Ye have heard that it was said,
Thou shalt use keywords 3-5 times in thy text, and
Thou shalt create Metadata that are acceptable to the Search Engine
But Google says unto you,
Unless ye write blogs with quality, ye do it in vain.
Consider Jinx, an honest and unassuming resident of Raleigh, NC. Her father, John, had been stationed with the US Army in China at the end of World War Two. The simple Kentucky boy learned enough Chinese to befriend a shop owner on Jade Street in Beijing. Every so often his pal would call him to come inspect a new piece that had come into the shop. John would go down there to have a look and pay the man a hundred bucks for a little green bowl, a pitcher, or a knickknack and send them home. Jinx inherited the collection years later.
Turns out the jade collection on the appraisal table was of the kind of quality that sends appraisers ballistic. Honestly, before watching the appraisal, we thought it looked like a bunch of cheap green plastic tchotchkes. Not so. Jinx was treated to one of the highest values to date on the Roadshow - over a million dollars (and she had more pieces at home!)
Quality is the new gold standard of blogging. Gone are the days of packing your blog with keywords in an attempt to rank higher in search returns.
One might guess at the basic idea. Quality blogging includes AVOIDING corner-cutting such as:
But defining quality blogging positively is the slippery part. Google doesn't disclose any details about their actual criteria, but a close study of search returns by people who appraise such things can give us some clues. Here are some of the things they have learned:
Google and many other SEO experts increasingly agree that if once you get your page-level metadata sorted, just write an informed, engaging blog on a topic you want your leads to see.
PANDA appeared in 2011 as an additional filter to Google's algorithm. One relevant feature of the new algorithm is that Google updates it ALL the time, meaning that there is serious learning going on about what quality is and how to find it.
Panda finds and examines your site for any shortcuts you might have taken, including duplicate content within your site and plagiarized from other sites, fluff-content that doesn't add anything new to the topic (What we used to call BS on high school book reports), too many keywords that decrease readability, and so on.
From Moz:
"Panda starts off with human quality raters who look at hundreds of websites. Computers, using machine learning, are then brought in to mimic the human raters. When the algorithm becomes accurate enough at predicting what the humans scored, it’s then unleashed across millions of sites across the Internet."
On the Antiques Roadshow, the Appraisers Know Things and can easily tell a fake from a treasure. Google is not far behind when it comes to your content.
The Quality Rater Guidelines used by human raters to tease out the good from the bad outlines features of good and poor quality content, including:
Our advice to you: Quality blogging is in your future, so get up in that skull-attic of yours and start looking for treasure to share with the world. If you're not blogging at all now, consider publishing once a month to start, and slowly up it to once a week. Experiment with length and frequency by checking your page metrics to find the sweet spot. Read a lot of other industry blogs or articles to prime the pump. Combine your brilliance with good metadata practices and you should see your web traffic and leads increase over time.
You might end up like Jinx, who, when presented (at 3:10) with the final dollar figure for her jades simply said, "Damn."
Thanks to PBS's Antiques Roadshow
United WebWorks is a Savannah-based internet marketing company that offers premier blogging services for clients across the country.