how-usability-experience-and-content-affect-search-engine-rankings
The search engines constantly strive to improve their
performance by providing the best possible results. While "best" is
subjective, the engines have a very good idea of the kinds of pages and
sites that satisfy their searchers. Generally, these sites have several
traits in common:
- Easy to use, navigate, and understand
- Provide direct, actionable information relevant to the query
- Professionally designed and accessible to modern browsers
- Deliver high quality, legitimate, credible content
Despite amazing technological advances, search engines can't yet
understand text, view images, or watch video the same way a human can.
In order to decipher and rank content they rely on meta information (not
necessarily meta tags) about how people interact with sites and pages,
and this gives them insight into the quality of the pages themselves.
The Impact of Usability and User Experience
On search engine rankings
There are a limited number of variables that search engines can take
into account directly, including keywords, links, and site structure.
However, through linking patterns, user engagement metrics, and machine
learning, the engines make a considerable number of intuitions about a
given site. Usability and user experience are second order influences on
search engine ranking success. They provide an indirect but measurable
benefit to a site's external popularity, which the engines can then
interpret as a signal of higher quality. This is called the "no one likes to link to a crummy site" phenomenon.
Crafting a thoughtful, empathetic user experience helps ensure that
visitors to your site perceive it positively, encouraging sharing,
bookmarking, return visits, and inbound links—all signals that trickle
down to the search engines and contribute to high rankings.
Signals of Quality Content
1. Engagement Metrics
When a search engine delivers a page of results to you, it can
measure the success of the rankings by observing how you engage with
those results. If you click the first link, then immediately hit the
back button to try the second link, this indicates that you were not
satisfied with the first result. Search engines seek the "long click" –
where users click a result without immediately returning to the search
page to try again. Taken in aggregate over millions and millions of
queries each day, the engines build up a good pool of data to judge the
quality of their results.
2. Machine Learning
In 2011 Google introduced the Panda update
to its ranking algorithm, significantly changing the way it judged
websites for quality. Google started by using human evaluators to
manually rate thousands of sites, searching for low quality content.
Google then incorporated machine learning to mimic the human
evaluators. Once its computers could accurately predict what the humans
would judge a low quality site, the algorithm was introduced across
millions of sites spanning the Internet. The end result was a seismic
shift that rearranged over 20% of all of Google's search results. For
more on the Panda update, some good resources can be found here and here.
3. Linking Patterns
The engines discovered early on that the link structure of the web
could serve as a proxy for votes and popularity; higher quality sites
and information earned more links than their less useful, lower quality
peers. Today, link analysis algorithms have advanced considerably, but
these principles hold true.
All of that positive attention and excitement around the content offered
by the new site translates into a machine-parseable (and
algorithmically-valuable) collection of links. The timing, source,
anchor text, and number of links to the new site are all factored into
its potential performance (i.e., ranking) for relevant queries at the
engines.
Now imagine that site wasn't so great—let's say it's just an ordinary site without anything unique or impressive.
Crafting Content
For search engine success
"Develop great content" may be the most oft-repeated suggestion in
the SEO world. Despite its clichéd status, though, this is sound advice.
Appealing, useful content is crucial to search engine optimization.
Every search performed at the engines comes with an intent—to find,
learn, solve, buy, fix, treat, or understand. Search engines place web
pages in their results in order to satisfy that intent in the best
possible way. Crafting fulfilling, thorough content that addresses
searchers' needs improved your chance to earn top rankings.
Search Intent Flavors
Search intent comes in a variety of flavors ...
Transactional Searches
Identifying a local business, making a purchase online, or completing a task.
Transactional searches don't necessarily involve a
credit card or wire transfer. Signing up for a free trial account at
Cook's Illustrated, creating a Gmail account, or finding the best local
Mexican cuisine (in Seattle it's Carta de Oaxaca) are all transactional
queries.
Navigational Searches
Visiting a pre-determined destination or sourcing a specific URL.
Navigational searches are performed with the intent
of surfing directly to a specific website. In some cases, the user may
not know the exact URL, and the search engine serves as the White Pages.
Informational Searches
Researching non-transactional information, getting quick answers, or ego-searching.
Informational searches involve a huge range of
queries from finding out the local weather to getting maps and
directions to finding out how long that trip to Mars really takes (about
eight months). The common thread here is that the searches are
primarily non-commercial and non-transaction-oriented in nature; the
information itself is the goal, and no interaction beyond clicking and
reading is required.
Fulfilling these intents is up to you. Creativity, high-quality writing,
use of examples, and inclusion of images and multimedia can all help in
crafting content that perfectly matches a searcher's goals. Your reward
is satisfied searchers who demonstrate their positive experience
through engagement with your site or with links to it.