Twenty questions just for fun. It’s the 2018 SEO Quiz from Go Fish Digital. Good luck and no cheating. Just click here.
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Q&A with Simpleview on “The State of SEO for DMOs”
The Travel Vertical in conversation with Simpleview’s Paul McLeod, Director of Business Intelligence.
The Travel Vertical: We’ve enjoyed reading “The State of SEO for DMOs Report“ and appreciate your insights into several of the finer points of that document for our readers.
Have you read it yet? We have five questions about maximizing opportunities for SEO. Answers from Simpleview appear here:
Q: What opportunities might there be to recover real estate under ‘top things to do?’
A: Numbered lists seem to do well for “things to do” keywords, with or without modifiers such as “best” and “top.” Whether this is because Google directly prefers that format or users like it—and therefore link to it more often—is difficult to say. Anchoring their attractions content with such a list can be politically problematic for DMOs, who want to keep everyone happy without playing favorites.
Unfortunately, playing favorites is exactly what users, and therefore Google, want us to do. To the extent it’s possible, curating the best of your destination and listing those high points in a user-friendly, machine-readable manner is the best way to attack this high-volume, mission-central keyword.
Q: What is the optimal balance of follow and no-follow links? And why?
A: The optimal “balance” will come naturally if you use no-follow tags the way the search engines intend them (e.g. to mark paid or user-generated links as references not created by you purely for editorial reasons). The balance only starts to look off for the search engines if it seems like you’re trying to no-follow all your external links and hoard your ranking power. As long as you’re letting regular external links be followed, you and your DMO should be fine.
Q: Can you provide the latest update re: Facebook in regard to the following comment—“It may be that decreased user engagement with posts by marketers will lessen the indirect SEO benefits of being active on the site…We will continue to monitor how the situation plays out for destinations.”
A: This is still essentially impossible to measure directly, as the SEO benefits of such posts get mixed in with noise from so many other ranking factors. We continue to recommend a healthy social media content strategy as a compliment to SEO, given that so much user sharing and browsing activity occurs on Facebook.
Q: Please explain if there’s a way a DMO could optimize the attraction carousel—“Top Stories carousels are open only to sites verified to have a well-populated feed of news-only (e.g. not marketing) articles.”
A: The Top Stories and Attractions carousels are different. A DMO could optimize the Attractions carousel for its destination by submitting accurate information for points of interest through Google Maps.
Instructions: https://support.google.com/maps/answer/6320846?hl=en&ref_topic=3257381.
This may enhance Google users’ ability to explore your destination from Google’s own platform. As of now, however, there is no way to drive traffic to a DMO site from this carousel. All clicks simply take the user to a new Google search using the name of the clicked attraction as a keyword.
Getting into the Top Stories carousel would first require the DMO committing to a strong content strategy for generating factual, news-report content. Editorials and features will not help it get into the SERP carousel.
Then, this news-only content would need to be published in its own directory on the site, where no non-news articles will be found. This could be accomplished by setting up a separate blog instance for the news articles. With this done, some additional custom background work by a developer would be required; DMOs would need to contact their web vendor about meeting the requirements.
Q: In addition to Local Results, Featured Snippets and Twitter pack, are there any other frequently overlooked tips for claiming more free real estate on Google?
A: Google Posts are a potentially exciting new way to get into Google’s results, especially when people search your destination name. Make sure you’ve claimed your destination’s official Google Posts slot (city governments and DMOs are both eligible). If the government has already claimed it, ask if they can share access with you. Stories published within Google Posts will appear below the Knowledge Panel served up for your destination.
As of yet, the level of user engagement with this section is hard to gauge, but it’s worth at least establishing your claim to the space.
Hiding in Plain Sight: Google’s Quality Raters Guidelines Contain Nuggets of SEO Insights
It seems that Google’s own Quality Rater Guidelines contain golden nuggets of SEO insights for us regular folks. And, it also turns out that the guidelines are accessible to everyone.
If you’re a Google quality rater, E-A-T means: expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness. There are 150-plus pages to drill down into exactly what that means and how to rate it on a website, so it’s well worth investing the time to skim through the document, dated July 20, 2018.
Everyone says the key is “quality content,” right? To find out how Google defines quality, get the Quality Raters Guidelines here.
6 SEO Experiments That Will Blow Your Mind: WordStream
Did that title catch your attention? If so, it’s one of the:
According to Larry Kim, founder of WordStream and mega-SEO star, you should rewrite titles on your existing content. If your organic CTR is too low, write more enticing headlines to get people to click like mad. That’s one of the six proven ideas for improved discoverability and engagement in this content marketing article.
It will take nine minutes to read Larry’s column…and it will take much longer to implement…but it’s a great resource for cherry picking ideas from a hall-of-fame SEO strategist. (Remember, Larry sold his company for $130 million cash in May, so this is valuable advice!)
The Evolution of SEO and What Makes for Best Practice in 2018
This article from Moz starts out by reminding us that best practice for SEO in 2001 looked nothing like writing for SEO in 2008, which further evolved in 2018.
Take key words, for example.
- 2001 – Key word stuffing
- 2008 – Key words in important places (title, meta description, URL, H1, content, etc.)
- 2018 – Solving the searcher’s query matters most
To check the three must-haves for SEO today as well as the three nice-to-haves, click here.
Related: The Periodic Table of SEO Success Factors (The Travel Vertical, 12/13/2017)