Monday, 2 September 2019

Domain Authority is a Great Metric, but NOT my Focus!

Moz's Domain Authority (DA) has become the industry standard to measure the strength of a particular domain relative to ranking. I have seen a lot of clients and SEO experts way too keen on increasing the Domain Authority score of their sites. Some of the SEO services are sold with a promise of increasing the DA. There are several clients who demand DA to be tracked on a regular basis and ask for a justification if the Domain Authority drops for their website. Trust me DA doesn't work this way. It's a great metric that needs to be understood properly but it should never be the single focus of your overall SEO strategy.

Understanding DA according to Moz :-

    Domain Authority (DA) is a search engine ranking score developed by Moz that predicts how well a website will rank on search engine result pages (SERPs)

    Domain Authority is calculated by evaluating linking root domains, number of total links, MozRank, MozTrust, etc. — into a single DA score. This score can then be used when comparing websites or tracking the "ranking strength" of a website over time

    DA is a logarithmic measure between 0-100. The logarithmic nature means that it’s going to get harder to increase your DA as it increases; and that these increases will become exponentially harder as you move through the curve

Domain Authority is best used as a comparative metric rather than an absolute one.

Some inputs from Russ Jones, principal search scientist at Moz; that summarises the whole concept that I believe in: -

Domain Authority is meaningless when it isn’t compared to other sites, full stop. What matters isn’t whether your site drops or increases — it’s whether it drops or increases relative to your competitors.

Furthermore, Domain Authority is just one metric to illustrate a website’s search performance. Page Authority, Keyword Difficulty, Keyword Opportunity, Keyword Volume, Rankings, CTR, and local search best practices are slices of the same pie that marketers need to be monitoring and measuring against as well. Issues only arise when webmasters fixate on one metric, whether that is Domain Authority or anything else.

I found some expert opinions on DA that I believe in :- 



Why do I feel its illogical to solely depend on Domain Authority? :-

     Domain Authority (DA) is built by Moz, not by Google

    DA is calculated based on Moz’s own link index. According to studies, this link index is much smaller than the actual Google link index or even index of Ahref or Majestic. So even if Google has a concept like DA it’s value would be much different from Moz’s DA

    DA calculation is dynamic in nature and not real time. It changes only when Moz link index is refreshed

Why is it difficult to justify drop or increase in your site’s DA? :-

   Moz link index refresh must have included/not included your new links. Generally when your DA increases/drops, your competitor sites follow same trend (unless their links were included and yours weren’t)

    Highest authority sites could have earned massive links and up-scale DA 100 mark. So your DA can get stuck at a certain number because growing from there is difficult considering the up-scaling of DA graph in this scenario

     20 to 40% sites disappear every year from web, many of those could be your referring domains and also a part of Moz link index, resulting in a drop

My final take on tracking Domain Authority or Page Authority : -

     While DA is a good metric, relying solely on it isn’t a good idea

    DA can be used for reference purposes while we get a link from another domain or to check how our site is growing from the linking domains perspective compared to the competitor sites. But again, not to forget – it’s hard to influence DA or justify any drop/improvement in DA    

    Effectiveness of SEO or continuous improvement can’t be gauged by the progress of DA. One shouldn't be obsessed with DA or track it every month to gauge SEO progress. In most of the cases it has served as frustration for both clients and SEO experts.

   Even if Google has (or doesn't have) a similar concept in their ranking algorithms, there are definitely other areas/ranking factors that need more attention for organic traffic growth – technical hygiene, optimisation of site, more engaging content, weaving of the site, creating more sections that are highly searched, etc.

Saturday, 6 April 2019

SEO Podcast Episode 1 - Importance of Storytelling in SEO Meetings

Check out the first episode of SEO in Short's Podcast series. 

The first episode covers my short introduction followed by my inputs on how important is storytelling in the SEO meetings. You can also grab couple of important SEO Tips in this episode.





Listen to all the episodes on any of the following podcast listening platforms:-

Anchor

Apple Podcasts

Google Podcasts

Spotify

Breaker

Overcast

Pocket Casts

RadioPublic

Stitcher

- Tejas Thakkar

Sunday, 10 February 2019

Importance of Content Parity in Mobile-First Indexing - Video 3 Mobile First Indexing Series

Importance of Content Parity in Mobile-first Indexing - Video



What is the most important factor that you need to consider when it comes to Mobile-first indexing? It's content parity. Watch our video to understand why is it so.

Content would anyways match on a responsive website. But for websites with a separate mobile version, it is important to match content on both mobile and desktop version. This reduces chances of ranking drops once your website moves onto mobile first indexing. 

Watch SEO in Short Video Series to know more about Mobile-first indexinghow is it not connected to Mobile usability and what is the most important thing you need to concentrate on when it comes to Mobile-first indexing.

Recommended article - 
Clearing up some Confusion around Mobile-First Indexing

Tejas Thakkar

Is Mobile Usability connected to Mobile-First Indexing? Video 2 - Mobile First Indexing Series

Is Mobile Usability connected to Mobile-First Indexing?




There is absolutely no connection between mobile-first indexing and mobile usability. Google will try to check the content parity between mobile and desktop version of a website to move it onto mobile-first indexing. It won't check mobile usability of the website which relates to how easily a user can access the website on a mobile screen.

Watch SEO in Short Video Series to know more about Mobile-first indexinghow is it not connected to Mobile usability and what is the most important thing you need to concentrate on when it comes to Mobile-first indexing.

Recommended article - 
Clearing up some Confusion around Mobile-First Indexing

- Tejas Thakkar

What is Google's Mobile-First Indexing? Video 1 - Mobile First Indexing Series

What is Google's Mobile First Indexing - Video




Google's Mobile-first indexing means Google will index the content available on the mobile version of a website to rank it on Google desktop and mobile searches. This is different from Google's traditional approach of indexing and ranking a website based on the desktop version content.

Google has already moved a lot of website onto Mobile-first indexing.

Watch SEO in Short Video Series to know more about Mobile-first indexing, how is it not connected to Mobile usability and what is the most important thing you need to concentrate on when it comes to Mobile-first indexing.

Recommended article - 
Clearing up some Confusion around Mobile-First Indexing

Tejas Thakkar