Blogalytics: Let your traffic guide your topics
Originally posted by me at REW Blogs: under Blogalytics
Ok so what is blogalytics? Blogalytics is a term I just made up by combining the word Blog and the word analytics - Make sense?
Ok seriously though, this blog post is TOTALLY worth reading to the end, so keep reading. (Especially for you REW bloggers)
Blogalytics is a technique I have practiced, and selectively shared with friends that helps alleviate the annoying task of trying to decide what to blog about while at the same time being guaranteed that your blog posts will receive the kind of targeted visitors that you are trying attract to your website.
The analytics part: There are 2 requirements
1. In order to practice this technique you have to have "some" traffic from search engines.
2. You must have a web analytics program installed that provides data on which searches are currently bringing traffic to your site.
Ok so here is what you do:
Step 1: Login to your analytics program (I use Google Analytics and highly recommend them) choose your favorite search engine (Once again I choose Google) and select the option that shows you which keyword searches have brought you traffic via the Google search engine (Or whichever one you chose)
*Be sure to set your date range to a decent amount of days / months so that you have a nice sample of keyword searches that have brought your website qualified traffic during that period
Step 2: Now that you have done step one correctly, you have a list of keyword phrases that have brought you traffic during your chosen time frame. Here is where it gets weird, set your display to it's maximum amount of viewable results and head for the bottom. The bottom you say? Absofreakinlutely! The reason you head to the bottom is because you are looking for keyword phrases that you are ranking for, but not ranking well enough to send you enough traffic to be at the top of the list. So let's say your maximum was 100 phrases, copy the bottom 30-50 and paste them into an excel spreadsheet, word doc or any other editor. Now start deleting! Go through the list and delete any keyword phrases that may have erroneously come to your website or are just not keywords you are interested in. What you should have left is a shortlist of keywords that you truly are interested in receiving more traffic from.
Step 3: Check your rankings - this part is easy, go to Google and copy paste each keyword phrase that is on your shortlist into the Google search bar. (To make finding your URL easier set your Google preferences to show 100 results because you might be on page 2, you might be on page 9)
If you are already ranking #1 for any of your phrases, take a look a look at the page that is ranking for that term and ask yourself, will visitors searching for this phrase find this page useful, or is there a better way to appeal to this traffic? If you are satisfied that the page your #1's are landing on is a good match for the search, delete that phrase from your shortlist (You can't rank any higher AND the page they are landing on is suited to the phrase) - However! If your #1 ranked page is ranking for that phrase purely based on change (It wasn't all that competitive and Google ranked you based on a very minor mention of the phrase and the fact that your site has authority) put these #1's in a new column of your spreadsheet called re-target (Call it whatever you want, my names are dumb sometimes, shoot I came up with Blogalytics
) - I will tell you what to do with your re-target phrases list in a minute.
Step 4: The whole point of this article
Ok - now that we have finished steps one through three, we have two lists, one of keyword phrases we are already number one for but with pages that aren't properly targeted, and one for keyword phrases that have brought us qualified traffic but don't rank #1 (And likely aren't that well targeted)
This is your new list of suggested topics for your blog. You already know that your site has enough authority to compete in the rankings for these phrases and you now have the opportunity to properly optimize a blog post for both maximum search engine rankings and conversion.
The trick with writing these blog posts is the same as every other trick - there really isn't one. You don't want to just throw up some spammy blog post of a paragraph or two with no real value just to get a blog post on your site with that phrase in the title, because even though occasionally this will increase your rankings for that phrase, it won't convert the visitors once they get there, and I mean seriously, you already eliminated all the phrases you weren't interested in, so this is traffic you feel you can convert so put as much thought and effort into this blog post as you would any main page of your site. As a rule, and absolute MINIMUM of 20 minutes should be spent to plan and write a great blog post. But don't cheat, give your blog post as much time as it takes to make it the kind of quality post that will cause that visitor to become a client.
Note: I am the original author of this work and own all copyright and intellectual property rights to this content. If you would like to post any or all of this content on your own website, you MUST PROVIDE PROPER CREDIT including my full as the author: Morgan Carey, and a clickable link to the original located at http://www.realestatewebmasters.com/blogs/morgan-carey/246/show/