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SEO Website Review: Re-visited And Simplified

site inspection

This article will outline how to look at your own site and know what to optimize. It will help site owners look at their site and understand what on-page changes they could or should make (or ask to be made).

I get a lot of questions about key website elements that one needs to pay attention to. As a result I've written a number of posts about on-page SEO on my blog.

The truth is that there are tones of great article written on the topic and majority of them are true regardless the changes in Google algorithm. For example, there's a post on SEO site audit checklist by Mat Siltala. Let's take a look at the five categories of On-page SEO. Please note these are my way of structuring things and may not be consistent with everybody's.

Structural elements

Both search engines and users should be able to understand the structure of your website. The following elements will help in making the site be more understood.

Meta elements

Meta is data about data. Each page on your website will have this section at the top of the source code that will tell search robots about the page. The following elements are important:

Content elements

Again, the terminology may disagree with widely accepted terms but I refer to on-page content elements as "anything that a human eye can see".

Links

Links are like votes. The more votes your site gets the higher its authority is. There are two primary types of link we want to check: internal and external.

Internal links

Links leading from page to page on your website. Search engine bots use these links to travel from one page to another. Make sure the following link elements are in tact:

External links

These links lead to your site from external websites bringing search bots and people to your pages. Both quality (relevancy and authority of a linking site) and quantity is important.

Location SEO elements

With a huge importance of Local SEO these days, we want to make sure the site is relevant in local searches, especially if your site offers products or services locally. Make sure your pages have the following elements in tact.

At the end of the day, the goal of any search engine is to give the most relevant results for a given search query. So make sure your website answers positively to the following questions:

Great site audit resources

The five categories of website audit should get you understand the process better. These categories are major things your should look at when reviewing your website. However, if you want to see a more detailed review of SEO website audit, here's a great video at SEOmoz.

In addition, you may want to look at tools to check your site quickly. For example, WooRank and WebsiteGrader are the two at the tip of my tongue. Please note that these are automated review tools and a bit more human touch to site audit is required oftentimes. An SEO professional will be able to tell you about the relative importance of factors as well as make the decision on fixing things one way or another.

Finally, if you'd like to stay up to date with which ranking factors Google uses to rank your site, I suggest you check the 2011 study by SEOmoz. It's not a definitive answer to how Google ranks sites but a study that uses input from a lot of good people in the industry. And is definitely worth taking a look at.

SEO Checklists: