Could it really be possible? Well, back in March of 2017, no less an authority than Brian Clark wrote a blog post on Copyblogger with that very headline. LetÔÇÖs hear him out before we make our judgment.
Important links from this episode:
- Try StudioPress Sites
- Sites Weekly Newsletter
- Subscribe to Sites on Apple Podcasts
- @JerodMorris on Twitter
- Original blog post: What if You Could Simply Eliminate SEO from Your Life? by Brian Clark
Transcript
Jerod Morris: Welcome to Sites, a podcast by the teams at StudioPress and Copyblogger. In this show, we deliver time-tested insight on the four pillars of a successful WordPress website: content, design, technology, and strategy. We want to help you get a little bit closer to reaching your online goals, one episode at a time.
IÔÇÖm your host Jerod Morris.
Sites is brought to you by StudioPress Sites — the complete hosted solution that makes WordPress fast, secure, and easy ÔǪ without sacrificing power or flexibility. For example, you can upload your own WordPress theme, or, you can use one of the 20 beautiful StudioPress themes that are included and just one click away. Explore all the amazing things you can do with a StudioPress Site, and youÔÇÖll understand why this is way more than traditional WordPress hosting. No matter how youÔÇÖll be using your site, we have a plan to fit your needs — and your budget. To learn more, visit studiopress.com/sites. ThatÔÇÖs studiopress.com/sites.
Welcome to Episode 12 of Sites.
Last week, in episode 11, we discussed site security. I gave you five important steps that you need to take to build a fortress of security around your website.
If you missed that episode, please go back and listen to it. ItÔÇÖs both important and urgent that you take the security of your website seriously. Without security, your content and your design and your plugins, and everything else can too easily be rendered meaningless. Take security seriously.
Once you have strong security in place, then you can start thinking about things like  SEO. Which is our topic this week.
You may recall that we discussed SEO back in episode 7. In that episode, I highlighted a common mistake website owners make with SEO — namely, not thinking clearly enough about each of the three components parts of Search Engine Optimization. I also provided you with three important SEO action steps you should take right away. Like the security episode, Episode 7 about SEO is well worth going back and listening to if you missed it, or if youÔÇÖre new to the podcast.
And if you are new — welcome. ItÔÇÖs great to have you here. Please take a moment to send me a tweet and let me know youÔÇÖre listening. IÔÇÖm @JerodMorris on Twitter. And that goes for you too if youÔÇÖre a long-time listener. I love being able to make a personal connection with listeners, so please take a moment to say hi.
Okay — back to business. SEO.
We know we need to think about it. We know we need to have smart, proven strategies and technology systems in place to maximize its impact.
But what if 
What if we could simply eliminate SEO from our lives?
Yeah, thatÔÇÖs right, I said it: what if you could eliminate SEO from your life?
Is that really possible?
Well, back in March of 2017, no less an authority than Brian Clark wrote a blog post on Copyblogger with that very headline. The original headline was actually ÔÇ£Forget SEO.ÔÇØ
I say letÔÇÖs hear him out before we make our judgment.
Here, now, is my reading of Brian ClarkÔÇÖs blog post: ÔÇ£What If You Could Simply Eliminate SEO From Your Life?ÔÇØ IÔÇÖve adapted it slightly for clarity.
Make sure you stick around after the reading, as IÔÇÖll have this weekÔÇÖs hyper-specific call to action for you.
What if You Could Simply Eliminate SEO from Your Life?
Imagine a world without search engines.
ItÔÇÖs easy if you try.
No more surprise Google updates. No more worrying about XML sitemaps, robots.txt, and content analysis and optimization.
And perhaps most importantly, no more keyword research.
That last one means youÔÇÖre going to have to go old-school to figure out the language of your audience to reflect it back to them. ItÔÇÖs going to take a lot more work.
You didnÔÇÖt think you were going to get out of that one, did you?
