Is there a way to map your on-page SEO changes with the organic growth?
-
Hi Mozzers,
I was just wondering if there's a way we can map our on-page SEO changes with the increase/decrease in organic traffic. For instance, I introduced brand pages' link the product page breadcrumbs and suddenly organic traffic for my brand pages increase from X to 2X in 1 couple of weeks. Now, this can be because of this breadcrumb change purely or because of some algorithm update or may be, bots started finding the content interesting and hence, started ranking them up (in case the brand pages were launched recently).
So, you can't say which change should be mapped to what increase/decrease in organic traffic. Or, is there a way to map this?
-
Thank you so much Sir Alan. Really appreciate your reply
-
I'm only going to add to all of these great responses by saying this:
1. Even if you make a change today, it does NOT mean you will be able to know EXACTLY when that change is acknowledged by Google. This is especially true on larger sites. It can take days, weeks, even months for Google to properly recrawl the entire site (even when they crawl every day, some of those URIs were just crawled the day before or three days ago, while only a portion of today's crawl will be other, not as recently crawled URIs). And then it can take weeks for all of Google's algorithms to catch up. Along the way, those algorithms may even evaluate only a PARTIAL understanding of the change (while waiting for Googlebot to get to all the other pages).
2. One additional suggestion is to look at in-page analytics within Google Analytics, or a 3rd party click tracking tool to get a better idea of whether people are even clicking on a given link on-page. Just be careful in setting up 3rd party click tracking - do it poorly, and you can cause massive duplicate URL problems. And in-page analytics in GA often aggregates all clicks on all of the individual links on a single page where several point to one common destination URI.
-
Oh wow! Will connect with you on Twitter to understand about the same which can help me plan it better. Hope you won't mind sharing the way your architected your internal tracking tool
-
Yeah I am an Analytic Junkie and I have incorporated my own analytics I built that helps me compare with GA at the same time that helps me dive deeper into the numbers and gives me a more detailed overview of behavior on my pages as well as users.
It's cool
-
Hi Linda,
Yeah! High time to start exploring GA annotations. Needless to say, will definitely post here once I'll be able to find/build a good solution for the same
-
Hi Cesar Bielich,
Thank you so much for the well descriptive explanation, will start exploring GA annotations right away.
Yes, I can code and planning to work on internal analytics system to track these granular pieces but it'll take time to implement such powerful system when you've 10 million + pages and hence, its not a P0 right now. We have integrated GTM as well, and tracking some of these values to some extent. But, as you correctly mentioned that none of these things can be directly mapped to any increase/decrease in organic traffic, I should definitely think about prioritizing my project to understand the correlation between my changes and the organic traffic which can be an awesome asset to understand these things.
-
Hi Nitin,
We found that using Fruition (actually a penalty checker) was pretty useful as well. It overlays all Google updates and SERP changes on your Analytics data. And of course: use annotations in Analytics.
If you figure out a great way to do this, please let me know!
Kind regards,
Linda Hogenes
-
Hello Nitin,
Honestly I think there is no one solution fit for all in this situation. Let’s say you tweak your home page title and rankings get up by 2 positions this never means that this is a standard solution and things might not work the same way for other website.
Even if you test one thing at a time to see how your changes are impacting results, you cannot control the environment completely. Let’s say you fix all 404s on your website and panda roll out on similar dates so you cannot exactly say that if this change in result is because of fixing 404 pages or because of the panda update.
I think it’s very difficult to say exactly what is impacting how much on results but you can do some test and come to a point that few factors has a less weight as compare to others within the industry.
Just a thought!
-
Well there are a few factors you have to consider with this and unfortunately there is no definitive way to determine this with Google, but with patience, over time you can see the benefits from your changes and track them.
When it comes to algorithmic changes there is practically no way to monitor that. Google has told us time and time again that they make many changes constantly (almost daily and up to 500 to 600 changes a year) to their algorithm to make it smarter so you have to consider that. Tracking changes to on-page SEO with specific algorithmic changes will pretty much be impossible, BUT it's not impossible if you track it correctly. Remember that your users will give you all the information you need to determine if your changes are working, and the more your users are happy the more they will share and spread the news so that will eventually evolve into shares and backlinks.
Tracking on-page SEO changes to organic traffic
This one is simpler than you think as long as you know how to do it correctly. One of the best tools for this is Google Analytics. Here are a few things you can do.
- Google Analytics provides annotations for you to create markers when you make changes on your site. You can then track the changes you made with the annotation and see the difference in traffic.
- Track changes with "compare to" option when selecting dates that help you see the differences in traffic from the previous period. For instance if you made a change on November 1st. Use the compare tool and track the previous week of traffic to that date range and see if you can see an increase in organic traffic.
- You can "compare to" in the same way with more specific setting and see which pages on your site (or ones you made changes to) increased or decreased after you made your changes. Just run the "compare to" scenario the same in Google Analytics, but do it in Behavior > Site Content > All Pages and see which pages increased in traffic from your on-page changes.
