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How to Measure SEO Effectiveness



How to measure SEO effectiveness. Do you think Google rankings are the end-all be-all for measuring success with your SEO strategy? Think again. Now, don’t get me wrong. It is an important metric on where you rank because, after all, only 25% of users go to the second page of Google regarding search results. Even more disappointing, 90% of pages receive zero organic traffic.

But it’s not the end all be all. If you double, or triple up your Google traffic and you don’t generate any more revenue, does it really matter? No, you’re just paying more expenses on your server costs. So what are the metrics that you should be tracking?

RESOURCES & LINKS:
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Moz: https://moz.com/
AnswerThePublic: https://answerthepublic.com/
Ubersuggest: https://neilpatel.com/ubersuggest/
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Well, the first one is organic traffic, and the reason I say track your organic traffic is it’ll tell you how you’re doing with algorithm updates. See, Google is making thousands of algorithm changes per year. They usually do around three core updates per year. You want to know if you’re doing better over time or worse, so tracking your organic traffic tells you your team is doing better or worse? And that’s an easy metric that you can do in Google Search Console or you can do it in Google Analytics and you actually see that traffic over time.

The second metric that I want you to track is SERP visibility. How do you know that your SEO is improving in the early days? See, with SERP visibility this shows you, and you can see its data in Google Search Console, are people seeing your listing? When you’re ranking at the bottom of page one or page two, yes, some people are seeing it, you’re just not getting as many clicks and it takes a long time to get up to the top spot. So SERP visibility, and if that number keeps going up, it means that you’re continually ranking higher and higher overtime in Google.

Metric number three, number of backlinks. Now, the more people that link to you naturally, the better your content is. It means people like your product, your service, your content, the stuff that you’re putting out there. 94% of content on the internet never gets backlinks. And when it comes to SEO, many companies believe this is the hardest part. In fact, it’s so hard that 60% of businesses outsource their link building strategy to an SEO expert. If you need help with your link building, check out my ad agency, NP Digital.

Now there’s also reciprocal backlinking, which means I link to you, you link back, avoid that. It’s not good. It doesn’t help with your ranking. That’s just gaming the system.

Now, creating longer content is a great way to boost your backlinks. Not only does longer content often rank better on Google, but it also receives on average 77.2% more backlinks than shorter articles. Now this doesn’t mean that all your content should be long. When it makes sense for it to be long, it should be long. But if it’s an article on how to tie a tie, you don’t want to make it long. It’s just making it confusing. People just want to see some images or video on how to tie a tie.

The fourth metric I want you to track is domain authority. The higher your authority that means the more credible you are, and typically the higher you’re going to rank. Now, this is a metric from Moz. It’s a score from one to a hundred. Typically, the higher the ranking or the number, the better off you’re going to rank.

Metric number five is the most important metric, conversions, and revenue. Look, Google Analytics can track how much revenue you’re generating from SEO. It doesn’t matter how much traffic you get at the end because something’s wrong if it doesn’t convert into dollars. You’re getting the wrong type of traffic. This is why keyword word research is super important at the beginning. This is why you want to use tools like ubersuggest: it’ll tell you what keywords are popular and have a high cost per click. If you’re wondering why cost per click is important, typically, if someone’s willing to pay more for a keyword in Google Ads, it means that keyword usually drives more sales.

So you want to go after the keywords that are related to your space, get searched a lot, have low competition, and have a high cost per click, and ubersuggest will show you that. And you can also use tools like AnswerThePublic to see what keywords are booming and becoming popular right now and exploding, so that way you know what to target in the short run that your competition hasn’t figured out about yet.

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https://youtu.be/FbQ8gO251po

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22 thoughts on “How to Measure SEO Effectiveness”

  1. Hey Neil, I'm currently building a price-feature comparison website for a certain niche. The business model is based on affiliate marketing. I don't sell anything, so the standard conversion in Google Analytics and other tracking services won't really work, right? What would be the best way to track "conversions" for Google.

  2. Great video, Neil! We appreciated your breakdown of the different metrics used to measure SEO effectiveness. It's essential to not just focus on one metric but to look at the bigger picture and consider various factors. Your suggestion to track both short-term and long-term metrics is especially valuable, as it allows us to see the impact of our SEO efforts over time. Keep up the great work!

  3. Great video as always, I just purchased your ubersuggest lifetime plan, I found more than thousand broken links and it took ages to redirect them one by one. Please do write an article on bulk redirect broken links if there is any. That would be great 🙂

  4. Neil, How do you look at the blogging future. I mean, many bloggers run multiple blogs. So day by day, untouched queries are getting done. and also already written blog keywords are also getting done by bloggers, so how you look at the future, I would like to know from you.

  5. Hey Neil! Another great video.
    I was wondering if you could help me with a little problem. My posts are indexed according to Google Search Console. But when I try to put in a query, my page isn't visible even up to the last search results.

    There was this query for which my post ranked on number 3. After a few days, it was no longer there. Thats okay because I know Google tests newer websites to see how people interact with a piece of content.

    But now, that query doesn't show my post even to the last of search results.

    SEMrush shows some keywords for which I rank, but when I search for those keywords, my site is nowhere to be found. I tried to find it till the last search results.

    Would appreciate it if you could help me out.

    Thanks.
    Ali.

  6. Hi Neil, just a short question regarding blog posts: Is it a good idea to publish the same blog article twice with different keywords? Because I just found out that the blog article I wrote about "Google My Business Profile" only ranks on the keyword "Google My Business" and not on "Google Business". So my idea was to upload it another time and name it "Google Business Profile". Thanks for your help!

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