What Is SEO? A Search Engine Optimization Guide

SEO, or search engine optimization, is the lowest-cost and most effective ways to drive traffic to your website. But what exactly is SEO, and how does it work? How can you make SEO work for you? That’s what you’ll learn in this guide.

Table of contents

For most of us today, when we need something—whether it’s an answer, an idea, a product, a strategy, or a service—we start by asking search engines. Google alone gets 3.5 billion searches per day. So just as search engines have become important in our lives, they have also become integral to many business marketing strategies. In fact, organic search is considered to be the highest ROI channel by 49% of marketers.

SEO stats - organic search yields the highest ROI for marketers

Organic search is just a fancy name for regular, non-ad search engine results, and the way marketers use organic search as a marketing channel is through search engine optimization, or SEO.

So how can you use the power of search engines to grow your business? In this complete guide to SEO, you’re going to learn everything you need to know to rank higher on Google, get more traffic to your site, and improve your brand reputation.

What does SEO stand for?

SEO stands for search engine optimization. Let’s break that down in the context of your website.

What is SEO?

That’s all well and good, but you can tell me that RPA stands for robotic process automation and that doesn’t mean I know what RPA is.

So what is search engine optimization?

A formal definition of SEO:

Search engine optimization is a set of technical and content practices aimed at aligning a website page with a search engine’s ranking algorithm so it can be easily found, crawled, indexed, and surfaced in the SERP for relevant queries.

A simpler definition of SEO:

SEO is about making improvements to your website’s structure and content so its pages can be discovered by people searching for what you have to offer, through search engines.

The simplest definition of SEO:

SEO is what you do to rank higher on Google and get more traffic to your site.

Yes, Google is just one search engine of many. There’s Bing. Directory search engines. Even Instagram is a search engine. But capturing 92% of the market share, the terms “Google” and “search engine” are synonymous for the intents and purposes of this post.

SEO stats - google captures 92% of search engine market share

Benefits & importance of SEO

People are searching for any manner of things both loosely and directly related to your business. These are all opportunities to connect with these people, answer their questions, solve their problems, and become a trusted resource for them.

So whether you want more brand awareness, online visibility, leads, sales, or loyal customers, SEO is your answer.

the seo keyword funnel

SEO is your chance to get in front of potential customers at any stage of their customer journey.

Types of SEO

Google and other search engines take several factors into account when ranking content, and as such SEO has many facets. The core three types of SEO are on-page, off-page, and technical SEO:

The above three types of SEO are used for websites and blogs, but they also apply to three subtypes of SEO:

While all three subtypes require all three core types of SEO, they do vary in how heavily they rely on each core type.

chart showing how the different types of search engine optimization overlap

Image SEO relies heavily on technical and on-page optimizations while local SEO is more about off-page and on-page optimizations.

How does SEO work?

So how does Google determine which pages to surface in the search engine results page (SERP) for any given query? How does this translate into traffic to your website? Let’s take a look at how SEO works.

chart showing how search engine optimization works

In other words, SEO works like a complex feedback system—to surface the most accurate, trustworthy, and relevant results for any given search using input from you, Google, and searchers. Your role is to produce content that satisfies Google’s experience, expertise, authority, and trust requirements (E-E-A-T), which satisfy its searchers’ requirements.

SEO ranking factors on Google

So what are those requirements? What actually constitutes quality, targeted, EAT-friendly, and SEO-optimized content? Well, there are hundreds of Google ranking factors, and Google is also constantly evolving and refining its algorithm to continue providing the best experience possible, but there are 12 that should be prioritized.

According to FirstPageSage, these are the top Google ranking factors and how they are weighted:

  1. Consistent publication of high-quality content (26%)
  2. Keywords in meta title (17%)
  3. Backlinks (15%)
  4. Niche expertise (13%)
  5. User engagement (11%)
  6. Internal links (5%)
  7. Mobile-friendly/mobile-first (5%)
  8. Page speed (2%)
  9. Site security/SSL certificate (2%)
  10. Schema markup/structured data (1%)
  11. Keywords in URL (1%)
  12. Keywords in H1 (1%)

But make no mistake about the factors at the bottom of this list. As you can see in the below chart, “Other” factors, like unlinked mentions, social signals, domain history, outbound links, and site structure, carry 1% weight. But given that there are at least 200 Google ranking factors; that’s at least 189 “other” factors that collectively make up that 1%. In other words, those seemingly small factors, like keywords in URL, that on their own make up 1%, are not so small.

search engine optimization - google ranking factors

How to do SEO: On-page optimization

Now it’s time to talk about how to actually do SEO—how to optimize your website for these factors so you can rank higher on Google and get more traffic. This requires a combination of on-page, off-page, and technical optimizations, so we’re going to organize the steps in that manner. Here are your on-page optimization steps:

  1. Start with keyword research
  2. Create quality content targeting those keywords
  3. Place your keywords
  4. Optimize your titles
  5. Optimize your meta descriptions
  6. Include and optimize images
  7. Internal and external links

1. Start with SEO keyword research

The first step in search engine optimization is to determine what keywords you’re optimizing for. These are terms that your ideal website visitors are likely to type into Google or other search engines, and each page on your site should target a different keyword cluster so they don’t compete with each other.

