Thứ Hai, 29 tháng 11, 2021

How to Measure the Quality of Your SEO Traffic Using Google Analytics

 Before you start reading, I'll forewarn you that this article will start with a tweet and end with a challenge. Sound good?

From one of my favorite SEO role models, and founder of Women in Tech SEO, Areej AbuAli

So, before getting lost in the sauce in the various metrics, it’s important you understand that your business goals are unique to you, so the way you measure your goals should reflect that. From there, the next steps are to get a better grasp of what quality traffic means for your website, and then evaluate how users engage with your content. 

To get a better understanding of what’s considered “quality traffic”, we’ll look into various Google Analytics metrics that will help you create a rock solid SEO strategy. 

Why does quality of traffic matter for SEO success?

At the end of the day, quality traffic is what accelerates business success, especially for post-publishing optimization. 

For example, let’s assume your blog has 200 visitors per month with a conversion rate of 1%, generating two leads. By improving the quality of your traffic, your conversion rate and number of leads will also increase:

  • Traffic: 200

  • Conversion rate: 4%

  • Leads: 8

This indicates that “superfan” visitors are far more engaged and therefore more profitable than moderately excited users. Google’s new page experience algorithm update further solidifies this statement. 

It’s become crystal clear that the way that consumers interact with your website contributes to your business growth. 

How do you measure the quality of your organic traffic in Google Analytics?

We can go on and on about Google Analytics, but today we’re specifically looking at traffic quality. Here are the top metrics to keep an eye on:

  • Engagement metrics: time on site, pages per session, exit rate

  • Conversion metrics: conversion rate, form submissions, other goal completions, 

  • Relevance metrics: bounce rate, user geo-location, new and returning visitors

Engagement Metrics

Time on site

The time on site is the measurement a user spends on a site, regardless of whether it’s being used or not. For instance, let’s say a user has multiple tabs open but isn’t necessarily using all of them at once — Google Analytics still counts the time the tabs were open. 

In fact, Google counts sessions up to 30 minutes without a visitor clicking on other pages. But once the timestamp hits 30 minutes, that session will be counted as a bounce. Knowing this, it's clear that not every user who lands on your site is highly engaged.

Generally speaking, the more time a user spends on your site the better. This indicates that your SEO strategy has defined content that is worth their while. Furthermore, the way you have structured your site not only helps them find the information they need, but they also read more about other topics or services that you might be offering. 

A good time on site indicates: 

  • High-quality content

  • Good site architecture

  • Proper internal linking

  • Great UX design

  • High-quality traffic that’s interested in your products and services

To set efficient goals, you could measure time on site together with the next metric, pages per session. 

Here’s a sample goal:

Users who spend an average of four minutes on your site, and at least two pages per session are more likely to be engaged with your content. 

To find this metric, click audience (on the left side) > overview (underneath) > under overview, click average session duration.

Pages per session

To put it simply, pages per session is the average number of pages a user views in one session. It is one of the most important behavior metrics within GA, as it indicates how deep within your site a user navigates to. Essentially, the more pages they view, the more interested they are in what you have to say. Typically the first page a user lands on is your home page, but the goodies are on your service or product pages. With that said, to obtain quality traffic, you should aim to have at least two pages per session on average. 

If you aren’t seeing these results, you need to start investigating what isn’t working. It might be that you're targeting the wrong keywords or your audience is in the wrong country, and therefore they bounce. 

If they land on your home page and don’t move onto another page, it’s a possibility that your home page isn't properly linked to other pages, it’s too slow when loading, or the overall architecture of the site is confusing. Tweak this if necessary, and observe what happens. Often, the simpler it is to get around your site, the better! 

Now, as you view your pages per session, I recommend segmenting pages per session based on channel, so you can see which streams have a greater impact and double down on that. 