When making these changes remember to use Google Analytics and track specific organic changes in traffic by going to Acquisition > All Traffic > Source/Medium and then click on your search engine of choice (I'm assuming Google of course). Or when tracking other changes use different dimensions and metrics to track the organic traffic.
Can you code?
Depending if you are using wordpress or built your site from scratch knowing how to include some code on your site to track your changes helps tremendously.
For instance you can add some code to help you determine how many users are clicking on your breadcrumbs links and see if that help creates more organic traffic. PHP is great for this. Instead of having the links on your breadcrumbs sending the user to the exact page, have it go to a script that logs that click in a database so that you can see how many users are clicking on your breadcrumbs links and which ones, then send them to the desired page. Over a few weeks you will see which clicks are the most effective.
If you need some help you can private message me here at Moz and I can show you what I mean. I have been a web developer for over 15 years and I am a Analytic junkie so I can show you some things
Hope that helps
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
When analysing my inbound anchor text am I using by page or site?
When checking to see my anchor text profile to make sure it's not too dense with the same phrases, should I be measuring against my whole site or page specific? eg if i have 100 links across my site and 20 are for the same phrase this is 20%, but if the same 20 phrases are to one page and that page has 40 links this is 55% Many thanks Ash
Reporting & Analytics | | AshShep10 -
Where have the 'most changed keyword rankings' gone from the weekly summary emails?
Since the change to Moz we have noticed that the weekly summary emails do not show the 'most changed keyword rankings' table. We found these extremely helpful and would be disappointed to see these go. Are these going to make a come back?
Reporting & Analytics | | RedAntSolutions2 -
Previously performing page no longer ranking
The best performing page on my website www.danielalexandra.com/personal-training/ has suddenly completely fallen off the google radar and all of my ranking results for keywords have dropped significantly as a result. My domain is only 4/5 months old but was already becoming relatively competitive and generating some interest until this? Any ideas as to why this may have happened?
Reporting & Analytics | | DAlondon0 -
404 errors on page urls that don't even exist
I am getting a lot of errors on pages with urls that aren't even legit. Like for example: /videos/support/index.asp No such path even exists like this on the site. I have a /videos and /support off root but no place on the site is there any reference or file at location /videos/support/index.asp so I get a lot of 404 duplicate page errors. This is just one example of several. How do I stop this?
Reporting & Analytics | | GKLWL0 -
Posting on blog comments with anchor text on high ranked pages effective?
So i've identified some blogs which have a fairly high ranking and lots of traffic. They also allow anchor text in the name field. Does it make sense for me to comment on these blogs, or does google treat these with less authority that true page links? Any advice is greatly appreciated! TIA
Reporting & Analytics | | symbolphoto0 -
URL-structure change - former long-tail traffic gone
Hey people, I'm sure many of you applied changes to the URL structure of a client's or your own website before. So did I for obvious reason: The structure before was like www.domain.com/brand_page/_22-key-word-translatedkeyword.php (ranked 20). This was changed to www.domain.com/key-word.html.
Reporting & Analytics | | dumperama
Edit: Also on-page it was optimized, but only taking out worthless links like "keyword-link to other page" and adding a relevant SEO text (also valuable for the user) Now, for the targeted short-tail keyword, the outcome was great - ranking increased by 17 landing the page on the first SERP. But: Before this page garnered a wide range of long-tail keyword traffic.To be exact: 2600 different keywords generated traffic for that page in a period of 1 month. Now the newly structured site (also on-page optimized) only receives traffic from around 100 keywords. You can imagine that the absolute amount of visits also dropped. So I'd like to know if you observed similar results. Another question that's coming up in this context: How regularly does Google refresh the keywords associated with a page? Like: Is this page really relevant for this one keyword we associated it with 5 years ago? Because it is clear, when I'm looking at the aforementioned 2600 KW in detail, most don't have anything to do with the site, i.e. are not mentioned at all. Still they generated valuable traffic though. All of this is really crucial to this project, because soon the whole website's supposed to be relaunched with optimized URL structure and of course everything else that's need SEO wise... I'd love to hear your experiences. Thanks!!0 -
Google URL Builder Extension showing up as indexed pages.
Hello, I was reviewing my PRO member campaign report. I see that I am getting warnings for too long of URLs. However, these URLs are my website URL with the Google URL builder tracking code that I set up for my marketing campaings. Why are these being indexed? For example: www.website.com/?utm_source=Oct+Newsletter&utm_medium=e.... Thank you, Kristen
Reporting & Analytics | | KLFeichtner0 -
Analytics bounce rate change
Hi mozzers, I have a little riddle. A few weeks ago the bounce rate on one of our website dropped 90% - from 45 % average to 5 % average. We haven't changed much in the code of the site, layout or anything else. The traffic is pretty stable too. Anyone can guess why? Or have experienced something similar? xOvrb.jpg
Reporting & Analytics | | ThomasHgenhaven0