SEO Gets Harder Every Day
Ranking
on the first page of Google gets harder and harder every day. Just like
how it’s harder to rank among the top 100 marathoners simply because
there are so many more competitors today than there were decades ago.
That’s
the bad news.
The
good news is that just because more businesses have websites doesn’t
mean they are all actually competing in SEO. Sure, they are “in the
race” but in my experience auditing hundreds of client websites, the
majority of businesses aren’t really “in the race.”
Bear
with me because I’m about to reveal the second key takeaway…
The Difference Between Running and Racing
Since
2011, I’ve completed 9 marathons, but if I’m honest with myself, I’ve
only raced 2 of them. The other 7 I was just trying to finish. I didn’t
realize this until after I trained for racing a marathon and then
actually raced one. The difference is night and day. This was a huge
revelation for me and it parallels how I see most businesses
approaching SEO.
The
most obvious difference is the sheer volume of running it takes to race
a marathon. If you want to just finish, then 25 to 30 miles per week is
enough. Heck, I’ve even heard of people who didn’t train much at all
and they still managed to cross the finish line.
But
if you want to race, then you’ll need to get up to 50+ miles per week.
That’s just what it takes to get your body prepared for 26.2 miles of
running hard the entire course.
With
SEO, as I said earlier, a lot of businesses simply can’t compete
because they aren’t investing enough time and resources. It’s the
equivalent of running 25 miles per week and thinking you’re training
hard. Without running more miles each week, the result is that you’ll
hit what’s called “the wall” around mile 20 and you’ll be shuffling or
walking or some combination of both for the next 6.2 miles.
Same
is true with SEO. Without enough resources invested, you’ll hit “the
wall” and never get on to the first page.
Intuitively
that makes sense, but the next logical question is, “Where should you
invest your resources?”
Great
question! Let’s take a look…
Variation Keeps You Healthy
I’ve
studied training programs for several professional marathoners and in
addition to higher weekly mileage, they vary their workouts day-to-day
and week-to-week. One day they’ll focus on speed, the next day they’ll
slow way down and focus on recovery, then the next day they’ll focus on
endurance, and on and on they go with different types of workouts
designed to improve one area that’s important for running marathons.
Studies
have shown that alternating different types of hard workouts and
recovery is the recipe for success with marathon training.
Alternatively, overly focusing on one area like speed or endurance is
the recipe for injury.
And
the same can be said about success with SEO – you must use a mix of
tactics, such as meta tag edits, website structure, site speed, schema,
mobile optimization, content development, outreach, guest blogging,
citations, online reviews, and content marketing. Overly focusing on
just one area at the expense of the others will not likely lead to
positive results.
There’s
one last takeaway before we conclude…
Injuries Are Inevitable
Research
has shown that up to 50% of runners get injured each year. The reality
is that if you’re pushing your body, you’ll inevitably wind up injured
at some point.
With
SEO, drops in keyword rankings are also inevitable. When this happens,
it’s important to assess the “injury” and determine the root cause.
Have you taken your foot off the pedal with blogging? Have you ignored
online reviews recently and let the door open for a competitor to sneak
in?
Once
you determine the root cause, then it’s time to start rehabbing. As
long as you’re serious about your SEO and willing to put in the work,
then there’s no “injury” you can’t overcome. It just takes dedication
and a little bit of patience.
By
now I hope it’s clear what it takes to be successful with SEO – a
willingness to invest enough to truly compete with the growing
competition, a focus on a healthy mix of SEO tactics, and the
dedication to overcome inevitable setbacks along the way to the coveted
#1 Google ranking.
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