Micro-Choices, Max Impact Personalizing Your Journey, One Moment at a Time.pdf
Web Analytics and SEO for Startups
1. Analytics and SEO for Startups
Dr. Laura J. Hornbake, Consultant Web Analytics
Christina Meyer, SEO/SEM Consultant
8.2.2014
Amazee Metrics AG / Förrlibuckstr. 30 / 8005 Zürich / info@amazeemetrics.com
3. Goals
• To communicate what web analytics can tell you and why you
should care.
• To help you avoid data overload by focusing on the insights you
need and allow you to forget about the vanity metrics.
• To provide you with some tools that can help you to learn more
about your startup’s performance and to make data-driven
decisions.
5. Audience
Who is visiting your site and what
can you find out about them?
• Demographics
• Interests
• Location and Language
• Devices, Browsers, and
Operating Systems
• New vs. Returning
• Frequency, Recency
10. Audience: Implications
• Do the actual visitors to my site correspond to my target market?
• Is my site ready for (or backwards compatible with) the devices and
browsers they are using?
• How can insights about my audience inform future development of
the site?
• What actions can I take to either better attract my target audience or
better serve this audience?
• How else might these insights require me to revise my strategies and
plans?
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12. Acquisition
How did your visitors find you? Which channels are bringing the most
traffic?
• Channels: Direct, Search Engines, Referrals, Social, etc.
• Referrals
• Campaigns: Advertising, Newsletters, QR codes
• Social
15. Campaigns
• Whether you’re running low/no budget buzz marketing campaigns
or have funding to spend on ads, you should be tagging URLs
correctly to track campaign performance.
• Example: Newsletter Campaign
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17. Acquisition: Implications
• Which channels are working for me? Where might I try to improve?
• Is all that time I spend guest blogging, answering questions on Q&A
sites, posting on social networks, etc. producing any results?
• Are my marketing campaigns meeting my expectations?
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21. Events
• Event tracking can be as simple as recording how often users click a
button or as detailed as registering how far down a page they scroll.
• Form errors
• Video engagement
• Interaction with maps, custom widgets, popups
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23. Behavior: Implications
• Are visitors doing what you want or expect them to do (register,
subscribe to a newsletter, download a product brochure, etc.) on
your site?
• Which pages are really attracting visitors and getting them to further
engage with the site?
• Where are you losing visitors? Is there something you can clarify or
make simpler?
• Are you tracking the key events that are important to you?
• How can you use experiments to find the best performing version of
your content?
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25. Conversions
How can you measure success at meeting the specific goals you define
for your site?
• Goals
• E-commerce
• Multi-Channel Funnels
26. Goals
• Which interactions have value
to you?
• Sales, leads, engagement
• Examples:
• User registration
• Page views > 5 pages
• Contact form submitted
• Event
• Assign monetary values to
events
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27. Multi-Channel Funnels
• What complex paths do visitors take
before completing a conversion?
• Assisted conversions
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28. Conversion: Implications
• Are you meeting the targets you’ve set for your goals? Do you need
to revise them?
• What can you learn about how visitors finally arrive at the
interactions you’ve defined as goals?
• Is the effect of certain channels more subtle than the Channels
reports suggest?
• How might this influence your strategies?
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30. Final Suggestions
• Experiment with slicing and dicing data in different ways:
• Timeframes
• Segmentation
• Make web analytics a regular part of your processes
• Be curious; be flexible.
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31. Take Away
• Get beyond the first overview page of your analytics tool and dig
into the data.
• Web analytics can provide you with a lot of good data for your
strategic decision-making.
• Am I wasting time/effort/money or are the things I’m doing paying
off in concrete, measurable results?
42. Ranking Factors
Ranking factors are criteria used by search engines to evaluate the content and
relevance of a web page.
The web pages are ranked based on these ranking factors.
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43. Ranking Factors
Study based on 10’000 search
terms for Google Germany.
http://www.searchmetrics.com/de/services/ranking-faktoren-2013/
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44. Step 1: Keyword Research
Keyword Sources:
• Your own website
• Competitors‘ websites
• Google Trends
• Google Autocomplete
• Google AdWords Keyword Planner
Focus on high volume and low competition.
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45. Step 2: Technical Optimization
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Make your website accessible for search engines.
Help search engines understand the content of your website.
Achieve a high click-through-rate in the SERPs.
Provide a user-friendly website.
Achieve high rankings in the Search Engine Results Pages.
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46. How Results are Displayed in the SERPs
Title
URL
Description
Direct Links
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47. URL Structure
• Use important keywords in the URL:
• Search engines understand the content of your website.
• Higher click-through-rate
higher ranking
• SEO Best Practice:
• Separate words with dashes, no underscores
• Keep your URLs as short as possible (not more than 200
charachters)
• Do not use any spaces or special characters
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48. Geographic and Language Targeting
There are 4 ways to include geographic and language targeting in URLs:
• Top Level Domain: www.google.ch, www.google.de
• Subdomain: de.reuters.com, uk.reuters.com
• Subdirectory: www.zara.com/ch/de, www.zara.com/de
• URL Parameter: example.com?loc=de, example.com?loc=fr
• SEO Best Practice: Subdomain or Subfolder
• Subdomain: Allows different server locations.
• Subfolder: Low cost (1 host)
• If you have different Top Level Domains link building must be done
separately for each domain.