To find pages per session, navigate to GA, and then click “Acquisition overview”. Under the behavior bar you’ll see “pages per session”:

Exit rate

This one’s pretty straightforward. An exit rate tells you how often a customer has left your site from a page. Unlike a bounce rate (which I’ll discuss later), the exit rate tells you that a user left one page, and went to another. Let’s take a look at an example to illustrate.

Let’s say a new visitor enters your homepage, but they want to learn more, so they navigate to your blog. They spend some time reading your content and find what they want, so they exit. This shows up as a percentage under site content > all pages > exit rates. 

(see image below to visually see where to find the exit rate on your Google Analytics) 

Of course, if the exit rates are high you’ll want to assess elements like:

  • Website copy

  • Images/videos

  • Site load time

  • Page design

Start by tweaking one element at a time and analyze the results after each change until your exit rates start improving. Some pages will inherently have higher exit rates than others such as  your privacy policy and contact us pages (usually users find what they’re looking for on Google without entering your site). 

However, if you manage to decrease the exit rates for your services pages, blog posts, and/or product pages by tweaking the components we just talked about, you’ll find higher quality traffic and more conversions.

Now that you’re an expert in engagement metrics, let’s have a closer look at conversion ones.

Conversion metrics

Conversion rate

Google Analytics adds up all the goal completions of  your site  and calculates that as the overall website conversion rate. Nonetheless, consider looking at each goal separately to see how they’re performing so that you’ll know which goals you’re meeting and which conversion goals need to be adjusted. 

To view each individual goal, navigate to “goals overview” and then pick the goal you want to assess by selecting it in the drop down menu. From there you’ll see your conversion rate overview for that particular goal. Here’s an example of goals in the below image:

Now let’s look at how organic traffic plays a role in this scenario: 

How can we discover whether or not organic traffic on your site is helping you reach your conversion goals? If for example your conversion rate has gone down, while your organic traffic has gone up, it's possible that you’re targeting the wrong keywords, thus getting less qualified visitors to your site. From there, you’d need to analyze which keywords need to be replaced (hint: check Google Search Console for keywords that are bringing in the highest CTR).

By switching your perspective and looking at the conversion rate of each goal through individual traffic sources, you can make better decisions to optimize and therefore obtain higher quality leads. 

Form submissions

 To get the most out of Google Analytics, I suggest setting up event tracking for form submissions so that you have a clear overview of what users are doing on your website. Tracking your form submissions allows you to understand how users navigate to the form page and focus your marketing efforts there.

Coming back to SEO, the relationship between form submissions and quality of organic traffic is quite similar to conversion rate. A form submission is considered as a goal which users are prompted to complete. If a large percentage of your users don’t fill in a form, this indicates that they are not engaged and therefore are not the right kind of visitors you should be targeting. If this is the case, re-assess the kind of information you request, the usability of the form, and the overall UX of your form page to make it more relevant and engaging.

To track your form submissions, click on admin at the bottom left hand corner > click view > click goals. 

Other goal completions

In addition to the metrics mentioned earlier, you can also set up goals like trial sign ups, newsletter sign ups, ebook downloads, or case study downloads (to name a few). You can track these goals by time, events, pages, or url. 

For example, if you recently posted on your social media channels about a free download, you can set up a goal and pinpoint which social media post brought the most traffic and assess the ones that worked better.

As mentioned earlier, tracking your various goals helps you better understand your audience as well as how they engage with your website. You will be able to deep dive into the channels that work best for your overall marketing efforts, as well as identify ways to incorporate UX and content design into your SEO strategy.

False conversions

I’d like to mention that although tracking metrics in Google Analytics is important, it’s just as critical to ensure you’re not skewing your data through false conversions. Inaccuracies in your data set could cause several problems and lead you to the wrong conclusions about your traffic and its quality. Looking at such false data will be the reason to decide on and implement the wrong SEO strategy for your website. 

To double check the goals you’ve set up, look for the conversions tab > goals > reverse goal path. Once there, you can identify where your goal conversions are occurring and if there are incorrect pages popping up that could be a sign you’ve incorporated the wrong data for a goal. 