How to do keyword research for SEO

These are your basic steps for finding the best keywords to target with your organic content:

how to use google ads - wordstream

Try out WordStream’s (always) Free Keyword Tool

You can refer to our more in-depth how-to on keyword research here.

2. Create quality content targeting those keywords

Your main navigation pages (homepage, about us, contact, products, services) will target keywords, but the bulk of your keyword targeting will come from long-form content in the form of blog posts. Quality, SEO content is:

illustration of html headings in seo optimized content

3. Place your keywords

In addition to naturally in the body of your content, you’ll want to place your keyword into specific spots on the page to indicate to Google what you’re looking to rank for. This includes:

how to increase traffic to your website - on-page seo keyword placement

4. Optimize your titles

For any page on your website, you actually have two titles. The title tag is the title that appears on the SERP and is the single most impactful place you can put your keyword. The H1 tag is the title that appears on the page when you click into it. Whether or not these are the same depends on the page.

To optimize your titles, be sure to:

seo optimization - title tag vs h1 tag

5. Optimize your meta descriptions

The meta description is the description that appears on the SERP below the title tag. Google doesn’t always show the one you’ve provided in the SERP; it likes to build its own based on the query, but it’s still important to optimize for SEO. Google reads this description when crawling the page to understand what it’s about.

To optimize your meta description:

Here’s an example of a real-world meta description in search results:

seo meta description optimization

Meta descriptions = SEO “ad copy”

6. Include and optimize images

Images are a key player in SEO optimization. They keep users engaged with your pages, enhance the quality of the information, and provide opportunities for you to rank and generate traffic to their host pages through image results. Plus, Google has increasingly been making the SERP more visual.

Here’s how to do SEO optimization for images:

7. Internal and external links

When doing SEO for blog posts, you’ll want to add both internal and external links.

How to do SEO: Off-page optimization

All of the steps above are on-page SEO strategies. Off-page SEO, on the other hand, is what you do on other pages of your website, other websites, and even other platforms to help your page to rank. Here are some off-page SEO tactics

8. Earn and reach out for backlinks

Backlinks, or links to your site from other websites, are the third most important Google ranking factor. Backlinks from higher credibility sites are, of course, more valuable than those from lower credibility sites. The more high-quality backlinks you have, the higher you’ll rank.

search engine optimization - backlinking improves rank

Image source

So how do you get more backlinks? There are several strategies, but a few include:

9. Share your content on social media

In addition to linking to your homepage in social media profiles, you should also be regularly sharing your blog posts with your feed. This earns you referral traffic, and the more eyes on a post, the higher the chances of generating backlinks. Social media itself isn’t a direct google ranking factor, but your activity on the platforms and users’ engagement with your content there send social signals to Google that influence your ranking.

10. Build your brand reputation

When determining how high to rank a particular page on your site, Google doesn’t just look at that one page. It takes into account your brand as a whole, which it does so by looking at other information about it across the web—including reviews, ratings, listings, awards, and even unlinked brand mentions. As such, building your brand reputation by optimizing your listings, gaining positive press, and asking for reviews is essential for SEO. Much of this falls under the realm of local SEO but there are plenty of brand-buiding strategies that apply to non-brick-and-mortar businesses too.

How to do SEO: Technical optimizations

Technical SEO optimizations are done on the back end of your website to make sure it meets Google’s site security and user experience requirements, as well as to make it as easy as possible for Google to do its job on your site. Here are some of the main technical optimizations to take care of:

internal linking structure

All redirecting to this one canonical URL:

While review schema can give you more appeal:

how to get more website traffic - review schema markup

There are lots of schema types that apply to different types of businesses. You can learn more about schema & markup in our guide to schema for SEO.

SEO tools

You can’t carry out effective search engine optimization without data, and to get data, you need tools. Luckily, most of them are free. The best SEO tools for an optimal SEO strategy are:

Head here to get an instant SEO audit with our Free Website Grader.

SEO strategies and best practices

Let’s finish off with some SEO strategies, best practices, and tips to help you get the most out of your time.

Continue to learn SEO

This guide should get you off to a firm start with SEO optimization, but we have a number of additional resources to help you learn SEO. Many of them have been linked in the guide, but here are some more:

And as we mentioned above, you can get a free, instant SEO audit with our free Website Grader.

Link nội dung: https://appstore.edu.vn/seo-my-a65692.html