Categories: Blog

5 key insider SEO tactics you need to master

Search engine optimisation (SEO) can be a vast, confusing area for most to bravely venture into. When you are entrenched in a website with multiple, conflicting strategies and changing goals it can be difficult to point your ship in the best direction or even know where your destination should be. Marketing teams can easily become bogged down with so many different industry guides, best practice methods and shared neighbourly techniques that it can be challenging to draw breath.

In recent years search engines have again moved forward by adjusting and upgrading their service in an attempt to deliver the best user experience for their visitors. Providing intelligent search results that now take an incredible amount of factors into account, so much more than just the basic steps that once earned you a top spot on Google. In this blog, I’ll share latest tips and trends that you can use when optimising your current SEO strategy.

1. Walk before you run

Ensure your basics are covered before embarking on more focused SEO techniques. These should already be incorporated into your strategy, for example: optimise your page titles; keep URL structure short, descriptive and categorical; make sure your site has not outgrown the web server resulting a drop in site speed; use correct HTML heading tags, avoiding generic or conflicting titles. Having a sound foundation is vital to build your web presence upon.

2. Create content that earns links

A few years ago when Google released their adjusted search engine algorithm, SEO experts across the globe proclaimed ‘content is king’. Let us clarify this overused buzz-phrase. Relevant, original, shareable content is king. Inbound links are still one of the key factors in how search engines rank your website. An increase in shared content linked from external websites will improve how search engines position your pages and also perceive your overall website. This is especially true when the inbound links come from a source with a greater authority than your site, almost in an endorsement setup. Search engines will perceive these links as stronger than others and add increased value to your site because of this.

“But then we stumble upon that abandoned section of PDFs dating back to 1998. Then we’re in a meeting and so-and-so pipes up to say actually we can’t possibly get rid of that… or that… or that… and by the way, the CEO still wants her letter on the homepage.”
Sarah Wachter-Boettcher, Content Strategist talking at Industry 2015

Sarah Wachter-Boettcher, Content Strategist talking at Industry 2015

Aim to keep your content on topic. Tidy out the unnecessary content weighing your site down allowing you to invest your time on the content that will deliver results. View your website as your prized possession – not the company archive for everything including that old kitchen sink.

3. Align your content and SEO teams

Pushing your teams to work together will allow all parties to understand how and why they should adhere to best SEO practices. Content teams may not be familiar with character limits or basic white hat SEO techniques that could massively improve their page ranking. SEO teams may not be familiar with exact content topic or context to be able to adjust fields by themselves. As always, communication is key, and avoiding content chaos should be a principal goal in your strategy.

4. Prioritise mobile SEO

Ignoring users who visit your site on mobile devices is clearly shooting yourself in the foot, but this has been a tactic that has been pressed for a few years now. This should be ingrained in any SEO strategy. Take this a step further and take a deeper look at your mobile support. User experience on mobile devices is another growing factor in search engine algorithms – Google now favours mobile-friendly websites in its search results. If you have an automatic redirect to separate mobile specific website, make sure the user is redirected to the relevant page within it rather than being bounced to the mobile homepage, then having to take extra effort to relocate the original content. Avoid unplayable content by using HTML5 standards for animations, cross- platform compatible video embedding. Design mobile user interfaces for ‘fat fingers’, avoid window popups and give Flash animations a very wide berth with a rather large bargepole in hand.

5. Use an analytical and reporting process that works

Measuring how your web site is performing has become second nature in web development. More often than not the basics are covered by Google Analytics, providing a complex array of statistics about visitors to your website. But what do these statistics really mean? Analytical data by itself is meaningless and needs interpreting to become a useful tool to move forward with. Reports should be straight to the point, in context, easy to understand and should not become just another mundane regular process. As well as highlighting the key gains over a period the report should also show where to improve. There should be clear and achievable action points that will benefit the website when carried out. Improve your report content and take action on the results.

A good example of an effective modern SEO strategy in effect can be seen on the website of NHS England. An overall tidy and organised structure covering the basics of SEO, featuring up to date and relevant healthcare related key stories on the homepage. They use a responsive design to deliver a mobile optimised layout that avoids the pitfalls other approaches may encounter. Their mobile style also features touch friendly navigation elements. Most of their inbound links are probably down to their position and authority as an organisation but their content also begs to be shared. An effective yet subtle optimisation of a very busy website.

