In her last piece, Jo took you on an adventure to create a keyword list.

Check if youβre on the page 1 of Google
Open up your keyword list, click +Add URL to check your rankings, provided youβre in position 1β10 of the search results.

Want to see if youβre in the top 50?
Heck yeah! Take that same list and paste them into a new campaign in Moz Pro.

If you already have a campaign running you can also transfer these straight over from Keyword Explorer. Just check the box next to the keywords you want to track, then choose a campaign from the drop down.

You know before (about 30 seconds ago), when we talked about manual searches returning personalized results? Checking rankings in Moz Pro avoids all that nonsense by anonymizing the data and, in my experience, provides the most accurate results, showing what the “most” users see. Pretty snazzy, right?
A new campaign will build in about 30 minutes, which is just enough time to catch up on βStranger Thingsβ and reminisce about Winona Ryder circa 1990β¦
On the other hand, adding to an existing campaign will be a bit longer. Youβll see data as soon as your campaign updates next. So you can binge watch the entire 4 series, because why not, right?
…and weβre back! Check out where youβre ranking for your target keywords, which URL is ranking, and over time, whether youβve moved up or down.

We also pull in search volume from Mozβs Keyword Explorer to give you an idea of demand. When looking at search volume, donβt forget that the higher the demand, the more competition youβll likely face. Donβt be disheartened by ranking well for keywords with lower search volume, especially if they convert better.
Tracking your rankings is crucial to understanding why youβre not performing as well as you expected. If youβre seeing a lot of down arrows, you need to investigate who is jumping ahead of you and why.
Dig into keywords with falling rankings
Letβs find some keywords that have that sad little down arrow, meaning weβve dropped down in rankings since our last update.

Here’s a little bundle of keywords that I can investigate. Iβll click on the keyword to open up the Analysis report and scroll down to “Your Performance.” Now we can see a historical graph of your rankings and track those other sites who want to push us to one side. And what do we have here?

Theyβve gone and nipped in front of us! This will not stand! Itβs likely that for some reason your competitor’s result has been sending stronger quality, authority and relevance signals to Google. When it comes to SEO you canβt stand still.
Toolkit:
Keyword Explorer Lists β Check your rankings on the fly
Moz Pro β Track your rankings (and your competitorsβ rankings) over time
Step 3: Optimize your content
There are 2 parts to this step,
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Get your basic on-page optimization in order.
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Check your content is tip-top quality
Don’t go changing (too often)
I donβt want to recommend you jumping in and making changes to content too often. Even Google needs time to register your updates. However, if your content is a bit dusty and youβre losing out to competitors, then itβs time to check that everything you think is in place is actually in place.
View your page like a bot
I like to think of this as a βbotβs-eye-view.β When a little bot comes along, it doesnβt go, βOooh, look at that lovely header image! Oooh, I love that font, the white space is really working for me! Oh, how the Internet has changed since my days as a junior bot trawling through gifs of dancing babies!” It reads the code and moves on. We can do this too, with a little bit of knowhow.
Using Firefox or Chrome, you can right-click and view the page source.

If youβre unfamiliar with reading code, itβll look pretty intimidating.
Weβre going to use CMD + F (or CRTL + F for Windows) to hunt for the bits and pieces weβre after.

Pro tip: If youβre seeing og:title, this is a Facebook tag.
Likewise, if youβre using the meta property=”og:description,” this is also a Facebook tag. These help format posts when the URL is shared on Facebook. Youβll want to make sure you also have Title and Description tags link these:
<title>The best title for this page</title>
<meta name=”description” content=”The best description for this page” />
Basic page optimization
This is relatively straightforward, because you control your pages. However, maybe for that very same reason, itβs still a bit of a stumbling block for beginners. If youβre confused and locked in a mind-melt of madness because you canβt figure out if you should use the primary keyword and/or the secondary keyword in the title tag, chill your boots.
Here is a brisk and fairly brief run-through on how to get into a productive page optimization mindset.
Title tag basics
This is the bit you click on in the SERPs. Title tags should be 50-60 characters of punchy goodness that is relevant to your content. Because itβs relevant to your content, it includes the words you want to rank for and accurately describes what youβre talking about. You better believe Google is paying attention to click signals, so draw that click with your awesome headline. Think about the titles you click on when youβre searching for lovely things. Do your own searches to see what title tags are out there; itβs not like theyβre hard to find, theyβre literally a click away.
Meta Description basics
This is the bit of text under the title tag in the SERPs. Meta descriptions should be about 155-160 characters of tender lovinβ poetry that talks to the user like theyβre a real human being, because they are, and so are you (unless youβre part of the cat colony I suspect controls large portions of the web). This is not a direct ranking factor, but it can heavily influence clicks. Clicks from humans. And what do clicks do? They signal to Google that youβre hot stuff!
On-page copy
Yep, youβre going to want to pop your keywords here, too. But really, letβs not get too hung up on this. If youβre writing something super-duper about your topic, this will flow naturally. Make it as long as it needs to be to make your point. Donβt rattle off the same words over and over; use language to the best of your ability to describe your topic. Remember all those clicks you worked so hard to get with your title and description tags? Well, if they all bounce back to search, you just know Google is paying attention to this. Your content has to be worth the click.
Go and look at what type of content is already ranking. This is not an exercise in scraping content, but a way to make sure that your content isnβt just as good, but much better.
This task can be done manually for a small site or for a few pages youβve cherry-picked, no problem.
Check your whole site regularly
Maybe you’ve been creating content like a content-creating super machine and you might have skipped a few description tags. Or maybe you copy and pasted a title tag or two. In this case, youβll want to check that itβs all hunky-dory on a larger scale and on a regular basis.
Weβre going back to our Moz Pro campaign to take the heavy lifting out of this job.
Head to the Rankings tab and hit that little “Optimize” button on the right.

