Off-page SEO includes all SEO tactics that take place away from your own website.
If you want to rank your site on Google and increase your
brand's visibility and organic search traffic, you need to be looking beyond
your own site and this make off-page SEO one of the most important parts of a
successful strategy.
What is meant by off-page SEO?
Off-page SEO includes all SEO tactics that take place away from
your own website.
It is not only link building, but there are also far more to
off-page SEO strategies that you should be using in addition to basic SEO and
include tactics such as brand building, citation building, content marketing,
social media, and more all play an important part in an all-inclusive SEO
strategy.
Put simple, off-page SEO covers any tactics that you can use
that do not require making changes to your own website or published content and
signals to both search engines and users a sense of your site's authority and
are also used as key trust and relevance factors.
Think of it like this:
On-page SEO include everything on your website.
Off-page SEO is any other site or platform that you can use
to market your website and brand online.
Technical SEO is all technical underpinnings and anything
that affects the performance, visibility, or how search engines access your
site. This includes HTML code, URL structure, schema, page speed, site
structure, indexing and crawling and much more and is needed to rank on Google.
On-page SEO covers the tactics that you use on
your site that help search engines to better understand and rank your content.
From creating great content on your site, optimizing title tags, meta tags, and
H tags to internal linking, image optimization, and more — these all fall under
on-page SEO.
Off-page SEO includes those tactics that
relate to activities conducted away from your own website. Link building is
often considered to be the main off-page tactic, but this also includes tactics
such as content marketing, social media, appearing on podcasts, landing
reviews, building local citations, and more.
Technical SEO covers those things that
directly affect the indexing and crawling of your site by search engines. Some
argue that this falls under on-page SEO. However, it is also widely considered
a discipline in its own right: site speed optimization, structured data,
canonicalization, hreflang, and more all class as technical SEO.
Why You Need Off-Page SEO and why you will struggle to rank
for competitive search terms.
Think about off-page SEO as building your site's authority,
and without this, your site won't outrank those that already have higher
authority. And it is usually the case that content from higher authority
websites ranks higher than those with lower authority. It is all about
increasing your site's authority, something that often goes alongside building
a brand.
Links are by no means the only off-page signals that search
engine algorithm uses to rank a website, even though being perhaps the most
important and doesn't include link building as it is unlikely to drive the
needed results, based on the fact that links are one of Google's top three
ranking factors.
But to think you can only focus on link building is a
mistake. There are many other off-page SEO techniques and tactics that you
should be using — they will not only help you to drive success from SEO but
also help to build your brand.
13
Off-Page SEO Techniques That Work
Link Building
Brand Building
Content Marketing
PR
Local SEO (GMB and Citations)
Social Media
Forums
Influencer Marketing
Events
Guest Posting
Podcasts
Reviews
Content Syndication
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #1: Link Building
Link building should be the backbone of any off-page SEO
strategy, given the weight of links in Google's algorithm, but it is important
to understand how you should be approaching link building as an off-page
tactic.
One of the key goals of off-page SEO is to build your
business' authority. Links from authority websites help to position your own
site as an authority — they are a vote of trust from one site to another.
The #1 goal of link building should be to earn quality links
from authority sites. You should always focus on quality over quantity. It is
important to understand what the link gap between your own site and your
competitors looks like.
But there is a little more to link building as an off-page
tactic than simply targeting authority sites (note: it is not easy to get
authority sites to link to another, but with the right approach, it is
absolutely possible).
Here are the three primary factors you should be considering
with link building:
Authority
By now, hopefully, you already understand why the authority
of links is so important. You can find the authority of any website that you
are looking to earn a link from or to understand the authority of links that
currently point to your domain using our own proprietary metric — Authority
Score. But what exactly is AS, and what does it measure?
Unique
Domains
Another key metric of link building success is the number of
linking root domains that point to your site, even above the number of
backlinks. Studies have shown a clear correlation between the number of linking
domains and higher rankings. Domain diversity should be a key focus as part of
your strategy.
Topical
Relevance
You should always aim to land links from sites that
topically align with your own. As an example, if you run a travel site, you
should aim for the majority of the links that you earn to come from other
travel sites; bloggers, online publishers (such as Lonely Planet), tourism
boards, and the like. It makes sense.
Sites typically link to those that cover a similar topic,
not those that aren't related. That said, it is OK to have some links that come
from other topics if they are natural and make sense; just aim for the majority
to be closely topically aligned.
