For any small business looking to
get involved in online marketing, this is the age-old dilemma. User experience
and SEO should, ideally, work hand-in-hand, but that never seems to be the
case. Company owners and Webmasters have to make changes to their websites in
order to please the search engines, but this doesn’t always coincide with what
readers want to read. So why not just write for the readers? You should, but
how will they ever find you if you can’t make it to the top of search engines?
As time continues, this catch 22
only seems to get stronger and more annoying. Businesses have to ask the
inevitable question: How can I find that balance between SEO and user
experience?
Why SEO and User Experience Don’t
Always Work Together
It’s first important to understand
why the two have a hard time working together in the first place. There are a
few different reasons many Webmasters have found:
- Visuals. The Google algorithm bots cannot see visuals the way that humans can, and this poses a problem. Humans like to see graphics more than they like to see text, and many time graphics take some interpretation. This is something that a Google bot cannot do, and therefore websites are torn between creating an awesome graphic versus awesome keyword-rich text. For this reason, both are necessary to succeed in most cases.
- Choppy Text. Readers like to read choppy text online. In other words, they like to read text that is broken up into bullet points and subheadings so that they can skim across the page. This is fine for Google bots to understand, but Google bots need a lot of content to be able to really get a feel for the page and how the page should rank. With many choppy online texts, there isn’t as much content to work with (of course this doesn’t have to be true, but it’s something many writers need to learn, which can take quite a bit of time and training). In other words, writing for both is really a developed talent.
- Keywords. Google says that you can write naturally and your keyword should naturally appear, and while this might be true, we all know that a little bit of extra help can’t hurt. Webmasters and content writers are always going through and adding keywords into headings and titles to give it that extra push whether readers like it or not.
Still, don’t forget that SEO and user
experience CAN, for the most part, work together. It’s not easy, and there are
going to be these certain situations (discussed above) where you’re going to
have to lean one way or the other, but overall it’s not impossible.
How to Bridge the Gap Between SEO
and User Experience
When it comes time to think about
how to solve this age-old dilemma for your business website, I like to think of
three different situations:
The best solution: The best way to bridge the gap is to think about your
readers first and SEO second. This doesn’t mean that you’re ignoring one
completely, but you’re putting your readers first, which is the most important
thing. A few things to keep in mind:
-
You don’t want to have doorway pages, or pages just for search engines, so the
only thing you can do is create great content for every page. If that means a
lot of graphics, try to couple it with a lot of great content.
-
Teach your content writers how to be thorough without being overbearing
-
Do some keyword research so you know that what you’re writing about (for your
readers) is something that has a good chance of ranking on a SERP (usually
based on search volume and competition).
When SEO should come first: This is the real question that many Webmasters have to
ask. Is there ever a time when SEO should come before your readers? Not really.
Google hates this and readers hate this. Although doing so may put you to page
one, it isn’t going to mean much if the content isn’t engaging.