Once you hit that little button, youβve set off a chain of events where our bot looks at the keyword youβre targeting, then has a good old dig-around on your page and gives you a score out of 100.

Weβre hoping for that wheel of destiny to roll around to 100.
If we make it part-way around, itβs time to look at the suggestions to see how you can improve your on-page optimization.

Focus on top-level pages, pages that convert, and high-authority pages first.
Toolkit:
Moz Pro Page Optimization β Check that your whole site is optimized correctly
Further reading:
8 Old School SEO Practices That Are No Longer Effective – Whiteboard Friday
Step 4: Become a keyword connoisseur
Itβs easy to become fixated on a keyword beyond what is reasonable or healthy. Are you carrying a torch for a golden keyword? Stalking it in the SERPs even though itβs completely entranced with the likes of Wikipedia, eBay, AdWords, and Image Packs?
Ranking in the high-click zone for your keywords is all about beating other sites. This special, golden ticket to traffic wonderland might be a good long term goal, but youβre not going to get to the top of the results in the near future.
On the other hand, maybe youβre afraid of competition, so you only target keywords with very low difficulty.
This can be a winning strategy if the keywords have strong intent and youβre targeting the long tail of search, but you donβt want to put in all that work creating content and find that no one is searching for it. No searches means no traffic, and no traffic means no humans to click a thing that makes a person somewhere in the world look at their analytics data and smile.
A little bit of competition is a good thing β it indicates a healthy, profitable industry.
So weβre looking for a sweet spot: keywords with some demand and less competition. Iβm going to break down what organic competition is, and how you know what level of keyword difficulty you can target.
What’s the meaning of this so-called ‘competition?’
If you want to rank organically, your competition is the other sites that are currently on the first page for the keywords. Itβs not the total number of sites that are using your keywords in their content, and itβs not the AdWords competition.
If someone on your team, or an agency or a client sends you competition data thatβs defined as low, medium, or high, this is very likely to be AdWords competition, and it relates to the cost-per-click.
Mozβs Keyword Difficulty score uses the top 10 organic results to calculate the Difficulty metric. Itβs a score out of 100, where a higher number means that the competition is strong, and it may take you longer to see results from your efforts. Every search you bash into Keyword Explorer shows you the Difficulty score from the Keyword Overview, and you can build these into lists so you can compare related keywords.

Benchmark your siteβs Difficulty rating
We know that Difficulty is out of 100, but a question we get all the time is: How do I know what level of Difficulty is too high?
Well, first off, testing is a sure way to find out. But if you want a little pointer before you head down that road, here’s how you can quickly benchmark your siteβs Difficulty rating.
Time for another consoling hug from Google Search Console. Grab the keywords that are already sending you traffic from Performance > Search Results and export the results to the format of your choosing.

Save these to a list in Keyword Explorer.

Hit “Save,” and now you have a benchmark to use when looking at other keywords you could potentially rank for.

When youβre looking at keywords to target in the future you’ll have a good idea whether itβs a short-term or long-term goal.
You can also capitalize on keywords youβre already getting traffic for by looking for opportunities in the SERP Features. Can you steal a Featured Snippet?
I also want to track these keywords over time to see if Iβm losing or gaining ground, so Iβll add them from my list straight to my Moz Pro campaign.

