Does Great Content = Great Rankings?

The age old question in the search engine optimization world is if you build wonderful, user focused content, will this lead to great search engine positioning and rankings? It’s repeated often enough that you’d think it is true. Great content will get linked to and that will increase the search rank and the cream [...]

The age old question in the search engine optimization world is if you build wonderful, user focused content, will this lead to great search engine positioning and rankings? It’s repeated often enough that you’d think it is true. Great content will get linked to and that will increase the search rank and the cream will rise to the top. Isn’t that how search engine marketing works? In theory, yes, that is how it is supposed to work. And it’s a nice theory. However, as is often the case, there is a gap between theory and practice. This gap is carefully pointed out by Rand Fishkin at SEOmoz.

I’m not so sure about Rand’s remark about 70%+, but I do agree that relevant inbound linking is very important. And I also agree that second-rate content can rank higher than great content merely because the second-rate content producer is better at marketing his content. It is, after all, a popularity contest. Rand hit that nail right square on the head!

When it comes to ensuring you get the rankings you deserve, you should of course strive to write the best content you can produce. But you should also be a promotion hound and get out there to build relationships with other companies, partners, etc. The bottom line is great content will help convert a sale, lead and should speak to your audience. But there is no substitute for good old fashioned marketing ability. To build your website and your company online as a leader in your industry, market or niche it is should be your main goal. If you and your in house team work hard building your reputation, over time you should be able to build your visitors as well. To build your website as an authority through relevant link you should be proactive with your marketing, social networking, blogging, commenting, online publicity, article marketing, industry associations, etc…all of it!

Great Content Equals Great Rankings, Right? Wrong.

Posted by randfish

I’ve been a big fan of Chris Dixon’s excellent blog for a while now, so you can imagine that I was really excited to see him writing about SEO in a post last week. Chris kindly called out SEOmoz, which humbled me, but he also espoused some thinking in the comments that made me a bit concerned and was the catalyst for this post. Here’s how it went:

RAND: Chris – I think the biggest thing you’ve forgotten to mention is that 70%+ of the weighting/ranking used by all of the engines depends on links. If you’re not thinking about how your content and pages will incent users/bloggers/writers/media/other sites to link to your work, you’ll lose out to someone who does.

A while back I got riled up about the lack of SEO in startup marketing and wrote about it – http://j.mp/4q9zkh – might be relevant/useful, though I did write with a bit more anger than was likely deserved.

CHRIS: Rand – totally agree re links. But isn’t getting links primarily about creating great content?

Read the article you link to btw and am in complete agreement.

RAND: Tragically, at least in my experience, the answer is a resounding no. Great content is easily missed by the web’s link-heavy audience, while some pretty crummy content that’s been marketed well (or made the right connections or comes from the right sources) will tend to overperform.

The web’s link graph isn’t a meritocracy – like everything else in life, it’s a popularity contest. Those who find the best ways to distribute, promote and market their works to the audience most likely to link to it are going to succeed much more so than just the "great content" producers.

Just think of it like politics. The best, most rational, reasoned, intelligent arguments are the exception, not the rule. Instead, the conversation and media attention (and thus, public awareness) is focused on concepts that are easy to grasp, virally distributable (which often puts rumor and innuendo above fact) and fit a compelling narrative (rather than add complexity).

A post on this topic – http://j.mp/4tYThK

I would love to tell Chris that he’s right, that the better the content, the better, higher quality and greater quantity of links that content earns. But, perhaps sadly, that’s not the case. What those in the content world would call "better" does not always (nor even mostly) garner the links and rankings. Instead, those who have "better optimized" for attracting links tend to far outshine their peers with rankings and traffic.

This may seem like a tragedy, or even a travesty of the democratic structure the web is supposed to represent, but in fact, it’s the way all marketing has worked for generations. The "best" restaurants are often family-owned, hole-in-the-wall, never-marketed-themselves joints whose fabulous epicurean creations are a secret to all but the most diligent culinary Clouseaus. Meanwhile, the affront to humanity and cooking that is Olive Garden advertises relentlessly, conducts impeccable market research and appeals to the lowest common denominator in town after town to achieve geographic and market-penetration ubiquity (BTW – my wife is Italian and thus recoils at the very mention of this establishment and the tarnish it’s brought to her beloved countrymen’s kitchens).

