-
Recent Posts
Recent Comments
Archives
- September 2019
- August 2019
- July 2019
- June 2019
- May 2019
- April 2019
- March 2019
- February 2019
- January 2019
- December 2018
- November 2018
- October 2018
- September 2018
- August 2018
- July 2018
- June 2018
- May 2018
- April 2018
- March 2018
- February 2018
- January 2018
- December 2017
- November 2017
- October 2017
- September 2017
- August 2017
- July 2017
- June 2017
- May 2017
- April 2017
- March 2017
- February 2017
- January 2017
- December 2016
- November 2016
- October 2016
- September 2016
- August 2016
- July 2016
- June 2016
- May 2016
- April 2016
- March 2016
- February 2016
- January 2016
- December 2015
- November 2015
- October 2015
- September 2015
- August 2015
- July 2015
- June 2015
- May 2015
- April 2015
- March 2015
- February 2015
- January 2015
- December 2014
- November 2014
- October 2014
- September 2014
- August 2014
- July 2014
- June 2014
- May 2014
- April 2014
- March 2014
- February 2014
- January 2014
- December 2013
- November 2013
- October 2013
- September 2013
- August 2013
- July 2013
- June 2013
- May 2013
- April 2013
- March 2013
- February 2013
- January 2013
- December 2012
- November 2012
- October 2012
- September 2012
- August 2012
- July 2012
- June 2012
- May 2012
- April 2012
- March 2012
- February 2012
- January 2012
- December 2011
- November 2011
- October 2011
- September 2011
- August 2011
- July 2011
- March 2011
- November 2010
Categories
Meta
Tag Archives: goals
How To Get Backlinks: The Beginner’s Guide to Link-Building
The post How To Get Backlinks: The Beginner’s Guide to Link-Building appeared first on HostGator Blog . What Is Link Building? Once you launch a website and start working to figure out how to get found online, you’ll start to hear a lot about link building. Understanding what link building is and how to do it can go a long way toward making your website more visible online and more successful at reaching your goals. If you could use some help understanding the basics of this important, but difficult part of online marketing , here’s our guide on all the basics you need to know to get started. What is Link Building? Link building is one of the most important and difficult parts of SEO. Any tactic that helps a business or organization get links from other websites that point back to your website count as link building. There are a lot of different strategies people implement to try to gain new links, but even for the most consistently successful tactics, it can involve a lot of work, time, and failures in order to achieve a few successes. Nonetheless, in the competitive space of SEO, link building is one of the strategies that will have the biggest influence on how well you perform in the search engines and how easily people find your website. That makes it worth devoting some of your time and marketing budget to. Why Link Building Matters One of most important things any marketer or website owner needs to learn about SEO is that you are not the search engine’s priority – at least not as a marketer. The goal of Google and the other search engines is to deliver up the best, most useful results to their users. To do that, their algorithms look at various signals that suggest people like and trust websites (or that they don’t, as the case may be). Every time one website links to another, it communicates to the search engine that site A thinks site B has something worthwhile to say that its own visitors can trust. It’s like receiving a reference or a good review in SEO terms. And if site A is one that has a lot of links from other sites pointing back to it, then it’s like receiving a reference from someone really well respected, making it that much more valuable. While links are only one of many ranking factors that the search engines pay attention to, they’re one that holds a lot of weight in how search engines decide which websites are authoritative and trustworthy. When you have a lot of other sites linking to yours (especially other sites that are seen as authoritative and high value by Google), it makes you look like a more reliable pick to include high up in the search rankings for users. It’s specifically because link building is so difficult that it’s a really good way to set your website apart and stay competitive in the search engines. There are two main approaches you can take to link building: Trying to earn links naturally with the content you create. More proactively reaching out to websites to try to get your link included on them. Most brands that do link building will benefit from doing a combination of the two. 5 Steps to Earn Links Naturally Before anyone’s going to link to your website, you have to give them something worth linking to. That means that previous to starting on the more proactive link building strategies we’ll describe below, you should start with some initiatives that will set the stage for making your website worthy of getting said links. 1. Keyword Research SEO isn’t about getting just any top spot you can manage, it’s about ranking for searches that are relevant to what your website provides. For any SEO strategy, including link building, your first step should be to research what language your target audience is using and what information they’re out there looking for. Then, you’ll know what content to create and what types of links you want. Spend some time doing keyword research to figure out the main topic areas and questions your audience is interested in. This will form the basis of both your content strategy and your link building efforts. 