{"id":452,"date":"2015-07-09T14:00:30","date_gmt":"2015-07-09T11:00:30","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.digitalmarketingpro.net\/?p=452"},"modified":"2021-06-29T08:53:05","modified_gmt":"2021-06-29T05:53:05","slug":"5-seo-metrics-that-matter-more-than-rankings","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.reliablesoft.net\/5-seo-metrics-that-matter-more-than-rankings\/","title":{"rendered":"5 SEO metrics that matter more than rankings"},"content":{"rendered":"

There are a number of SEO metrics that are more important than ranking in the first page of Google. If you are able to identify and monitor these correctly, you increase your chances of actually getting to the top positions of Google and enjoy all the benefits.<\/span><\/p>\n

In the minds of many people SEO is about getting high rankings<\/b><\/a> for particular keywords and while this is not false, it is not completely true either. SEO is about making your website easier to be discovered and understood by search engines and friendlier to users. If you do this using best practices then sooner or later, SEO will work<\/b><\/a> and you will gain higher rankings.<\/p>\n

Why metrics are more important for SEO than rankings?<\/b><\/h2>\n

To measure progress or lack of it:<\/b> To say it simply, if you don\u2019t measure SEO then there is no way to know if what you are doing is working or not. When doing SEO work for a website, it will not magically go from page 5 to page 1 of the SERPS but the improvement will come gradually that\u2019s why it is necessary to measure and be able to identify progress.<\/p>\n

To justify your SEO investment:<\/b> SEO costs a lot of money and nobody likes to spend money without getting a return. Even if you decide not to outsource SEO<\/b><\/a> but do it yourself (or internally if you are a business), you are still spending valuable time which has a monetary value.<\/p>\n

SEO Metrics can tell you if the money you spend on SEO and digital marketing in general, is worth it.<\/p>\n

To motivate you to keep improving your website or blog:<\/b> Digital marketers<\/b><\/a> spend endless hours in front of a computer screen trying to promote web properties online and until you get the results you want, it\u2019s easy to get disappointed and quit. Metrics can tell you if you are moving to the right direction and motivate you to keep going.<\/p>\n

Key SEO Metrics Explained<\/b><\/h2>\n

One of the main differences of doing business on the Internet versus doing business offline, is that in the Internet everything can be measured with great accuracy. From site visits to button clicks and conversions, the figures you have in your disposal for analysis are endless.<\/p>\n

If you try to analyse and understand them all, you will get lost and lose focus on what is important to know that will enable you to take correct decisions for your digital marketing campaigns.<\/p>\n

To save you time, I will outline below the 5 most useful SEO metrics you should monitor on a daily basis.<\/p>\n

#1 – Average Google Rankings<\/b><\/h2>\n

You want your website to rank for various keywords on the first page of Google, correct? This way you will get traffic and make business (i.e. conversions). That\u2019s the long term plan but until you get there you have to work you way to the top.<\/p>\n

The best and free way to monitor your ranking positions in Google is to use the \u2018Search Analytics\u2019 tool available under \u2018Search Traffic\u2019 in \u2018Google Search Console\u2019.<\/p>\n

\u2018Google Search Console (formerly known as Google Webmaster tools)\u2019, is a free tool provided by Google to webmasters which among other things, it also gives you details on how your website ranks in Google search.<\/p>\n

The first step is to register and verify your website with the Search Console (read this<\/b><\/a>) and then navigate to the \u2018Search Analytics report\u2019.<\/p>\n

\"Search<\/p>\n

By default the report shows you the queries people typed in the Google search box and the number of clicks they received i.e. the number of visits to your website for that term.<\/p>\n

What you want to see is the average ranking position for those keywords and you can do that by selecting the \u2018Position\u2019 checkbox as shown above.<\/p>\n

A nice feature of the tool is that it allows you to compare your rankings positions for the last 7 days or for the last 28 days. You can do that by selecting one of the options under \u2018Comparison\u2019, in the \u2018Dates\u2019 radio button.<\/p>\n

