How To Rank Your Blog On Top In 2020 - Tech Support Jatin
This is by far my most frequently asked question that I get, Hey Jatin, my website is new and I'm still" not seeing a lot of visitors. before I started seeing result from SEO effort ? When you're putting all this time and effort into making your website to get to the top, you're anxious, you want to see results right away, don't you ? Hi everyone, I'm Jatin in this blog I'm going to break down the question of how long does SEO take to work for a new website. Before we get started make sure you subscribe to this blog. SEO always useing very easy & following a specific formula would get you to the top of page one, and in many cases.
When I share my SEO journey, back in the day
I could get a top of page one in a few months, maybe
even six months at the latest for the head terms, they were like auto insurance
and credit cards. But nowadays SEO is super competitive, there's over a billion
blogs on the web, there's roughly one blog for every seven people, and there's
even more websites on the website, it
makes sense on why SEO is so hard, because now Google has its prime pickings to
figure out which website they're going to place on top. In other words, they
can be super picky, while five, 10 years ago they couldn't be as picky.
So first, let's start by seeing how SEO has changed over the
years. Keyword research. This is one of the big areas. This wasn't nearly as
competitive a market as it used to be. There're literally thousands of
websites, if not millions of websites created every single day. As of January
1st, there're over1.7 billion websites online. That's a lot of competition. It
used to be that you could focus on five or six keywords, maybe even ten, and
those keywords would bring in most of your site traffic. Many company used to
be able to focus on smallest group of generic keywords and see great results.
The reality now is, it's a lot different. All Websites now have a list of 50 - 100 keywords and more depending on the site.
And at bare minimum each page on your site is going to need to be targeted at
least at one keyword. However, in most cases actually three or four keywords
per page. Now, the next thing that's changed is content. It used to be that you
can simply write an article and implement the key word a fair number of times
and Google automatically would rank you, a.k.a. QR density, right ? The more
you put the keyword in your page, the more they know about that page is around
that topic and then you're ranked. Now that doesn't necessarily flow naturally
and it didn't really work well for users, hence Google doesn't look at density
the same way anymore. Google has gotten smarter and they changed their
expectations a bit. They're not just looking at a site shoving in the same
keyword and stuffing it and ruining the searchers' experience. They are make
some big change to get better their
rankings by not showing low-quality content as high. So now when you're writing
content, it's not about that keyword in there, naturally it'll be in there and
other synonyms will be which Google can tell, because think of them as a big
dictionary and thesaurus. If they know what is the article is about even if you
don't have that keyword in there. Their main priority is to deliver a high
quality content and keeping the search intent in mind.
When anybody types in a search list, query it usually is a question.
It's not necessarily specifically a question with a question
mark ,but when someone does a Google search they're looking for an answer to
whatever they typed in, and if your page does that, provides that answer with
that content you're in the good graces, if you don't, you're not going to do
well.
So don't just shove in keywords within your content and
write long pieces of article because, hey, people say Google wants 2,000-word
article ranked at the top. It's not about word count. It's about providing what
the users are looking for as quick as possible.
If you do in 500 words, 2,000 words,5,000 words, whatever it
may be, whoever does it in the easiest form for the user, without shoving in
keywords, and creating the best experience is who's going to do well and the
best in the long run.
The answer is it depends. I know it's frustrating, right. it
takes for a new site is four to six months to start seeing some traction in
service. However, because there're so many factors in SEO, there is no
definitive answer. Every industry is different as well. It's easier to rank
fora plumber in a localized city, than it is to rank for auto insurance
nationally. On average, based on my experience, even if you're starting a new
website and you're actively working on your content, on page SEO and link
building, it can take roughly six months before you start seeing results. It
doesn't mean in six months you're going to rank at the top and get what you
want, but it usually takes six months to start seeing traction. And the best
way to start seeing the traction faster is going after the long tail phrases which
convert better than head terms. So if you want to rank faster, there's some
important SEO factors that you need to know if you want to rank. The first
thing we should look at is your site and is it secure and is it accessible to
Google crawlers. Are you using HTTPS ? if robots.txt blocking right pages allowing the access to the right ones? Using a
site map and submitting it to Google Webmaster tool, so Google can crawl on
your pages? Is your website fast in load time? If it's fast, not only it's
going to boost your rankings, because it's a part of their algorithm, and then
you get to use Google Page Speed to see how fast your website loads, both on
mobile and desktop device, and they'll tell you what to fix as well. But mobile
speed time and desktop speed time also affect conversions as well. The other
thing that you need to look at is, Is your site mobile-friendly ? Did you know
that over a half of searches on Google are done by mobile devices ? If your
website doesn't look nice on a mobile device, like iPhone or Android device, don't
expect them to rank it high up. The other thing that you have to look at is do
you have authoritative content. Right ? If you just have a me-too content, it
won't cut it. Google doesn't want the same regurgitated content over and over
again. They want you to provide something that's unique, that people haven't
read before. Every time I blog on something new we're seeing on average 47.6%
more traffic than when we blog on something that's been regurgitated and is
old. So in other words, try to blog on something that's new, that people haven't
seen before. I know it's frustrating, but the world has changed and, yes, there
still is new stuff that people are learning about. Not everything has been written
even though there's been over a billion blogs on the web. Another thing you
need to look at is quality backlinks. Getting links from authoritative sites is
one thing, if those sites are emulated you're not going to do as well. attract
right type of links? & if you are creating
amazing product and servicing to get more link ? more links than any other? It's
actually Uber suggest.
Did you know I generated over 10,000 backlinks alone just to Uber suggest?
I'm not going out there asking people for links, they're just
linking to me and it's attracting them. Another thing I want you to look at is
social signals. If you though social signal have no effect on ranking according
to Google, there is a correlation between pages that rank high and have a
decent number of social signals. Google always want to rank page at the top that
people love. So if people love a page, they're more likely to link to it. They're
more likely to share it on the social web, right ? They wouldn't just say, "Hey,
I'm going to link to it, but I would never share it. "They go hand in hand. The other thing
that you need to look at is do you have your business in formation listed. Especially
if you're a local business. You need to claim your Google My Business profile, you
need Yelp reviews, Google reviews, have a good Better Business Bureau page. The
more reviews you can attract the better off you are. The big takeaway is, when
you do the right things and you go above and beyond and put the user first, you're
going to rank faster, than if you just try to optimize your page for Google and
not put the user first. Thank you for watching, if you have any questions leave
a comment below ,I'll answer it. Please share the blog, like it. I'll see you
soon.