2. Content Marketing Other websites won’t have many good reasons or natural opportunities to link to your website’s homepage. What’s the likelihood the information you have there is going to add something important to an article or other webpage on their website? For other people to want to link to your website, you have to create the sort of content they’d have a reason to link to. That means embracing content marketing . For most businesses, that will mean starting a blog and making a commitment to create original, high quality content to publish on it regularly. It’s a lot of work, but in addition to being an important step in link building, it also gives you more opportunities to connect with your target audience. When you provide them with helpful information, that gives them a reason to care about your brand, follow you, and likely think about you first the next time they need whatever you’re selling. 3. Content Promotion With so many blogs and media sites out there, people are unlikely to stumble across your content without you putting some effort into making it easy to find. Obviously, SEO is part of that equation – when people can find your content in the search engines, that’s one of the best way to drive new views to your website. But for most websites, obtaining links and search engine rankings will only come after you put some effort into helping your first readers find your content. For each piece you publish, plan a strategy for getting it in front of people. That could include sharing it on social media, sending the link to people you expect would be interested in it, posting it in relevant forums, or even using paid promotion on Google or social media sites to boost its reach . The newer your blog is, the harder it will be to get your first followers, so expect to spend some time (and possibly money) working to get your content seen. Nobody can link to your awesome posts until they know they exist. 4. PR While people in the PR industry don’t necessarily tout themselves as link builders, PR work includes helping brands get coverage in the media and on a number of websites – often with links. By either working with a PR person or creating an in-house PR strategy , you can find more opportunities to gain mentions of your brand on other websites, position people in the company as thought leaders, and encourage coverage of initiatives you take that could be considered newsworthy, like a charity drive or creative stunt s. 5. Relationship Building People are more likely to link to brands they know and trust. For people to know you, you have to make connections. A whole industry has grown up around identifying and figuring out ways to connect with influencers . Think about ways to interact with other people and brands in your industry that doesn’t make it all about you. Participate in online communities they’re in, join Twitter chats you notice they regularly attend, or ask them to be an expert source for a piece of content you’re writing. When it comes to the link building strategies we describe below, you’ll get a very different response from someone who knows who you are and already feels a connection to you than someone who sees you as a total stranger. 5 Common Link Building Strategies Once you have some good content on your website that you’re confident in and a baseline of relationships with various people and brands in your industry, you’ll be in a strong position to start employing common link building strategies. Here are a few of the tactics people find the most success with. 1. Targeted Content Promotion Most of your content promotion efforts will be trying to get your content in front of a large number of people in your target audience. This tactic involves identifying a number of individuals you think would be likely to like, share, or link to your content and sharing it with them more directly. If it’s someone you already have a relationship with, tagging them when you share the post on social media may be enough to get their attention. If it’s not, then you can try crafting an email making the case for why you think they’d like your content, citing similar content you’ve seen them share or times they’ve written about related topics. The biggest risk of this tactic is coming off as an annoyance to the people you’re trying to reach. You’re essentially asking strangers to do you a favor, so you should always do your best to think about how your content might benefit them rather than making it about you. And if you’ve spent time building relationships like we recommended, this tactic will go a lot smoother. 2. Brand Mention Campaigns Every time someone mentions your brand, that’s an opportunity for a link. Using a link reclamation tool, Google Alerts, or advanced search commands in Google, you can find places around the web where someone’s talked about your brand and any of the high up people in your company that may be seen as thought leaders. In every instance where your brand or CEO or founder gets mentioned that doesn’t include a link back your website, craft a pitch to the website owner asking them to add one. Pro tip: Do not send a template email to every website without taking a minute to actually visit the site. If they’re criticizing your company, you risk annoying somebody who already doesn’t like you. And if the mention actually has nothing to do with your company but is some other use of the term you use as your brand name, you’ll both be wasting your time and look lazy to the recipient. But for websites that are mentioning your brand because they think you’re worth talking about for positive reasons, they may be inclined to take a couple of minutes to add the link at your request. 