SEO Content Optimization for How To Articles
Posted: Wed Jan 29, 2025 9:56 am
That said, if we want to talk about content optimization from an SEO perspective we can because this practice certainly helps the search engine to better scan our article and therefore offer it value.
SEO Content Optimization
#1 Article Title
The choice of the title of the article, which usually corresponds to the <h1> tag of the page (but be careful, there can be more than one <h1> tag but I don't want to open this debate!) must contain the main keyword (therefore turn leads into sales with overseas chinese in worldwide data theoretically the one with the highest search volume). My personal advice is to write a title that makes logical sense for the reader, in the sense that it must not be a title that is too SEO-optimized because it would create confusion for the final reader. So let's try to find a middle ground!
Example of overly optimized title: Chocolate Sacher Torte Recipe.
Example SEO and user-friendly title: Recipe for making a delicious Sacher Torte!
Do you understand the concept? Which of the two titles would you as a user prefer?
In this example we dispel the myth of the keyword that must necessarily be at the beginning of the title! Let's say that from an optimization perspective it is true, but then it would have a poor CTR and what I want is for the user to then enter my website.
#2 Paragraphs and content
A good tip I can give you is to divide the content into paragraphs because this helps the reading and scrolling of the text. The paragraph titles usually use the <h2> tag and contain the secondary or related keywords.
SEO Content Optimization
#1 Article Title
The choice of the title of the article, which usually corresponds to the <h1> tag of the page (but be careful, there can be more than one <h1> tag but I don't want to open this debate!) must contain the main keyword (therefore turn leads into sales with overseas chinese in worldwide data theoretically the one with the highest search volume). My personal advice is to write a title that makes logical sense for the reader, in the sense that it must not be a title that is too SEO-optimized because it would create confusion for the final reader. So let's try to find a middle ground!
Example of overly optimized title: Chocolate Sacher Torte Recipe.
Example SEO and user-friendly title: Recipe for making a delicious Sacher Torte!
Do you understand the concept? Which of the two titles would you as a user prefer?
In this example we dispel the myth of the keyword that must necessarily be at the beginning of the title! Let's say that from an optimization perspective it is true, but then it would have a poor CTR and what I want is for the user to then enter my website.
#2 Paragraphs and content
A good tip I can give you is to divide the content into paragraphs because this helps the reading and scrolling of the text. The paragraph titles usually use the <h2> tag and contain the secondary or related keywords.