Next time my campaign updates, and forevermore into the future, Iβll be keeping the sharpest of eyes on these keywords.
Toolkit:
Google Search Console β Grab keywords already sending you traffic
Keyword Explorer β Find the real organic competition and benchmark Difficulty
Step 5: Build your siteβs authority
Now step 5 is a real doozy, and itβs a common stumbling block for new sites. Just like networking in the real world, online authority is built up over time by your connection to sites that search engines already trust.
I like to think of authority as the pixie dust from the J.M. Barrie novel Peter Pan. Itβs almost mentioned as an afterthought, but without it Wendy and the gang were just kids jumping up and down on their beds. Theyβre thinking happy thoughts. They might even get a bit of temporary lift, you know, just like when you might get a bit of traffic here and there β enough to keep you jumping. But there’s a very big difference between jumping up and down on a spring-loaded mattress and flying off to a world of perpetual youth.
Track your authority
To figure out how much dust you have in your tank, youβll need to take a look at the Moz metric Domain Authority. This is our best prediction of how well a site will rank for any given search. Itβs on a scale of 1β100, and higher DA means more authority.
You can get your paws on DA free through Moz’s Link Explorer, the MozBar (Moz’s free SEO toolbar), or in the SERP Analysis section of Keyword Explorer. I like to keep MozBar on DA mode so I can check this metric out as I scoot about the web.


To make this a whole lot easier, head to the Moz Pro “Links” tab. Here youβll find your historical link metrics, alongside those of your direct competitors.

Pixie dust, or website authority, gives you insight into what is powering your rankings, but everyone else’s as well. These metrics are relative with respect to the other sites similar to your own, including your competitors.
Gather a pocket full of pixie dust
The first thing we always recommend when people reach out to us to find out how they can improve their Domain Authority is to improve the overall SEO of their site. The good news for you is weβve already done that in steps 1-4 β highest of high fives to you!
The second thing you have to do is get backlinks. This is commonly known as link building. When I started doing SEO for an ecommerce site back about what feels like a thousand years ago now, I had no idea what I was doing; this term irked me, and still kind of does. It sounds like you need to build links yourself, right? Nope! Itβs like youβre playing Minecraft, but instead of building the structures, youβre actually trying to encourage other people to build them for you. In fact, youβre not allowed to build anything yourself, because that’s cheating. Game changer!
Donβt forget you donβt want just anyone building these structures. You need good people who themselves have authority; otherwise, your lovely gothic mansion might turn into a pile of rubble.
A lot of link building today is PR, content creation and outreach. Iβm not going to go into that in this post, but Iβll include some links in the toolkit below to help you in that department.
We’re going to look at what actions you can take to track and build your authority.
Check for any leaks
Thereβs no point grabbing up pixie dust if you have a whopping great hole in your pocket.
Find and plug any holes quick-smart. Link Explorer has a handy tab just for this job. From βLinksβ click on βTop Pagesβ and filter by Status Code.


Now here’s a list of broken pages , ordered by Page Authority that have inbound links. Pages on your site that are down arenβt passing value β not to mention itβs less than ideal user experience. You can prioritize the pages with the highest PA and amount of linking domains.
Internal links
I said before that you canβt build any of your links yourself. However, as with everything in SEO there’s a caveat: in this case, links from within your own site are not only key to your siteβs usability, but they also pass equity. Internal linking is primarily for user experience, but it also helps bots navigate your site for the purposes of lovely indexing.
Donβt stuff too many links on your page
Your homepage and other top pages will probably have the strongest authority, as other sites will link to your homepage in many cases.
You want that high-equity page to link out to other pages in a natural way that resembles a pyramid structure. Donβt forget the user in your rush to dish out equity; do visitors want to go from your homepage straight to some random deep page on your site? Does this help them on their journey?
On-Demand Crawl in Moz Pro help you find out if if you have too many on-page links.

You also shouldn’t go overboard with keyword-rich anchor text. Once again, think about the user, not about gaming search engines. Itβs unlikely to get your site penalised, but itβs typically ineffective and not a good use of your time.
If youβre scooping up big swaths of copy to get keyword-rich anchor text but it doesnβt really help the person reading the article, then maybe youβve got yourself an awkward link at your dinner party.
To follow or nofollow?
Links come in two flavors: follow and nofollow. Generally speaking, you do want your internal links to be βfollow.β Although there are good reasons to noFollow internal links depending on your site setup. Bots will literally follow links unless told not to on the journey of your choosing and equity will be passed on, which is just what you want.
You can use the MozBar to check your pages for follow and nofollow links.

On your own site nofollow links can be marked on a link-by-link basis, or a whole page on your site can be allocated as nofollow. Letβs find the “Meta-robots Nofollow” column in your crawl CSV and filter by TRUE to check if you intended to mark these pages as nofollow.

Toolkit:
MozBar β In-browser link analysis
Moz Pro Crawl Test β Find those nofollow pages and pages with too many links
Link Explorer β Explore backlink analysis
Further reading:
Mozβs guide to link building
Wrapping up
I hope this helps you begin to uncover why your content isnβt ranking for your target keywords, and sets the wheels in motion for climbing up the SERPs.
Try Moz Pro + KWE, free for 30 days
Donβt forget that Moz Pro is available free for the first 30 days and it includes Keyword Explorer, so you can start to understand your siteβs authority, check your on-page optimization, track your rankings over time, and figure out how to improve them.