5 top things an eCommerce Site Can Do To Improve Rankings and Traffic
-
Hello,
We are a niche eCommerce company with a limited budget but time on our hands to make changes and start projects.
For our main keyword we rank 10th. It is a small to medium sized niche.
Without knowing the details, I'm looking at the top 5 things I can do for Rankings and Traffic considering on-site, off-site, keeping in mind google updates.
Also, what's the best or your favorite Ecommerce ranking/traffic articles?
Thanks!
Bob
-
I think best solution for improving rankings is decreasing load time with CDN aka Content Delivery Networks. You should watch this video about CDN: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_4COWL7oNSw
-
This is very helpful mirabile, there was just so much other stuff above you to give "Good Answers" to. Thank you.
-
If you haven't already done so, I recommend giving some major attention to your onpage copy that describes each product. If you're using generic vendor blurbs that other sites use, then this is not only telling Google "Hey, nothing new to be found here!", but it's also kinda telling your customers "Hey, nothing new to be found here, we totally can't help you differentiate our listing between that one on the competitor site, sorry."
It's not only about price, or how fast you think your shipping is. It's about helping the product page on your site look better than on the competitors. More content love, originality, thoughtfulness, and customer care all around.
I used to work at an online retailer, and we wrote all custom descriptions and spent a lot of time on them. Users loved was that we took the time to write detailed, high-quality copy that helped explain the product, so sales went up as a result of this.
**AS DID OUR ORGANIC TRAFFIC. **
-
One of my retail sites has more informative content about the product niche than all of my retail competitors and manufacturers combined. Most of the traffic entering this site comes in through content pages. Most of those visitors never see the homepage.... but they learn that we are the site with the info. Lots of people leave reviews .... "this site has great info, we buy there because they have answered our questions". So, if you are in a niche such as DIY then the content approach will work really well. All of that info reduces the number of people who write or call for information. It was a great investment.
Only 5.5% of the impressions on this site are on the homepage. About 20% of the homepage is dedicated to showing off our content. The top right corner of the site is a 300x250 rectangle that shows comments by customers who reviewed us today.
-
All awesome!
Donna had a great one that should be emphasized more than others right now due to it's urgency - that's number 1 - mobile ready. You can read more about that in the link I just provided (PLEASE read it) but here is a great tool to help get you started down that route:
Google Mobile-Friendly Tester Make sure you put your site through that testing tool to see how you're doing from a mobile standpoint. And then make sure you read through the Mobile SEO guide provided by Google.
-
EGOL,
Groundbreaking Advice as usual. We're using (mostly) 7 informational videos with transcripts. You think more people will buy if less area on the home page is going for products and more for answering every one of their questions by video? Please explain!
-
but time on our hands to make changes and start projects.
Transform the site from a retail site into an informational site with a small store.
-
I concur with Patrick's excellent suggestions and would add a few more to the list.
- Make sure your site is mobile ready.
- Optimize for speed.
- Use Moz and GWMT to identify and fix site errors.
- If you don't have reviews on the site already, enable them. Feed that into the schema markup Patrick mentions above.
- Link building. Identify who's linking to your top competitors and go after the ones you can. As your top suppliers and partners to link to you. Give them something of value in exchange.
- Use screaming frog to scan your site and check for cannibalization. Don't waste resources competing with yourself.
- Optimize internal linking structures and anchor text.
- Vary and test rhe effectiveness of different calls to action.
My go-to resources for ecommerce websites is The Ultimate Guide to SEO for eCommerce Websites from KISSmetrics. You'll see it talks about all the items mentioned by Patrick and myself as well as some more.
-
Hi Bob
These are just suggestions, but I would focus on the following (more than 5, but they all help):
- Site structure - Make sure that your site is laid out and categorized in a logical format, with products/services being a short amount of clicks away. Don't make users work and make sure search engine crawlers can easily crawl and find important pages on your site. Here's a great resource from Search Engine Land.
- Product page title tags - Make sure your title tags on your site are using keywords or phrases that users are searching for. Do NOT overdo keywords and stuff them in. Make sure the titles are descriptive of the content with keywords or phrases at the front of the title. Also take advantage of branding in every title tag.Take a look at Moz's Title Tag best practices page.
- Schema markup - WebMeUp has a great article on Schema for eCommerce. This takes time and effort but pays off in dividends in the long run. You will need a web developer if you are not code savvy. Read more about Schema here if you are interested.
- Use meta descriptions - You'll hear repeatedly that meta descriptions are no longer ranking factors, and that's true. BUT, they still hold a ton of weight when it comes to users clicking through to your site from search. Think of your meta description as your sales pitch when a user sees you in search. HubSpot offers a great article on meta descriptions and Moz has a great best practices page.
- Social media - Make sure you take advantage of all relevant social media platforms for your business; meaning use the ones where your target audience is and engage in that community. Make sure you use a brand name, link to your URL in your bio, and also make sure that all relevant contact information is correct and up to date. Here's a great Inc article to help get you started, as well as Moz's Social Media for Beginners guide.
- Business listings / Local citations - this is more if you have a physical store but it's also good for listings in business and niche driven areas. Use Moz Local or Whitespark. I have used both and they do great work.
- Partnerships / certifications - Make sure you take full advantage of partnerships that you may have and also find certifications that are relevant to your business. Both of these items signal trust to users and search engines, and can greatly influence both. This includes items Better Business Bureau, shopping cart or checkout safety certifications, and any industry certifications that separate you from your competitors.