Check out the visual below for further direction. 

Relevance Metrics

User geo-location

To find your audience’s geo-location, scroll to the audience on the left hand side, then geo, and finally location. Here you’ll find all the different countries that users are coming from, their acquisition, behavior, and conversion data. To get even deeper, you can click on a specific country and see state or city level data. 

For larger and international businesses, the big picture geo location data will be most useful, but for smaller or location specific businesses, the granular data will be crucial. For instance, if you’re a boutique clothing store, the city view helps you understand what locations your customers are coming from so you can create more relevant content and optimize according to location. 

By understanding the demographics of your audience, you can create highly relevant content to answer their questions and improve the quality of your organic traffic. 

Bounce rate

We spoke earlier about bounce rates, but let’s unveil how to use this metric to help your company. The bounce rate represents the percentage of visitors who land on your site and quickly exit without navigating to another page. 

For example, if you have affiliate links on your site, a user might click on a specific link and go off onto a new browser window. Your bounce rate would be high but this isn’t necessarily a bad thing in this particular situation, as affiliate purchases are one of your business goals. If you’re a service based brand and you have a high bounce rate, this indicates that people can’t find the information they’re looking for on your site and exit.

Your bounce rate will depend on the goals you’ve set up on Google Analytics and what type of business you have. If you look at the acquisition overview section of your Google Analytics, you’ll come across the bounce rate. Here you’ll notice the bounce rate percentages from different sources of traffic. If the bounce rates are high for organic traffic, that could mean you’re targeting the wrong keywords or audience.

If you’ve already switched to GA4, you may be missing the bounce rate metric from your dashboard. What GA4 gives you instead are engagement metrics.

GA4 tags users who have either visited more than one page, completed an event or conversion, or who have been on the site longer than 10 seconds as “engaged users”. This metric will usually be higher than bounce rate, because certain sessions that would have been considered a bounce are now classified as an engaged user. The engagement overview on GA4 gives you an idea of how many of your users engage with your content and for how long, which is a useful substitute for the GA bounce rate metric.

New & Returning visitors

To get more information on your new and returning visitors visit the audience tab, then click on behavior and “new and returning visitors”. Instead of looking at these metrics separately, it's a good rule of thumb to view them simultaneously as your company grows. 

Over time, you should see both numbers increase. However, if there’s ever a drastic decrease in the amount of returning visitors, that could be an alarming metric. You’d need to deep dive into the reasons why this is happening (such as a recent change on your site or the wrong marketing tactic). 

Benchmarking Google Analytics traffic data 

Let’s be honest here… you need benchmark data to truly understand how well your website is performing. I get it, we’re humans and we need guidelines! So in this section, I’ll cover low and high percentage rates for metrics discussed above. 

For example: 

To add, the new versus returning customers metric varies by industry and type of business however 20-30% for returning visitors is a typical ratio to achieve. 

How to use Google Analytics data to improve your website’s SEO traffic quality and user engagement

Google Analytics data is valuable because it helps us prioritize and strategize how to improve our SEO traffic quality. To truly see the benefits of using Google Analytics and to improve the traffic quality of your site, you’ll need to monitor engagement, conversion, and relevance metrics  over a long period of time, but these are only one part of the puzzle. Sustainable growth will come from continuously researching, analyzing, and adjusting your site.

Downloadable version here

What to do if your engagement metrics are underperforming

On page optimization

Optimizing your published content is an easy way to improve the quality of your traffic and increase engagement. To do so, you want to look at applying keyword research that matches search intent. Group keywords with similar topics and identify the right terms to target through each page of your site.

Other specific on page optimizations include:

  • Incorporating your target keyword in the first 200 words of your copy

  • Your page title and meta description to have the acceptable Google length (72 characters for title and 170 for meta description)

  • Your target keyword is included in H1 and subheadings

Now, let’s focus on design. 

Think of content design 

Another quote for you from Ginny Redish, Consultant Specialist in Web Usability and Writing: ​“Content is the user experience”.

With that in mind, the layout of your website and the way visitors consume content has a gigantic influence on your user experience. Not only can creating human-first content design improve your SEO, it can consequently enhance your traffic and engagement metrics. 

Here are some pointers on how to make this happen:

  • Avoid large images and videos that take up a lot of page ‘real estate’

  • Split your content into short paragraphs and headings

  • Emphasize important words and elements to improve readability

  • Use lists and tables where possible

Up next, what to include in your blogs to ensure an excellent website experience.

Write articles that provide the right amount of information

Articles should be comprehensive, not too long just for the sake of word count and not too short where information is missing. Users will know if you’re keyword stuffing or simply providing fluff content that doesn’t actually solve their problems. 

To make sure this doesn’t happen check out these tips:

  • Create articles that match the word count of top-ranking competitors but also make content succinct enough so that it doesn’t overwhelm your readers

  • Create longer articles that can be promoted on other channels such as social

  • Create longer articles that increase time on site metrics

Use the right language

There should be a balance between SEO language and copywriting. Ensure you’re using the right language with these tips:

  • I said it before but I’ll say it again...Avoid keyword stuffing (user’s can smell a keyword stuffed article a mile away!)

  • Avoid language that is not understandable from the user

  • Use simple language with the right amount of keywords and spread those out evenly across your content.

Study the way your audience communicates, and model your content and copy after that. You want your audience to feel comfortable and drawn to your content, not confused and repelled. 

Improve User Experience (UX)

Look at your website and assess how easy it is to read, navigate, find out key pieces of information, and perform any actions.

Here are some quick reminders:

  • Place CTAs in the right spots

  • Ensure readability is consistent 

  • Make sure information is easy to navigate

  • Make sure the site architecture has a solid flow

Ensure the website’s design works well on both desktop and mobile

As more consumers buy online for just about everything, the mobile user experience will contribute to your overall rankings. Here are five tips to optimize your responsive site:

  1. Check Page Speed Insights for mobile vs desktop

  2. Ensure all elements are properly visible and readable on both desktop and mobile

  3. Optimize image scale on mobile

  4. Simplify navigation

  5. Shorten your text 

What to do if your conversion metrics are underperforming

Use direct-response copywriting techniques

Use compelling language that encourages users to take immediate action. Copy should be targeted and to the point. To support that statement, 54% of American adults read at a sixth grade level, or below according to the U.S. Department of Education. So the simpler the copy, the better.

Optimize call-to-actions

Make sure CTAs are placed in the right spots within a page, have the right color and the right text. Use powerful and emotionally driven words that’ll entice quick wins. You’d be surprised at how a single word tweak or color change can drastically increase conversions. Not to mention, this is the precise method to ensure that SEO is bringing in conversions and leads.

Avoid any elements that could distract the user

Although some may suggest pop-ups, let’s be real here— the majority of the time you scramble to click the x so you can get back to scrolling. With that being said, avoid pop-ups, numerous CTA’s, and banners. If people are always in a rush to leave your site, that certainly won’t help any element of your marketing strategy.

What to do if your relevance metrics are underperforming

Target the right keywords 

Before creating a page or a blog, start with keyword research to identify which keywords you should target through your new piece of content. Think like your customer and identify exactly what their intent is and what’s trending in your industry. Also, pinpoint long-tail keywords that are highly specific to the niche you serve. This way, the content you put out will be for a very targeted audience, therefore conversion rates will be higher. 

Review the topic and focus keyword search intent

If the keywords you have selected are not performing well, review whether you selected the right ones and if they match search intent. Research what competitors are doing, so that you can put your own spin on the content around these keywords. 

Localize your content so you’re targeting the audience in your target market

Create content that’s relevant to where you’re located. For instance, if you own a pizza shop in Chicago, you might create a blog about the best places to get fresh cheese in Chicago. So instead of just developing random content, think about localizing content and examples that’ll attract the most qualified audience.

