turbin3
BuSo Pro
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- Oct 9, 2014
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I figured I'd put this up, as it's something I've noticed more and more frequently over the past 2-3 years, through optimizing hundreds if not several thousand pages of dozens of client sites. I know it will be nothing new for a number of you, and I also know that it is possible to rank faster than this, including within as fast as a few minutes or few hours in certain cases. Though, I'm looking at this more from the perspective of cookie cutter client work. Not necessarily pushing the limits, just doing the due diligence of optimizing client sites.
For a change, I'm going to try and be clear and concise, since I'm in a rush. Basically, in short, if you do your on-page optimization correctly you might be able to see improvements in rankings within as short as 24-72 hours. There is no guarantee, and in some cases you may not see anything for a significantly longer period of time. More often than not, however, I find it to be the case that if you really did your job with on-page optimization, you are probably going to see an initial jump in rankings within the first few days to a week. Even if it's not the full 100% of the overall improvement you stand to see, there is usually an initial surge of rankings improving by several spots or by several pages. After this period immediately post-launch of your optimization, typically it seems that the rate of improvement tapers off and you see either ranking stabilizing where they are, or slowing to a slow progressive improvement that may still show some positive movement over the course of the following weeks or months.
Some of the things I typically look to accomplish with on-page optimization:
Some details about this chart. This is a site that's PR5, DA50, Majestic 26TF / 33CF, and 9-10 years in age. The keywords in the chart below add up to 5,090 US search volume, and 8,580 global. The pages are all 2 levels deep. None of the pages have ANY backlinks. Most of the pages are actually still a bit light on content. A majority are 200-300 words, but a few are 150-200. A few have embedded videos with structured data snippets, and most have unique logo images with descriptive ALT text. Not much to say here. The pages are fairly light and uninteresting. Note that the date of implementation of my optimization recommendations was November 25th. Within 48 hours, several keywords shot up in rank from previously unranked to page 2-5. One keyword, 3,600 in US volume, improved from unranked to the 40's and stabilized around #45. Another keyword, 720 US volume, improved from #44 to #15. Another, 260 US volume, improved from unranked to #24. Most of these rankings have now been stable for about one week.
Over the past 2-3 years, I've seen similar results, usually within a 24-72 hour window, across a fairly wide range of sites. This includes small local business, low authority sites, to software/SAAS companies of mid-range authority, all the way to high authority international tech companies/manufacturers. So the results are definitely not a fluke of a high authority site, or anything like that. Anyways, all of this amounted to probably not a massive increase in traffic, but consider the fact that you could be doing this day in day out, especially with long tail keywords that could stand to deliver a much greater ranking improvement (albeit low to no traffic sometimes). There are often far more effective methods of generating traffic, such as "traffic leaks", but consider what you could be missing out on, just by optimizing what you have a bit further.
For a change, I'm going to try and be clear and concise, since I'm in a rush. Basically, in short, if you do your on-page optimization correctly you might be able to see improvements in rankings within as short as 24-72 hours. There is no guarantee, and in some cases you may not see anything for a significantly longer period of time. More often than not, however, I find it to be the case that if you really did your job with on-page optimization, you are probably going to see an initial jump in rankings within the first few days to a week. Even if it's not the full 100% of the overall improvement you stand to see, there is usually an initial surge of rankings improving by several spots or by several pages. After this period immediately post-launch of your optimization, typically it seems that the rate of improvement tapers off and you see either ranking stabilizing where they are, or slowing to a slow progressive improvement that may still show some positive movement over the course of the following weeks or months.
Some of the things I typically look to accomplish with on-page optimization:
- Keyword placement in meta tags and body content
- I aim for getting them closer to the front, and within the first 1-4 words if possible, though not usually at the expense of readability and quality. Even if it means only moving an existing keyword one or two spots within the meta tag, I find there can often still be value in it.
- Semantic variations
- Semantics, LSI, blah blah blah. I don't have a hard rule for this, and I tend to be inconsistent in how I do it, but the strange thing is, I find that it almost seems to be ideal to be a bit inconsistent with this. Sometimes on some pages, I may have the meta tags optimized consistently, using the same keywords, not really containing any semantic ones, and only including semantic terms in the body copy. Sometimes I include semantics in meta tags. Sometimes I'll include semantics in meta tags, and will leave the main keywords out of an H1, or something like that.
- In short, I basically just "roll with it", write what sounds natural, while keeping an eye on whether I've been repeating the same word more than a few times, and if I feel I have or I feel things are sounding too boring, I throw in some semantics. It doesn't have to be rocket science.
- On-page elements
- The typical stuff. Images, videos, structured data, ALT text, etc. Keywords, semantic variations, do whatever. You all know the drill.
- Internal linking
- I'll admit, honestly, I don't even bother half the time. With the types of client sites I'm usually working with, there are sometimes already a few internal links in the content, but there's also a pretty fair number that don't have any. I'm lazy, and frankly I just have too much volume to deal with, so I let this one slide a lot of times, unless I already know of some relevant URLs and it won't take me long.
- Keyword research
- I spend an inordinate amount of time on keyword research. Where a situation calls for 1-2 primary keywords on a page and maybe 3-5 semantic variations, I probably end up pulling hundreds if not several thousand keywords several different ways from several different tools.
- Usually I'm pulling data from Keyword Planner, Google Webmaster Tools, Moz Keyword Difficulty, sometimes Raven Tools Research Central, Bing Webmaster Tools (lots of stuff falls through the cracks with GWT, and you'll often find keywords reported as zero search volume in GWT, but noteworthy volume in BWT), sometimes Link Research Tools, Spyfu, and probably a half dozen other tools. Start with the basics, work up from there if necessary, if you're unsatisfied, or if something is particularly competitive.
Some details about this chart. This is a site that's PR5, DA50, Majestic 26TF / 33CF, and 9-10 years in age. The keywords in the chart below add up to 5,090 US search volume, and 8,580 global. The pages are all 2 levels deep. None of the pages have ANY backlinks. Most of the pages are actually still a bit light on content. A majority are 200-300 words, but a few are 150-200. A few have embedded videos with structured data snippets, and most have unique logo images with descriptive ALT text. Not much to say here. The pages are fairly light and uninteresting. Note that the date of implementation of my optimization recommendations was November 25th. Within 48 hours, several keywords shot up in rank from previously unranked to page 2-5. One keyword, 3,600 in US volume, improved from unranked to the 40's and stabilized around #45. Another keyword, 720 US volume, improved from #44 to #15. Another, 260 US volume, improved from unranked to #24. Most of these rankings have now been stable for about one week.
Over the past 2-3 years, I've seen similar results, usually within a 24-72 hour window, across a fairly wide range of sites. This includes small local business, low authority sites, to software/SAAS companies of mid-range authority, all the way to high authority international tech companies/manufacturers. So the results are definitely not a fluke of a high authority site, or anything like that. Anyways, all of this amounted to probably not a massive increase in traffic, but consider the fact that you could be doing this day in day out, especially with long tail keywords that could stand to deliver a much greater ranking improvement (albeit low to no traffic sometimes). There are often far more effective methods of generating traffic, such as "traffic leaks", but consider what you could be missing out on, just by optimizing what you have a bit further.