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Beginner’s SEO Guide for Startups and Small Business Websites

How can this SEO guide help my Business?

This SEO Guide will help you reach your target organic search audiences.

This SEO guide can improve your web page’s organic search position for top revenue generating keywords. The higher your pages appear in organic search for those keywords the more qualified traffic you get from in-market searchers needing your products or services. This translates into increased leads, sales and revenue.

With this guide you’ll learn step-by-step about key SEO factors that’ll boost your organic page rank, including:

What are the Goals of an SEO Guide?

How to do SEO Keyword Research

Find the Keywords

The first step is to find keywords that are both relevant and have lots of traffic. We will do this by using several tools and steps. At the end, we will have one spreadsheet with seven or eight worksheets. One of the worksheets will be the final collection of top keywords.

How can Google Ads Help with Keyword Research?

There are several research options to develop a keyword list in Google Ads. We recommend using both to compare results, the first (Discover new keywords), and then the second (Get search volume and forecasts).

1. Discover new keywords

Open Google Ads | Tools | Keyword Planner and select “Discover new keywords”.
(see Figure 1 below)

Figure 1: Select “Discover new keywords”

Figure 2: Important: Select your default language and country.

Figure 3: Set your “Date Range” to at least 4 years back.

2. Get search volume and forecasts

Once you’ve developed a list of keywords from “Discover new keywords” you can “See search volume and other historical metrics for your keywords, as well as forecasts for how they might perform in the future.” (Google Keyword Planner)

Figure 4: Check search volume and forecasts for your keywords.

Figure 5: Copy and paste or upload a file with your keywords here. Then click “Get Started”.

Click “Get Started”

In the next screen you will see forecasts of how your keywords within a campaign will perform, negative keywords and historical metrics (a dash “-“ means there’s not enough data) (see Figure 6 below).

Figure 6: Performance forecasts, negative keywords and historical metrics for your keyword list.

Competitor Research with Google Ads

Instead of keywords and your company’s URL, you can insert your competitors’ URL into the Google Ads Keyword Planner tool. This shows what Google thinks your competitor’s website is about.

Figure 7: Use Keyword Planner to check your competitor’s keywords.

More Keyword Research with Google Ads

Google Ads has another tool to show keywords: the Search Terms report (see Figure 8 below).

Figure 8: Use the Search Terms Report to find additional keywords.

How can Google Analytics be used for SEO Keyword Research?

Still here? Okay, next tool. Let’s use Google Analytics to get more keywords. This shows more keywords that people use to reach your site. For this to work, you must first install Google Search Console and tie it to your analytics Account. View the following links to set up Google Analytics, Google Search Console (GSC) and how to add GSC to Google Analytics. (note: Google Analytics will fully incorporate GSC, but until then these instructions are necessary.)

Setting up Google Analytics:

https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/1008015?hl=en

Setting up Google Search Console (GSC):

https://support.google.com/webmasters/answer/34592?hl=en

Adding GSC to Google Analytics:

https://support.google.com/analytics/answer/1308621?hl=en

Note: Look at the top 10-30 keywords. You may think your website is one thing but most visitors come to your site for an entirely different topic. You may want to expand the top pages or add additional pages based on those keywords. Write metatags for those pages that include the search terms that people are using.

Level of Indexation

While we’re in Google Search Console, let’s look at the Index Coverage report. This tells us how many pages of your website have been indexed by Google.

Figure 9: Use Google Search Console to make certain your pages are indexed in Google.

Final Step: Combine the Worksheets

By now, you have ten or fifteen worksheets in your spreadsheet.

Look for keywords that can be combined into a phrase. For example, you have keywords such as “best charity” and “donate money”. You can combine these into one phrase (“donate money to the best charity”) which covers both keywords. Combine as many keywords as you can.

Which Pages for SEO?

If you have 10-15 pages, you can do the SEO work in a few days. But if you have 50,000 pages (or 1.5m pages…), that’s too much. And there’s no point in doing all of those pages. Some SEO companies will offer to fix all 50,000 pages, but that’s a waste of your money. There’s no point doing SEO work on pages that don’t appear in search engines. Do SEO only on pages which bring new users. How to find those?

  1. Go to Google Search Console | Performance | Pages tab. Check yes for all of the boxes (Clicks, Impressions, Position). Select the Pages tab. Set the date range as far back as possible (see Figure 10 below).
  2. The graph shows your website’s pages in Google. These are the pages that people see in Google. Download the list (click the down arrow icon).
  3. Now go to Google Analytics | Behavior | Site Content | Landing Pages.
  4. Sort the table by New Users. These are the pages where new users come to your site. Download this table.

Figure 10: Also use Google Search Console to determine which pages to SEO.

  1. Combine both of these tables.
  2. Look for pages with lots of impressions, lots of clicks, and high ranking (position 1, 2, or 3). Make a list of those pages.
  3. Do very good SEO work on these pages.

How do I Use Keywords in Meta-Tags?

Before we take the next step of reviewing competitors’ meta-tags, we have to make a new worksheet.

Here’s an example of the meta-tags worksheet:

Figure 11: Create a Meta-tags spreadsheet.

How Can I Research My Competitors’ Meta-Tags?

How do I Write the TITLE Tag?

How do I Write the DESCRIPTION Tag?

How do I Write the KEYWORD Tag?

Google, Bing, and Yandex ignore the meta-KEYWORD tag. You don’t need to use this.

Here’s an example: <meta name=”KEYWORD” content=”goldfish, backyard pond, frog pond”>.

You can either put a few keywords there to fill the space or just not use it. It doesn’t matter.

How do I Write ALT Tags in the Images?

The image link has an ALT tag that holds text about the image. You can use this to add a sentence of descriptive text.

How do I Write the Page Heading?

Search engines pay attention to a page heading because it has information about the page.

How do I Write the Text on the Page?

The text on the page should be descriptive, informational, and include the main keywords.

TIP: Don’t open the first paragraph with a sentence that starts with a clause, such as “If you are looking for something nice to put in your pond….” People scan the first few words of the first paragraph. If it’s not relevant, they go back to the search engine. Open the first sentence with your keywords. For example, “Goldfish are the ideal fish for your backyard pond.”

A Few More Tips

How can I Make an XML Sitemap?

Why Should I Post My Company’s URL to Twitter?

How can I Test TITLE and DESCRIPTION Tags?

More about SEO

GOOD NEWS: Basic SEO gets you into Google and people may be able to find your site.

BAD NEWS: Google is much more complicated than this.

BETTER NEWS: Most of your competitors are really bad at SEO. So if you do just an okay job, you’ll be ahead of them. If you learn more SEO and do a great job, you’ll be at the top of the search results.

Author: Andreas Ramos

Vice President, Digital Marketing

Beasley Direct and Online Marketing, Inc.

For help with your SEO project, contact us at BeasleyDirect.com. We’ve worked on dozens and dozens of SEO audits and improved organic search results 20-50% for our SEO clients.

Summary
Article Name
Beginner's SEO Guide for Startups and Small Business Websites
Description
This SEO guide can improve your web page's organic search position for top revenue generating keywords.
Author
Beasley Direct and Online Marketing, Inc.
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