On-Page SEO best practices

  • Use your target keyword in the first 100 words.

  • Wrap your blog post title in an H1 tag. It’s automatic in WordPress.

  • Wrap that subheading in an H2 tag.

  • 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.

  • 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.

  • Make your URLs short.

  • Include a keyword in every URL.

  • The closer the keyword is to the beginning of the title tag, the more weight it has with search engines.

  • Modifiers in the title like “best”, “guide”, “checklist”, “fast” and ”review” help you rank for long tail versions of your target keyword.

  • 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.

  • A good meta description helps your result stand out, which can boost your organic CTR.

  • Include your keyword once in your meta-description.

  • Publish something unique.

    1. A new tip or strategy.
    2. A better list of curated resources.
    3. Strong design and UX.
    4. New case study.
    5. Streamlined step-by-step process.
  • Publish something valuable.

    1. Add details Images, screenshots, or steps that make easier to put your content into practice.
    2. Crisp writing Strong copywriting will make your content more engaging.
    3. Updated material Brand new strategies, steps and examples go a long way.
    4. Expert authors Content from someone with first-hand experience is almost always more valuable.
  • Be EXACTLY what a Google searcher wants. Check what articles rank for a particular keyword. Write something similar (but more unique and valuable).

  • If it makes sense, test titles tags with a question.

  • Double check if you have your Schema set up correctly using the Structured Data Testing Tool.

  • Write title tags with some emotion. But avoid power words like ”insane” and ”powerful”. They make your title look like clickbait.

  • Add the year to your title and description. It makes it clear that your content is up-to-date.

  • 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.”

  • Make your content super easy to skim. Use a lot of ton of H2, bullets and images.

  • Sites with unique images tend to outrank the sites with stock photos.

  • Link your high-authority pages those that need a boost. Make sure to use keyword-rich anchor text.

  • 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.

  • Give every image on your site a descriptive filename and alt text.

  • Get a performing hosting.

  • Remove as many third party scripts as you can.

  • If possible optimize your content for Featured Snippets.