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How to Make the Right Landing Page Rank: A Complete SEO Checklist

right landing page

landing page

Your page is ranking high in SERPs for a high-conversion target keyword. What can be better?

Wait a minute.

It’s the wrong page!

Yes, it is your page, but it isn’t even close to the ideal query match.

Even if you think that it is still great that your page ranks high, no matter what the content is, you can face the following consequences:

I think that such a situation is not what you need for your site and conversion pages. But it is not a catastrophe, you can totally deal with it.

I’ve made a checklist on emergency actions that will put everything in place. Compare the page that is ranking and the page that should rank, and optimize the latter for things it lacks.

 

 

Keyword Optimization

The page that is ranking instead of the intended one may have some elements that are better optimized for your target keywords.

So, you should optimize the page you need to rank to ensure its success in search listings. Here’s how.

1. Title Tag

Though now search engines are able to interpret a page’s topic without exact keywords in the HTML title tag, it is still of great importance, as it is seen in three places of high visibility:

If you have doubts that Google looks at title tags for its search listings, go to its own AdSense homepage, and look up the title in the source code. It is nicely optimized for a “make money online” long-tail keyword.

 

 

 

What to Do:

2. Meta Description

The importance of this tag is comparable to the title tag. The meta description shows up in:

The description gives users more details on your content and helps them determine whether it is relevant to their query. This preview influences the CTR.

What to Do:

3. Header Tags

HTML header tags (H1-H6) are used to structure content and show its hierarchy within the page.

The use of header tags help search engines understand content much better.

Plus, header tags provide a structure for a particular piece of content that allows visitors to consume the main points in a short period of time.

What to Do:

4. Content

It is as clear as day, content rules.

For search engines to find your content, they need some cues. Keywords are the best cues you can incorporate into your page.

What to Do:

5. Internal Search

When your website is over 20 pages, it can be a good idea to have a search box on your website.

A great thing about a search box is that you can integrate it with Google Analytics (here is how) and view the queries that visitors enter at your site.

This data will let you:

6. Open Graph

Open Graph tags make snippets out of your links when they are shared via social media. This way, you can control how your content is represented after sharing in Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, etc. It makes sense then to optimize OG tags to entice clicks and conversions.

What to Do:

Visual Optimization

Now we’ll look at the elements that make your results more attractive to users. It gives search engines a strong cue that this page is much more fitting for a particular query.

7. Schema Markup

Schema markup is a number of special vocabularies that you can use to mark your pages. As a result, your snippets will stand out in SERPs.

For example, your snippets may have additional elements like:

What to Do:

Google has two quite handy tools to help you with adding schema markup to your pages:

8. Multimedia

Images, diagrams, infographics, and video tutorials make content more engaging thus increasing the time spent on site.

What’s more, besides clear improvement of user experience, some of these elements can be optimized for target keywords.

What to Do:

9. Above-the-Fold Content

The term “above the fold” has come from newspaper editors and become an SEO concept after Google’s page layout update, when it started penalizing sites for lots of ads above the imaginary fold.

 

What to Do

Even if you get a fair amount of revenue from displaying ads on your website, you have to remember that too many ads can have a negative impact on search rankings.

Make sure to have enough content above the fold:

 

 

10. Social Share Buttons

The prominent placement of social share buttons will make sharing of your content even easier for your visitors.

What to Do:

Technical Optimization

In this section check those technical issues that can prevent your page from ranking.

11. Page Speed

Page speed has been used as a ranking signal for desktop for 8 years now, and it’s becoming a ranking factor for mobile starting this month.

Page speed has a great influence on user experience, revenue, and SEO.

Moreover, Google seems to have recently made a strategic decision to focus on speed, having introduced several breakthrough technologies and tools lately, so it’s high time paying attention to this aspect.

What to Do:

12. Mobile Friendliness

People are almost always on their smartphones. A huge number of queries are conducted on these devices.

What’s more, Google has already started migrating sites to mobile-first indexing. It means that Google will look first on your mobile version when crawling, indexing, and ranking your websites, not your desktop version.

What to Do:

Linking Optimization

In this section, I’d like to discuss how your links (backlinks, external links, and internal links) can influence rankings of your important pages.

13. Backlinks

Sometimes the wrong landing page will rank instead of your important page because it has higher authority backlinks, which is a strong relevancy signal to search engines.

What to Do:

14. Outbound Links

Outbound links to related external pages is a relevancy signal that helps search engines determine your page’s topic.

The wrong page that ranks may have more external links to high authority sites. Thus, search engines may think that this page is a hub of quality info and pull it to search listings.

What to Do:

15. Internal Links

When several pages target the same topic (or keyword), your internal links get less valuable, and search engines cannot always determine the most relevant page for this topic. It is one of the most obvious reasons for the wrong page to rank.

What to Do

De-optimization

It is a rare thing in an SEO world to give advice on how to degrade ranking signals of your own page. But when this page ranks instead of a more prominent one and does no good whatsoever, this is the only way to deal with this unpleasant situation.

Here is a short plan for this act of self-sabotage:

1. Take Away Targeted Keywords

In spite of the fact that search engines can now determine a topic without exact-match keywords, it still won’t hurt to remove references to targeted keywords. This also includes anchor text that are optimized for keywords.

2. Merge Similar Pages

In case you do not want to devalue a wrongly ranked page, because it still contains valuable information and inbound links, you can consider merging these pages to create a master page on this topic.

3. Canonicalize

If you have a couple of pages with almost identical content, use rel=canonical to inform search engines which page is more important. It will prevent you from having duplicate content and save you from keyword cannibalization.

4. Noindex

This measure can be taken for those pages that are still valuable for your visitors, but you do not need them to rank in search results.

For example, it is true for blog category pages. You do not want them to be indexed and potentially end up in search results instead of your much more useful pages.

Just use robots meta tag in your HTML to noindex such pages.

5. Delete

It sounds quite radical, but you have to do it if this page has:

Before deleting, make sure that this page does not have any important backlinks and internal links. Also, add a 301 redirect from this page to a similar one that you would like to be ranking.

I’m sure that by going through this list, you will find out the reason for the wrong page to rank instead of a more prominent one.

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