6 Top SEO Ranking Factors That Work Today

Google rankings can mean a steady stream of free traffic to your website. However, staying on top of the current SEO strategies that are effective can be elusive. In the past year, SEO ranking factors have changed quite a bit. These 6 SEO Ranking Factors and additional tips will help you keep on track. Aside from these steps below, you may also boost traffic with long tail-keywords.

Google Regularly Makes Updates To SEO Ranking Factors

Google regularly makes major updates to it algorithms, and its SEO ranking factors have changed dramatically during the past years. A group of SEO experts and search pros share insights on how SEO rank has evolved and offer advice on how to keep up. Are links on other websites that point to your site an important Google-search ranking factor?

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The answer used to be blatantly obvious, and for some, it still is. Google, however, made major changes to its search engine algorithm during the past few years. The company also changed the way it displays search results. Then there are mobile search results, which can be different from desktop results, the possible impact (or not) of social media shares, the emergence of Google’s RankBrain artificial intelligence (AI), and many other factors that come into play.

It’s all enough to cause confusion and lead to questions about today’s most important search engine ranking factors. We interviewed a set of SEO experts for their takes on the most important SEO ranking factors. They’re not listed in order of importance, because not all of the experts agreed on the degrees of importance for factors. However, the consensus is all digital marketers, SEO experts, and other search pros should focus on the following six SEO ranking factors.

6 key search-ranking factors

1. information relevance and SEO rank

Google ultimately became the dominant search engine because it is adept at displaying, on the first page of search results, the most relevant information that matches a keyword query. Eventually, users came to assume the search engine only shows the most relevant results first, a behavior that web-usability consultant Jakob Nielsen dubs, “Google Gullibility.”

information relevance is often assumed or overlooked in studies of ranking factors, but it’s still the most important factor, according to Eric Enge, CEO of Stone Temple Consulting.

Relevance is often presumed to be “on” or “off,” so information is either relevant or irrelevant to a query. “But that’s not really the right view in my opinion,” Enge says. “You can’t assume that relevance is a binary factor, where you assign a zero score if it’s not relevant and a 1 score if it is relevant. True relevance scoring would be on a sliding scale, ranging from 0 to 1, with any possible value in-between. The information with the lower score would need to score somewhat higher on other metrics to outrank the [higher score].”

2. Inbound links and SEO

Google made a number of tweaks during the past year, including the rollout of RankBrain and the second mobile-friendly update, but the core ranking factors remain much the same, according to Jayson DeMers, founder and CEO of AudienceBloom, information- and social media marketing firm. “The quality of inbound links pointing to your domain or page is still the most important ranking indicator.”

Links have always been key to high Google ranks. During its early days, Google touted its PageRank technology as an important competitive differentiator. PageRank is Google’s “numeric rating of how important it considers pages to be,” according to Search Engine Land. Google said in 2011 that PageRank “works by counting the number and quality of links to a page to determine a rough estimate of how important the website is. The underlying assumption is that more important websites are likely to receive more links from other websites.” As of earlier this year, Google no longer shares PageRank scores publicly, but it still uses them in ranking calculations, Search Engine Land says.

Stone Temple Consulting recently performed a research study to answer the question: “Are links still a powerful ranking factor?” The gist is that provided the information is relevant and a site doesn’t have technical problems or quality issues, links are still highly important. And “authority” is Enge’s No. 2 most important ranking factor after information relevance, though it’s primarily driven by the quality and diversity of backlinks, he says.

SEO consultancy Backlinko recently posted the results of its search engine ranking factors study, based on a million Google search results. Backlinko found that “the number of domains linking to a page correlated with rankings more than any other factor.” Backlinko also concluded that a site’s overall link authority, as measured by Ahrefs Domain Ratings, “strongly correlates with higher [search] rankings.”

Rand Fishkin, the founder of Moz, which offers SEO and other software tools as a service, says page-level link features are the No. 1 search engine-ranking factor today, assuming a site’s information is relevant. These features include Google’s PageRank, the number of linked root domains, quality of the link sources, and trust metrics. Every other year, Moz releases its own search engine ranking factors survey, and in the last survey for 2015, page-level link features were the No. 2 ranking factor, just slightly below domain-level link features.

3. information quality and SEO rank

Google wants to deliver not only the most relevant information but also the highest-quality search results. And quality can be measured in a variety of ways, according to Enge, including proper grammar and spelling, reading level, comprehensiveness — how well the information covers the spectrum of user needs related to the query — uniqueness, and a lack of negative signals, such as excessive keyword repetition. (The information Marketing Institute’s blog offers more information in, “How Google judges the quality and what you should do about it,” and, “What quality information is, and how to help your clients create it.”)

“Marketers and SEO professionals should still focus on developing the best information they can to attract quality inbound links to their information, and that usually means executing a solid information marketing strategy,” says DeMers. “It’s harder to stand out these days due to increasing competition in the information sphere, so if there’s one change I can recommend … it’s investing more to make sure your information is truly remarkable, even if that means creating less information overall.”

