On-Page SEO best practices
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Use your target keyword in the first 100 words.
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Wrap your blog post title in an H1 tag. It’s automatic in WordPress.
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Wrap that subheading in an H2 tag.
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Keyword Frequency matters. Google may deny that using the same keyword multiple times helps. But SEO pros with experience will tell you that it definitely works.
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External links to related pages help Google figure out your page’s topic. It also shows Google that your page is a hub of quality info. Websites with external links tend to outrank those without them.
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Make your URLs short.
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Include a keyword in every URL.
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The closer the keyword is to the beginning of the title tag, the more weight it has with search engines.
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Modifiers in the title like “best”, “guide”, “checklist”, “fast” and ”review” help you rank for long tail versions of your target keyword.
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Use this formula for the meta description → This is a [content overview]. Learn how to get [specific benefit] from this [content description].
Example → This is a complete guide to on-page SEO. Learn how to get higher rankings with this in-depth post.
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A good meta description helps your result stand out, which can boost your organic CTR.
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Include your keyword once in your meta-description.
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Publish something unique.
- A new tip or strategy.
- A better list of curated resources.
- Strong design and UX.
- New case study.
- Streamlined step-by-step process.
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Publish something valuable.
- Add details → Images, screenshots, or steps that make easier to put your content into practice.
- Crisp writing → Strong copywriting will make your content more engaging.
- Updated material → Brand new strategies, steps and examples go a long way.
- Expert authors → Content from someone with first-hand experience is almost always more valuable.
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Be EXACTLY what a Google searcher wants. Check what articles rank for a particular keyword. Write something similar (but more unique and valuable).
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If it makes sense, test titles tags with a question.
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Double check if you have your Schema set up correctly using the Structured Data Testing Tool.
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Write title tags with some emotion. But avoid power words like ”insane” and ”powerful”. They make your title look like clickbait.
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Add the year to your title and description. It makes it clear that your content is up-to-date.
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It’s OK to have an image at the top of your post. But if it pushes your content down the page, that’s bad.”
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Make your content super easy to skim. Use a lot of ton of H2, bullets and images.
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Sites with unique images tend to outrank the sites with stock photos.
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Link your high-authority pages those that need a boost. Make sure to use keyword-rich anchor text.
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If your post covers an entire topic, it has a higher chance of ranking. Use lots of LSI (Latent Semantic Indexing) Keywords. Which means: synonyms. To find the right ones, check out the “Searches Related to…” area at the bottom of the Google results for your keyword.
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Give every image on your site a descriptive filename and alt text.
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Get a performing hosting.
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Remove as many third party scripts as you can.
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If possible optimize your content for Featured Snippets.