It can be a tough and technical job, which is why some companies have their own in-house SEO professional. Fortunately, that really isn’t necessary if you have a little knowledge of SEO, have a quality website, and comply with Google’s guidelines.
Beginners
1. How Google Crawls – Discusses the basics of how Google
crawls the web, indexes, and serves results.
2. How Google Works – If you want to get into SEO, you’ll
need to understand the basics of how Google (and other) search engines work.
This video provides a background on Google search.
3. Getting the Basics – If you want to get traffic from
Google and rank well, you’ll need to have a site that Google views as high
quality. It has certain signals that it uses to gauge a site’s quality. This
article covers the basics of what attributes you’ll need.
4. PageRank – To understand the Google search engine and why
some sites rank higher than others, you’ll need to have an understanding of
PageRank. This Wikipedia article gives a good background. (It’s even referenced
by Google employees.)
5. Quick Sprout’s Guide to SEO – A 9 chapter,
infographic-style guide to SEO. A good resource if you don’t want to read a
book but want something more thorough than a simple explanation.
6. Moz’s Guide to SEO – Don’t want to learn about SEO
through long infographics? Then check out this 10 chapter guide written by the
folks over at Moz.
7. SEO Starter Guide – Written by Google – A 32 page
document which explains how to run SEO. This document was written by Google in
2010.
8. 8 First Step SEO Tips for Bloggers – Are you a blogger
who wants to increase traffic to your website? Try reading this article first
to get a good start on your SEO knowledge.
9. SEO Tips for Beginners – Are you a total novice when it
comes to SEO? If so, read this short article which lists 5 things you can do
right now to get you pointed in the right direction.
Bonus! Creating a SEO Strategy – Hear from Googler Maile
Ohye on how to create a SEO strategy using a wide variety of tools.
Free Tools
Quality, free tools – what could be better? Check them out:
10. Google Webmaster Tools – Before you look at any other
tool, check out this suite of tools provided by Google. For help using
Webmaster Tools, check out this page. Also check out Bing Webmaster Tools.
11. Open Site Explorer – Also known as the search engine for
links, Open Site Explorer is a Moz creation. This tool allows you to see who
links to your site, find links that point to old and broken pages, and research
competitors to see who links to them. To check out the toolbar and view the
product demo, check out this page. In order to understand this tool, you’ll
need to be familiar with the terms Page Authority and Domain Authority. Note:
this is a limited free tool. You can pay for enhanced access.
12. Microsoft SEO Toolkit – The Microsoft web team made an
SEO tool. Check it out here.
13. Broken Link Finder – Having broken links lowers the
quality of your website, which in turn hurts SEO. Find them and squash them
with this free tool.
14. SEO Site Tools – An extension for Chrome that pulls up
page rank, meta description, incoming links, and more for the site you’re
visiting.
15. Keyword Suggestion Tool – A free tool (with an account)
from SEO Book. Shows the number of searches for a specific keyword and gives
suggestions.
16. Majestic SEO – A good tool for viewing backlinks to your
website. Also check out Link Diagnosis.
17. Spider View Simulator – View your website the way a
spider would. This will give your site a different perspective and may help you
find and fix errors. Also check out their other tools.
18. Spider Test Tool – Similar tool as above, but this one
is from SEO Book.
19. Robots.txt Checker – Errors in your robots.txt can cause
problems for a spider’s ability to crawl your webpage. Find them with this free
tool.
20. WordPress SEO Plugin – A popular plugin for WordPress.
View the webpage to see a list of all the features.
21. Anchor Text Over Optimization – Google is cracking down
on websites that are overly optimized for SEO. Part of that involves anchor
text. This tool highlights where you may be at risk for anchor text over
optimization.
22. Test Page Speed – Your website speed affects your pageranking, so you want to ensure your website loads as quickly as possible. This
tool (from Google) will measure your site’s speed and offer suggestions for
improving speed.
23. Google Trends – Shows volume of searches over time. A
good tool to view keyword popularity.
Knowing the Status of Your Website
Want to know how optimized your website is for SEO?
24. Anatomy of a Perfectly Optimized Web Page – Unsure of
how to make an SEO optimized page? Or not sure if your page is optimized? Print
out this graphic and hang it in your office.
25. Webmaster Guidelines – Take a while to read these
guidelines and make sure your site is in compliance with Google. Don’t forget
to check out the Link Schemes document, which has recently been updated. For a
background on the update, check out this article.
26. Marketing Grader – HubSpot’s popular free tool gives you
an overview of your marketing efforts, including an SEO analysis.
Tips and Tricks
27. Setting up an SEO Friendly WordPress Site – WordPress is
a publishing platform that is used by millions of websites. Read this article
if you have a WordPress site or want to get set up with one and are not too
familiar with SEO.
28. SEO for Blogs – Don’t have a WordPress site but still
want SEO for blogs? Have a WordPress site and want to learn about SEO for any
kind of blog? If yes, check out this article.
