6. Optimize Your Header, Meta Title, & Meta Description
The first thing readers see when looking at Google’s search engine results pages is the page’s title (it may correspond to the headline of your copy, but not necessarily).
You want the title to be enticing and offer the reader information that they need — this can boost your organic click-through rate (CTR) and increase pageviews.
The title should help both people and search engines determine what your content is about and what information they will find on your page.
How you describe your content to users and search engines is significant. Here are the recommendations for meta titles, meta descriptions, and your H1.
Recommendations for your meta titles:
- It is unique and includes your target keyword.
- It is 55-60 characters long. Google truncates title tags that are longer than 55-60 characters, and they have a 600-pixel width limit (but this can sometimes vary depending on the device being used).
- Sends a message that accurately matches the content and search intent. If the content doesn’t live up to users’ expectations after clicking the title, they will just bounce off the page. This will indicate to Google that you are not providing relevant content to your users, which might, in turn, affects your rankings.
- Includes a Call-to-Action. A CTA is a crucial addition to your title or meta-description. CTAs should motivate users to go to the website.
Recommendations for your meta descriptions:
- Contains target keywords
- Calls-to-action and/or targets an emotion
- It consists of 140-160 characters (1-2 sentences). If it is too long, it won’t fit, Google will truncate it, and people will not understand what your site can provide
- It should be unique and describe a webpage. Make it meaningful — offer a compelling reason to visit the specific page. Google encourages including certain information like price, manufacturer, etc., scattered throughout a page
Recommendations for your H1 tags:
- It fits within the 600-pixel width. Within this width, readers can see the full title. Otherwise, Google truncates it
- May include numbers, for example, “10 Quick Ways to Create the Perfect Title”. Articles with list headlines get up to 2x more traffic and up to 2x more shares than other types
- May include bracketed clarifications like [interview], [video], [2021]. Articles with bracketed clarifications perform 38% better than those without clarifications, suggesting that readers like to have a full picture of what they will get when they click
- Includes actionable words like “learn,” “take,” “boost,” “enhance,” etc. This may help readers understand what they will gain from the page
- Motivates users to go to the website — emotional triggers may help get users’ attention and create interest
7. Create Organized, Easy-to-Read Content
Google’s Gary Illyes at Pubcon Austin 2020 said that flow and readability are essential for search engine rankings. So, make sure your text is readable. If the text’s vocabulary is over their head or the reading level is too advanced, you will lose your visitor.
Half of the US population reads below an 8th-grade reading level. It is not because they are incapable of reading more complex copy; they just choose not to (especially online). This means that your copy will not get shared, liked, or lead to conversions if it is too difficult for some audiences.
You have to know your audience. Professionals will not be okay with a 7-8th grade reading level if they are researching services. You need to earn their trust by sounding professional, so for a more educated and experienced audience, up to a 12th-grade reading level is fine.
Here are the keys to what makes readable copy:
- Good structure
Good structure guides both users and search engines through your content as smoothly as possible. Each new point should be reflected in H2, H3, and H4 headings. According to our research, 36% of articles with H2 and H3 tags have better performance in traffic, shares, and backlinks.
- Skimmable headlines that inform without reading
Readers often skim before they read. According to the study by Nielsen Norman Group, only 16% of people will read your copy word by word.
Make sure your headlines inform a reader of what they will gain by reading individual paragraphs or the page as a whole.
When you think about search intent and what answers people need, you can give those answers in your headlines and elaborate in the following paragraphs.
- Clear and informative paragraphs Just like headlines, readers like to skim through paragraphs to find the information they need quickly. Vast walls of text are daunting and challenging to scan.
Nielsen Norman Group’s Eye-Tracking Study revealed that users read in an F-shaped pattern:
Make sure the copy’s paragraphs are short and start with the key message. Clarity and concision are the keys to excellent readability and user experience — the more the white space, the better the user experience.
- Bullet points and numbered lists
Long paragraphs can be broken up with bullets or numbered lists and graphics that inform the user.
These techniques help you guide your reader through the copy without making them work too hard to find the information they need — they are also skimmable, which is a bonus.
- Short sentences
With shorter sentences, you are once again making the reader’s job easier and your message more digestible.
- Subtopics are covered within the copy
Keep in mind a few points from your previous research: target keywords, structure of the top-ranking pages, users’ queries, and questions.
