Friday, April 27, 2018

BrightonSEO Recap 2018 – Part 2

Recapping live from BrightonSEO 2018 with round ups of the talks taken place so far. We’ve got some key takeaways from the search marketing conference, as well as their slide decks.

Here’s everything you need to know from BrightonSEO 2018.

Turning the Oil Tanker – Keeping Abreast of Monster Sites

Steph Vickers – Hargreaves Lansdown

If you’re looking for how to get buy in for your SEO strategies, then this talk is for you. Steph explores how to stay abreast of big websites with multiple stakeholders.

What we learned

Speak Up Against Bad Tools

If you have inherited a toolset you are not happy with, don’t be afraid to request a new one. You will often have to create a business case but it will be worth it.

Automate, Automate, Automate

If it can be automated, automate it. Work with developers and data analysts to see if any of your “grunt work” can be sped up.

Share Your Knowledge

Educate others in the business on SEO by tying the SEO goals back to the overall business objectives, or your colleagues’ specific departmental objectives. “Use the universal language of £££, not Schema”.

Understanding Google Penalties

Kasper Szymanski – @kas_tweets – Search Brothers

Ex-Googler Kaspar Szymanski explained how Google penalties for all to understand. The talk included how the penalties are issued, how to recover and perhaps most importantly: how to prevent Google penalties from happening.

What we learned

Google Penalties are Not the Be All and End All

Every google penalty can be fixed and lifted.

Regularly Check Your Backlinks

Use as many tools as possible to evaluate backlink profile and begin ink removal for high amounts of negative backlinks, chances are there aren’t humans at the ned of these links to communicate with about removal.

Take Responsibility

It doesn’t matter who built the links that get you penalised; whether it’s your predecessor or someone who didn’t know what they were doing, take responsibility as Google won’t take this into account, leave emotions out of reconsideration requests.

Optimising for Search Bots

Fili Wiese – @filiwiese – Search Brothers

Former Google engineer Fili Wiese gives us a talk on how to optimise your website to allow search bots to crawl it more efficiently.

What we learned

Crawl Prioritisation is the New Crawl Budget

The usual key term with optimising for search bots is “crawl budget” but we should really change this to crawl prioritisation. When Google first discovers your website, it crawls it from the top-down (homepage first, following the normal structure). At some point it will stop doing that and become a random crawl. This means that the URL scheduler is kicking in and determines which URL gets crawled and when. Not every URL gets crawled equally or as often – some URLs get crawled a lot, some don’t. Links (internal and external) can be really useful for helping Googlebot to prioritise.

Googlebot Deprioritises Low Quality and Duplicate Content

Things that can make Googlebot deprioritise your URLs include – duplicate content, low quality content, incorrect server signals (i.e. a soft 404 will make Google trust your server signals less)

Improve SEO Signals Before Migrating

How Much Positive Impact Can Crawl Budget Optimization Have in a Mobile First Index Era?

Mark Thomas – Botify

Former Google engineer Fili Wiese gives us a talk on how to optimise your website to allow search bots to crawl it more efficiently.

What we learned

Crawl Prioritisation is the New Crawl Budget

Watch your Server Logs

We are currently in the interim period between crawls from desktop user agent to mobile user agent. Keep an eye on your server logs to identify your individual changeover date

Know the Difference Between Mobile and Desktop Crawlers

Mobile and desktop crawlers are very different. Don’t disregard this changeover if you have a responsive site.

Plan, Plan and Plan Again

Migrate. Plan. And mitigate any risks. See it as an opportunity to free up budget to increase and improve revenue.

Advanced and Practical Structured Data with Schema.org

Alexis K Sanders – @alexisksanders – Merkle

Alexis K Sanders delivers a rapidfire introduction to structured data using Schema.org for non-techy Marketers attempts to give anyone the confidence to take on any structured data markup challenge in 20 minutes!

What we learned

Enhanced SERP Results

Benefits: Enhanced SERP results – i.e. review stars, pricing information, event listings. All of these either give you slightly more SERP real estate or help to make your listing stand out more from the others. A study of different eCommerce sites shows that URLs that have rich results have a higher click-through rate. There is also an opportunity to improve relevance – Schema helps Google to understand content. Schema.org has also introduced a specification called “speakable” which may help with voice search in the future – something that many people are wondering how to optimise for.

JSON-LD or Microdata?

For the search engines there isn’t a big difference. Microdata is embedded in HTML whereas JSON-LD is easier to implement through Javascript. However Microdata is better supported at this time. Even though Bing claims to support JSON-LD, analysis shows that they don’t support it too well yet – although it’s something that they are working on.

Scheme.org Works like a Dictionary of Itemtype

For the advanced users: Use Schema.org itself. It works like a dictionary of every single itemtype that you can use. They provide what the itemtype does, how much it is used online, and the different properties that you can assign. Also how to nest the different data types within your markup.

Common Pitfalls

Using curly quotes instead of straight quotes! Mind your commas. Use Google’s structured data testing tool to check your work. Also, make sure that you aren’t violating Google’s policies, or you could end up with a manual penalty and all your hard work will be for nought.

Technical SEO in the Mobile First Indexing Era

Barry Adams – @badams – Polemic Digital

Alexis K Sanders delivers a rapidfire introduction to structured data using Schema.org for non-techy Marketers attempts to give anyone the confidence to take on any structured data markup challenge in 20 minutes!