29. Patrick McKenzie’s SEO Tricks – McKenzie provides some
SEO tricks. Even if you’re advanced with SEO, it won’t hurt to read this.
30. Making Content Memorable – If you run a blog, it’s
important to not put your time and energy into getting tweets, likes, +1′s, etc.
Why? Because it’s still not totally clear how these play into Google’s ranking.
You should be spending your time focusing on producing great content. This SEO
Copywriting (SuccessWorks) article gives a good overview of how to turn an
article from “meh” to memorable.
31. Strategic SEO for Startups – More good SEO tips from
McKenzie, this time focusing on “Startup SEO.”
32. Quick Wins in SEO – Want some quick wins (that you may
not be familiar with already) in SEO? Are you familiar with title tags and h2
tags? If not, check out this article. It’ll help bring some quick wins to your
website.
33. SEO for Software Companies – Run a software company and
want to know how to get traffic to your website via content creation? Check out
this article for all the details.
34. SEO Tips from Gabriel Weinberg – Ever heard of the
DuckDuckGo search engine? The creator of that search engine, Gabriel Weinberg,
gives a few of his SEO tips here.
35. SEO for ecommerce – An 8 part article which delves into
optimizing an ecommerce site for SEO. Also check out SEO tips for e-commerce
sites written by Google employee Maile Ohye.
36. Conducting a Competitive SEO Audit – HubSpot gives an
overview of how to conduct an SEO audit of the competitive landscape.
37. What Every Programmer Should Know – Are you a developer
that’s a little unsure about SEO? Read this article written by a developer
explaining the ins and outs of SEO.
38. Best SEO Tactics Post-Panda – In February 2011, Google
released a relatively significant update to its algorithm. The update was known
as Panda and it hurt the traffic of a lot of sites. This Quora thread gives
good tips for surviving and maintaining strong Google traffic in a post-Panda
world.
Staying Updated
As mentioned, staying updated on Google algorithm changes is
important. Of course, there are a few principles that are timeless and good
policy. For example, maintaining a quality site with accurate information is
top priority, because content is king. These things won’t change.
But being aware of any changes or updates to the Google
guidelines and complying with what they’re looking for is required, too. These
resources will help you do that. They also contain solid advice that you can
use for your SEO efforts. Add these blogs to your RSS reader to stay on top of
all things SEO:
39. Google Webmaster Central Blog – The official Google blog
for all things related to its search. Written for webmasters.
40. Google Algorithm Changelog – A good, unofficial resource
where you can find the change history to the Google algorithm.
41. Google Webmaster YouTube Channel – Frequently updated
with a Q&A from Matt Cutts. If anything about SEO is a “must watch,” it’s
this. No speculation, no conjecture, just accurate information from a key
employee on Google’s search team.
42. Moz Blog – A variety of topics in the SEO arena are
covered. Features a variety of guest bloggers.
43. KISSmetrics SEO posts – A collection of SEO articles
that have been posted to the KISSmetrics blog.
44. Search Engine Land – This homepage has lots of good
articles related to SEO.
45. Dave Naylor – Dave Naylor is well respected in the SEO
industry. Read his blog to get the latest insights.
46. HubSpot SEO Posts – A collection of posts HubSpot has
relating to SEO.
47. SEO Book Blog – Aaron Wall is well known in the SEO
community. This is his blog, which is part of his site.
48. Search Engine Journal – Gives you tips while also
providing some industry news and commentary.
49. SEO Roundtable – Provides a good overview on SEO news.
50. YouMoz – Blog posts written by the Moz community.
51. Search Engine Guide – Contains lots of intriguing and
educational posts..
52. Alltop SEO – A continuously updated collection of all
the top posts from a variety of SEO blogs.
Getting Inside the SEO Industry
Want to engage and communicate with SEO enthusiasts? Check
out these resources:
53. Webmaster Central Forum – A large forum hosted by Google
where you can get help with SEO issues.
54. Moz Community – A community hosted by Moz that features
a Q&A, articles written by others in the community, and webinars.
55. SEO Subreddit – An SEO community in Reddit. Features
news, Q&A, case studies, and more.
Get Help
In addition to getting help with the 3 resources mentioned
above, you can also try these paid methods:
56. Talk with an Expert – Need to talk to someone for help
or advice with SEO? Check out the experts available on Clarity.
57. SEO Book Community – A popular SEO community. It does
require a paid account of $300 a month.
58. Inbound – A Hacker News-like discussion board where many
inbound marketing issues are covered. There’s a heavy focus on SEO here.
So, will using all of these tools, reading blogs and
articles, and talking with SEO experts get you to the top of a results page?
Nope. The key thing to remember with SEO is that it all comes down to producing
quality content. After that, promote it and make sure it spreads. These things
will get you pretty far.
Because SEO, in the end, is not much different from a
business. Giving people what they want and the accurate information they need
is job #1. If you do SEO exactly right but neglect the quality aspect, your
efforts won’t yield much in the way of results. You have to be familiar with
SEO and have a quality site.
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