Why SEO Is Important: 8 Reasons (And How to Get Started)
No matter your line of work, people are searching for your business online. Let’s look at a few reasons why search engine optimization (SEO) is important. Look at these SEO stats: If you want more traffic coming to your...
Shows how many different websites are linking to this piece of content. As a general rule, the more websites link to you, the higher you rank in Google.
Shows estimated monthly search traffic to this article according to Ahrefs data. The actual search traffic (as reported in Google Analytics) is usually 3-5 times bigger.
The number of times this article was shared on Twitter.
No matter your line of work, people are searching for your business online. Let’s look at a few reasons why search engine optimization (SEO) is important. Look at these SEO stats: If you want more traffic coming to your website, you need to rank high on Google. To do that, you need SEO. Did you know that 90.63% of pages get zero traffic from Google? This likely happens because these pages: To fix them, you need to: Guess what? These are all crucial aspects of SEO. That’s why SEO is important. When you promote your content, you’ll get a short burst of traffic. But this doesn’t last. However, if your content ranks high on Google, you can get consistent traffic month after month. For example, take a look at the organic traffic coming to our link building guide. It was first published in 2016, and traffic has only continued to grow: Your potential customers almost certainly turn to Google when they have a problem. Depending on where they are in the buyer’s journey, the way they search and the queries they use will be different. For example, if you have a product that helps businesses with outbound sales emailing, a naive prospect may use search to figure out their problem, with queries like these: Later on, this same searcher may learn about sales automation and realize that products that help them send deliverable emails and check open rates exist. They’ve now moved into a different stage of the buyer’s journey, searching terms like “best sales outreach tools” or even for brand names and specific technical features. At each stage, there’s an opportunity to create and rank content that addresses a wide array of questions and concerns: If you can rank strategically for content that answers the queries your customers have and search for, then it’s as if you magically show up every step of the way and cement your brand into your prospects’ minds. You’ll be top of mind when it comes time to buy. Only 0.63% of Google searchers click on results from the second page. If you’re not ranking for your niche’s top keywords, then someone else is. It can be a brutal competition. And SEO is the price of entry. The Ahrefs Blog gets an estimated 380,000 monthly search visits: If we had to acquire this traffic from Google Ads, we would have to pay an estimated $860,000 per month. But we’re paying nowhere near that amount for our content marketing efforts, so it’s reasonable to say SEO is more cost effective in the long run. If you’re a local business or your business has a physical presence, you’ll want to appear on Google Maps when someone searches for your business or related keywords: To do this, you’ll need to create a Google Business Profile—which is part of doing local SEO. Setting up a Google Business Profile is straightforward: SEO Lily Ray ran a survey of 1,100 respondents and found the majority of them trust the information they find on Google—both in terms of the results themselves, as well as the content they find within SERP features (e.g., featured snippets). That means if your website or your content appears at the top of the results whenever your potential customers search on Google, it shows you’re trustworthy and an authority in your industry. When it’s time for them to buy, your brand will be top of mind. Convinced that you need to start doing SEO? Here’s how you can get started. If search engines cannot find, crawl, or index your website, then you can’t rank your website for any important keywords. So the first and most important step is to make sure there aren’t any technical SEO issues hindering you from ranking. To do this, audit your website by signing up for our free Ahrefs Webmaster Tools and running a crawl using Site Audit. When the crawl is done, you’ll see all the top issues for your site. Click on the number in the Crawled column to see the affected URLs. You can also click on the “?” to see why it’s an issue and how to fix it: If you want search traffic coming to your website, you need to target topics that people are actually searching for. You can find these topics by doing keyword research. One way to get started is to see what topics your competitors are already ranking for. Here’s how: Here, you’ll see the pages sending the most search traffic to your competitor’s website. Look through the report and pick out the keywords that are relevant to your website. Once you have a list of keywords you want to target, you’ll have to create pages that are optimized for them. By optimization, I don’t mean “mention the keywords as many times as possible.” Keyword stuffing no longer works. Google today can understand synonyms and semantically related words. What should you do then? Here are the best practices: Links are an important Google ranking factor. In fact, according to Google’s Andrey Lipattsev, links are one of the top three ranking signals: But links can’t appear out of nowhere. Even if your content is valuable, people need to know it exists before they can link to it. That’s why you need to promote your content and build awareness. Here are some tips on promoting your content: For example, say we search for “mechanical keyboard” and apply the following filters: Doing so gets you over 3,800 potential websites you could reach out to: Find their emails and reach out to them. Need to convince your boss or upper management to invest in SEO? Check out these resources: Looking to learn more about SEO? Check out these guides: Any questions or comments? Let me know on Twitter.1. Run a technical audit of your website
2. Target topics with search traffic potential
3. Create content that ranks
4. Promote your content
Learn more