Like many parts of life – it’s not about the quality, diligence or aptitude you bring to your field, but your ability to market it successfully. As SEOs, our responsibility is to help the best of the best become the most noticed, most beloved and most linked-to in their field. It’s a strange, almost paradoxical leap of logic, but one you internalize this principle, it gets easier to accept and to spread to your clients and managers.

p.s. I’m also a fan of Chris Dixon’s startup, Hunch – I’d urge you to check it out and try answering a few dozen questions. The results are quite fascinating.

Do you like this post? Yes No

Posted by randfish

I’ve been a big fan of Chris Dixon’s excellent blog for a while now, so you can imagine that I was really excited to see him writing about SEO in a post last week. Chris kindly called out SEOmoz, which humbled me, but he also espoused some thinking in the comments that made me a bit concerned and was the catalyst for this post. Here’s how it went:

RAND: Chris – I think the biggest thing you’ve forgotten to mention is that 70%+ of the weighting/ranking used by all of the engines depends on links. If you’re not thinking about how your content and pages will incent users/bloggers/writers/media/other sites to link to your work, you’ll lose out to someone who does.

A while back I got riled up about the lack of SEO in startup marketing and wrote about it – http://j.mp/4q9zkh – might be relevant/useful, though I did write with a bit more anger than was likely deserved.

CHRIS: Rand – totally agree re links. But isn’t getting links primarily about creating great content?

Read the article you link to btw and am in complete agreement.

RAND: Tragically, at least in my experience, the answer is a resounding no. Great content is easily missed by the web’s link-heavy audience, while some pretty crummy content that’s been marketed well (or made the right connections or comes from the right sources) will tend to overperform.

The web’s link graph isn’t a meritocracy – like everything else in life, it’s a popularity contest. Those who find the best ways to distribute, promote and market their works to the audience most likely to link to it are going to succeed much more so than just the "great content" producers.

Just think of it like politics. The best, most rational, reasoned, intelligent arguments are the exception, not the rule. Instead, the conversation and media attention (and thus, public awareness) is focused on concepts that are easy to grasp, virally distributable (which often puts rumor and innuendo above fact) and fit a compelling narrative (rather than add complexity).

A post on this topic – http://j.mp/4tYThK

I would love to tell Chris that he’s right, that the better the content, the better, higher quality and greater quantity of links that content earns. But, perhaps sadly, that’s not the case. What those in the content world would call "better" does not always (nor even mostly) garner the links and rankings. Instead, those who have "better optimized" for attracting links tend to far outshine their peers with rankings and traffic.

This may seem like a tragedy, or even a travesty of the democratic structure the web is supposed to represent, but in fact, it’s the way all marketing has worked for generations. The "best" restaurants are often family-owned, hole-in-the-wall, never-marketed-themselves joints whose fabulous epicurean creations are a secret to all but the most diligent culinary Clouseaus. Meanwhile, the affront to humanity and cooking that is Olive Garden advertises relentlessly, conducts impeccable market research and appeals to the lowest common denominator in town after town to achieve geographic and market-penetration ubiquity (BTW – my wife is Italian and thus recoils at the very mention of this establishment and the tarnish it’s brought to her beloved countrymen’s kitchens).

Like many parts of life – it’s not about the quality, diligence or aptitude you bring to your field, but your ability to market it successfully. As SEOs, our responsibility is to help the best of the best become the most noticed, most beloved and most linked-to in their field. It’s a strange, almost paradoxical leap of logic, but one you internalize this principle, it gets easier to accept and to spread to your clients and managers.

p.s. I’m also a fan of Chris Dixon’s startup, Hunch – I’d urge you to check it out and try answering a few dozen questions. The results are quite fascinating.

Do you like this post? Yes No

Seth Godin: Sliced Bread

Malcolm Gladwell: Outliers

Anthony Parinello: Your Price is Too High