Technical SEO in a Semantic Search World

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Semantic Search is the new reality for organic search marketers. However, many of the technical SEO best practices we've become accustomed correspond the the "old world" of traditional SEO, and not the "new world" of Semantic Search. Learn how to start thinking about identifying and prioritizing optimization tasks in the Semantic Search world.

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Technical SEO in a Semantic Search World

Ethan Hays

Head of Digital Products gyro

@ethanhays

The Web is a Mess

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Technical SEO is Table Stakes

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Technical SEO keeps your corner of the web clean, and easy to use.

SEO in 2014

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Semantic Search Changes Things…

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But How?

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Q: How does the Semantic Search model change the way I optimize my site? A: Not much, if you were doing it right to begin with ;)

Semantic Search has to be integrated into our organizations at the level of repeatable process, just like “traditional SEO” 5 years ago. The fundamentals are still important, but they’re evolving. 1. Information architecture

• Depth of site architecture is critical

2. Code • Establishing process for Schema.org microdata should be started NOW

3. Content • Auditing for thin content at scale

Information Architecture

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Depth of Information Architecture

The depth of your IA is one of the most influential factors in how link authority is distributed through your site.

1. Take an average site with home page authority of 100 2. Each page links to 100 other pages 3. Pages lose ~15% of authority before linking to other pages

(100 * 0.85)/100

(0.85 *0.85)/100

(0.0072 *0.85)/100

Home page

1 click

2 clicks

3 clicks Authority = 0.000061

A page 3 clicks away from home is 1.6 million times less authoritative than the home page!

Analyzing Depth of IA

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1. Crawl your site using ScreamingFrog 2.4

2. See the summary in the Overview tab as it crawls

3. Export and open .csv

4. Select all crawl data

Analyzing Depth of IA (cont.)

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5. Insert > Pivot Table • Drag Status Code

and Content to Filter

• Drag Address to Values

• Drag Level to Row Labels

• Set Status Code

filter to “200” • Set Content filter

to “text/html”

Code

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Schema.org Microdata

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Seachmetrics study data shows us it’s important: • Over 36% of Google’s SERPs contain listings with

Schema.org markup

And underutilized: • Only 0.3% of websites have implemented

Schema.org markup

What’s the disconnect? • Requires developers to code differently than they’re

accustomed to • Schema.org is intimidating

700+ data types in the hierarchy

Get Started on Schema.org Now

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Give your developers some background • Most developers appreciate good technical documentation • What is Schema.org? – LRMI whitepaper is a great place to start

Break the task into manageable chunks • Don’t try to solve for all the data types at once • Focus on the data types that are applicable to the largest number of pages

Give them concrete examples they can code to • Giving them HTML for a correctly coded page • Tell them to make the rest of the pages of that type look like the example

Use Handy Tools

1. Go to Google’s Structured Data Markup Helper 2. Select what kind of page you’re tagging 3. Enter the URL

Tag Your Stuff

4. Select elements on your page 5. Apply the correct labels 6. Continue highlighting and adding data items 7. Click “Create HTML”

Create Your Source Code 8. Click “Finish” 9. Click “Download” 10. Advanced SEO Power Move:

a. Sit down with your developers b. Walk them through each line of added code c. Sit down with QA to create test cases to verify correct implementation

What Data Types Apply to My Pages?

Use AlchemyAPI and plug in your most common page types:

Content

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Analyzing Word Count

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• Go to crawl data • Insert > Pivot Table

Drag Content and Status to Filter

Drag Address to Values

Drag Word Count to Row Labels

Set Content filter to

text/html Group your data

• Right click any row

• Select Group • Enter 200 in

the By: field

Analyzing Word Count (cont.)

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• You get a nice grouping of pages with what is likely “thin” content

• Go back to the crawl data worksheet • Select the Word

Count column • Apply a number

filter [Less than 200]

• You have a list of content to prioritize for improvement

Accelerate Into The Turn

• Semantic Search is going to accelerate the rate of change in SEO.

• Begin to get your head around how you’re going to implement and drive organizational adoption.

• What separates a website with good SEO from one with great SEO is rarely how much technical knowledge the SEO has.

• It’s how good you are at communicating the why behind your

recommendations: • Building a business case • Educating your C-suite • Integrating SEO into product manager & developer workflows

Thank You!

@ethanhays

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