Growth Newsletter #168
I hope you all survived the various April Fool's campaigns this year.
My favorite was definitely Häggis-Dazs by Aldi. If you can top it, reply and let me know.
But let's dive into how to revamp and get more from your SEO articles.
– Neal
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This week's tactics
How to get more out of your SEO articles
Insight from Tim Hanson of penfriend.ai
SEO articles are not “one and done.”
It’s an iterative process that depends on how well the article is ranking and its trajectory.
First, here’s evidence of WHY you should consider this. SEO expert Tim Hanson updated some stale articles when he discovered they were trending downwards. You can see the difference they made:
Here’s Tim’s process:
- Pop up Search Console every quarter.
- Go through all your articles that are at least a few months old. Find articles that are trending downwards and add them to a list.
- For each page on that list, apply the below changes depending on how they currently rank.
Ranking 1-7 and getting traffic
These are the articles doing well. They rank for their target keywords and get a decent number of eyes and clicks. Once an article gets 100+ visitors a week change your goal from SEO increases (views) to conversion increases (sign ups, purchases).
Consider things like:
- Adding CTA’s/signups/relevant next blogs
- Adding videos to go deeper
- Creating lead magnets and content upgrades
- Potentially adding more context to the article
Do not fundamentally change the concept of the content.
Google has placed it high for a reason, and that reason is usually the “feel of the whole blog”. Don’t change that. Changing that more often than not results in losing rank.
Position 8-25
Content ranking here is on the right track, but needs a little something extra.
Often the article is not addressing the actual search intent. Why are people searching what they’re searching for? Are you actually answering that question or just addressing it? Are you answer their next question?
You’ll want to add things like
- Core keyword in the H1/H2’s. You’re likely missing it
- Shorter paragraphs and bullet lists to making skimming easier (improve readability)
- More internal links
- More focus on the key search intent
- Expanding further to answer their “next question”
Pos 25+
Assuming the blog is at least a few months old, it’s likely stuck.
The most common reason why it’s stuck is it doesn’t match search at all. It’s not even close. Go and take a deeper look at the pages ranking for the keyword you’re going for. See what patterns they all follow.
How are they talking about the keyword/keyphrase you’re trying to rank for? More than likely you’re missing something obvious that 5+ pages on the SERPs are doing well.
The second most common reason why you’re not ranking? Likely word count. Check the average word count and make sure you’re matching that average. Shorter is unfortunately not considered better in SEO most of the time.
Pos 50+
Rewrite entirely. If you’ve been holding this position for your core keyword for 6-12 months. You likely need to rewrite the whole thing. No one is ever going to see this page.
Quick note
The problem with content marketing is that every time you publish something, you're giving yourself future homework to edit and update it in the future—especially if it's about topics that shift and update frequently. This can become quite unwieldy quickly.
It's one of many reasons we recommend less, but better content.
Some SEO resources
- Our past and future tactics about SEO and Content Marketing.
- Newsletters/blogs from SEO creators like Kevin Indig, Eli Schwartz, Backlinko, and Marie Haynes
- Some of our fave SEO tools: ahrefs, Semrush, Exploding Topics, and Surfer.
Community Spotlight
News and Links
Something fun
Something fun
A great (fake) ad by George Mack (aka the Ad Professor). It's also a cool content strategy for someone running an ads agency :)
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— Neal & Justin, and the DC team.