The Last Hurdle – Marketing, Social Media Marketing.

Ranking Well on Google

Ranking Well on Google. Google is arguably the most well known and popular search engine and it has got there by having a premise that is at once simple and incredibly complex to achieve. It strives to provide any given searcher exactly what they are looking for. If you, like me, remember search engines like Ask Jeeves, Yahoo, Lycos and Bing all of which are still live search engines (if you are sitting there saying “who” then this point is well made) then you will no doubt also remember that asking even for the most basic question back in the day, was really pot luck as to whether you would get anything useful back.

The difference is Google evolved, it utilised various innovative ideas like it’s autocomplete – which really was rather dire in the beginning, but they persevered and continued to develop and innovate and now no one types an entire sentence in the search box. Of course, with the rise in search engine use so did the spammers and more nefarious practices increase, so Google decided to tackle those too. In 2003 Google released it’s first major algorithm update called Florida and has been fighting the good fight ever since. With various core updates and now daily algorithmic updates, Google’s fight to provide a searcher with exactly what they are looking for continues. When it comes to SEO (Search Engine Optimisation) it is Google’s guidelines that SEO specialists aim to meet.

Ranking Well on GoogleRanking Well on Google

But what exactly are they looking for? How do they decide where to rank your site? There is no quick answer to that question. Google do not publish an exhaustive list of what it takes (check out our SEO Tips for Small Businesses article for quick handy tips) to rank well. However, there is a wealth of guidance available on their Webmaster Central Blog, including this recent release about Google Core Updates. In the article Google talk about why sites increase or decrease in rankings after a Core Update and what you can do to mitigate losses or to generally improve your site – the core message here is to focus on content – however, I would add to ensure that your site is optimised for Mobile First too!

In their Core Update, article Google kindly list out a whole set of questions you should ask yourself about your site collateral (every single page or post that you would like to rank). They are in sections and for ease of use and to save you clicking back and forth between their article and this synopsis, I have listed them below:

Content and quality questions

 

Expertise questions

 

Presentation and production questions

 

Comparative questions

 

Ranking Well on Google – In summary

As you can see from the tone of the questions, Google doesn’t want you to blindly follow a set of tasks with a view to just creating masses of traffic to your site – we should be over the “numbers game” mentality by now and should be focusing on quality over quantity in all aspects of our digital media activity. Focusing on the user and their intent behind their search request, facilitating and anticipating their need is what Google is trying to get you to focus on. In essence, with regards to Ranking Well on Google, just as they do, they want you to provide on each page, article or product, what they have always strived for – give the user what they want and as we started out by saying this is at once a very simple and yet extremely complex thing to achieve but if you do it well then the benefits are there for the reaping!

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