- Secure site - This is especially important if you are collecting user information or transactions on your website. Google recently announced that they do use https as a ranking signal and give a little more weight to websites using https as opposed to http. Again, this is important because you are an eCommerce website. Make sure your site is either one or the other, not both.
Again, these are just suggestions to get you going. I listed relevant resources, so discuss with your team and web development team as these items take time and need to be prioritized based on your website and capabilities.
Hopefully these help - let me know if you need anything else, Bob. Good luck to you and yours!
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Can someone clear up social signals as a ranking factor?
I'm aware that Google have addressed this before and specifically said that social signals are not a ranking factor: http://searchenginewatch.com/sew/news/2325343/matt-cutts-facebook-twitter-social-signals-not-part-of-google-search-ranking-algorithms However I came across this (admittedly great) infographic from Neil Patel, an SEO I have a lot of respect for: http://www.quicksprout.com/2014/01/31/how-social-signals-impact-search-engine-rankings/ In the post he specifically states that "both Google and Bing use data from social sites in order to determine how high to rank your website." I have always understood that social signals help drive links by spreading your content to a bigger audience, thereby getting your content in front of people who are likely to link. I also appreciate that content that is shareable is also likely to be linkworthy. However. Neil doesn't talk about correlation here, he talks about social signals as a ranking factor. Is he being misleading, or has the game changed since Matt Cutts said they don't use social signals?
Social Media | | CustardOnlineMarketing0 -
Social shares: A ranking factor or not?
Open Site Explorer lists them and every so-called SEO expert says social signals/shares are a ranking factor. Everyone but Matt Cutts, it would seem. So if they're not a ranking factor, why show them in Open Site Explorer?
Social Media | | Jeepster0 -
How would you increase rankings if you were in charge of the SEO for this site
Hello, For the site nlpca.com How would you get them to the #2 spot for "NLP" and the #2 spot for "NLP Training" They won't do link building due to reputation in the industry. They're open to Google+ and the +1 button. They are willing to add stellar targeted authoritative content. They're adding a blog and comprehensive "What is NLP?" article. They are a "Top 5" authority in the field. Thanks.
Social Media | | BobGW0 -
How can i make our social network site rank higher?
Our site is currently not in the first 3 pages of Google. it is a social networking site that requires users to login/ register. Much of the content is therefore user generated and is as diverse as the users themselves. The problem is that SEOmoz crawler is not even picking up the keywords i inserted into the site. Does this mean that Google is not even picking them up as well? Our site is www.yookos.com
Social Media | | seoworx123
We are using JIVE, which is best suited for intranets. What can i do to improve the site's rankings?0 -
Similar Sites to CrunchBase
Hi All, Are there any similar sites to CrunchBase in that you can submit your blogs, websites, social profiles etc all to one central 'People' type page? I'm after high quality directories like this that allow you to create profiles to link to all your other profiles. Only after quality sites like CrunchBase, not spammy ones. Any suggestions? Many thanks
Social Media | | bradkrussell0 -
How to get most out of viral blog traffic?
Our website has a WordPress blog, hosted at website.com/blog. I've discovered that with some hard work and a bit of luck, I can create a blog posts that will go viral - they will get about 50k readers in 1-3 days (which is a LOT for our website), and 300-1000 tweets, 100-250 Facebook shares, and anywhere from 10 to 130~ G+1s. (Unfortunately, these are for the posts, not for our website.) The posts will also get some comments. And most importantly, a few links - sometimes from very reputable domains. However, I feel that I could be doing much more here. The links go directly to the blog post, and I'm not sure how much is that helping our website overall in regards to SEO. What actions can I encourage the readers to do, and how should I prioritize them? Some of the actions are: Sharing/liking, writing a comment, checking out our products, subscribing to our Facebook/Twitter/G+ profile, subscribing to our RSS. One another possible action/opportunity that I see and which could potentially pay off is to offer some kind of PDF report to be emailed, which would initiate an autoresponder sequence. Do you think that having a clear call to action in a blog post could reduce the sharing of it ? Is it possible to encourage whoever is writing about our blog posts to use a direct link to our website, instead of linking directly to the post? If yes, how? E.g. if I included a direct link to our website in the post itself, e.g. in the most important part of the post that gets quoted, it could work - unfortunately that's usually virtually impossible. Am I sitting on a gold mine here, and should do this as much as possible? Should I consider putting this content not just onto the blog, but on our website.com/something ? I'm actually not sure how that would help though, it would simply have a shorter URL. I've discovered that it doesn't matter where I post this content, if the presentation looks decent. So it doesn't have to be posted on website.com/blog. I can even post it on other domains - should I? And the most important question: How do I get the most out of this opportunity in SEO regards? Thanks for any ideas or insights!
Social Media | | Jiri.Novotny0 -
Can you set up a Google 'author' for rich snippets using a G+ business page or does it have to be a personal profile?
I've set up an author profile for myself, but if I'm writing articles for clients, I don't necessarily want to do it in my own name. Is it possible to set up a Google author profile using a G+ business page? Obviously the idea is to try and gain the rich snippets that only recognised authors receive, but to do so in the name of my client.
Social Media | | Piranha_Solutions1 -
Is facebook and twitter always a good idea to promote a website and improve Google rankings?
I'm attempting to promote a fresh seafood market / restaurant here on the Sunshine Coast, Australia. I have not found a lot of examples of people using Twitter and Facebook to promote this type of business here. Is it hard to justify the time for return here? One benefit I thought for twitter is we could have tweets displayed on site giving us some dynamic content which would hopefully keep Google spider coming back more regularly is this correct? Is there any link building advantage to using these social media sites?
Social Media | | iSenseWebSolutions0