Lets talk for a minute about choosing the right words 
HereÔÇÖs a relevant quote for you:
ÔÇ£The difference between the almost right word and the right word is the difference between the lightning bug and the lightning.ÔÇØ ÔÇô Mark Twain
When youÔÇÖre executing on your content marketing strategy, what you say is crucial. But when it comes right down to engaging and converting your intended audience, how you say it becomes the definitive difference.
You need to speak the language of the audience. In a world with search engines, you get a glimpse directly into the mind of your prospect, based on the language they use when seeking a solution to a problem or looking for the answer to a question.
Back before search engines, writers and advertisers still had to discover the language of the intended audience. It just took more work.
YouÔÇÖve likely heard of Eugene Schwartz, one of the most influential copywriters in the history of the craft. This is what he said on the topic back in the 1960s:
One hour a day, read. Read everything in the world except your business. Read junk. Very much junk. Read so that anything that interests you will stick in your memory. Just read, just read, just read  There is your audience. There is the language. There are the words that they use.
In that scenario, youÔÇÖd have to rely solely on other content creators to get the language right. How do you know they did the proper work?
Still want to live in a world without search engines and keyword research?
YouÔÇÖre already doing the work
Let me be frank  its simply negligent to not use keyword research to understand the language of your audience so that you can reflect it back to them. Youre simply doing content marketing poorly if youre not discovering and addressing the related topics that your prospects care about.
And once youÔÇÖre covering the topics that matter, and using the language your audience uses, youÔÇÖre doing most of what matters for search engine optimization. You donÔÇÖt have to obnoxiously repeat keyword phrases anymore ÔÇö Google has been smarter than that for years now.
For example, voice search has increased sevenfold since 2010, thanks to mobile. This gives you a more conversational glimpse into the minds of your audience, while also allowing you to write in a natural, engaging manner that Google still understands.
Plus, GoogleÔÇÖs semantic abilities continue to improve. The algorithm interprets queries based on what users mean, even if that differs from what they searched. And GoogleÔÇÖs AI is even beginning to understand metaphors.
In short, if you do the work thatÔÇÖs required to understand the language and cover the topics your audience cares about in the context of doing business with you, youÔÇÖre doing the bulk of the work that constitutes modern SEO.
From there, the rest of the learning curve isnÔÇÖt that bad. And youÔÇÖve got technology on your side for that.
HereÔÇÖs the real danger of focusing on SEO
The real danger of SEO isnÔÇÖt that youÔÇÖll create content designed for robots. People use search engines, not robots ÔÇö so youÔÇÖre always creating for humans. And Google not only wants you to do that, they require it.
No, the real danger is that you run into problems when you chase search traffic as if itÔÇÖs an end instead of a means. The intentional nature of search traffic makes it a potential gold mine, but only if you do something with it.
In other words, ranking number one in Google for a coveted search term means nothing if that traffic doesnÔÇÖt further a business objective.
- Are they likely to click deeper into the site?
- How about a content upgrade that gets them on your email list?
- Can you get them to check out your product or service?
ThereÔÇÖs nothing worse than a quick bounce. And search traffic bounces even if you do a great job of answering the initial question ÔÇö if you donÔÇÖt give them a next step, that is.
Traffic doesnÔÇÖt mean squat without some form of conversion. And search traffic is not your audience; itÔÇÖs just a highly qualified missed opportunity unless you get them onto an email list or prompt them to make a purchase.
This is the SEO last mile
If youÔÇÖre doing the real work of understanding the problems, desires, and language of your audience, you might as well do the remaining work of optimizing for search engines. And most of that is handled by technology.
Primarily, you need a mobile-friendly site that loads fast. Which, letÔÇÖs face it, youÔÇÖd need even in our imaginary scenario where search engines donÔÇÖt exist. People are still people, and thatÔÇÖs why Google wants you to optimize for their experience.
If youÔÇÖve done the extra work to rank well in search engines, you now owe it to yourself to optimize for conversion as well ÔÇö because thatÔÇÖs what you need to do for any kind of traffic, right?
