10 Recurring SEO Health Checks You Need to Be Doing
Search engine optimization is an ongoing
process. It takes a lot of work to achieve those elusive Page One rankings—and
a lot of work to retain them. Part of the required onsite work is a systematic
review of sources that might indicate there's trouble brewing or already in
full storm mode.
This article outlines
10 health checks of indicators as part of clients' long-term SEO strategy,
along with suggested check frequencies (there are no hard-and-fast rules on
frequency; every company will have a different requirement).
1. Search Console health check
Frequency: weekly
Frequency: weekly
Search Console
information is as close as you're going to get to understanding what Google
does and doesn't want. It's advice straight from the horse's mouth. Though it
contains lots of useful info (checked your average page CTR against site
outliers recently, for example? Need to swap up your meta descriptions to make
them more compelling?), reviewing the Coverage and Performance sections and any
messages related to slow loading pages is essential.
2. Google Analytics traffic analysis
Frequency: monthly
Frequency: monthly
Review your organic
traffic: Any peaks/troughs? pages performing as expected? Correlation between
offline marketing activities and branded searches?
3. Meta tag and HTTP header analysis
Frequency: monthly
Frequency: monthly
To be honest, most SEO
software will quickly pick up meta tag and HTTP header issues and alert you,
but if you're not signed up with one of the SEO software houses, then download
the free version of Screaming Frog and crawl your site using that instead.
You're looking for any noindex meta tags in the section of the source code or
X-Robots-Tag nofollow/noindex directives in the http header.
4. Technical health
check
Frequency: quarterly
Frequency: quarterly
The
most common technical errors we see are canonical errors and mislabeled
hreflang tags ("uk" is not country code for Great Britain...). Common
canonical errors:
- They
disappear; suddenly you've got massive duplicate content problems.
- They
all start referencing the unsecure http version of the domain.
- They
reference 404s. Yep. Here's the original version of my page...
- They
clash with hreflang tags. If you have a regional page indicated
appropriately with hreflang tags but the canonical suggests the original
version is actually the page dedicated to another region, then this is
problematic for a search engine trying to figure out what's going on.
Won't go in to too much
detail about hreflang tags, but suffice it to say, use the right country codes.
It's
also well worth using the aforementioned Screaming Frog to run a custom search
for Google Analytics/Tag Manager code on every page you're tracking. Massive
traffic drop? Maybe the homepage has mysteriously shed its tracking code...
5. Robots.txt review
Frequency: quarterly
Frequency: quarterly
A
simple but obvious one. Anyone been tampering with the robots.txt file?
Accidentally copied the file over from a staging site and blocked all search
engines from crawling any page on the site with a cheeky "Disallow:
/"?
6. XML sitemap review
Frequency: quarterly
Frequency: quarterly
Many
of the SEO CMS plugins will automatically update xml sitemaps as new pages are
added to the site. Check to make sure that's definitely happening, and be sure
to submit your sitemaps in Search Console.
7. Meta data review
Frequency: quarterly
Frequency: quarterly
You're
ranking for your target keywords, but your organic CTR is awful. Have you
accidentally written your shopping list as the meta description? Or, even
"better," has a disgruntled ex-employee/agency changed all your meta
titles and descriptions as a final "up yours" before leaving? Does
that airline really offer complementary sexually charged massages with a
surprising ending? And does the CEO really have male genitalia on his head?
Believe me, this sort of thing happens.
8. Internal linking
review
Frequency: every six months
Frequency: every six months
Google
spends a lot of time telling webmasters to use descriptive internal linking and
not simply the words "click here." Want search engines to truly
understand your page content? Then use the right keywords and their variations
as your internal anchor text. Also, make sure your most important pages are
linked to from multiple locations on your site; doing so will help the flow of
PageRank while simultaneously telling search engines you really want
them crawled.
9. Fetch and render
priority product pages
Frequency: every six months
Frequency: every six months
Are
search engines seeing all the content on your site? Google and other search
engines can handle most JavaScript, but if you notice during a rendering test
(using the old version of Search Console) that nothing appears on the page,
then you have a problem you need to quickly address with your development team.
That
happened recently to a client of ours because of the way in-viewport animations
happened on the site. Google was executing the JavaScript required to animate
the text blocks, but not triggering a scroll event that was required to make
the text visible.
Unfortunately,
blank pages struggle to rank, so if you do have dynamically loaded webpage
content, it's well worth establishing what Google and Bing can and cannot see.
10. Schema review
Frequency: every six months
Frequency: every six months
As
we see more and more featured snippets in Google's results pages, it's
important to make sure you're on point with schema mark-up that could snare you
that elusive Position 0. Use Google's Structure Data Testing Tool to ensure
site revisions haven't accidentally broken the code or removed it from the
section of the relevant page. Also make sure your highest priority mark-up
isn't nested under less important mark-up and your social mark-up is all in
order so you smash those social CTRs.
BONUS: Full
onsite/offsite audit
Frequency: annual
Frequency: annual
Simply
a well worthwhile exercise!
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If you need help with your email, web site, video, or other presentation to promote your company, product, or service, please give me a call at 440-519-1500 or email me at john@x2media.us.
X2Media can help you target your content and get your message to the audience in a way that it not only seen and heard, but remembered.
Until next month. . . .remember. "you don't get a 2nd chance to make a 1st impression." Always make it a good one!!
From X2Media I would like to thank you for your time.
John E. Hornyak
X2Media, LLC
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If you need help with your email, web site, video, or other presentation to promote your company, product, or service, please give me a call at 440-519-1500 or email me at john@x2media.us.
X2Media can help you target your content and get your message to the audience in a way that it not only seen and heard, but remembered.
Until next month. . . .remember. "you don't get a 2nd chance to make a 1st impression." Always make it a good one!!
From X2Media I would like to thank you for your time.
John E. Hornyak
X2Media, LLC
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