SEO isn’t just a discipline that exists outside the goals of your business. It should complement and be informed by wider business smarts.
- Treating onsite SEO as a ‘one-off’ project without a plan to regularly review the site – especially if your site has a high product or content rollover, or has big seasonal changes to push new messages and offers
- Changing horses mid-stream – revisiting keyword lists month by month in response to internal politics
- Not consulting existing Analytics data to identify best performing keywords
- Targeting all markets simultaneously
- Forgetting about Bing and Yahoo, where rankings and traffic can be easier to find in the short term
- Failing to understand (or convey to a client) that an SEO campaign is a long term strategy and results will not necessarily be evident in the first weeks or even months in competitive markets
- Failing to utilize universal search options for increased SERPS visibility eg images, news, blog search, product feeds etc
- Failing to work out initially if you can get a ROI from a sector you are targeting (profit margins, keyword volume etc)
- Putting SEO in a silo outside core business objectives
- Failing to include SEO input during the building of an online business plan and creating a site development spec.
Market Research
- Concentrating on trying to concentrate on acquiring the ’same’ links as your competition
- Looking solely at offline competitors
- Not tracking industry news and events for new, fresh content ideas
- Identifying ‘competitors’ purely based on results for broad, vanity keywords
- Not using tools like Google Insight or paying for data from the likes Hitwise to identify seasonal trends
- Not using the valuable data available from a concurrent PPC campaign to monitor converting keywords
- Being unprepared to deal with social media
- Failing to deal with negative feedback and reviews online
- Failure to do your own market research through reviewing interaction with your site through Analytics, click tracking, customer surveys etc
- Failing to have any form of conversion tracking software on the site to see what keywords are the ones that you have to go after
Keywords
- Focussing on a small number of high volume ‘vanity’ terms rather than a deeper and better-converting long tail
- Allowing keyword choices on the basis of “the MD checks this every day”
- Chasing unrealistic keywords for your budget
- Choosing keywords from internal industry-speak rather than consumer-led terms with actual traffic
- Deploying brand / company name as part of a tedious “Company.co.uk – About” page title formula
- Setting too many keywords to dilute linkbuilding and content efforts
- Believing the numbers for likely traffic
- Using the “other users found this page by..” method of including misspellings and synonyms
- Forgetting that 25% of all searches have never been seen before and that search queries are typically much longer than single words
- Not reviewing keyword choices to understand where your site is failing to convert visitors and why
Content
- Copying content from other sites – potentially tripping penalties
- Stuffing content with unnatural frequencies of keywords
- Keyword “wishlists” in page titles (“UK SEO – SEO in the UK – UK SEO Agency from a UK SEO” etc)
- Duplicated meta descriptions, which encourage Google to create their own snippets which can be nonsensical and harm clickthrough rates
- Deploying content in images and Flash files
- Creating content that has no value to human readers and fails to back up your market messages
- Syndicating content to higher authority sites which are likely to be indexed before your own site and thus become canonical
- Placing a large block of keyword-stuffed “seo content” a mouse scroll below the footer on the home page
- Outsourcing content writing to the cheapest provider that you can find… you get what you pay for
- Putting text within images rather than using background images under HTML text content
Links
- Building links from a narrow range of IP addresses
- Demanding link volume rather than looking at quality
- Using more than one company to build links without co-ordination between their goals
- Buying blogroll links from sites with dozens of unrelated, anchor text links to companies in completely different markets
- Using toolbar PageRank to determine the value of a link in isolation, without considering the content of the page, quality of the domain etc
- Not re-checking link equity from established links to make sure good links haven’t gone bad
- Relying on a small number of sources for links that could be nofollowed/deleted/removed by policy at any time
- Over building links on a small set of anchor text
- Not creating links to sites and pages that already link to you naturally
- Believing that linking to the search engines or an SEO company will deliver you any benefit
Watch your URLs
- Not redirecting URLs to a canonical domain – leading to huge duplicate content issues
- Leaving the non-www version and the www live simultaneously
- Not sending correct 404 HTTP responses for broken pages
- Using long strings of variables in URLs rather than short, static URLs with a proper file extension
- Not using the correct 301 response for old content that has moved to a new URL
- Using links for territories and currencies that create duplicates of your content in all but minor ways
- Using ‘unfriendly’ characters in URLs, such as underscores instead of hypens
- Allowing the indexing of URLS with session id variables
- Not using keywords within URL structures over numbers and internal shorthand
- Having a directory structure that includes terms like ’seo’
Channelling your Equity
- Deploying sitewide links to low-value pages such as “categories” with 1 product in them
- Linking every page to every other through an over-prescriptive menu and diluting equity spread to non-critical content
- Leaking equity to external sites by not deploying the rel=nofollow attribute
- Using ‘click here’ and ‘read more’ as default choices for internal links, rather than more descriptive phrases containing keywords where appropriate
- Not using the homepage to channel power to the most important market sectors you’re targeting
- Not using other properties you own (parent company websites, partners etc) to direct keyword equity to your target site
- Using internal nofollows to try to sculpt PageRank
- Failing to protect your site from exploits – everything from basic keyword spam in blog comments to sophisticated hacks
- Using XML sitemaps to mask poor internal link structure
- Not understanding the importance of ‘first link first’
Code
- Deploying lots of inline Javascript and CSS and increasing the site’s download time
- Keeping CSS and Javascript files on the same domain, reducing threading and increasing load times
- Leaving dozens or hundreds of ‘keywords’ in the meta keyword
- Having page titles that deploy “keyword wish lists”
- Using navigation that can only be accessed through Javascript
- Not considering the use of AJAX to bring in content and links to keep load times low and control equity spread without compromising user experience
- Serving unoptimised images with large file sizes
- Failing to label images with relevant alt attributes containing keywords as appropriate
- Serving different pages to spiders and human visitors through cloaking without an obviously justifiable reason such as personalisation
- Denying access to spiders through Robots.txt
Relationships
- Not keeping the SEO company in the loop with changes to the company’s wider strategy
- Allowing web developers to build/change things on the site willy-nilly without informing and consulting with SEO
- Changing contact points frequently so that messages and learning get lost
- Not introducing SEO agencies to other parties like offline marketing companies, PR agencies etc. This misses massive opportunities for content synergy and pooling of ideas.
- Not responding to requests for information and content
- Not ensuring that SEO recommendations are implemented as fully as possible
- Blaming SEO partners for falling traffic without first seeing if there are wider market reasons such as seasonality that could be playing a part
- Enacting SEO recommendations from other third parties without consulting with an existing SEO partner
- Being unwilling to gain a small understanding of HTML / CSS
- Not paying your SEO company!
The First Rule of SEO Club is…. “Don’t Talk About SEO Club”
- Leaving “clues” in source code like <!– This content for SEO //–>
- Using obvious file names and document structure. http://www.yoursite.com/styles/seo.css is going to attraction attention and all that “text-indent:-100em” stuff is going to highlight your hidden content pretty much off the bat.
- Having dozens of obvious keyword landing pages linked from sitewides
- Advertising the fact that you belong to a link exchange program by carrying banners that promote such schemes
- Asking for advice about SEO issues on public forums without consulting your SEO company first
- Leaving link requests in blog comments
- Creating easily identifiable networks with common IP addresses, templates and outlink profiles that have an obvious relationship with your target site
- Making sloppy link requests to bloggers who are likely to out you (hint: read their back catalogue!)
- Using automated tools to check rankings on too big a scale
- Using the same link sources for different target sites again and again
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