As of October 2018, the World Wide Web contains over 4.4 billion pages.
SEO is all about businesses trying to optimise their websites so they appear in those first few search results. The higher they are in the search engine results, the more visitors they will get to their websites and the more customers they will attract.
Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) exists because search engines like Google want to ensure that when someone searches for something, the results they get are the most useful, valuable and relevant.
Google uses a constantly evolving and very sophisticated algorithm of over 200 different ranking criteria in order to do this. If a business wants to increase their search engine ranking they must try to ensure their website meets this criteria as much as possible. In theory, the more boxes they tick, the higher up the rankings they will appear.
If you’re completely new, you may want to read the first guide in this series: SEO for beginners – what do you need to know?
Only SEO specialists are expected to get anywhere near to covering Google’s 200+ ranking criteria.
Luckily, these four most important and easy-to-implement factors could dramatically effect where your business appears in search results
- How relevant is your website?
- How healthy is your website?
- Fix any broken page links
- Ensure your site is logically organised
- Have good code integrity – this means the code behind your site is clean, efficient and true to the latest standards
- A clean and consistent URL structure
- Breadcrumbs – this is a name for a type of secondary navigation on your site that lets people know where exactly they are on your website, leaving a trail of breadcrumbs back to the original page they came from. Huge websites with lots of content use it so visitors can find their way around more easily and it can have a positive impact on your SEO
- How much authority does your website have?
- How many other reputable (high authority) websites have linked to you
- How frequently you are mentioned online by other sources
- Who you link to
- Usability
- How long your website and it’s pages take to load – slow loading times negatively impact your ranking
- Mobile friendliness – is you website easy to view on mobile devices?
- Navigation – how easily can people find the information they need on your website, and is it organised in a logical way?
- Is your site easy to use? Are there too many ads and pop-ups that detract from the experience? Are forms difficult to fill out? Are the buttons too close together, which make them hard to click on?