Work on site speed (slower websites have higher bounce rates)

In this day and age consumers want information at the speed of light, in fact 1 in 4 consumers will abandon a website that takes longer than 4 seconds to load. Tough crowd, right? To ensure speedy load times, visit Google’s Page Speed Insights to assess where the site stands in terms of page speed and to identify elements that slow down your website.

Use Google Analytics data to measure and improve the quality of your SEO traffic

At the end of the day, more qualified traffic = more money in the bank. 

So your overall goal should be working towards creating the highest quality content, website, and user experience to convert those visitors into loyal customers. 

To reach these goals, make sure to map out engagement metrics like time on site, and pages per session, conversion metrics like form submissions, and relevance metrics like bounce rate and user geo-location. 

Now, in the beginning I said I’d end with a challenge, so here it is: Create a list of 3-4 priority metrics and craft a realistic goal for each of those. Can you do that? Great! And, for on-going reflection, bookmark this article so that you can refer back when need be. You’ve got this!

Source: https://moz.com/blog/measure-seo-traffic-quality-with-google-analytics

7 TIÊU CHÍ ĐÁNH GIÁ ĐỘ KHÓ DỄ DỰ ÁN SEO

⚡️ SEO đang rất quan trọng với chiến lược Marketing. Tuy nhiên, trong suốt quá trình tìm hiểu về SEO cho website luôn có rất nhiều luồng thông tin khó để đánh giá, nào là:
✅ Báo giá từ nhiều Agency khác nhau.
✅ Rất nhiều bảng kết quả kiểm tra, đánh giá website doanh nghiệp được gửi đến.
Câu hỏi đặt ra của bạn lúc này: các Agency dựa vào tiêu chí nào để xác định chi phí cho một dự án SEO hay nói cách khác dự án SEO như thế nào khó, như thế nào dễ?
Để trả lời câu hỏi lớn đó, GTV đã lên ngay bài viết nà để bạn sẽ có một cái nhìn tổng quát trong dự án SEO của doanh nghiệp, dễ dàng đánh giá và đưa ra chiến lược phù hợp.
Trong bài viết lần này GTV sẽ mang đến cho bạn:
✅ Tổng hợp 7 tiêu chí đánh giá cực quan trọng cho dự án SEO
✅ Giải đáp từng tiêu chí cho bạn một cái nhìn tổng quan

#gtvseo #gtv_seo #criteria_for_assessing_the_difficulty_of_seo_projects

Thông tin liên hệ:
GTV SEO
Địa chỉ: Số 91, Đường số 6, Khu dân cư Cityland Park Hills, Phường 10, Quận Gò Vấp, TP. HCM
SĐT: 0919-009-319
Email: info@gtvseo.com

Summary of 7 criteria to evaluate the difficulty of SEO projects for businesses

Here, you and I always know, SEO is very very important to the Marketing strategy. However, during the process of learning about SEO for the website, there were a lot of information flows, which are:

  • Quotes from many different agencies.
  • A lot of test results, evaluation of business websites are sent to.

Your question now: What criteria do agencies rely on to determine the cost of an SEO project or in other words, how difficult is an SEO project, how easy is it?

Understanding your question, this is also why I am here.

To decide on a successful SEO project, it is necessary to understand what business website optimization needs. But that shouldn't be your top priority. That is, the most important thing is an accurate assessment and final decision on which agency accompanies your business.

Therefore, to help you ensure the correct decision, here are 7 criteria to evaluate the difficulty of an SEO projectThese are all practical experiences from the project implementation process, as well as sharing from an experienced SEOer.

Instantly see the information you need!

#first. SEO products/services belonging to the YMYL . group

When a professional SEO service agency mentions the difficulty of a project, the first criterion that cannot fail to mention is YMYL - Your money, Your life.

A long term term from Google that refers to websites whose content directly affects the health, finances, and well-being of users.

