SEO Is Not That Hard
Are you eager to boost your website's performance on search engines like Google but unsure where to start or what truly makes a difference in SEO?
Then "SEO Is Not That Hard" hosted by Edd Dawson, a seasoned expert with over 20 years of experience in building and successfully ranking websites, is for you.
Edd shares actionable tips, proven strategies, and valuable insights to help you improve your Google rankings and create better websites for your users.
Whether you're a beginner or a seasoned SEO professional, this podcast offers something for everyone. Join us as we simplify SEO and give you the knowledge and skills to achieve your online goals with confidence.
Brought to you by keywordspeopleuse.com
SEO Is Not That Hard
Tooltips
Could a simple tooltip be the secret ingredient to boosting your website’s SEO? Join me, Ed Dawson, as I explore how these often-overlooked elements can transform not just user experience but also your site's performance on search engines. With 20 years of SEO expertise under my belt and as the founder of the SEO Intelligence Platform keywordspeopleuse.com, I break down how tooltips can clarify complex terms, ease the cognitive load for your users, and even enhance accessibility—all while subtly playing a part in improving your site's search ranking metrics.
In this episode of "SEO is Not That Hard," we dive into the world of tooltips and their dual benefits. Not only do they make your website more user-friendly, but they also encourage longer user engagement and lower bounce rates—both crucial to SEO success. You'll learn how to harness the power of tooltips to keep visitors engaged longer, improving time on page and signaling to search engines that your content is valuable. Tune in to discover practical strategies for integrating tooltips into your web design and watch as these small but mighty elements contribute to a more robust SEO strategy.
SEO Is Not That Hard is hosted by Edd Dawson and brought to you by KeywordsPeopleUse.com
You can get your free copy of my 101 Quick SEO Tips at: https://seotips.edddawson.com/101-quick-seo-tips
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"Werq" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)
Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Hello and welcome to. Seo is not that hard. I'm your host, ed Dawson, the founder of the SEO intelligence platform, keywordfupoleasercom, where we help you discover the questions people ask online and learn how to optimize your content for traffic and authority. I've been in SEO and online marketing for over 20 years and I'm here to share the wealth of knowledge, hints and tips I've amassed over that time. Hello, welcome back to SEO is not that hard. It's me here, ed Dawson, hosting, as usual, and today I'm covering tool tips, and so this isn't tips for tools that I might suggest people use.
Speaker 1:This is actually about tool tips on web pages. So you know the little things. You normally have something like a question mark, something like that you can hover over, or it's next to something where you can get some additional information just by hovering over it. Tooltips, um. So this is something that's really okay. It's both usability and seo, but it's one that's really worth talking about. So, yeah, let's uh dive into it. So, first of all, let's define what a tooltip is. So, really, a tooltip is a brief, usually informative message. Hopefully, that appears when a user hovers over, focuses on or taps an element on a web page, so it's a way of providing additional context, information or clarification about something on your web page without cluttering up the interface. So tooltips are commonly used to explain icons, abbreviations, form fields, row headers, that kind of thing. They're designed to enhance the user's understanding and interaction with your web pages. So you might be thinking okay, tooltips improve user experience, but how does that relate to SEO? Well, there's a good question. But while they are primarily a usability feature, they can indirectly influence your site's seo performance by improving user engagement metrics, which we know is important now, and providing opportunities to include sort of relevant, topically relevant keywords and text on your page.
Speaker 1:So let's like have a look, first of all, while why tooltips are good for usability. So, first of all, they enhance your users understanding. So they're there to provide immediate contextual information without requiring users to navigate away from the page to try and find out what's going on. So, for example, if you have a complex term or an unfamiliar icon, a tooltip can offer the explanation on the page, ensuring users aren't confused or frustrated. Secondly, they reduce the cognitive load. So, by offering additional information only when needed, tooltips help keep your interface clean and uncluttered, so users can then focus on the primary content and access extra details that they need on demand, which makes for a smoother user experience rather than having to wade through loads of text, especially as they get used to using the page. They wouldn't need to have that reminder every time. It improves your form completion rates.
Speaker 1:So in forms, especially when you've got information that might not be completely obviously clear, where people have got to provide, a tool tip can give information on how to fill out specific fields correctly, which reduces errors. It means you're more likely to get successful submissions, particularly useful for complex technical input fields. Tooltips encourage user engagement, so interactive elements like these can make your website more engaging and users are more likely to interact with content that provides them with immediate feedback or different information in a user-friendly way as they go along. And finally, it's got accessibility benefits. So if you implement them correctly, then tooltips can improve the accessibility for users who rely on screen readers or keyboard navigation, meaning that you're going to ensure a broader audience can use your website. Okay, so that's the usability side of things, which is worth doing it just for that usability in itself, because it'll help, like I say, with a whole bunch of stuff, including conversion rates. Um, but when it comes to pure seo benefits, you know there are benefits that tooltips may have when it comes to seo, so let's run through them. So one we've got increased time on page, so providing this additional information encourage interaction. This tooltips can keep users engaged for longer and increase to old time signals to search engines that your content is valuable and relevant. Secondly, it reduces bounce rate. You know better user experience means a user is less likely to bounce, leave your site immediately. So a lower bounce rate can positively affect searches and rankings. We know that, as it indicates user satisfaction, you get an improved click-through rates. If tooltips are used in navigation menus or call-to-action buttons, they can guide users more effectively than just having a page without them, and this can lead to high click-through rates in important pages.