There many other filters you can apply to the data to refine your results like device type (desktop, mobile, tablet), countries or even the type of search (web search, image search or video search), but for SEO metrics purposes you can concentrate on the average position.<\/p>\n

One thing to note about \u2018Search Analytics\u2019 is that the data is available for the last 90 days only so if you need more than that, you have to export the data every 3 months and keep it in an excel file.<\/p>\n

How to use the average position statistics<\/b><\/p>\n

What is important to monitor when viewing your average ranking position is to find out for which keywords you are improving over time and also to spot which keywords are closer to <10 average ranking position (each Google search results page has 10 positions so if rank for a keyword on position 15, then this means you are on page 2).<\/p>\n

These are the keywords (click on the keyword to see which page is ranking for the particular keyword) that can generate more Google traffic for your website in the short term.<\/p>\n

To make those pages stronger, you can use internal links<\/b><\/a> and also promote them in social media.<\/p>\n

#2 – Organic Traffic Changes<\/b><\/h2>\n

When you check your Google Analytics reports to see how many visits you got, you will notice that you have visits from spammy websites that make no sense. These \u2018fake\u2019 visits are not real people that visited your website but they are \u2018page requests\u2019 from software programs.<\/p>\n

They do this for various reasons which I am not going to waste time discussing them, what you should do to evaluate if your traffic increases over time is to monitor visits coming from organic search i.e. people that used Google, Yahoo or other search engines to search for something and ended up in your website.<\/p>\n

You can view this by looking at the \u2018Organic Search\u2019 report under \u2018Acquisition \/ All Traffic \/ Channels\u2019 in Google Analytics.<\/p>\n

\"Organic<\/p>\n

Ideally you want to see these numbers<\/b><\/a> in the report but because SEO takes time<\/b><\/a>, what is more important is to experience a steady increase from organic visits. Use the date picker (top right of the screen) and select a range of 2-3 months and analyse how your organic traffic changed over that time.<\/p>\n

If you are working consistently on your website but don\u2019t see an increase (at least a small one) then it means that something is wrong and you many need to change your SEO tactics<\/b><\/a>.<\/p>\n

If on the other hand you notice big fluctuations in traffic (either positive or negative), this is again something that you need to investigate further. May be you were hit by a Google penalty and that resulted in loss of traffic or you have recovered from a penalty and that\u2019s why your traffic increased suddenly.<\/p>\n

#3 – Bounce rate<\/b><\/h2>\n

Regardless of the type of website you have, your goal is to keep visitors longer to your web pages and site. If people leave as soon as they enter your website, this is not good for them, it\u2019s not good for SEO and it will not help you achieve your business goals.<\/p>\n

The bounce rate<\/b><\/a> value tells you exactly this i.e. the percentage of people that navigated away from your website without visiting a second page. The lower the bounce rate of a page, the better.<\/p>\n

\"Bounce<\/p>\n

As you can see from the screenshot above, the bounce rate percentage is available in almost all Google Analytics report.<\/p>\n

How you can use this metric?<\/b><\/p>\n

Use it in conjunction with the organic traffic report to find out which pages of your website have a high bounce rate. These are the pages that you need to change in order to reduce the bounce rate and keep visitors to your website for longer.<\/p>\n

#4 – Conversions \/ Event Tracking<\/b><\/h2>\n

One of the nice things about Google Analytics is that it allows you to easily add and monitor website goals. As I have mentioned many times, all types of websites have goals, whether this is a sale of a product or service, visits to a particular page, clicks on ads or signups to a newsletter.<\/p>\n

You need to identify your website\u2019s goals and create them<\/b><\/a> in analytics. By doing so you will know how many conversions you had, the origin of these conversions (organic traffic, direct traffic, email etc) and in some cases the value of the conversion (this is mainly applicable for ecommerce stores).<\/p>\n

\"creating<\/p>\n

A few things to note about conversion tracking:<\/p>\n