Organic linking is the development of hypertext links between web sites with or without an explicit agreement to exchange links. Organic links are more likely to appear in a context relevant to the subject of the target document, which makes them useful for search engines like Google search that rank pages according to their links.
In
my opinion, one of the best ways to measure to overall success of your
SEO campaign is to look at your organic SEO traffic. Rank just isn’t a
good SEO metric for a variety of reasons including the increased
personalization of search, the impact of social signals on the search
results, the effect of local SEO on search results and more. A site’s
rank changes too frequently to be a viable method of measuring your long
tern SEO success. Looking at your organic SEO traffic, however, can
give you a much better idea of what is going on.
How do you measure your organic SEO traffic that is a direct result of your SEO efforts?
1. Start with a traffic overview
Using
your analytics tool (I prefer Google Analytics because you may as well
get the data directly from the horse’s mouth), start with an overview of
all the traffic that has come to your site in a given period including
SEO traffic, PPC traffic, direct traffic, branded traffic and so forth.
This number is the total amount of visitors that have come to your site.
Google Analytics does a good job of breaking it down into traffic
sources so you can see exactly which sources are sending the most
visitors to your site.
2. Segment down to organic traffic
Now
the trick is to weed out all the non-organic SEO traffic, so the next
report you should pull should be strictly search traffic. It’s important
to make sure that you are only looking at non-paid traffic so you
aren’t lumping PPC visitors in with your SEO visitors.
3. Remove branded keywords
At
least in Google Analytics, when you zero in on the SEO traffic, the
report also pulls a list (up to 500) of the most used keywords to find
your website. You can export this data into an Excel spreadsheet and
organize it alphabetically by keyword. In order to determine your true
organic SEO traffic, it’s important to remove any and all branded
keywords from your list. While SEO can definitely help build your online
brand and introduce it to whole new audiences, pure SEO traffic comes
from non-branded keywords that drive visitors who have never heard
of/interacted with your site before over.
The
keywords and numbers you are left with are your organic SEO traffic
numbers! In order to determine if your SEO is working, you can compare
these keywords/numbers to the same time period in the previous year
before you launched your SEO campaign. In addition to sheer percentage
growth, it’s also worth comparing your keyword lists. What new keywords,
either ones directly targeted on the site or long-tail variations of
them, are popping up in the new data that weren’t there last year? Every
new keyword that drives visitors is a results of your SEO efforts.
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