When there are such a variety of methods and techniques to implement on our own sites, what is the best way to put these into effect? In my experience, comprehensive guidelines can be exhausting to follow to the letter and can often become redundant and quickly outdated. Teams can easily see change as painful, frustrating and time consuming by default. Tackle this by making change achievable. Start with small adjustments that don’t overwhelm and sell further changes focusing on the benefits achieved over the difference in process.

We cannot become an SEO sensei in a day, or even in five steps. Aim to take these small actions and integrate them into your SEO process. Hard work will pay off and cheap shortcuts won’t last – SEO is a marathon, not a sprint. Investing in the latest techniques will result in an enhanced and more impactful site for your company now and in the future.

Gregor MacKenzie

Born and reared in the wild Highlands of bonnie Scotland, Gregor started his working life as a 13‑year‑old “Saturday boy” for a local retailer bagging tatties into 3lb bags. From this strong foothold he decided to follow his heart rather than his “further-education” head and Gregor invested 14 years into the business, growing with it as he grew up himself. As the previous owners stood back into retirement Gregor moved forward and picked up the reins. A normal working day started at midnight leaving for Glasgow Fruit Market, working through the night, morning, afternoon and into the evening. Gregor was involved in every aspect of running a business including development, personnel management and client relations. He loved growing the business and steering it into new markets, networking with many small artisan family businesses as well as multinational suppliers. After many years of hard work invested, national economic pressures made the decision easy to close down the business before it was too late, but it lives on in his heart as the high standard of work he aims to output on a daily basis. Alongside his daily work Gregor has spent most of his life surrounded by technology. He is at one with IT, specialising in web design and development, IT support and training, programming, coding, photography, stage lighting and sound, video production, IT hardware installation, maintenance and repair to name a few areas of expertise… he can even change the wee square battery in a smoke alarm at a push. Gregor relishes a challenge and will take on any uncharted hi‑tech projects with unmatched enthusiasm and a keen watchful eye.

A little about Gregor:
  • After a childhood stained by being a stubborn fussy eater, Gregor has flourished as a home cook and can now happily talk about produce, seasonality, trends, techniques and taste combinations until the cows come home. This is an excellent way to distract Gregor if the need arises, or if the cows are late.
  • Since the mid 90s Gregor signed off his e-mails with a casual ‘G’ in place of his full name. This allowed Gregor to garner the monikers ‘Big G’ and ‘G’. Gregor takes it as a compliment when referred to by these names.
  • Gregor’s first ‘proper’ PC was a Packard Bell desktop featuring a Pentium II 233MHz processor, 200Mb hard disk, 32Mb RAM, CD-ROM drive, 3½” floppy drive, 15" CRT monitor, 1 USB, 1 Serial and 1 Parallel port, running Windows 95.
  • There is a local legend in the glen that on certain nights of the year, when the moon is full and the stars are out, between the clocks falling back and the first cuckoo of Spring, then and only then, Gregor will casually but gracefully pick up his guitar and enjoy a night of heartfelt sing‑song‑ing with a room full of chums. Certainly a night etched with fondness into the annals of their memories, adorned with a post-it note marked “golden”.
  • Gregor enjoys DIY. His most recent project has been the design, evolution, redesign, building and completion of a stoater of a bar-be-cue, with an integrated spit-roast, giant chopping board, magnetic knife rail and an adorable handy wee shelf.

Share
Published by
Gregor MacKenzie

Recent Posts

Social care and technology: where are we now?

The Highland Marketing advisory board discussed social care and technology a year into the Covid-19…

2 days ago

Bola Owolabi: How tech firms can narrow healthcare inequalities

Tech companies must engage marginalised patients, embrace diversity as a business imperative, and could become…

2 weeks ago

Our commitment to the environment

At Highland Marketing, we recognise that we have a duty to protect the environment and…

1 month ago

Top strategies your health tech marketing agency should implement

To truly stand out in our saturated market it's imperative for your health tech marketing…

1 month ago

Versatile writing models for impactful PR and marketing

Delve into the versatility of writing models like PAS, AIDA, and the inverted pyramid. Learn…

1 month ago

Natasha Phillips: Health tech vendors and nurses must work more closely together

The former NHS CNIO for England has joined the Highland Marketing advisory board. Here, she…

2 months ago