Myth #1: The
Goal of SEO Is To Rank #1 for “your keyword”
This is the #1 myth
about SEO. In fact, most people I talk to believe the goal of SEO is to
rank for “your keyword.” Simply replace “your keyword” with the most
relevant search phrase for your business. For example, “dentist,”
“chiropractor,” and “attorney” might come to mind if you run one of
those businesses.
Wait a minute, how
could ranking #1 for your keyword not be the goal of SEO?
Well, first of all,
rankings alone don’t help your business. The goal of SEO is to drive qualified
traffic to your website and then convert
the traffic into leads and sales.
With that in mind,
consider the difference between someone searching for “attorney” versus
someone searching for “workers compensation attorney in nyc.” Clearly,
the person searching the longer phrase has more intent to hire a
worker’s comp attorney located in New York City.
So what have we learned
about this myth?
First, the goal of SEO
is to drive traffic and conversions. Second, the keywords you think are
most important may not be as valuable to your business as other
longer-phrase keywords (aka long-tail keywords). The key is to consider
the search intent,
not just the relevance, of the keyword.
Myth #2: SEO Is
All About Editing HTML Meta Tags
Again, there are a
couple of problems with this myth.
First, this grossly
over-simplifies SEO. If you believe this to be true, then you likely
also believe your SEO is “done” because your web developer “took care
of it” using some keywords in the webpage meta tags.
Unfortunately, SEO is
not quite that simple, and the days of stuffing keywords on your
webpages in order to rank high have been over for a long time now.
Search engines are more sophisticated now and they look at more than
just the meta tags on your webpages. They look at many webpage factors
like your title, headers, usability, internal linking structure, site
speed, and the length and quality of the content.
Second, this myth
ignores all of the SEO factors that are outside of your own website
(aka off-page SEO). For example, one of the most important SEO factors
is the quantity and quality of links from other websites. Sure, you
need to focus on your own website, but you can’t ignore all the
off-page SEO factors if you want to succeed with SEO.
Myth #3: You Can
Set It and Forget It
Sorry Ron Popeil, with
SEO you cannot “set
it and forget it!” But SEO sure would be a whole lot easier
if you could!
This myth is similar to
myth #2 above. If you believe SEO is just a matter of editing your own
website, then you would logically also think that SEO is something that
only needs to be done once. Unfortunately, that’s not how it works.
Editing your webpages
so they are relevant for your target keywords is only half the battle.
The other half is building up what’s called your website’s domain
authority.
Think of domain
authority like your own personal reputation. If you have a strong
reputation, then people tend to listen to you and trust you. If you
have a bad reputation, then people steer clear of you.
That same behavior
plays out on the Internet.
Websites with strong
reputations for publishing high-quality, accurate information that
people want to read are given preference in Google versus other
websites. One indicator of a strong reputation is the quantity and
quality of the websites linking to your website. When lots of other
websites with high domain authority link to your website, it is a
signal to Google that your website should also be trusted.
Now that you’re
familiar with domain authority and the role links play in SEO, it
should be obvious that you can’t just “set it and forget it.” You need
a long-term strategy for attracting links from other reputable
websites.
Myth #4: SEO Is
All About Tricking Google
In my experience, many
businesses think that they need to trick Google in order to rank their
website high in the search results.
While it’s true that
some businesses do in fact trick Google using spammy SEO tactics,
that’s not a sustainable long term strategy. Eventually, Google figures
out how to weed out the businesses using spammy tactics, so it’s not
worth the risk.
To understand why this
is a myth, you must put yourself in Google’s shoes.
Google’s goal is to
rank the best webpages for any given search. What is the best webpage?
That depends on the keyword searched! If the searcher is looking for a
nearby dentist, then Google’s goal is to rank the best local dentist
websites. If the searcher is looking for advice to overcome a running
injury, then Google’s goal is to rank the best, up-to-date, accurate
information about that topic.
With that in mind, then
SEO is not about tricking Google; SEO is about partnering with
Google to provide and help the search engine find the information
it needs. That’s how you need to approach SEO if you want to have long
term success.
Myth #5: Google
Ads Give An SEO Boost
The 5th myth I hear
frequently is that advertising in Google gives your website an SEO
boost.
I’m sorry to say that’s
simply not true. It doesn’t matter how much you spend with Google Ads,
it will not directly help your website rankings in the organic,
non-paid, results.
That doesn’t mean you
shouldn’t advertise in Google. In fact, I recommend most businesses
test Google Ads because it’s one of the best marketing tactics
available to small businesses.
However, advertising is
separate from search engine optimization and you should not expect to
suddenly start ranking high in Google just because you’re using Google
Ads.
While we’re on the
topic of other marketing channels impacting SEO, I’ll give one more
bonus myth…
Bonus Myth:
Social Media Has No Impact on SEO
Over the years, there’s
been a debate in the digital marketing community about whether or not
Google uses social media signals in their algorithm.
My stance is simple –
it doesn’t matter! It doesn’t matter if search engines factor in social
media signals when ranking websites.
What matters is whether
or not social media marketing has a positive impact on your SEO. The
answer to that question is yes. By using social media marketing, you
will naturally improve your search engine rankings. To learn more, read
my article about the 3 ways social media can
boost your SEO.
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