Posts Tagged search rankings

How long will the SEO blog bubble last?

Having a blog is the latest trend in SEO. It seems that everywhere you look there are online shops with blogs filled to bursting with content carefully written to target the phrases identified in their keyword research plan. The theory is that blogs are the easiest way to update any website with fresh content and build up a good body of text that will help build relevance in the eyes of Google spiders.

It works. There is no doubt that having a regularly updated blog is good SEO, particularly if it’s backed up by solid keyword research.

But here’s the catch. Google, Bing, and the other search engines aim to identify the best and most relevant website matching a particular query. That is the best website from the searcher’s point of view, not the one that pours the most effort into search engine optimisation.

The people who write Google’s ranking algorithms aren’t slow on the uptake. Sooner or later they’ll realise that not every online retailer really needs a blog and that many of them exist for search engine optimisation only. It remains to be seen just how rankings will change in response.

For now, blogging is a very effective tool for building SEO. It works, so we’re not going to tell you not to do it, but we do advise keeping it in perspective. Pay attention as much attention to other site content, to social media, and to link building as you do to blogging. The only SEO guaranteed to work in the long term is creating a great site.

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Time scales for SEO and web analytics

Patience is a virtue, except on the internet. The sheer speed of online communication is astounding when you consider the distances involved, and we’ve all come to expect more or less instant access to data housed anywhere in the world.

However, not everything comes quickly. The benefits of SEO in particular come to those who wait. The time scale for a comprehensive search engine optimisation campaign is rarely less than a month or two for sites in a moderately competitive field. Sites that start out with very little content and few links may see gains fast if they choose keywords conservatively and keep their focus localised, but most companies looking to make serious money using the internet will have to wait a little longer to see strong progress.

That’s often said on various blogs and forums, but what is less commonly mentioned is that the initial ranking gains made during an SEO campaign may not last long. Don’t get too excited if someone gets you into the top spot for your chosen keyword, because that shift in rankings may or may not be robust. Algorithm changes- and Google makes at least one algorithm change per day on average- and action by competing sites can see your place in the result pages drop back down.

Some SEO actions produce more robust gains than others, and the stability of your step up in the rankings will also depend on how competitive your field and your keywords are. SEO is a long term process and it needs to be ongoing- a least to some degree- if you intend to keep any gains you make, but there will probably be short term fluctuations in your rankings from day to day as well.

Whether your rankings change for the better for for the worse, wait at least four or five days before celebrating or panicking.

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