Before I start, my entire argument about why I believe Google to be a lying liar that lies lies below the list to follow:
- Good titles are still really very essential — Because Google returns search results based on the sloppy terms you place into the box (and not in any clean Boolean or schema) onto the a results page that pretty literally just passes your page title through, you had better do a good job of making sure every single page of your site has a very descriptive, accurate, and unique title. That’s all Google has and that’s really all you have when it comes to whether or not someone clicks on your content or not.
- You still need to write for robots — Google is smart. It does understand synonyms, is a thesaurus, and can make leaps in logic; however, Google cares more about speed than cleverness. Luckily, there are so many people who parbake or pre-prepare everything so perfectly for Google’s thoughtless pass-through that you’ll always lose. Google doesn’t have to think at all because there are enough other sites besides your site that does everything right — such as writing for robots, literally and across a wide diversity of appropriate keyword phrases — that any laziness on your part will be harshly penalized.
- Site speed is the most important — Even if you do everything right in preparing your site for a simple Google pass-through, Google will drop you as a top-three result on Organic Search if the pass-off isn’t immediate. So, after you make your site perfectly suited for Google and you’re still sucking wind, try upgrading your server, reducing the number of plugins you use, increasing the aggressiveness of your caching strategy (or, get a caching strategy), consider beefing up your server, putting our database on a separate box, get your ping down by getting closer to the the Internet‘s backbone or have someone optimize your DNS, or look into an Internet content delivery network service provider.
- Google is not a thinking thing or thesaurus — As a direct result of Twitter‘s success, Google rightfully feels like its results need to be real-time. In effectively creating an acceptable real time web, Google is generally in a state of constant feeding frenzy. A lot of cheating happens in this initial couple hours. And Google acts pretty dumb. In its rush to deliver content as it happens, real time, it tends to care more about filling the vacuum of trending breaking news than it cares about verifying. So, while Google does an amazing job of “trust but verify,” it trusts first. So, it’s still possible, even in 2014, to drive a lot of organic traffic to your site by just trend-surfing, news-surfing, and headline-surfing your content directly to what’s going on right now. You’ll just about always get a crush of traffic if you can be first to press on a big event, disaster, death, or announcement.
- Google is still painfully literal — If you don’t write it, literally, in a literal string, on your site, verbatim, please don’t be surprised if your site doesn’t rank at all in that particular topic.
- Conspiracies still work on Google Search — As we have learned from Cristina Everett and the New York Daily News, if you can orchestrate a lot of people to write about the same topic or link to and fro or if you can conspire to write about each other or support each other’s content back and forth or even get everyone else in your little cabal to share and mention your posts, blogs, articles, columns, products, press release, announcement, or post, conspiracies of these sorts still work on Google, especially during its super-dumb feeding frenzy real time web “yay, hot donuts” phase.
- Meta tag descriptions are important — This is what Google passes through directly from the pages of your site verbatim to the results in the form of the page description, second only as important as the Title. If you don’t provide a pretty, well-written, useful one, Google will lazily and hastily scrape one up for you, one that will probably suck and might even eventually result in Google deprioritizing your site (because there’s always someone else who will gladly do it right).
- Alt tags are essential — Google still really can’t do anything with video or images or photos or code blobs unless you describe them or label them textually in a way that Google can read and index. And, if you do a good job of labeling your images, graphics, logos, executables, scripts, documents, PDFs, Google will reward you by showing your photos and videos and images and logos and graphics when people do image or video searches or even inline in regular web searches. If you dominate image and video search in your vertical it can really help your general ranking everywhere else. So, it’s not even just the ALT tag anymore, there are quite a few ways to use HTML Schema to tell Google what’s going on. Do it! Drupal, Joomla, WordPress, and even Squarespace make it super-easy so you really have no damn excuse! Do it! Do it!
- Name all your files to be Google-readable — I spoke on this in the previous bullet but instead of leaving your photos and images with their default file names, be it what Adobe named them during some sort of slicing process or whatever your digital camera or phone named it when you uploaded it to your server. Instead of Photo.jpg, name your photo chris-abraham-portrait-black-glasses-black-t-shirt-black-white-chrisabraham-gerris.jpg or something like that.