3. Skyscraper Content The first step in this strategy is to spend some time seeing what shows up on the search engine results page (SERP) for a number of relevant keywords for your brand. What you’re looking for here is content in the first few spots that isn’t actually that good or that’s outdated. If you feel confident that you can create content that’s better (or already have), then these are your targets for the skyscraper content strategy. For each of the identified terms, create really awesome content or improve the content you already have. Aim to make it some of your best work and definitely make sure it’s more thorough and helpful than the content that currently claims those top spots in Google. Once your content is published, find out which pages include links to the sub-par content you’re wanting to replace on the SERP (most SEO tools include a feature to help with this) and get to work contacting those sites to recommend they link to your content instead. Be careful in how you word your emails. You do want to make a case for why your content is more valuable than the content they link to now, but you don’t want to sound like a pompous jerk. If the other content has outdated information, point that out. If your post is more thorough and includes more actionable tips than the competitor’s, emphasize that. Focus on what makes your content valuable rather than trashing your competitor. 4. Guest Posting Part of what makes link building so difficult is because it often involves asking someone to do work that benefits you more than it does them. Guest posting is a useful tactic because when you write a good guest post for another website, you’re doing something valuable for them and their audience. Including a natural link back to your website in the post doesn’t require any work on their part and, if you do it right, will provide value to their audience in the process. It’s a win-win. Start looking for blogs in your industry and in related or complementary industries that accept guest posts. You can use Google for this – do searches for terms like industry “guest post” or industry “guest post submission guidelines” and start visiting the sites that come up to get familiar with the kinds of topics they cover and what their typical posts look like. Brainstorm topic ideas that are in line with what they cover (but haven’t been written about on the site before) that will provide you with an opportunity to link back to a page on your own site. Then send a pitch that follows their guidelines. Not every pitch you send will get you a “yes,” but as long as some do, you’ll be able to build a number of links this way. You do have to be willing to put in the work here to write a really good guest post that’s up to the standards of the blog you’re writing for. This is a tactic you have to be prepared to commit some serious time and work to. But it can double as a way to get a link and to reach a new audience with your content, while also starting a relationship with the blog you write for. 5. Broken Link Building This is another tactic based on the idea that you can provide the website owner value at the same time that you ask for a link. Broken links cause a bad experience for a site’s visitors and make them lose trust in a website that looks sloppy or outdated. If you can identify broken links on websites that once pointed to content that’s relevant to what you cover on your website, congratulations: you’ve found a link building opportunity. You can either create new content based on the broken links you find that addresses the same topic that the outdated link had been about, or you can try to spot broken links on topics you’ve already covered. In either case, by contacting the website owner you’re accomplishing two things that can make their life easier: Alerting them to a broken link on their site that they likely didn’t know was no longer working. Providing them an alternative link to replace the old one, so they don’t have to do the work of finding a new resource. As usual, take a minute to visit their website and make sure that the content you’re suggesting will make sense on the page you’re recommending they add your link to. As long as your content is helpful and high quality though, there’s a decent chance your recipient will consider giving you that link. Developing Your Link Building Strategy As you can see, when you get down to the particulars, link building can mean a lot of different things. You don’t have to try every tactic suggested here to start building links. Each brand can pick and choose which tactics seem to make the most sense for you. But if you want to compete in the search engines, doing some form of link building is an important part of achieving that goal. For expert help with your link building and other SEO initiatives, contact HostGator . Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
How Do Search Engines Work?
The post How Do Search Engines Work? appeared first on HostGator Blog . SEO 101: How Search Engines Work So much of your business depends on being visible in the search engines. You’d like to try to understand this thing that has so much power over your success. But figuring out how search engines work can be really confusing. And it’s not just you. There’s a whole industry based around trying to understand which sites rank for which reasons, and even the information we do know is changing all the time. We can’t provide an extensive rundown of how the Google algorithm works for you (no one can), but we can provide some basic information on how search engines work that may help remove some of the mystery. Here are a few of the main things you should know. The Search Engine’s Goals The first thing to understand about how search engines work is that their priority is providing the best possible results for what the searcher is looking for . When it comes to the natural results, the search engine is not concerned about how much a particular website owner might want to grab those top spots or think you deserve it – they only care about the people searching. By providing the information people need, a search engine can ensure those people keep coming back to use the site again. We know how well that’s worked for Google – many of us use it every day. That primary goal leads into the secondary goal that generates the company’s profits: making money on ads. Businesses pay to advertise on search