• There is no good reason to use URL parameters.
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49. Title Tags
• HTML Tag (HTML-Head): <title>
• Use important keywords in the title tag:
• Search engines understand the content of your website.
• Higher click-through-rate
higher ranking
• SEO Best Practice:
• Not more than 70 characters long
• Place keywords at the beginning of the tag, the brand name at
the end.
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50. Meta Description Tags
• HTML Tag (HTML-Head):
<meta name="Description" content="Eine Beschreibung Ihrer Seite"/>
• The meta description tag is a marketing text for your result in the
SERPs:
• Does not affect search engine rankings.
• But: Higher click-through-rate
higher ranking
• SEO Best Practice:
• Not more than 160 characters long
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51. Heading Tags
• HML Tag (HTML-Body): <h1>, <h2>, <h3> etc.
• H1 is the most important heading tag for search engines and should
include relevant keywords:
• Search engines understand the content of your website.
• SEO Best Practice:
• Use exactly one H1 Tag on every page
(you can use more than one H2 tag).
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52. Internal Linking
• Search engines crawl a website by moving from link to link.
• Internal linking is crucial for search engines:
• To recognize the structure of the website.
• To find all existing pages.
• Search engines understand the content of a link based on its
anchor text.
• SEO Best Practice:
• Use 2-3 internal links on every page, but no more than 100 links
on one page.
• Use relevant keywords in the anchor text.
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53. Image Names and ALT Tags
• Search engines and screen reader software identify the content of an
image based on its filename and ALT tag.
• SEO Best Practice:
• Use descriptive filenames for your images
(no numbers or special characters)
• Always define a descriptive ALT tag
http://pixabay.com/en/cupcake-cake-chocolateicing-pink-163593/
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54. Source Code Validation
• Search engines use the W3C standard to evaluate the quality of a
website.
• Definition of W3C according to Wikipedia:
„The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is the main international
standards organization for the World Wide Web“.
• Check your homepage regularly with the W3C validator and correct
all errors and warnings: http://validator.w3.org/
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55. Page Load Speed
• The page load speed of a website is an important ranking
factor.
• Google considers a page load time longer than 1.4 seconds as
slow.
• Use the recommendations of Google PageSpeed test to
optimize your website‘s performance:
https://developers.google.com/speed/pagespeed/insights/
http://pixabay.com/en/running-cheetah-speed-animal-fast-48433/
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56. Sitemaps
• A sitemap helps the search engines understand the structure of the
website and supports the crawling process.
• Create an XML sitemap for your website and submit it to Google
with Google Webmaster Tools.
• Submit a new sitemap whenever you make changes on your
website.
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57. Duplicate Content
• Duplicate content is caused by identical or similar content on
different URLs.
• Duplicate content can harm search engine rankings:
• Search engines do not know which of the pages is the most
relevant for a search query.
• Search engines prefer to offer the user a variety of different
pages in the SERPs.
• If there is a lot of duplicate content search engines might think
that you want to trick them.
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58. Common Causes of Duplicate Content
• URLs in www and non-www versions.
• URLs with uppercase and lowercase characters.
Keep 1 version and implement a 301 Redirect from the other
versions to this one.
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59. Structured Data
• With structured data a markup can be added to your content which is
recognized by the major search providers.
• Common types supported by Google:
• Breadcrumbs (links)
• Events (date, name and location)
• Music (links to songs or samples)
• People (name, job title, address)
• Products (price, availability, review)
• Reviews
• Apps
• Videos
• Overview of all rich snippets: http://schema.org/docs/schemas.html
• The created rich snippets can be validated with the testing tool of Google
Webmaster Tools: http://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/richsnippets
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61. Publisher and Authorship Tag
Publisher Tag:
• Relationship between Google+ company page and company website
Authorship Tag:
• Relationship between Google+ profile and blog posts
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62. Mobile SEO
Make sure to have a mobile-friendly website.
SEO Best Practice: Responsive Design
http://www.marketingcharts.com/wp/online/almost-1-in-3-google-organic-search-visits-estimated-to-be-mobile-in-q4-2013-39235/
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63. Step 3: Usability
• Overall Appeal: Provide a readable, well-structured website
• Navigation: Make it easy for users to navigate even if they access the
website from the search engines, as opposed to from the
homepage.
• Information architecture: Provide consistency.
• Content quality: Provide well-written, useful and fresh content.
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64. Step 4: Link Building
The relevance of a website is defined based on the quantity and quality
of external links.
Effective link building measures:
• Submit your website to company and industry directories.
• Contribute with comments to relevant blogs and forums.
• Submit your content to social bookmarking sites.
• Search for unlinked brand mentions.
• Identify broken links on websites.
Content Marketing is the most important driver of links.
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66. Social Media
• Social Signals are a strong
influencer of search engine
rankings.
• Facebook, Twitter and Google+
are the most important social
networks for SEO.
http://www.searchmetrics.com/en/services/ranking-factors-2013/
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67. Take Away
• Make sure that your website is visible in the Search Engine Results
Pages.
• Take SEO into account when building your website.
• Regularly monitor the technical performance of your website with
Google Webmaster Tools.
• A continuous effort for link building and content marketing is
important.
• SEO is an ongoing process – you will see results after a few months,
not after a few days.
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