Search Engine Optimization Checklist, More than 5 billion Google searches take place every day, making search engine optimization (SEO)—improving the volume of high-quality traffic to your website—an important component of interacting with your audience.

Chris Homer, SEO Analyst at Mailchimp, states, “SEO is free advertisement for your firm.” “You’ll attract the right audience if you take efforts to ensure you rank high for relevant queries.”

It’s simple to build and maintain your site for SEO if you understand what helps you rank higher in search results and what hurts you. Learn about SEO in the sections below, and then utilize the checklist to include SEO into your digital marketing plan.

Know how to use search engines.
Search engines like Google and others utilize formulae, called algorithms, to choose what sites to bring up in response to a search. While search engines alter their algorithms often, there are lots of predictable ways they’ll judge your site.

Expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness (EAT) are among the main elements Google evaluates in its results. There are various methods to construct this.

Generate visibility
Reviews, mentions on social media, links to your material from other websites, and guest pieces that backlink to your website will all assist your rating. But, don’t take a shortcut and pay corporations to acquire connections for you—Google doesn’t approve of this behavior.

Update your profile
Build your EAT by ensuring that Google has important information about your business. Use Google My Business to maintain your profile so you connect with your audience on Google Search and Maps utilizing location data.

Show Google you’re relevant
Assure Google that it can trust you as a reliable website by addressing these essential ranking criteria.

Search relevancy. Google and other search engines carefully analyze whether a page fulfills the purpose of a user’s search. This implies your website has to be quite clear about what you do and where you’re located.
Mobile-friendliness. Google generally ranks mobile sites over desktop when analyzing website pages. Mailchimp allows you to see your website as it would appear on a mobile device, so you can be sure that your site will look fantastic on any device.
Page-load speeds. A page should load as soon as possible—preferably between one to 3 seconds, according to Google—to provide the user a good experience with the website.

Also Read: SEO TUTORIAL

The Ultimate Technical SEO Checklist (2022) (Not all of these may apply to your situation.)

  •  Have you created a new Email address for your site? This isn’t necessary, but always makes things easier for me. You could also just setup Gmail filters.
  •  Have you installed Google Analytics? This is not optional!
  •  Have you installed Google Webmaster Tools? Again, not optional.
  •  Have you installed Bing Webmaster Tools? Do this too.
  •  Using WordPress? Have you installed Google Analytics for WordPress and SEO for WordPress? These plugins will make your life 100x easier.
  •  Have you checked Google Webmaster Tools for 404 / 500 errors, duplicate content, missing titles and other technical errors that Google has found? Make sure to keep up with any messages Google is sending you.
  •  Have you used Browseo to find even more technical errors?  The most common detrimental errors people tend to make are 302 redirects that should be 301 redirects.
  •  Have you used Xenu to find any broken links you might have? This is a free, easy way to check.
  •  Have you used Google’s Keyword Research Tool? Be sure to consider searcher intent and difficulty, pick 1 keyword per page, and you’ll generally want to start with lower-volume keywords first.
  •  Have you looked at competitor link profiles? This is the easiest way to get started with link building. This way, you can see what kind of anchor text they’re using, as well as how and where they’ve been getting their links. Input competitor domains at Link Diagnosis, Open Site Explorer, Ahrefs and Majestic SEO.
  •  Have you incorporated your primary keyword (or something close) into your page URL?
  •  Are all of your title tags ~65 characters or less? Title tags over this will be truncated in results.
  •  Are all of your meta description tags ~155 characters or less? Meta description tags over this will be truncated in results.
  •  Have you used an H1 tag? Is your keyword in the tag? Is it before any (H2, H3, H4…) tags? Are you only using 1 H1?
  •  Do you have a healthy amount of search engine-accessible text on your site? My recommendation is at least 100 words, because you want to give search engines an opportunity to understand what the topic of your page is. You can still rank with less, and you don’t ever want to put unnecessary text on your site, but I recommend not creating a new page unless you have roughly ~100 words worth of content.
  •  Did you use synonyms in your copy? Remember: synonyms are great, and using natural language that’s influenced by keyword research (rather than just pure keywords) is highly encouraged!
  •  Do your images have descriptive ALT tags and filenames? Search engines “see” images by reading the ALT tag and looking at file names, among other factors. Try to be descriptive when you name your images. Don’t overdo it though!
  •  Are you linking to your internal pages in an SEO-friendly way? Are you describing the page your linking to in the anchor text, so that both users and search engines understand what it’s about? I recommend not using anchor text in your global navigation because it can look like over-optimization. Stick to in-content links instead.
  •  Have you started off-page optimization and began building links? This is the hardest, most important aspect of SEO! Check out the ClickMinded Link Building Strategy Guide to get started.
  •  Have you made sure your site isn’t creating any duplicate content? Utilize 301 redirects, canonical tags or use Google Webmaster Tools to fix any duplicate content that might be indexing and penalizing your site.
  •  Are you using absolute URLs in your code? Some CMS platforms give you the option. Use absolute URLs instead of relative ones.
  •  Have you checked your site speed with Google Page Speed Tools?
  •  Have you created an XML sitemap and submitted it to Google and Bing Webmaster Tools? Use XML-Sitemaps.com or the Google XML Sitemaps WordPress Plugin.
  •  Have you created a Robots.txt file and submitted it in Google and Bing Webmaster Tools?
  •  Have you claimed your business / website username on other major networks for reputation management reasons? Not only do you want to make sure no one else gets your account name, but you can often “own” all the results on the first page of a search for your brand if you’re a new website or company. Here is the URL structure of some of the major networks (I’ve avoided linking directly to sign up pages because they keep changing):
  • http://www.twitter.com/brand-name
  • http://www.facebook.com/brand-name
  • http://www.yelp.com/biz/brand-name
  • http://www.youtube.com/user/brand-name
  • http://www.linkedin.com/in/brand-name
  • http://brand-name.wordpress.com/
  • http://brand-name.tumblr.com/
  • http://pinterest.com/brand-name/
  • http://www.hulu.com/profiles/brand-name
  • http://technorati.com/people/brand-name
  • http://about.me/brand-name
  • http://brand-name.posterous.com/
  • http://profile.typepad.com/brand-name
  • http://www.squidoo.com/lensmasters/brand-name
  • http://www.stumbleupon.com/stumbler/brand-name
  • http://www.etsy.com/people/brand-name
  • http://en.gravatar.com/brand-name
  • http://www.scribd.com/brand-name
  • http://brand-name.livejournal.com/
  • http://brand-name.hubpages.com/
  • http://www.flickr.com/photos/brand-name/
  • http://photobucket.com/user/brand-name/profile/
  •  Is your site mobile friendly? Have you checked it on multiple browsers with BrowserStack?
  •  Have you setup social media accounts on Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn and Google+?
  •  Have you added Authorship Markup to your site? Authorship markup search snippet images are gone, but you may still want to add it to your site. Use the Authorship Markup Walkthrough.
  •  Have you used the My Site Auditor Report to double-check everything once you’re live?
  •  Have you reviewed all of the free SEO tools at your disposal before completing this audit? If you don’t understand some of the high-level concepts (don’t worry, it can be tough!), have you reviewed the Beginner’s Guide to SEO?

(provided by http://www.clickminded.com/)

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