engines in large part because they know a huge number of people use them every day. As long as Google keeps its users satisfied and coming back, advertisers will continue to keep the company profitable. So the search engine’s main concern is therefore how to make sure the results it delivers provide the most useful information for the consumer’s query. That’s where things start to get complicated. Search Engine Index For a search engine to be able to identify the right web page for every possible query (or come as close as possible to such a lofty goal), it has to have a record of all the possible web pages online, along with some understanding of what’s on each of them. To do that, search engines create a massive index of web pages. This index attempts to identify and organize every website and web page on the web in a way that allows it to draw connections between the keywords people search for and the content included on each page. On top of all that, it needs to be able to assign relative quality to different web pages that cover the same topic. This is tricky since all of this is happening with machines. People have a hard enough time agreeing on what constitutes “quality” content, but search engines have to determine it based on factors that machines can measure objectively. Website Crawlers The first challenge of creating a search engine index is identifying all the web pages out there . This part of the job is up to website crawlers. Each time a website crawler discovers a page, it crawls the page, collecting all the relevant information on it needed for the search engine index. With that page added to the index, it then uses every link on that page to find new pages to crawl . Website owners can speed up the process of getting a website crawled by the search engines by submitting a sitemap and using internal linking. This is the easy part. Search Engine Algorithms The second challenge of the search engine index is the much more complicated one: attributing relative value to all of the web pages . If the website crawler finds 100,000 pages that include content on them it deems relevant to a specific term, how does the search engine decide what order to deliver those results in? That’s where the search engine algorithm comes into play. Engineers at each of the big search engine companies have spent untold hours developing a complicated algorithm that uses a number of factors to assign relative value to websites and web pages. Ranking Factors While there are many different factors that go into determining exactly why one page will rank over another – many more than we can summarize here, and more even than the greatest SEO expert knows – we have an idea of some of the most important search engine ranking factors Google and the other search engines take into account: Links – Links are the most important ranking factor, especially external links (those that point from one site to another) because every time another website links to yours, it signals to Google that there’s something authoritative or valuable on the page being linked to. When a web page that has a lot of other websites linking to it links to another site, that link is even more valuable because of the high authority the website already has. While everything else on this list matters, a LOT of determining rankings is based on the number and quality of links that point to a website. Website age – Older websites are generally seen as being more trustworthy and authoritative than new ones. Keywords – Search engines are always trying to provide the most relevant results, so they look for terms on the page related to the query of the person searching. The more you use related keywords , the more it signals to the search engine that your content is relevant. Mobile usability – Google has been upfront about using mobile usability as a ranking factor. If your website looks awesome on desktop, but has never been optimized for mobile use, then it could hurt you in the rankings. Page speed – People are impatient and therefore so are the search engines. A slow-loading page will rank lower because of it. Behavior data – Google tracks what people do once they get to the search engine results page (SERP). If someone clicks on a page and immediately backtracks – that’s a signal that the page didn’t provide what they were looking for . If instead they spend time on the page or even click through to different pages on the site once they get there, then it shows Google that the site provides value. Google and the other search engines have provided some information about the ranking factors they use, but they generally keep pretty quiet about how their search engine algorithms work. They don’t want people trying to manipulate the results – something that’s long been a problem with black-hat SEO practitioners. Search Engine Optimization While there’s definitely a lot we don’t know about how search algorithms work, everything we do know has come to form the basis of the whole field of search engine optimization. SEO is competitive and you’re limited in what you can do to grab the rankings you most want for the keywords relevant to your business, but there’s still a lot you can control and do. Our series on SEO basics will dive deeper into some of the ranking factors you can control and how to optimize your website to perform better in the search engines. Check back soon for the rest of the series. Don’t miss the rest of the articles in our SEO 101 series! How to Write Compelling Title Tags Writing the Best Meta Descriptions What’s the Best URL Structure? Website Architecture Best Practices Want to boost your website rankings? Get expert help with HostGator’s SEO services. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged architecture, business, content, goals, hostgator, ranking-factors, results, search, search-engines
Comments Off on How Do Search Engines Work?
