Dawn Anderson

Best Tweets from #SEMrushchat: SEO in 2020


We had our first #SEMrushchat of 2020, and our guest was respected SEO, Dawn Anderson; she shared a lot of great insights throughout the chat, and you can see them below. Since it is a new year, we wanted to talk to our community about their feelings on the ever-evolving changes in SEO strategies, their concerns for 2020, new tactics they will be trying, and mistakes they won’t repeat this year.

It was an interesting discussion because concerns, strategies, and mistakes were diverse due to the various jobs our community members have. Still, they also all seem to have a solid and similar plan for managing the upcoming changes Google will make this year. So check out the great insights below, and we hope 2020’s Google updates will be easy for you to manage. 


“SEO is changing” is a hot topic nowadays. Are these new alternations noticeable to your business? How so?

You have to be aware that SEO cannot operate in a silo and a business cannot succeed online from just SEO so either skill up cross channel or collaborate well to join the dots.

 

JP Sherman

I look at it and I describe it to my peers and stakeholders as – SEO is changing insomuch as it’s adding more nuance to the core fundamentals of tech/ content/ architecture – SEO isn’t a cookie, it’s tiramisu.

 

Bill Slawski ⚓

SEO has always been changing, as the Search engines and searchers change; as information and technology change; It’s essential to continue to learn and grown and understand the direction of the evolution of search & SEO.

 

Simon Cox

SEO has been changing for a long old time. Probably more rapidly from the end of 2018 but businesses may have not realized, and the difference will be more marked for them. There has been a lot of change – hard to keep up with it all.

 

Netvantage Marketing

SEO does change, but the changes aren’t always drastic. The changes can build on the foundation that has already been created. In this industry, it is important to be aware of changes and stay on top of them, but don’t need to freak out of them.

 

Nerissa Marbury

SEO is always evolving. Some changes are immediately noticeable while others aren’t noticed until seen in client data (whether your client or that of someone in your network). SEO is one marketing area where sharing is almost a must to stay up-to-date.

 


Q2. What SEO predictions are worrying you the most? Why?

Bill Slawski ⚓

SEO Predictions that worry me the most: 1. People are stopping clicking on SERPs
2. Voice Search will be 50% of all searches
3. Machine Learning makes Ranking too difficult for anyone

 

Dawn Anderson

One thing that does concern me is a move to people thinking just anyone can do SEO well (particularly on complex projects) and downplay the necessity for expertise. Just chuck some content out. Nope. SEO is not getting easier. It is getting more complex.

 

Simon Cox

That we are going to have to measure SEO techniques in a different way by the end of the year. Organic may well be pushed out of Page 1 except for longtail. New tools and techniques may be needed.

 

Dawn Anderson

Including the likes of Google My Business (which is SEO), because often people aren’t even reaching your website. So need to take that measurement in there.

 

David Cohen

The SEO predictions made by people who don’t do the work or aren’t held accountable for SEO results are most worrying.

 

BrandExtract

The prediction/trend of Google getting more heavily involved in certain industries (i.e. Google Flights) is the biggest one for me. Depending on your industry, this can be crippling to site traffic, and worse, your business if SEOs don’t adapt and get creative.

 

Igal Stolpner

Probably the future growth of zero clicks searches. We know very little about what else Google is planning here. As only one example, see what happened to the traffic of Lyrics sites in the past 24 months.

 

Tod Cordill

I’m not worried about anything in the #SEO space. I’ve always told clients: write for the customer, not the search engines. SEO is only part of the mix. Large swings in performance have a smaller financial impact. But this isn’t the case for everybody.

 


Q3. What is a new SEO thing you have never tried before but decided to implement in your 2020 strategy? Why now?

Dawn Anderson

We’re going to start to implement machine learning with UGC to categorise content for topic relevance using classifiers. Using log file analysis even more than previously too with Cloudflare. Building custom 301 parameter handling systems for custom sites.

 

Dennis Layden (101%) | 📸🎥🎸🎹🎶🦎☕🌴📈

Google Featured snippets, it’s ridiculously easy if you structure your onsite data properly. To me, it’s low handing fruit that can add a sense of authority to your SERP presence without having to actually invest too much time/energy (low hanging fruit).