- Backlinks (still) matter — Reciprocal links, Page Rank, Domain Name age, and Backlinks are the core of Google and they’ll never really get rid of it. It’s their secret sauce and whether they’ve developed a new formulation there is still some sort of Google Rank (Grank?) or Google Klout (Glout) going on — this Very Big Lie that backlinks no longer matter is the source of this article, Google is a lying liar that lies, as that’s one hell of a Big Lie.
- Human readable URLs are important — If your content management system (CMS) still gives you URLs that look like www.socialmedia.biz/?p=27642 instead of www.socialmedia.biz/2014/08/20/always-write-for-google-never-for-humans then you really need to either install a plugin or upgrade your crappy CMS.
- Google still cares about formatting tags — No matter what anyone says, use the <h1>, <h2>, <h3>, <em>, <i>, <b>, <u>, and their HTML5 and CSS equivalents — they add structure and Google Hearts Structure.
- Google still indexes every page “separately” — You need to make sure every single one of the pages on your site are optimized. Google indexes by page and not by site. You need to have a separate, bespoke, title, keywords, description, and copy for every page and not just for the site. You need to either do it perfectly for each page or choose an SEO plugin that can do it for you automagically.
- Google hasn’t given up on Authorship — Even though 70% of all publishers, platforms, sites, papers, bloggers and writers ignored Google Authorship, Google rewards everyone who works happily and merrily towards making Google happy, and they’ll surely find a way to not deprecate the hard work we put into their effing terrible, unpopular, and alienating Google+, Google+ Pages, and Google Authorship.
- Google cares very much about site architecture — All robots and bots would always prefer structure data to the muddy hell known as whatever we like to read, research, and explore as humans. So, any predictable structure you can design into your site will be surely appreciated by the robots and bots of Google. If you move your site to a popular publishing platform like WordPress or Drupal, you will have invested in a structured platform that Google gets already.
- Google still does care about Sitemaps — Google loves structured data and Google loves it when you let it know that your site’s been updated instead of just waiting around until a Spider or Bot comes around.
- Google still loves RSS and ATOM — Google loves structured data, remember?
- Google actually prefers long-form content — Google indexes about half a megabyte, 520 Kb, per page, so you’re doing yourself a disservice by keeping your pages limited to 100 Kb. And, Bing probably indexes upwards of a Megabyte of each page. Each page, right, and not your entire site.
My Bona Fides
I’ve been producing websites since 1993, submitting sites to directories well before search engines sent out bots and spiders, and tailoring content for Google since late 1998. Soon to be 16-years later, Google hasn’t left behind all of its old tricks — no matter what Google tries to tell you what Google organic search has become circa 2014. When it comes to how things work when it comes to developing a server, site, content, and brand to appeal to Google, Google is a lying liar that lies.
Google is a Lying Liar that Lies
Google’s not the only lying liar that lies but it’s the source of all the other lies. After 16-years, Google wants you to believe that there’s magic happening whenever you put a query into the still-simple and minimalist Google search box. It’s all magic indeed, but Google’s not exactly as thoughtful, creative, curious, sentient, or semantic as its top propagandists try to convey as they lie to our face about meta tags, alt tags, image tags, description tags, reciprocal links, link juice, link-backs, back-links, text links, keywords, tagging, categories, and just about everything else… and I’ll tell you why: the only people who actually have the infinite time, money, expertise, knowledge, hardware, bandwidth, wisdom, content, and interest in becoming exactly what Google wants us all to be.
Held Hostage by a House of Cards
What this means is that were Google to make obsolete any of its previous search engine optimization (SEO) strategies it would filter way more good content than bad. By being a lying liar that lies Google is trying to psych out all of the black- and gray-hat SEO spammers who are out there. Here’s the secret: their only secret is people. They have not deprecated anything! They’ve only expanded upon their base, not revised it! They cannot, actually, as their index of the entire Internet is the biggest house of cards ever.