The list of some of the industries listed under the YMYL group are:

  • Pharmacy
  • Health
  • Finance
  • Education
  • The law
  • Industries with high value orders: real estate, interior design, etc.

Is your industry on this list? If yes, your website needs to comply with EAT criteria.

EATs are Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. In other words, EAT is a criterion for evaluating content quality.

Therefore, when your website belongs to the YMYL industry group, most SEO implementation requires a lot of investment in terms of effort, time and cost. Of course, it is very likely that your SEO project belongs to the difficult SEO group.

Website Reviews
If your website is in YMYL, you need to comply with EAT criteria

#2. Topic keyword (keyword) SEO business

Good news for you here!

If your product/service doesn't have many competitors, or is new in the market even though it's in the YMYL group, it's possible that your SEO project evaluation results are just average.

As follows:

SEO for iphone phones is a difficult niche, but SEO with the theme of "cheap blue iphones" is much easier, because there are not many competitors in this segment.

#3. Brands and competitors in the internet market

Did you know, according to a survey from Marketing Charts , up to 69% of customers in Canada, 57% in the UK think that: Brand is an important factor affecting their purchasing decision.

This is also a great influence on the SEO project. In fact, if your business has a brand and reputation, it will be prioritized by Google, as well as the SEO process is easier and vice versa.

I know that, you can completely evaluate your brand, its coverage in the online market. But to know exactly 99.99% you can do it in the following way:

First, use the following syntax: intitle:“brand name”. Next, you proceed to check the accounts on social networks, page forums, other competitors' websites to determine if they receive a lot of interaction on those pages. Finally, you can completely evaluate your brand accurately in the current market.

Brand reviews
How to evaluate a brand?

#4. Industry competitors have done professional SEO?

Just like you, competitors in the industry can and will soon do SEO. So, if your niche has too many SEO competitors, the website SEO project needs to invest a lot of effort, content, and different SEO techniques.

That means only when you combine all the conditions on your business can you compete with your competitors on the search results page.

That is also the fundamental strategy of GTV SEO when undertaking difficult projects. SEO method GTV SEO always:

  • Compliant with Google standards.
  • White hat SEO, but there is no shortage of special techniques to bring the fastest, most sustainable and safest results.
  • Build useful content that attracts even the most demanding customers.

The overall SEO projects GTV SEO undertake always bring in potential customers, increase the conversion rate for revenue through abundant traffic sources.

Immediately refer to the results and how to undertake each project of GTV SEO here.

But, first, take a look at the following 5 tips to verify your competitors have an SEO lane.

5 ways to quickly identify competition from competitors

Method 1. Check keywords in meta tags

The easiest way to determine if a website has SEO, you can do it quickly with: Search 3 hot keywords and 3 keywords related to your business' products and services. If the returned results appear in the title, it means that many competitors are SEO very well.

Evaluation of SEO projects - keywords
Results returned with the keyword you searched for

Method 2. Check Heading

The next way you can apply that is to see if the website's articles have SEO standards or not. The standard SEO article structure will look like this:

Check headings with SEOQuake


As you can see, its structure will include: 1 heading 1 and a lot of headings 2, 3 to prove and explain the main point of the article.

Similar to method 1, the more competitors implement standard SEO articles, the harder it is to surpass them.

To check the article criteria with SEO standards like me, you can use the SEOQuake tool .

Method 3. Is the right keyword Landing Page?

With this way you need to rely on 2 factors:

  • Correct page type.
  • Correct user intent.
1. Right type of page

You simply understand, the Landing Page must have the right type of page (article knowledge page, category page, product page, ...)

For example: When you search for "blazer shirt", the first result returned is the product category page, ie the user's need to learn product details.

This is similar, when you want to SEO product pages, content for this keyword is very difficult.

Rate top results

The top results are all product category pages when searching for “blazer shirt”.

From my experience, oftentimes, SEO for homepage/category/product pages is more difficult than with content optimization.