Backlinko’s survey results found that “publishing focused information that covers a single topic may help with rankings,” and that “longer information tends to rank higher in Google’s search results. The average Google first page result contains 1,890 words.” And a separate study from BuzzSumo and Moz found that long-form information “of over 1,000 words consistently receives more (social media) shares and links than shorter form information.”

Searchmetrics, an enterprise SEO and information marketing service provider, ranked information quality as the third most important element in its 2015 study of search ranking factors and rank correlations. Among the factors that can influence such ranking are keywords, in the body of the copy, in internal and external links, and in meta-descriptions; word count; and relevant terms.

4. Technical issues and SEO

Like information relevancy, technical issues are sometimes overlooked in SEO ranking factor studies. Technical issues, however, can prevent a site’s information from ranking as high as it could for relevant keyword queries — or keep it from ranking at all.

Common technical issues include duplicate information, dubious inbound links, poor navigation, and improper redirects. Google’s goal is to deliver a positive user experience, so information on sites with architecture problems won’t likely earn a high ranking. “You have to solve those problems if you want to play the SEO game,” Enge says.

In fact, technical issues ranked as the No. 1 most important factor to mitigate in Searchmetrics’ study. Technical issues aren’t just about problems in a website’s structure, however. Technical on-page factors that can play a role in rank include whether or not information has a strong meta-description if it uses H1 and H2 tags, and whether a site is encrypted via HTTPS. “HTTPS is becoming more relevant and even a ranking signal for Google — but it is not necessary for every site,” the Searchmetrics report says. “Encryption is primarily important for sites with purchasing processes or sensitive client information to increase trust and conversion rates.”

5. User engagement and SEO rank

Does your information truly engage website visitors? If so, Google may reward you with a higher search ranking. Unfortunately, it’s unclear how exactly Google measures user engagement. “I don’t think anyone in the industry has a good handle on what user engagement measurements might be,” Enge says, adding that he doesn’t think click-through rates are a direct ranking factor.

For some pages, high bounce rates are a positive signal, according to Enge. When visitors land on contact pages in search of phone numbers and then click away, for example, that’s satisfactory user engagement. “But I do believe Google is looking at user engagement in some ways,” Enge says. Google software engineer Paul Haahr confirmed as much in a March 2016 presentation, in which he said Google leverages user engagement to evaluate the quality of its ranking algorithms.

Moz’s Fishkin says user interaction and engagement, along with usage-data signals, are among the top SEO ranking factors. Such signals include clickstream analysis, which collects, analyzes, and reports aggregate data on the pages site visitors to see and in what order, and visitor traffic. In its beginner’s guide to SEO, Moz outlines some user engagement metrics and provides an explanation of how usability and user experience impact search rankings.

Searchmetrics lists user experience as its No. 2 ranking factor, based on elements such as the number of internal links and images, responsive design — when a website adjusts to both mobile and desktop screens — and time spent on site.

6. RankBrain and SEO

In March 2016, a Google search executive said RankBrain, links, and information are the three top ranking factors, according to Search Engine Land. RankBrain uses AI to help Google “interpret the searches that people submit to find pages that might not have the exact words that were researched for,” Search Engine Land says.

But some SEO professionals aren’t convinced RankBrain is such an important factor. Google has said many times that RankBrain has a larger impact on long-tail queries, according to Enge. (Long-tail queries are highly specific search phrases with multiple words.) RankBrain runs on all queries, he says, but it doesn’t impact broad or generic keyword search terms at all. Instead, it impacts keywords terms that are a bit more complex “infrequently,” and RankBrain affects long-tail keyword phrases “fairly often,” Enge says.

SEO tips and best practices for 2016

1. Don’t overemphasize social media shares

After Google+’s fall from grace, social signals lost a lot of search sway, especially for personalized results, according to Moz’s Fishkin. And Enge points out, “social media sources can be shut off at any time, so Google doesn’t want to make it part of their core algorithm.”

2. Ranking factors are intertwined

Some misconceptions about ranking factors come from the idea that site owners can make a handful of changes or tweaks to pages and quickly see their rank, according to Holly Miller, a Searchmetrics SEO expert and professional services manager. “There are a lot of factors at play,” she says. “A lot of the technical and information elements have to work together in concert to provide a superior user experience. It’s ultimately about asking yourself, ‘Does this information help the user accomplish X?’ Or, ‘Does this information answer their question?'”

3. Always keep user experience in mind

Usability, user experience, speed, and the ability to deliver unique value are crucial to SEO, according to Fishkin. “These were often the domains of other marketing and website professionals in the past, and SEOs merely helped with more technical and keyword-based on-page and off-page signals,” he says. “But today, to succeed long-term in search, you need these elements of stickiness and remarkability.”

Via      www.cio.com/article/3104104/search/top-6-seo-ranking-factors-of-2016.html