Matt Cutts’ Search Quality Team
Their real secret is how many members are really employed by the very human Google Search Quality team let by Matt Cutts. While I am not accusing Matt Cutts of being a lying liar who lies, per se, I am just suggesting that it can’t be easy to have all the resources that $59 billion in cash can buy and still be unable to effectively combat the tens of billions spent globally every year by companies desperate to make it organically to the top-five results of one or more of the keyword phrases that best represent their business. Google is almost exactly like the IRS: it’s got site auditors looking for abuse — and not nearly enough of them — and it also makes lessons out of key abusers periodically in order to coerce, convince, seduce, influence webmasters into better compliance on their own — the only real way to deal with she sheer numbers of pages and volume of content. No matter how awesome Google algorithms or Google auditors may well be, the only true way of moving forward while delivering quality content quickly is by convincing every single web-enabled company, social network, community, directory, store, blog, portfolio, and organization on the web to actively remain in compliance with lies that the lying SEO liars tell.
Google and the IRS are Enforcement Twins
The closest analogy I can think of is US tax code: tax-dodgers will always be able to our maneuver the IRS. There’s no way that Google or the IRS can win against the force of money, innovation, creativity, and just about zero-accountability when it comes to gaming the system, be it aggressively white hat (spirit of the law), gray hat (letter of the law), or even black hat (go ahead, copper, try to catch me!). What both the IRS and Google try to do is rattle their sabers, make hollow threats, puff up and posture, pretend they’re more advanced technologically than they are (the all-seeing eye — not even the NSA really has it, really), and even how well-staffed they are (against a hoard that even includes mom and pop sites who did some reading about SEO and site design and who did a bunch of dumb stuff thinking they were being especially clever). So, both Google and the IRS lie to our face, suggesting they have absolute control, keeping us in line so that we spend our own resources adapting to and complying with new laws and ham-fisted attempts to close loopholes big enough for cargo planes to fly through. And, like tax law, the richest generally create, discover, or exploit every single exception to the rule.
A Tax Inversion Analogy
For example, in the news: Tax Inversion. Letter of the law? Sure, go for it! Spirit of the law? Unpatriotic, anti-American, garbage! But, the tax code ends up being so complex and so inexorably woven into the fabric of revenue and good faith and reputation and pork and extortion and lobbying and big business and smart lawyers and accountants that extricating one gaping loophole from the whole of tax code in the context of global business is impossible no matter how much the New York Times beats you up about how unamerican it may be, you’re sort of stuck hoping that folks outside of multinational companies like Burger King and Apple are too worried about harming their reputation or thinking it too complex or expensive to actually follow through and reincorporate by hopscotching across friendly countries like Bermuda, Canada, Ireland, Panama, Switzerland, the Cayman Islands, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom.
At the End of the Day
If you follow all of Google’s propaganda, you’ll do fine. But, you don’t need to reinvent the wheel. And, you also won’t be penalized if you’ve made every single SEO mistake in the world but came to it with a really good heart. Don’t worry so much. Sure, if you write lots and lots of very compelling, well-written, juicy content, you’ll of course do so much better, right? Energy in, energy out. Google rewards exceptional content. However, we’re not all writers, we’re not all publishers, we’re not all passionate about content-creation, and some of us have not tapped or have not interest in tapping their creative vein.
Google Can’t Afford to Leave Anyone Behind
Every time Google has tried to raise us up and improve us as Internet publishers, they have failed; and, they can’t afford to leave our content or us behind, especially when they so desperately want the entire world to build a mirror copy of In Real Life online and in a form that Google can Index and understand. As a result, they need to do the equivalent of making the search algorithm as patient, accepting, compliant, flexible, and empowering as humanely possible, otherwise, the only sites that will every return are sites that are heavily bankrolled. Google might very well be a lying liar that lies but it really does care about the best customer service experience humanly possible. And, in service of that, Google has and will continue to turn the other cheek while at the same time telling us exactly opposite.
FAQ
Q1: Why is having a descriptive title crucial for SEO? A1: Descriptive titles help Google understand the content of your page, influencing its ranking on search engine results pages (SERPs).
Q2: Does Google prioritize speed over content quality? A2: Yes, site speed plays a significant role in Google's ranking algorithm, often affecting a website's position on SERPs.
Q3: Are meta tag descriptions important for SEO? A3: Absolutely. Meta tag descriptions directly impact how your page appears on SERPs, influencing click-through rates.