 

Simon Cox

Trying to get a client’s Wix site to rank well and bring in a lot more customers. It’s new to me and after some despair at first, it is becoming a fun challenge!

 

Link Café

This year I’m going to be riding the podcast wave! It’s a great way for people to get more information and join in with discussions. Google have clearly caught on with their new type of rich snippet too 😉

 

Interested in getting started with podcasting? We have a guide for you here.

Reva Minkoff

Schema is becoming a much bigger part of our strategy and a bigger talking point with clients, simply because there are so many additional SERP features these days.

 

Dawn Anderson

I’ll reiterate my point made over the holidays here too. We’re going to be using Bing Webmaster Tools and Yandex Webmaster tools a lot more now. So many useful learnings in there. Real actionable changers.

 


Q4. What do you consider your biggest SEO mistake in 2019 and what lessons did you learn from it?

Alexis Katherine

My SEO mistake from last year was bragging on the ROI potential of SEO without first diagnosing the client’s (lack of) attribution model. Lesson: Make sure they’re ready to measure growth before creating it.

 

Ben Austin

An SEO “mistake” isn’t necessarily a “mistake”. Sometimes you have to embark on a trial and error journey to find out what really works for YOU!

 

Dennis Layden (101%) | 📸🎥🎸🎹🎶🦎☕🌴📈

Not paying enough attention to snippets, maps placement, and other features, which Google is implementing to push the actual SERPs down past the breakpoint. Also, not focusing enough on long-tail keywords which are becoming increasingly relevant thanks to voice.

 

Shawneda Crout, M.A. Technical Communicator+Author

My biggest mistake in 2019 was not doing what I do for clients consistently for my own brand. I took six months to learn how to adapt my workflow to make time to do for my brand what I do for others, without losing work-life balance.

 

Remco Tensen

Don’t invest in burnout. Especially not when you’re hired per hour. They want more? Let them buy more hours. They hire you. They don’t OWN you. Don’t underestimate the importance of rest. Lack of sleep/rest ruins the quality of work. Esp. management & creativity.

 

Dawn Anderson

Ironically one of my biggest mistakes from 2019 was trying to learn too many things which wouldn’t always bring me proportional value.

 

Youness Bermime

Migrating WordPress without a usable recent backup comes to mind. Oh the nightmare. Lesson learned: always have a backup of the backup!

 


Q5. In 2019 Google updated its algorithm more frequently and noticeably than ever before. What are your top tips for surviving the updates throughout 2020?

Dawn Anderson

Just don’t focus on the updates. Focus on thinking about what informational needs your target audience has and adapting your current offering to meet those needs.

 

Fistbump Media

Keep focusing on user experience and great content. That always wins. When I see volatility, I usually see stability (or gains) in sites taking this approach.

 

James Leisy

Future-proofing: Create good content – write for the user not the bot, easily crawlable site, get the fundamental building blocks right, don’t try to cheat the system. If you do this, you have less to worry about with future algorithm updates.

 

Bill Slawski ⚓

Start Reading Google whitepapers that they prepare for academic and industry conferences: it will help you plan ahead before changes in those are implemented at Google. (Are you ready for ALBERT yet?)

 

Carlos Castro

Always follow best practices and don’t try to unethically hack your way to the top of search results. If you play by the rules, the impact of an algorithm update may be less harmful to you.

 

Youness Bermime

Seeing into the future again? Don’t fight the Algorithm. Get ahead of it!

 

Kendra Cornell

Pay Attention! Follow experts and blogs that stay up-to-date on changes and can explain them well, this is the best way to understand what’s happening. Also, don’t panic! The changes aren’t as bad as they seem😉

 


Tell Us Your Questions, Thoughts or Concerns About SEO in 2020

If you have advice, opinions, or concerns about SEO this year, please share them in the comments below. If you have questions, we will reach out to our community members and ask them to come and answer your question. Also, join us on Wednesday, January 15th, at 11 am ET/4 pm BST for SEMrushchat. We will be discussing Podcasting! 





Source link

?
WP Twitter Auto Publish Powered By : XYZScripts.com