What we learned

Thoroughly Look at Your Site on Mobile

Take the time to look through the mobile site. We sit behind desktops all day. Sit down and navigate through websites on mobile.

Tabs are Okay

Mobile crawlers are more tolerant of hidden content. HTML preferred – JavaScript is rendered, but we want to make it easy.

Ensure Structured Data is Still Visible on Mobile

Generally, make sure the technical SEO provisions made on desktop are all visible on mobile. Don’t take anything for granted.

How to Tighten Up Your SEO on Large Websites

Bill Sebald – @billsebald – Greenlane Garage

As marketers, we need to establish trust between consumers/businesses and brands in an environment where people don’t trust anybody. Here’s how:

What we learned

Ask for the Log Files to Gain a Clear Understanding of your Crawl Statistics

Bill recommends https://sitebulb.com for detailed crawl analysis, and for understanding where XML sitemaps may be causing index bloat

Use an Indexation Tester

He (Greenlane) has built an indexation tester (this is a big deal as to automate this you usually need to use proxy servers): http://bit.ly/index-tester

You Can Also…

Find sites that used to link to legacy versions of your site using the Wayback Machine: http://bit.ly/wayback-linking

The Wild West of Apps Search Optimisation (ASO)

Chelsea Blacker – @chelseablacker – Blueglass

As marketers, we need to establish trust between consumers/businesses and brands in an environment where people don’t trust anybody. Here’s how:

What we learned

Optimise Your Apps

“the web of apps”: It’s significant that we optimise our apps to appear high on search rankings. Play around with your categories for apps, make sure you get your keyword in to the title eg “{name of fitness app} – fitness” and include long tail keywords.

Lots to Learn for the Future of ASO

The ASO industry is reminiscent of SEO 10-12 years ago, there’s a lot of questions as we’re unsure about what the future is for apps

Treat the App as you Would a Website

This includes App indexation

Cut the Crap: Next Level Content Audits with Crawlers

Sam Marsden – @sam_marsden – DeepCrawl

Sam Marsden from Deepcrawl gives us an overview of his new process for conducting content audits combining crawl data with other data sources. This new process is designed to help us to optimise crawl budget, avoid penalties, and make sure that our most important pages are not getting lost in the noise as well as assessing on-site engagement and search performance.

What we learned

Do a Full Inventory of Existing Content

Sam starts off by talking about when Deepcrawl recently had to do a site redesign – this included moving over to a new CMS. As part of this, Sam decided that a content audit was in order – to discover the full inventory of content and then attach performance data to this content to decide what to do with it.  Sam came up with a much more crawl centred approach than what most online guides suggest. He mentioned that cloud crawlers like deepcrawl can help because it means you aren’t limited by scale – you can crawl millions of URLs in one crawl and then bring other data sources, such as majesticSEO link data or search console data into this crawl. Sam believes that crawl data needs to be at the centre of your audit rather than being a source.

Ask Yourself These Four Key Questions

What are we going to do now that we have the data? 4 key questions when looking at relationships between different pieces of data:
1. What is and isn’t performing well on my website?

  1. How do you deal with content that isn’t performing well?
  2. How can you get the most out of content that is performing well?
  3. How can we optimise content going forwards?

Schedule Crawls

Now that Sam has given us some of the details of the process, he explains how to automate it – Schedule crawls. Use Deepcrawl’s Zapier integration to trigger crawls through different means i.e. through a calendar invite. Create automated rules. Pull your data into dashboards for continuous monitoring.

The Toughest Battles in SEO are Internal: How to Prioritise and Demonstrate Value

Rachel Costello – @rachellcostello – DeepCrawl

In this session we were taught how to pick – and more importantly, win – your SEO battles, as well as providing tangible results for your projects if you ever need to build a case for SEO in house.

What we learned

A New Acronym for SEO?

Rachel suggests that perhaps the acronym should now stand for Search Experience Optimisation, as SEO is about so much more than optimising for search engines, User Experience is fundamental too.

Check Your Site for Algorithm Changes

Use the Barracuda Digital ‘Panguin Tool’ to map Google algorithm updates to your organic performance statistics, and easily see whether your site has been affected by an algorithm change

A Slow Website Could be Costing your Company Severely

Branded3 have created a tool that calculates the estimated reduction in revenue that poor site speed can lead to: https://www.branded3.com/site-speed-conversion-rate/

How to Increase Conversions and Rankings Using the Limbic Map of the Brain

Danny Richman – @dannyrichman – SEO Training

Lots of us marketers focus on words, copy and technicalities to sell our products to our prospects. However, addressing their emotional needs has proven much more effective in achieving CTR and other success metrics.

How to optimise your online presence to meet your audience’s emotional needs:

What we learned

Use Emotional Goals

Identify and analyse your audience’s emotional goals using the limbic map of the brain

Use These Emotions in Your Copy

For example, those looking for an apple tart recipe are actually looking for love and praise from their friends and family. Those looking for cheap perfume are looking to identify with celebrities and smell irresistible. Those looking for free PowerPoint templates are actually looking for templates to inspire and impress their audience.

Play to Your Audiences Senses

Use lots of implicit signals including as large images and colours, aspirational headings and layouts. “This is the person you will become by buying this product

Check our other blogs from this morning’s talks to stay up-to-date with all things BrightonSEO 2018.

 

 

 

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