Which brings me to my real point here. Outside of purely technical issues due to legacy website problems, SEO is not separate from content marketing. ItÔÇÖs an integrated aspect of content marketing.
So, to go back to the original question posed in the headline: Can you really eliminate SEO from your life?
Yes and no.
You can certainly eliminate having a separate, siloed focus on SEO from your life. It doesnÔÇÖt work, and it wastes your time and effort.
Because once you stop viewing SEO as something separate from your content marketing, and start viewing SEO as an integrated set of activities that help you empathize with and better serve your ideal audience, you will find yourself in a much better position to achieve your content marketing goals.
And when you combine smart, integrated SEO with basic, proven conversion techniques  well  now you have the formula for a powerful, successful WordPress website.
Now itÔÇÖs time for this weekÔÇÖs hyper-specific call to action.
Call to action
For this weekÔÇÖs call to action, I want you to take a few minutes and gain a greater understanding for how people are currently finding your site in search engines.
So go into your analytics program and take a look at the keywords driving traffic to your site. Look at the top keywords, then dig into some of the medium- and long-tail keywords as well. And donÔÇÖt just look at the list of words, look at the landing pages people are ending up on when they search those terms. Are they landing pages you WANT people ending up on for those terms? And are those landing pages set up to convert? Check. Double check.
Are there terms you think, or you want, to be driving referrals to your site that arenÔÇÖt currently? Doing this can give you important insight into new pages you should create, or perhaps even assumptions on your part that are wrong.
The different types of insight that you can gain from an exercise like this are plentiful. So take 10-15 minutes, poke around, and see what you find out. I bet youÔÇÖll find it to be worth your time, as youÔÇÖll gain a better understanding of your current search visitors, as well as holes in how search engines see you that new content can help you plug up.
And please report back to me on Twitter. What did you learn by following through with this weekÔÇÖs hyper-specific Call to Action? I want to know!
Okay — coming next week, we move back to content. And I promise you next weekÔÇÖs episode will be the perfect next step after an episode like this weekÔÇÖs about SEO — because, as we discussed earlier in this episode, the best search rankings in the world wonÔÇÖt matter if your content doesnÔÇÖt engage visitors once they reach your site. So listen in next week to learn how to create content that deeply engages your audience.
Finally, before I go, here are two more quick calls to action for you to consider:
Subscribe to Sites Weekly
If you havenÔÇÖt yet, please take this opportunity to activate your free subscription to our curated weekly email newsletter, Sites Weekly.
Each week, I find four links about content, design, technology, and strategy that you donÔÇÖt want to miss, and then I send them out via email on Wednesday afternoon.
Reading this newsletter will help you make your website more powerful and successful. Go to studiopress.com/news and sign up in one step right there at the top of the page. ThatÔÇÖs studiopress.com/news.
Rate and Review Sites on Apple Podcasts
And finally, if you enjoy the Sites podcast, please subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts (formerly known as iTunes), and consider giving us a rating or a review over there as well.
One quick tip on that: to make the best use of your review, let me know something in particular you like about the show. That feedback is really important.
To find us in Apple Podcasts, search for StudioPress Sites and look for the striking purple logo that was designed by Rafal Tomal. Or you can also go to the URL sites.fm/apple and it will redirect you to our Apple Podcasts page.
And with that, we come to the close of another episode. Thank you for listening to this episode of Sites. I appreciate you being here.
Join me next time, and letÔÇÖs keep building powerful, successful WordPress websites together.
This episode of sites was brought to you by StudioPress Sites, which was awarded ÔÇ£Fastest WordPress HostingÔÇØ of 2017 in an independent speed testÔÇÅ. If you want to make WordPress fast, secure, and easy — and, I mean, why wouldnÔÇÖt you — visit studiopress.com/sites today and see which plan fits your needs. ThatÔÇÖs studiopress.com/sites.
This blog was originally posted on Studiopress.com This post is in no way associated with Kembel.ca. For more posts by this author, please click here.
