Many content writers and SEO experts believe that the time has come to move away from keyword optimization and to adopt topical optimization instead. What’s the difference? Here are a few, brief insights.
Traditional SEO
The problem with this methodology is that it results in a lot of duplication, and lower quality content. This is the result of the focus being on getting keywords into content, and then repeating those keywords (or similar) across several posts. Once that is done with multiple sets of keywords, that leaves little time for writing insightful and well researched content. It’s also difficult to focus on quality when being pressured to insert a list of keywords into a single piece.
Topical Optimization
The idea behind topical optimization is to take advantage of this improvement. Search engine optimization strategies can now focus on topics rather than keywords. If your current strategy has begun including long tail keywords, you have the right idea. In fact, the majority of pageviews are the result of researching long tail keywords than short and simplistic keyword phrases. In other words, what a potential customer is actually looking for.
Topical Authority
Implementing Topical Optimization
One thing that people often forget when it comes to search engine optimization is that their audience’s behavior isn’t any different from theirs. You phrase your search queries as questions. You include more words and phrases in hopes that the search engine that you are using will return results that meet your needs. For example, “Chinese restaurants near me” becomes “Chinese Szechuan buffet restaurants open on Sunday near me” in order to narrow down the results.
What Makes Your Business Unique?
So, if you were the owner of a Chinese restaurant, serving this type of cuisine with a buffet option, what would you do? To begin with, you might consider identifying what makes your business different and more desirable to potential customers that are performing these specific searches. This is especially true when there is an opportunity to differentiate yourself from your competition.
What Can You Do For Searchers?
Finding Your Niche
In your case, as the owner of a Szechuan (Sichuan) restaurant, you offer up a very traditional form of Chinese cuisine that is known for a particularly mouth numbing spiciness. If you offer up a buffet option, that likely differentiates you from other Chinese buffets that specialize in typical, Americanized, Chinese fare. If you opt to remain open on Sundays while other Chinese restaurants do not, this is another area where you stand out.
To optimize topically, your posts would likely focus on Szechuan cooking, traditional Chinese recipes and other content that is meaningful to your audience. You would also, without a doubt, publish promotional content that also revolved around your unique cooking, Sunday availability, etc. After publishing several posts on this topic and promoting them successfully, you would hopefully become known as an authority on spicy Chinese cuisine and as a restaurant known for being open on Sundays.
Are Keywords Dead?
Keywords are absolutely not dead. Topical optimization is not an abandonment of that. At least it shouldn’t be. Even though Google, and predictably other search engines have made significant improvements. The fact remains that keyword searches do work.
However, if you want to improve your SEO, you have to adopt topical optimization. When you do this, you can achieve the goal of becoming known as someone who has authority and expertise in certain areas. Isn’t this better than becoming a part of a random list that shows up on a search engine result page, just because of some viral search terms? It might be a challenging direction to adapt to topical optimization, but it could be worthwhile to try.
Lead/Featured Image: Copyright: ‘http://www.123rf.com/profile_sqback‘ / 123RF Stock Photo
Jonathan Emmen
Jonathan Emmen – junior SEO specialist and a passionate blogger from Copenhagen and regular contributor for different educational and entertainment blogs. Follow him on Twitter to find more.
Latest posts by Jonathan Emmen (see all)
- Why Topical Optimization is Important For Your SEO - May 19, 2016