They can be separated into paragraphs or bundled together but should be included in the article and placed in a logical order.
- Simple vocabulary
Make sure to limit the use of words that are too difficult to read. At the same time, you can educate your readers on your industry or brand terms, but you must explain what they mean and make the explanation as easy as possible.
If you want to check the readability score, Semrush’s SEO Writing Assistant extension can help. It automatically analyzes your target keywords and suggests the optimal readability level for your copy based on your top rivals.
With this tool, you will also:
- Find out which sentences are too long.
- Discover which parts of the copy may not be original.
- Ensure your text is perfectly structured for a target keyword and written in an SEO-friendly style.
- Make sure your content piece complies with your overall brand voice — casual, neutral, or formal.
8. Include Visuals
A picture is worth a thousand words. Use visuals throughout your page — videos, images, charts, infographics, etc. In 2019, 74% of marketers used visuals in more than 70% of their content — because it works.
Videos and informative images, charts, and infographics can increase readers’ time on page and trigger them to share the visual across social media accounts. This strategy could potentially increase the reach of your content, and the media, when appropriately optimized, could be used in Google SERPs.
And don’t forget about adding image alt tags (descriptions for images you use throughout your copy). With Google’s image search on the rise, you should tap into this trend by adding short yet clear descriptions for your visuals. You’ll find more information in our Image SEO and Alt Tags Guide.
9. Include CTAs (Calls-to-Action)
SEO copywriting has a clear purpose — to drive users further along the customer journey. That is where calls-to-action come in handy.
Remember us mentioning “search intent?” If users land on copy that was produced for informational intent, include a CTA that will direct them to another page that targets keywords with navigational intent, and so forth.
From a copywriting perspective, this will improve your copy’s conversion rate and the ROI of your content. From an SEO perspective, this may improve your page views, decrease bounce rate, and send positive engagement signals to Google.
Pro tip: Include a few CTAs throughout your copy as readers might not read the entire page. Add one CTA after a few opening paragraphs, another one somewhere in the middle of your page, and one more at the very end.
10. Good Internal & External Linking Structure
When you include a link from your copy to an internal or external page, you’re simply following Google’s philosophy that “there’s always more information out there.”
But why would you drive people off your page with internal and external links?
- By linking to external content, you can build trust around your copy. Any time you include some stats or want to support a claim you are making, linking to an authoritative source can support your point.
- By linking to internal content, you can guide users through their customer journey and point them towards pages that convert. You can also link to some other content that expands on the idea you are covering. This will show that you are a valuable source of quality content, resulting in the reader spending more time on your site.
Here’s more information about the importance of internal links and how to do it right. And here’s a bit on external links, too.
Pro tip: Ensure the external link opens up in a new window to avoid distractions from your copy.
Top SEO Copywriting Tools
Need help with your content creation? If you’d prefer to order SEO-optimized content, Semrush offers Content Marketplace. The Content Marketplace is a place where you can order your content written by an experienced copywriter.
However, if you’re keen on doing your SEO copywriting yourself, here are some tools we’d recommend taking a look at to help with all the above (and more!):
Other Helpful Writing and Editing Tools for Writers:
- Google Search Console and Google Analytics for analyzing your pages’ performance. See what has been working so far, what you might need to work on, and what can be improved based on user behavior on your pages.
- Google Trends to find out what topics are trending and for keyword research (it shows the search query’s volume and related keywords to look at).
- Grammarly will help you find all the issues wrong in your copy’s grammar and improve the clarity and engagement of your content.
- Hemingway App will help you improve your readability as it checks your copy for over-complicated sentences.
- AlsoAsked.com will show you questions that arise around your chosen topic.
- Typeform/ Google Forms can be used to create and run surveys to gather data.
- Short URL/ Bitly can be utilized to shorten your page’s URL, track link clicks, and the performance of social media sharing.
- Canva will help you create custom images, social shares, animations, and infographics for your website, articles, and social accounts.
- Unsplash/ Flickr/ Pixabay will help you find high-quality, royalty-free images.
- Google Docs and Google Sheets for enhancing team collaboration on the copy and helping with content calendar tracking.
Now that you have the tips and tools at your disposal, it’s time to get started. Good luck creating your SEO-optimized content.