Page Speed Matters: 4 Reasons Why Bloggers Need To Care About Load Time
The post Page Speed Matters: 4 Reasons Why Bloggers Need To Care About Load Time appeared first on HostGator Blog . Why Page Speed Matters for Your Blog Everyone’s talking about how important page speed is for online businesses now. But does it really matter for your blog? It might, depending on your goals and whether you earn money from your blog. Here’s how to know if page load times are a big deal for your blog ( hint: the answer is yes ), and how to test and improve your blog’s page speed. 4 Ways Faster Page Load Times Help Your Blog 1. Faster pages rank better in the search results. Page load time is a factor in Google’s desktop search results rankings. In July, Google’s planned Speed Update will add mobile page load times to the factors for mobile search result rankings. Google’s Webmaster Central blog says all pages will be held to the same standard for search rankings, but that developers expect the update to “only affect pages that deliver the slowest experience.” How big a deal is it? If your mobile pages load fast or even at middling speeds, you’re probably OK. If your site loads really slowly on mobile, now’s the time to start speeding it up. 2. Fast page loads keep visitors from giving up on your blog. Even if Google doesn’t downrank your site for loading slowly on mobile, visitors may decide it’s not worth waiting around for your content. More than half of mobile users will bail on a site that takes more than three seconds to load—but many mobile pages take 15 or more seconds to load . How big a deal is it? It depends on your bounce rate and your page speed. Check your analytics to compare your mobile and desktop bounce rates. If your bounce rate is higher and your page load times are lower on mobile than on desktop, you’ve got a problem that needs fixing. 3. Faster page loads may help you beat the competition. If you sell on your blog and have competitors, remember that they’re under the same pressure to get with the page speed program. Deliver faster load times than they do and you may appear higher in search results. How big a deal is it? If you make money from your blog and sell in a competitive niche, faster load times are a must. 4. Faster page load times may raise your blog’s conversion rates. Even if you don’t sell on your blog, there’s probably something you’d like your visitors to do besides read and leave— join your email list , follow you on social media, join the discussion in the comments. All of these steps are conversions, just as getting a visitor to sign up for a class or buy the jewelry you blog about are conversions. Faster page speeds won’t translate directly into more conversions, but they can contribute. How big a deal is it? If prospects find your competition first in search results and never see your blog, or visit but bounce after 8 seconds of waiting, there’s no chance they’ll convert. Get those calls to action in front of your visitors fast and you stand a better chance of earning conversions. 5 Free Google Tools To Improve Your Page Load Times Here are five Google tools you can use to see how fast your site loads and how you can make it faster. 1. Google’s Mobile-Friendly Test Google’s Mobile-Friendly Test is easy. Plug the page URL you want to test into the search field and run your test. In a minute or so, you’ll get the verdict: mobile-friendly or not. If there were any issues loading your page during the test, you’ll get a list of those along with tips on fixing them. 2. Google PageSpeed Insights PageSpeed Insights compares your site’s load times on desktop and mobile. You may find that your site scores fine on the Mobile-Friendly Test but does poorly on PageSpeed’s mobile evaluation. Again, you’ll get a list of suggestions for improvement (such as optimizing your images for fast loading times ) plus a downloadable file of site elements that Google optimized for you. 3. Lighthouse Lighthouse is a good option if the fixes recommended in your Mobile-Friendly and PageSpeed test results don’t solve your slow load times. It’s a developer tool, so the results are more technical than those in the tests above. They’re also broader – Lighthouse checks SEO, progressive web app performance, accessibility, best practices, and overall performance. You’ll get a downloadable report with recommendations you can work on or share with a professional developer. 4. Speed Scorecard Speed Scorecard is one of Google’s newest tools. It lets you compare load times for up to ten sites, including your own. However, its comparison database only includes sites popular enough to appear in the Chrome User Experience Report. Most smaller blogs won’t show up, but that doesn’t mean you can’t check out larger competitors or colleagues in your niche. 5. Revenue Impact Calculator Google’s new Revenue Impact Calculator (below the Speed Scorecard) is where you can put a dollar amount on your page speed, if you sell things on your blog. Even if your site doesn’t show up in the Speed Scorecard database, you can still measure the revenue impact of speeding up your page loads if you enter a few pieces of data from your dashboard and accounts: Current page load speed Average monthly site visitors Average order value Conversion rate For example, a blog that loads in 8 seconds, has 500 visitors a month, an average order value of $50 and a conversion rate of two percent could earn $471 more per year by reducing the page load time to 4 seconds. Another blog that loads in 5 seconds, gets 20,000 monthly visitors, has an average order value of $100 and a conversion rate of 1% could earn $14,721 more per year by dropping the page load time to 2.8 seconds. Page Speed Does Matter for Blogs Ultimately, page speed is a big deal if you want visitors, readers, and revenue for your blog, and it will probably become an even bigger deal as more traffic moves from desktop to mobile. Keep up with the latest innovations, make sure your web host delivers the speed you need, and make sure you’re following all seven of these best practices for speeding up your website . Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading
Posted in HostGator, Hosting, VodaHost
Tagged chrome, competition, friendly-test, goals, google-page, hostgator, images, mobile, revenue-impact, speed-insights, speed-matters, visitors
Comments Off on Page Speed Matters: 4 Reasons Why Bloggers Need To Care About Load Time
About Us: How to Tell Your Business Story the Right Way
The post About Us: How to Tell Your Business Story the Right Way appeared first on HostGator Blog . About Us: How to Tell Your Business Story the Right Way The About Us section of your website has the potential to draw in customers, establish trust, and make people want to do business with you. But choose a couple of dozen small-business sites at random and you’ll find that many have About Us pages with next to no information, or that overload visitors with full-page blocks of texts that go into far more detail than most people can absorb. Here’s how to write an About Us section that showcases your business story, demonstrates to customers that you’re the right choice, draws in people searching for what you sell, and sets the tone for your customer outreach. Show What You Can Do for Your Customers It’s about you only to the extent that you have something your customers want or need. So tell your story in a way that shows you understand the problem your visitors want to solve. Zappos does a great job by describing the founder’s failed, frustrating shoe-shopping experience at a mall. No one wants to waste an hour and go home without new shoes, so right away, Zappos shows it understands something about its customers : They want convenience and selection. What if you’re blogging? Blog and media site Scary Mommy uses some frank descriptive wording on its About Us page to show that they get the struggles and rewards of motherhood: “We’ve seen it all, heard it all, and smelled it all, but we wouldn’t have it any other way.” You don’t have to be that direct if it’s not your style or not on-brand, but there are many ways to show that you get what your audience needs. Establish Your Trust and Expertise Besides looking for a solution to a problem, people who check out your About Us page want to see if you are the right person to solve their problem. An effective way to show your expertise and at the same time show that others trust you with their problems is with social proof . Your About Us page can include: positive customer reviews testimonials case studies from clients media mentions awards you, your employees, and your business have earned If you provide services, you can include well-known clients on your About Us page , as visual organizing tool Trello does. You can and should inject some personality into your About Us page, because site visitors want to know there’s a real person behind your site. That’s why popular toymakers Melissa & Doug come right out and say they’re real people on their About Us page, which is every bit as lighthearted as you’d expect for people who make toys. Your About Us page also needs to include: your name your location a photo or video of you that reflects your brand and personality contact details like a phone number, email address, and company social media accounts. Before they shop with you, customers also want to know that they can reach you if they need to. Consider this About Us excerpt from Round Rock Honey: “We believe in our honey so much that if you ever have a question, just look on the back of our bottle. You’ll find our names and phone number.” Get Found by Your Audience A good About Us page helps prospects decide if your site is a good match for what they need. A great About Us page also helps more people find your site. To do this, you’ll need to use some SEO tools to help your site show up when people search for what you offer. Make sure your About Us page includes: Long-tail keyword phrases that help people zero in on what they need. If you sell school uniforms in Dallas, don’t rely on “school uniforms” to drive search traffic to your site. Include “school uniforms in Dallas” or “school uniforms for Dallas-area charter schools” or whatever is accurately describes in detail what your customers search for. On-site SEO titles, meta descriptions, and tags for your About Us page with your most important keywords. Your meta description will appear in search results, so make every word count: “Zippy’s is the fastest and best courier service in the greater Houston area. Call 703-555-1212.” Optimized images for the best possible search results. Tag and describe them in ways that help people find your site. That team photo on your About Us page can be titled “Bakers of Custom Birthday Cakes in Duluth” instead of “teamphoto,” for example. Fast load times. When you’re done with your About Us page, run it through Google’s PageSpeed test to make sure it loads quickly enough to avoid getting downranked in search results. Mobile-friendly display and navigation . While you’re testing your About Us page, use Google’s mobile-friendly test tool to see how it performs on mobile devices. Better performing pages tend to rank higher in search results. Schema.org markup tools to optimize search results displays. You can use a schema plugin for your WordPress site or delve into this step-by-step guide on schema and Google Rich Snippets to format your About Us page for good-looking search results. For more information on these and other SEO strategies for your About Us page, check out HostGator’s ABC’s of SEO e-book . What’s Your Business Story? However you set up your About Us page—a serious rundown of your firm’s accomplishments or a set of whimsical videos about your handmade housewares shop—keep the tone, appearance, and language consistent with the rest of your site and with your brand. Consider your About Us page an ongoing project, keep it updated and focused on the goals above, and it can be a powerful marketing and customer relations tool. Find the post on the HostGator Blog Continue reading