Ridiculous SEO Myths That People Believe
The SEO industry is wrought with folklore. Much of what is said
doesn’t come with the evidence to back it up. Granted, we’re not immune to
truisms of our own, and sometimes it’s not a bad idea to put intuition first.
But there’s a difference between truisms or ethical stances and opinions
masquerading as facts. I’d like to debunk a few SEO myths today, so let’s
get started.
1. Links Are the Most Important Ranking Factor
This is the one SEO myth that gets said so often everybody
accepts it as truth. It’s so ubiquitous that I wouldn’t be surprised if we
accidentally found ourselves saying it at some point in the past. Links are
just so crucial and so hard to earn that we tend to think of them as the most
important ranking factor.
The truth is very different. Relevance is the most important ranking factor. Take a look at the latest
compilation of ranking
factors from Search Metrics:
Sure, at first glance, it looks like the number of backlinks is
more important than having the keyword in the title. After all, backlinks had a
correlation of 34 percent and having the keyword in the title had a correlation
of zero percent.
They must be useless, right?
Not even close. The correlation was zero, because across
thousands of searches, the top 30 search results all had the keyword in the
title. There was no correlation because it was a prerequisite to rank in the
top 30.
It’s simple. To get traffic, Google needs to fetch your page as
a match to the query before you even show up. Having the keyword present in
your content, preferably in the title, is by far the most important factor.
Not to mention, take another look at those ranking factors.
Google +1′s correlate with rankings better than links and Facebook activity is
tied with the number of backlinks. In fact, Search Metrics reached the
same conclusion back in 2012. This is just correlation, not causation, but keep
in mind that that’s just as true for link data.
The messier truth is that the importance of ranking factors
changes depending on the search query, because different ranking factors are
prioritized under different circumstances. High quality links are important
because they are hard to get, but they are not the most important ranking
factor. You need to take a more holistic approach if you want to succeed
consistently.
2. Bounce Rate is a Ranking Factor
This SEO myth comes up a lot more often than I would ever expect
and it’s completely false. Matt Cutts has flat out said that Google does
not use bounce rate as a ranking factor, nor do they use analytics data.
This should be rather surprising, considering that Google can,
in fact, easily tell if you have clicked back from a search result and how much
time you’ve spent on the site. So maybe they don’t use bounce rate, but instead
use time on site before returning? This quote from Matt Cutts suggests
that’s also unlikely:
Bounce rate doesn’t measure quick answers you get. You get the
answer and leave, so it isn’t a good metric for Google to use.
A more convincing argument is that Google Maps
Optimization uses “pogosticking” to infer user satisfaction. In other
words, if a user clicks on your page, leaves quickly and then clicks on a
different page and stays on it for a long time - then that user probably wasn’t very satisfied with what you had to
share.
More importantly, Google has a large collection of other user
behavior metrics, some of which they are almost certainly using:
·
Google also collects various kinds of click
data from Chrome, including anything you type into the address bar
with Google Instant enabled, bookmarks, Gmail and Docs data.
Not to mention the growing collection of Google+ and signed in
user data. Click-through data is likely used as well.
But not your bounce rate.
3. Domain Age is an Important Ranking Factor
Some people swear by domain age and may even call it a more
important ranking factor than links. But, once again Matt Cutts has come right
out and said that the impact on search results is very small once you
get past a couple months and that links are a much more important ranking
factor.
So why is it that some people swear by domain age as such an
important ranking factor?
Undoubtedly, older domains are more likely to have accumulated
links over time. They have been around long enough for more user data to be
taken into consideration and their competitors have had more time to get
punished or demoted for guideline violations.
In other words, when domain age seems important, it’s really
because stronger ranking factors have been influenced by the domain’s age. Just
having an old site isn’t going to benefit you. But having a site that has
proven itself consistently for extended periods of time is another thing
entirely.
4. You Can’t Compete With High Domain Authority Results
SEO Company’s can
often find themselves obsessing over domain authority, especially during
competitive analysis. In reality, we don’t even have strong evidence that there
is such a thing as domain
authority. At the very least, it is loosely defined and defined differently by
everybody that uses it. We’ve used this terminology ourselves, but really it’s
just a way of generalizing the potential of your internal links.
Let’s start with Moz’s own correlation data. Among
site-wide factors, even their own domain authority metric isn’t the best factor
to use. It has a correlation of 21%, while the total number of linking root
domains with partial match anchor text has a correlation of 25%.
This is actually identical to the
correlation for the number of linking root domains with partial match anchor
text among page level factors. Again, 25%.
Is there any reason to suspect that what we call domain
authority is anything more than the power of internal linking?
In my experience, I haven’t seen any data to suggest that domain
authority exists in any meaningful sense. I’m more inclined to believe that
internal links are essentially as helpful as external links.
If you come across a competing page on a high domain authority
site, all you really need to do is look at the links to that page, whether
they’re external or internal. Treat the host domain just like any other.
In other words, if the competing page just has one link from the
home page, all you would need to do is get a link from a page with more
authority than their home page and you’d have them beat.
I’m simplifying, of course, since there are so many other
ranking factors to deal with, but as far as “link juice” goes, I’ve never seen
any evidence to suggest you should think about it any other way.
5. The Best Way to Grow Traffic is to Boost Rankings
And finally, we come to a foundational SEO myth that might shake
some SEO services firm,
s right to the core.
We strongly believe that it’s important to improve your ranking
potential with inbound links, relevance, purposeful content and many other
factors, but rankings are not the only way to increase traffic.
I’ve successfully made the front page or the top spot enough
times to realize that my traffic estimates for keywords are inconsistent at
best. Google’s keyword tool is a poor guide and the only way to accurately
estimate traffic is to buy PPC ads and pay enough to show up every time. Since
it takes tremendous resources to improve your rankings for competitive
keywords, you can end up pouring a lot of wasted effort into a single ranking.
A less risky way to grow traffic is to continue investing in
promotion while producing content for relatively low competition keywords. When
promotion fails to improve my rankings, I often find it more useful to just
move on and produce more on-site content.
You want to have a system that chooses keywords with relatively
high traffic potential with little or no promotion for that individual piece,
as well as writers and developers who can put together the best piece of
content on the subject. You need to think of this as a process and get some
project management in place. It’s a good idea to use a tool likeWorkZone or the
heftier MS Project to keep your process in check.
Conclusion
Successful SEOs put myths to the test and don’t take advice for
granted. I hope this has been enlightening. If you have counter-evidence or
other SEO myths to add, I’d love to hear what you have to say.
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