean these topics don’t deserve attention, though.
In many cases, topics with low
search value stand out as critical building blocks in your content strategy.
While they might not be the ultimate evergreen pieces that draw all the people
to your material, they could easily be a critical reinforcing beam for your
existing content strategy, or an essential back-up source for a larger piece
you’ll write down the road.
Leave these seemingly unimportant
topics out of the fray, and you’ll risk creating a lopsided content marketing
approach.
The Case for Always Putting Your Readers First
Content marketing is a dynamic
field, to be sure, and there’s lots to look at in any given moment. In such a
busy industry, it’s understandable that some people lose track of what’s
important and get caught up obsessing over SEO, instead. The one thing you
can’t afford to lose focus of, however, is your reader.
While SEO trends come and go, your
readers are the foundation that gives you a business to work with. Lose them,
and you’ll lose the entire structure of your company. When you think of it this
way, it starts to make a lot of sense to focus on your readers first and SEO
second.
While it’s important to understand
the basics of good SEO and include things like keyword phrases and meta content
in your material, it’s more critical to understand what your readers want and
need, and develop an approach to give it to them.
When you do this, you can create a
successful content marketing approach that sustains your brand now and in the
future.
Source: - http://www.sitepronews.com/2017/02/15/why-your-users-should-come-before-your-seo/
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