Why: SEOs must balance useful content with user experience.

2. Correct user intent

As a person who implements a marketing strategy, you and I always know that: Any search action in any method must come from user needs. Customers search on the internet too, it's called Search Intent.

For example: Customers search for "women's blazer", that is, they want to buy women's blazers or beautiful trendy blazer models.

Proving, if your business just wants to SEO to the TOP keyword alone is not enough, but needs to meet the needs of customers. In this case, you should check the hotkeywords, infokeywords of 10 to 20 competitors to see if they are on the right landing page.

Usually, the pages that own TOP 3, TOP 5 will match the user's search the most. And if you see results returning pages with different content, then there is a great chance you will get the top TOP easily.

SEO takes a lot of technique, so in addition to valuable content, the backlink factor you also need to consider.

In the process of analyzing competitor websites, you see, the website has both backlinks and good content, this is really a challenge.

For How to check competitor backlinks you need to use the tool to support. Suggestion from me: Ahref will be the most accurate backlink checker tool.

In addition, you can check backlinks completely for free with the tool: Backlink by Neilpatel .

Note: When reading the results returned from the competitor backlink check, you need the following parameters:

  • Backlinks: only the number of backlinks pointing to.
  • Referring domain: only the number of different domains containing backlinks pointing to the business site.
  • Domain score or Domain Rating (DR): an index that evaluates the quality of backlinks, good backlinks with a DR of 40 or more.
tool backlink
Check backlinks for free with Ubersuggest.

Way 5. Onpage Elements

If you want to conduct a more detailed competitor check, check other Onpage factors.

Reference: The criteria of Onpage.

Just like above, the faster way you can check with the tool: Onpage of Neilpatel.

#5. The level of content diversity of the business website

In addition to assessing the project difficulty from the article with SEO standards or not, you can continue to do it based on the variety of content topics.

This method needs you to evaluate in two dimensions:

  • Vertical: Topics related to the product/service.

For example: Choose the keyword "blazer shirt", related vertical topics: where to buy blazer, women's blazer, etc.

  • Horizontal: The product/service topics that are part of it.

For example: With the keyword “blazer shirt”, the horizontal topic will be: The indispensable blazer models in your collection, …

Bonus: content topics are easier to identify when businesses have a detailed set of keywords.

#6. Industry characteristics of SEO implementation

As I mentioned from the beginning, each industry will have its own specific requirements and characteristics. Therefore, businesses must fully meet the specific characteristics for effective SEO.

I will take the cosmetic industry example to make it easier for you to imagine. For this industry, if you want SEO to be effective, you need to have product parameters, illustrations, inspection papers, ... professional and clear that meet the exact needs of users when looking for information about products. product.

SEO project evaluation criteria
Mastering product parameters, illustrations, inspection papers…

On the contrary, when the business does not provide the right image with the desired criteria, the SEO strategy will face many difficulties. To determine the SEO characteristics of your industry, you need to consult an expert who has a lot of experience implementing projects or related industries.

#7. Enterprise resources

One truth, we always need to recognize: Any strategy, if there are financial resources, good relationships, businesses will be easier to implement.

SEO is no exception, when you have an investment of cost and effort combined with certain branding activities and traffic sources, a long web history, the SEO KPIs that you initially planned will be faster. achieved more than ever.

During a stressful time like today. If your business has great economic potential, you can consider implementing SEO during the epidemic season to attract a large number of customers to buy through the website, thereby having a strong momentum and strong development after the pandemic. out of translation.

End

An SEO project that is determined to be difficult or easy will create a huge gap in project cost and time. Immediately apply the 7 criteria I share to determine how your industry group is implementing!

Source: https://gtvseo.com/tieu-chi-danh-gia-du-an-seo/

#gtvseo #gtv_seo #criteria_for_assessing_the_difficulty_of_seo_projects

Thông tin liên hệ:
GTV SEO
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