Q4: How do backlinks affect SEO? A4: Backlinks remain a critical factor in Google's algorithm, indicating the credibility and authority of your website.
Q5: Why does Google still value long-form content? A5: Long-form content provides comprehensive information, offering value to users and enhancing the overall user experience.
Q6: How does site architecture affect SEO? A6: Site architecture refers to the organization and structure of a website's pages. A well-structured site enhances user experience and helps search engines understand the hierarchy and relevance of content, positively impacting SEO.
Q7: What role do XML sitemaps play in SEO? A7: XML sitemaps provide search engines with a roadmap of a website's content, helping them discover and index pages more efficiently, ultimately improving SEO.
Q8: Is keyword research still important for SEO? A8: Yes, keyword research helps identify the terms and phrases users are searching for, allowing website owners to optimize content and improve its relevance and visibility on search engine results pages.
Q9: How do social signals impact SEO? A9: Social signals, such as likes, shares, and comments on social media platforms, can indirectly influence SEO by increasing brand visibility, driving traffic to a website, and potentially generating backlinks.
Q10: What are the benefits of local SEO? A10: Local SEO focuses on optimizing a website for local search queries, enhancing visibility for geographically relevant searches and improving online presence for businesses targeting local customers.
Q11: What is mobile optimization, and why is it important for SEO? A11: Mobile optimization involves ensuring that a website is designed and functionally optimized for mobile devices. With an increasing number of users accessing the internet via mobile devices, mobile-friendly websites are favored by search engines and provide better user experiences, ultimately impacting SEO.
Q12: How does site security affect SEO? A12: Site security, such as implementing HTTPS encryption and protecting against malware and hacking, is a ranking factor in Google's algorithm. Secure websites inspire trust among users and search engines, positively impacting SEO.
Q13: What is the role of content freshness in SEO? A13: Fresh content indicates that a website is active and relevant. Regularly updating content, publishing new articles, and refreshing existing pages can improve a site's visibility and ranking on search engine results pages.
Q14: How does voice search impact SEO strategies? A14: Voice search technology has grown in popularity, prompting SEO professionals to optimize content for natural language queries and long-tail keywords. Understanding user intent and providing concise, conversational answers can improve visibility in voice search results.
Q15: Are site speed and mobile responsiveness interconnected for SEO? A15: Yes, site speed and mobile responsiveness are closely linked for SEO. A fast-loading, mobile-responsive website provides a better user experience, which can lead to higher engagement metrics and improved search engine rankings.
Glossary
1. Search Engine Optimization (SEO): The practice of optimizing web content to improve its visibility and ranking on search engine results pages (SERPs).
2. Meta Tags: HTML elements that provide metadata about a webpage, including its title, description, and keywords.
3. Alt Tags: Attributes added to HTML elements, primarily images, to provide alternative text descriptions. They are crucial for accessibility and SEO.
4. Backlinks: Links from other websites pointing to your site. They are a key factor in determining a site's authority and credibility.
5. Site Speed: The time it takes for a website to load. Faster sites tend to rank higher on search engine results pages (SERPs).
6. Google Algorithms: Complex mathematical formulas used by Google to determine the ranking of web pages in search results.
7. Content Management System (CMS): Software that allows users to create, manage, and modify digital content on a website without requiring specialized technical knowledge.
8. Matt Cutts: Former head of Google's Webspam team, known for his contributions to the field of SEO and web development.
9. Real-Time Web: The concept of delivering and accessing web content as it is published or updated in real-time.
10. Google+: A social networking platform developed by Google, now discontinued, but once integrated into Google's search algorithms.
11. SERPs: Search Engine Results Pages, the pages displayed by search engines in response to a query.
12. User Experience (UX): The overall experience of a user when interacting with a website or application, encompassing ease of use, accessibility, and satisfaction.
13. Long-Form Content: Content that exceeds traditional length limits, typically providing in-depth analysis or comprehensive information on a topic.
14. Webmaster: A person responsible for managing and maintaining a website, often including tasks related to SEO, content creation, and website administration.
15. Google Index: The database where Google stores information about web pages, allowing them to be retrieved and displayed in search results.
Feel free to email me at [email protected] or call me at +1 202-351-1235
Learn more about Chris Abraham at Gerris digital.
Via Biznology