Are you wondering how Google sees your blog? Why SEO is so important for Google? Well, no one likes to blog to an empty room. Beyond your social media platforms and our amazing e-mail newsletters, your biggest source of readers will come from search engines, specifically Google. While, search engine optimization (SEO) is a huge topic one of the quickest things you can do to help Google offer your pages in search is to understand how Googlebots, Google’s little virtual minions, read your page.
All those painstakingly edited photos? Useless. Carefully considered font combinations? Google could care less. That expensive or hair pullingly coded JavaScript picture slider added to your blog? Googlebots don’t even register them as they wander past.
What Google Can See
Text and various HTML elements. That’s about it.
If you use Blogger, then your post interface does a good job of only giving you the important items for your blog: Title, Headings, Subheadings and Text. WordPress .com will throw a lot more options at you: Six headings, Categories, Asides, etc.
Self-hosted WordPress can quickly get crazy with a few plugins and you find yourself are dealing with meta-descriptions, keywords, post slugs and… oh my goodness… who has time to fill all that in?
Guess what? You don’t need to!
What Google Will Focus On
- Blog Title: Your blog needs a title (found under settings). The title shows in the tabs of a web browser, is picked up by RSS readers, and is used when people search for your blog by name.
- Post Titles: I like a catchy title, but honestly, Google wants a descriptive title. †Focus on using words that describe the post.
- Headings: If you are using WordPress the heading numbers correlate directly to HTML. Best way to think of them as headings and subheadings. They are meant to tell Google and human readers what is important and break up your post. They are NOT meant to be used to make text bigger or give emphasis to a word.
- Text: Specifically the first 150 or so words. (This is why you shouldn’t put your image first…read more on that here) That long preamble or conversation at the beginning of your post? Google does not care if you are friendly, it wants to delve into the meat of your article. Try to summarize your post or use keywords in those first few sentences. Google will often but not always, use them as the excerpt for the search.
- ALT text*: You know all those pretty pictures that Google cannot see? Well ALT text solves this for you. Write a short (sentence at most) description of what that image is all about. This helps index the picture in Google’s image search, allows Google to read the image, and gives users an idea of what your picture is if they cannot view the actual image.
*ALT text is the one thing Blogger is a pain about. You have to put the image in your post then click and add the alt text under properties. Wordpress allows you to add alt text when you upload the image.
In Conclusion
All the pretty layouts, images, and clever writing are what keeps readers coming back to your blog but it is important to give thought about how people can find you. Take a moment to look at your blog. Do your social media icons have alt text? What about your menu buttons? Are you using descriptive titles and making your first paragraph really count? These are your first steps in making each post Google-Friendly. Make changes and the next time Google sweeps your blog you will be ready for it to showcase your posts.
Brianna Willis works in information technology (IT) by day and craft blogging by late night. All other hours are devoted to her two small sons, family, and laundry. You can read more about her at, Craft Thyme, her blog that focuses on step by step seasonal craft tutorials and displays.
Excellent post! I am pinning this because I’m sure I’ll refer back to it over and over.
Great tips! Another “issue” with Blogger and alt text: Because of a known bug, only the first picture on your post can be edited with the pop-up bar– all others have to be edited through your HTML, including manually adding “alt” value.
That’s weird. I’m on blogger and I’ve always been able to edit all my pictures with the pop-up bar.
I checked blogger and couldn’t replicate the issue. However, adding an ‘alt’ tag in html is pretty easy. If someone needs to know how here is an easy link:
http://www.w3schools.com/tags/att_img_alt.asp
Thank you for these tips! Adding alt and titles to img tags has been something I just recently adopted a couple of days ago. Also, hyphenating my image file names, like “grace-not-perfection-01.jpg,” as I recently learned that there is a SEO preference for hyphens as opposed to underscores or no spaces at all.
I’m on Blogger, but I thankfully prefer writing all posts in code, so manually adding the alt property to the img tag is the way for me. I’m relatively new to reading and writing in code, but I’ve become comfortable to think in code sometimes. I looked at our walls the other day, I wondered if the background color was #cccccc. Haha. 🙂
Awesome Awesome post !very helpful and straight to the point! I’m pinning as well.Thank you!
Thanks for the tips! I had no idea about ALT text — I’m going to research more on that and start trying to use it. Thanks!
Thanks for including blogger in your post. As a longtime blogger user, I am getting a little weary of so many blogging posts out there that only address WordPress.
Thanks for these insightful and actionable points to get Google seeing my blog better.
It is the most clear and instructive details on how your blog looks as google overviews it.
I have been struggling with learning how my blog looks to google and have gotten some incredibly inaccurate and, frankly misleading information.
Thanks again for this post it gives me something concrete to work with.
Yvonne
I have used Blogger for more than 7 years and by that I mean actively because the first few years I rarely posted anything.
But as much as I loved Blogspot because it it now Blogger – I had to move to WordPress because I wanted to own my site and it gave me a bit more control.
Google owns Blogger but if you use Adwords with blogger it will tell you that you cannot use a redirect URL as a link. Which is one of the many reason I moved to from Blogger.
Great post, enjoyed it – off to read another of your interesting post.