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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
Best of : Site Architecture For Topical Authority
Site architecture stands as the foundation for building topical authority, with proper structure helping both users and search engines understand relationships between content pieces. Topical clusters serve as the strategic framework for organizing website content in a way that builds authority over time.
• Randomly posting content without strategic architecture makes it difficult for Google to understand your site
• Topical clusters focus on specific areas that can be broken down into related subtopics
• Pillar pages cover broad topics while cluster pages address specific subtopics
• Internal linking between pillar and cluster pages creates signals for Google about content relationships
• New sites should target long-tail keywords in cluster pages first to build authority
• Well-structured sites gain authority from the bottom up as cluster pages pass strength to pillar pages
• Architecture helps users navigate content and find relevant information more easily
Visit keywordspeopleuse.com – the solution to finding questions people ask online. Try it today for free and see why thousands use it daily. Get in touch at podcast@keywordspeople.com or find Edd on Twitter at Channel 5.
SEO Is Not That Hard is hosted by Edd Dawson and brought to you by KeywordsPeopleUse.com
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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/
Hi, ed Dawson here, and, as I'm a bit busy at the moment and need a break, welcome to another one of my best of SEO is not that hard podcasts. These are the episodes from the back catalog that I think have the greatest hits and ones that are still relevant and provide great value for you. So, without further ado, let's get into the episode. Hello and welcome to. Seo is not that hard. I'm your host, ed Dawson, the founder of KeywordsPeopleUsecom, the solution to finding the questions people ask online. In today's episode, I'm going to talk about site architecture for topical authority.
Speaker 1:The most common mistake people make when starting a site is to just start plowing away, churning out content like blog posts, without thinking about their site architecture. Imagine if you would like writing a book on a topic and just putting the content and chapters in any old order you fancy. It'd be really hard for people to read and understand how everything related to each other and how to understand what you were trying to get across. It'd be a mess, and so just randomly posting blog troll type content. It almost makes it impossible for Google to understand your site and how your content relates to each other. Now to solve this problem is that we need a architecture for our site that will help us build topical authority to make the site make sense. The content relate to each other. Your users find it easier to navigate around the site and find the content that they're interested in. That will answer their questions and also helps Google understand the site and how everything relates to each other, and it helps reinforce the content on related pages.
Speaker 1:Now the core piece that we'll use to do this is a thing called a topical cluster. If you're not familiar with what a topical cluster is, it is essentially an area of your site that's tightly focused around a particular core topic. These topical clusters will generally be something that's quite broad, that you can break down into multiple constituent parts which you can then cover in detail. So an example from my old site broadbandcouk of topical clusters would be home broadband is one topical cluster and that would cover everything about home broadband, and another topical cluster was mobile broadband, which covered everything about mobile broadband. So you can see how they're. While they're related to each other in the both types of broadband, they are actually very different in terms of how they work, the kind of deals available, all those kind of things. So they make sense into putting them into two different topical clusters.
Speaker 1:Now a topical cluster itself is made up of three core elements and that is a topical pillar page, topical cluster pages and internal links. So if we look at each in turn, so a topical pillar page is this core topical area for your website. As I've said, it'll be quite broad in what it covers and initially it's probably something that might feel out of reach for ranking. So, for example, with home broadband, yeah, that's be quite a difficult one for people to rank for straight away, but it is a core area of the site so we're going to have a pillar page on that core topic. It'll also generally be something that covers such a scope that you'd struggle to cover everything about it in one post. So, again, like one post that tried to cover everything possible at home broadband would be huge. So you see how this makes sense for it to be a topical pillar.
Speaker 1:The next constituent part is what's called a topical cluster page. Now a topical cluster page is there to cover a subtopic that is related to a topical pillar. A cluster page would usually cover the entire subtopic on a single page. So if we follow on from our home broadband pillar example, a cluster page for this pillar could include fastest home broadband, a cluster page on cheapest home broadband, a cluster page on broadband for students, a cluster page of broadband for homeworking, amongst others. There's loads of cluster pages you could put into this, but that's just four examples Now with each cluster page. Sometimes you'll find these cluster pages are actually the topic is too broad to cover in one article. So it's fine then to actually split that cluster page out into its own subtopics so you can treat that cluster page as its own pillar. So therefore you have pillar pages that have pillar pages that have cluster pages. So the example with home broadband, on broadbanduk, we actually have a second sub pillar for broadband providers, because there was dozens of broadband providers so we wanted to then group each of the providers around a provider broadband, home broadband provider cluster page.
Speaker 1:The third component are internal links. So we use internal links to provide Google with relevant signals between pages such as anchor text and hierarchical flow links to provide Google with relevant signals between pages such as anchor text and hierarchical flow. So all pillar pages will link to their cluster pages and all cluster pages will link back to their own pillar pages. Cluster pages can also link to each other where they're relevant to each other. So in the example we've used so far, we might link the broadband for students cluster page to the fastest home broadband page if we have a section in the students guide talking about the importance of getting fast broadband deals for students.
Speaker 1:Now this structure is really useful for just real people when they're on your website to find content, to find related content to each other, and it's also really useful for google because it helps google really understand how all your content fits together, how different sections of the site fit together and and the relevance between them based on that internal linking. Now, in terms of how it works with new sites particularly, is that okay if we started a site about broadband tomorrow, we're not going to rank for terms like broadband and home broadband. It's just too competitive. But the terms and the questions that you start to answer in the cluster pages further down the hierarchy, they're the ones where, if you do a good job of your content, that's where you can start picking up the long-tail keywords which you don't need as much authority in the first place to rank for, and they're the things that will start building your traffic and start building your rankings and as people discover your site and your content's good, they'll start linking to your content. Meanwhile, over time, you're adding to and improving your content and this helps you sort of raise you up in google and you will start to rank for more and more terms, naturally, and as your cluster pages start to get more authority, that then passes it on up to your pillar pages and they in turn pass up to your home page and eventually this is what brings your site from from being nowhere a brand new site to becoming a topical authority in your niche, and that's why this structure works so well and what's really key to the success of any new site.
Speaker 1:Thanks for for listening. I really appreciate it. Please subscribe and share. It really helps. Seo is not that hard is brought to you by keywordspeopleusecom. The solution to finding the questions people ask online. See why thousands of people use us every day. Try it today for free at keywordspeopleusecom If you want to get in touch. Have any questions. I'd love to hear from you. I'm at Channel 5 on Twitter. You can email me at podcast at keywordspeoplescom. Bye for now and see you in the next episode of SEO is not that hard.