Speaker 1:Keywords Tooltips offer that opportunity to include relevant keywords phrases topically relevant that may not fit naturally into the main content of a page, and this can help with your semantic SEO. A search engine can then understand more about the context and the relevance of the content and the page because of this tooltip information. We've talked about the enhanced accessibility. Accessible websites often rank better because they're catered to a wider audience. So using tooltips correctly can improve your site's accessibility, which can indirectly boost your SEO and, yeah, and overall user behavior signals. Positive user interaction, such as hovering over elements engaging with tooltips, can contribute to favorable user behavior metrics. So these metrics can influence how search engines will perceive your site's quality.
Speaker 1:So, however, it's important to note that for tooltips to have these SEO benefits, they need to be implemented properly. Search engines primarily crawl static content, so if your tooltips are hidden behind JavaScript or aren't accessible in HTML, search engines may not index that content. The caveat is, yes, google does render pages. It does try to do its best with JavaScript, so they may still work if it's all done in JavaScript, but why not do it properly the first time around, where you know it's definitely going to work? Okay, so if I've got you sold on why you should be using tooltips, then here's some best practices for how to implement them in a way that will work best for usability and also for SEO. So, first of all, use semantic HTML and ARIA labels. So if you use HTML elements and ARIA I call them aria because it's actually here to say it stands for accessible, rich internet applications attributes just google a, r, I, a and you'll you'll learn all about it and this. This will ensure that screen readers. Search engines can both access the tooltip content. You'll find loads of examples online of how to do this.
Speaker 1:Secondly, keep your content relatively concise. Tooltips there should be valuable information that's directly related to the element that they're associated with. So, you know, keep that text concise so that users can quickly grasp and understand what you're trying to get through to them. Optimize your tooltip content with keywords. You know, make sure if you just, you know, get your keywords in there. Don't be spamming, but but get it in. Naturally it will help. This is going to add extra relevance to your SEO and provide that additional context to the search engines.
Speaker 1:Ensure mobile compatibility, especially on a lot of sites now get most of the traffic from mobile users. So you want to make sure that on touch devices it works, because on a touch device there's no hovering option. So make sure your toolt tips are accessible via taps so they don't interfere with the user's ability to interact with other elements. Use um, yeah, ara attributes like the um area, dash, label area, dash, described by or role equals tool tip to make tool tips accessible to those users with disabilities, because this not only broadens your audience but it also can possibly positively impact seo.
Speaker 1:Avoid overuse. Too many tool tips can overwhelm users, so and that can cause your interface. So use them just for the elements that genuinely need additional explanation and provide fallback content. In case javascript's fails or is disabled, ensure your tool tip content is still available. Um, you know, if that's something complex, then talk to a developer on how to do that. And, yeah, and style Be consistent with your style. So have a consistent design for tooltips on your site so once a user's discovered one tooltip, they'll be able to spot where all those are on your site. And finally, yeah, if you can monitor user interaction, so you can use analytics tools to track how users have interacted with tooltips. So if you find ones that just aren't needed, it means you could possibly remove them. Or if you find ones where people are having to, you know, continue to have to use them, maybe it means you've got some more education you need to do around, whatever that topic is Okay.
Speaker 1:So for a real world way that tooltips are used, we've actually just updated our um content optimization tool that integrates with google search console, because that has got a lot of very kind of well, technical terms in them, or well, technical terms that don't necessarily have um, an obvious explanation if you don't know what they are. So, for example, things, things like similarity is a column on our you know, for pages and queries and things like that, where we're looking at, you know, create these embeddings code some similarity. If you don't know what it means, you know you want to get the full explanation. So we've got tool tips for that, to explain what the similarity is. Also, what's the difference between page position and best query position on you know, some of these data tables we've got. So all these things now we've now got tooltips next to them so that people can understand them, Because we were finding, when we were doing usability testing, that people, although they appreciated that we've got all this data, they didn't necessarily know what each column meant and what it related to.
Speaker 1:So, with this now, tooltips are there so that if people want a reminder or want to learn what each one is, they're there. Um, it's not going to be something that makes a big difference to seo because you know, google doesn't crawl on those pages. This is, you know, this is, this is a web app where it's not publicly accessible. So, yeah, google's never going to see. It's not going to help us seo wise. Um, but there are other places on the site where we do have tool tips and that will be helping us with our seo is whether it's helping our usability.
Speaker 1:So's tooltips which you may not have ever considered before in terms of an SEO thing, but let's remember they enhance usability, help users with additional context without cluttering interface, which can improve user satisfaction, get conversion rates up. It has indirect SEO benefits. So, again, those user engagement metrics help, but obviously there's also things like the keyword and the context of the text in those tooltips that will help your SEO. It's really key to implement it properly. Use HTML, use that A-R-I-A method of getting it implemented and avoid the common pitfalls, as in don't hide critical information, don't neglect accessibility and don't overcomplicate your tooltips. So yeah, I hope you found that useful.
Speaker 1:Any questions, any thoughts, get in touch with me as usual. All the ways of doing that are in the show notes and until next time, just remember keep optimizing, stay curious and remember SEO is not that hard when you understand the basics. Thanks for listening. It means a lot to me. This is where I get to remind you where you can connect with me and my SEO tools and services. You can find links to all the links I mention here in the show notes. Just remember, with all these places where I use my name, that Ed is spelled with two Ds.
Speaker 1:You can find me on LinkedIn and Blue Sky. Just search for Ed Dawson on both. You can record a voice question to get answered on the podcast. The link is in the show notes. You can try our SEO intelligence platform, keywords People Use at keywordspeopleusecom, where we can help you discover the questions and keywords people are asking online. Post those questions and keywords into related groups so you know what content you need to build topical authority and finally, connect your Google Search Console account for your sites so we can crawl and understand your actual content, find what keywords you rank for and then help you optimize and continually refine your content and targeted, personalized advice. Keep your traffic growing. If you're interested in learning more about me personally or looking for dedicated consulting advice, then visit wwweddawsoncom. Bye for now and see you in the next episode of seo. Is not that hard.