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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 : Why you shouldn't chase keyword search volume
Edd Dawson challenges the common SEO approach of targeting high-volume keywords, arguing that website owners should focus on building topical authority by comprehensively answering questions instead. This best-of episode demonstrates why obsessing over search volume metrics can distract from creating truly useful content that naturally ranks for a variety of keywords.
• Search volume tools often show zero volume for specific questions people actually search for
• Websites should first and foremost be useful by answering people's real questions
• Building topical authority means covering a subject in depth through answering related questions
• When you answer questions thoroughly, you naturally rank for keywords you never specifically targeted
• Even successful websites started imperfectly—the key is to begin and improve over time
• Building a website is like fitness training—you must start using those content creation "muscles" to develop them
• Don't get paralyzed by over-planning or seeking perfection before publishing
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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 why you shouldn't worry about keyword search volume. This podcast is inspired by a conversation I had on the live chat of KeywordsPeopleUsecom with a new customer, and this customer was somebody who's starting out on their journey of building their own website and trying to build their own business, and they're starting out looking to come up with a keyword strategy, and their first question to me was do we provide information on keyword difficulty in search volume? This is quite a common question. We get a lot people want to know, for all the questions and all the keywords that we find in our tools, what's the search volume? Now, the straight answer is for most of these keywords and questions that we come up with all the search volume tools and all the search volume estimators will say that there is almost zero um volume for these keywords, which puts a lot of people off, a lot of people who have listened to other um gurus out there who say you know, you must target high volume keywords or you must find um high volume keywords with low competition which almost don't exist, because if there's a high volume, people will chase it. If these tools say it's high volume, people will chase it. So these tools everybody's running around chasing a small set of keywords which they think have got high volume and to me it's the wrong way of going about setting out your keyword strategy and what you're going to achieve with your website.
Speaker 1:Your website shouldn't just be about hitting high volume keywords. Your website should be, first and foremost, actually useful. How do you make a website useful for people? You have to make it answer people's questions, because when people search they're trying to answer a question. So I explain this concept to the customer that the idea is you answer all the questions around a topic and doing so you'll start to run for many more keywords than the original question, and that when all the questions that we surface for people are actually those that people actually use because we get them from google and other online sources. So the customer's question back to me was how would we know which ones to target then if we don't know how many people are searching for the question monthly? So that's a good question, reasonable question, um.
Speaker 1:So I explained back that the concept is to target your building topical authority and to do that you need to cover a subject in depth by answering as many questions as possible. Um, and again they they sort of challenged me back and said but if you have a new blog and want to spend your time targeting the low difficulty, high search keywords, what do you do? And I mean to this really, I had to answer this. There's no shortcut. The method that this person was looking at is a different one to building topical authority. So at this point the customer said to me, quite rightly have you got a blog or a site you've done yourself along the principles you're talking about? So I said, yeah, go and look at broadbandcouk. That was a site that I launched, built and sold, um, and that follows this exact same principle. And they went along, had luck, and they said oh, I see what you mean. It's a tiered, interlinked site. And I said exactly um, you know that's a way. We've built a site there that's built to build topical authority to answer people's questions. And in answering all those questions and linking the pages to each other in a sensible way that you know that matches the content and the intent of all the of all the content, then that means that we started to build topical authority.
Speaker 1:We ranked for all sorts of keywords, not just the questions we were answering. By answering the questions, you start to hit other keywords just by dint of answering those questions. You build a whole corpus of content that covers an area in such depth that it starts to pick up all sorts of keywords just naturally. And that's the best way of picking keywords up naturally, as you write about a subject and answer those questions and go in depth, you start to pick up those keywords in a way that isn't forced, that isn't just targeting them based on volume. You will start to pick up volume keywords just by accident. And that's the right way of doing it, because if you do it in a natural way it looks better, it's actually naturally organic and your, your site is just more understandable and and fits fits the mold neatly, rather than trying to sort of force in keywords just purely based on volume and ignoring low volume stuff because why? Even just because something's low volume doesn't mean it shouldn't be there, so to to ignore it, ignore low volume stuff, would be nuts.
Speaker 1:Now, after this, we went into more depth on the actual niche that this person's trying to get into. It's their area of expertise. They've actually got qualifications in this area, so they're a really perfect author to be doing this. But they were getting really overwhelmed about how to set a site up, how to um, you know how to get it so that what the content strategy was going to be, um, how to do the hierarchy on all these things. That are legitimate questions, but, um, I said, like, you've got to take a step back. Um, you can't do it all at once.
Speaker 1:The most important thing is to actually just get started, um, because while you haven't got a site and there's no content published, you're not getting anywhere, whereas if you just start okay, that beginning it might not be brilliant, but that's fine, because the only way you get better at something is by starting, carrying on and improving and anything that you do to start with that you're subsequently not happy with. You can just come back to edit, delete, update, whatever you need to do with it, but the key thing is to get going. So you might not have the perfect hierarchy to start with, you might not have the perfect content plan, you might not have everything in place that you want to, but the key thing is just to get started. For example, if you go back and look at archiveorg any big website or any successful website if you go back a few years and look what it was like when it first started, you will see there will be content gaps. You will see that it would not be perfect. In many cases it might be awful, but the fact is they got started and they improved over time. And that's what you've got to do with your sites. You've just got to get started.
Speaker 1:Just publish anything, because you've just got to start using those muscles that create and publish content and if you don't start using them, then you'll never improve. It's like expecting to go to the gym and know to be to be an amazing bodybuilder in day one. No one starts like that. Everybody goes into the gym in the first instance unfit. It takes time, it takes repetition, it takes dedication, it takes learning to get that improvement to get to where you want to be. It's the same thing with building websites you just have to get started. So pick your niche, pick your subject. Whether it's one you're passionate about, qualified in, you're just interested in whatever, I don't care why you pick it, but once you've picked it, just get there, start building. That's the only way you're ever going to learn. Don't get so bogged down in the analysis and the planning that you never actually start, because then you've got nowhere. The key thing is is to just get going and improve as you go on. So I'm going to leave the last words to the person who I had the chat with the other day and they said your advice that you can't cover it all, don't overthink or over plan, it just start has been valuable.
Speaker 1:Thank you, thanks for listening. I really appreciate it. Please subscribe, 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 for free at KeywordsPeopleUsecom If you want to get in touch or have any questions. I'd love to hear from you. I'm at Channel 5 on Twitter or you can email me at podcastkeywordspeopleusecom. Bye for now. See you in the next episode of SEO. It's Not that Hard.