But what about specific tactics that you can use to build
and earn authority links?
Digital PR
Unlinked Brand Mentions
Resource Link Building
Newsjacking
That said, there are a lot of effective tactics you can use
to build great links and diversifying your link profile should also be a key
focus.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #2: Brand Building
It is now a well-known fact that Google rewards brands.
And brand building activities should form a key part of not
just your wider SEO and marketing strategy but also part of your approach to
off-page SEO. And once again, it all hooks back to build your online authority,
both for users and search engines.
But just how does brand building intersect with your SEO
strategy, and what are the metrics of success?
Brand Searches
Perhaps one of the strongest indicators that you are
building your brand is an increase in brand searches.
This could be searches for your brand name, products, or a
domain name.
You should also look at Google Trends to help track interest
in your brand.
Again, enter your brand name and see how interest has
changed over time; it is possible to look back as far as 2004.
Google trends chart on brand searches
There is another reason why it's so important to focus on
brand-building efforts, too, and that's brand SERPs.
What is brand SERPs? These are the search results that show
when someone searches your brand name.
As Jason Barnard writes...
"Search queries in the SERPs for your brand name are
vital touch-points for both people and machines and are therefore absolutely
essential to your business.
You should be tracking, evaluating, and improving them
consistently."
At first, you may consider these just to have a reputational
impact, but there is a strong SEO consideration, too. Barnard continues:
"The first pages of results for the search query
{Brand} indicate how well Google understands your brand, and the first 2-3
pages of results for the search query {Brand + review} indicate Google's
assessment of your credibility."— Jason Barnard
Brand-building efforts help Google to understand your
credibility, which is why it has become such an important off-page SEO tactic.
When you build a brand, you will also find that you naturally earn links and
mentions across the web, even without having to proactively work on these.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #3: Content Marketing
When we think of content marketing, it is all too easy to
think of it only as an on-page SEO tactic — that being the creation and
publishing of content that sits on your own website.
But, taking a holistic view, content marketing spans both
on-page and off-page tactics. Publishing great content on your own site is only
one part of content marketing; any content that you create and publish anywhere
on the web falls under content marketing.
If you go ahead and write a guest post, that is content
marketing. Publish an infographic that gets linked to from a top-tier
newspaper? That is content marketing.
The appeal of using content marketing as a tactic is that
the creation of great, engaging assets make it easier to focus on off-page
factors. And this, typically, comes from the promotion of the content that you
are creating — publishing great, engaging assets that others want to share and
link to.
Common content marketing tactics that work well to promote
to build off-page signals includes:
Blog posts
Infographics
Surveys, studies & research papers
Whitepapers & eBooks
Content marketing, as a tactic, is closely intertwined with
link building, social media, and PR, as well as also helping to build your
brand.
Quite simply, if you have a great piece of content, tell
people about it. You can use our Content Marketing Toolkit to help you not only
find popular topics that are gaining traction online but also find the most
relevant industry media to promote your content.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #4: PR
For a long time, PR and SEO were seen as two different
marketing disciplines, but in recent years, the lines have blurred, and the two
have come together.
Digital PR is now the link building tactic of choice for
many SEOs, given that it is the perfect way to earn authority links at scale.
You can use PR tactics to promote a remarkable story and corresponding linkable
assets, and it is possible to earn significant volumes of links as a result.
In fact, a recent study highlighted that the average
campaign earns links from between 10 and 24 unique linking domains.
PR contributes to off-page SEO signals in more ways than
simply helping to build links. A great PR campaign can also:
Increase brand awareness and resultant brand searches.
Puts your business in front of your target audience and gets
them talking about you.
Drives referral traffic.
Positions you as a thought leader in your industry and helps
to build trust signals.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #5: Local SEO (GMB & Citations)
While local SEO is a complete discipline of SEO, there are
certain elements that are key off-page SEO tactics — two are Google My Business
and citations.
Google My Business and Bing Places for Business
Google My Business and Bing Places for Business plays a
vital role in the online presence of pretty much any local business, and it is
easy to forget that optimizing your page and getting it to rank on the map pack
is actually off-page SEO.
Google My Business and Bing Places for Business isn't your
own website, and let's not forget that any efforts that focus on anything but
your own site counts as off-page.
It has recently been reported that 46% of all Google
searches are looking for local information and that 4 in 5 consumers use search
engines to find local information. It is a simple fact that if it is not your
business that is showing amongst local Google My Business and Bing Places for
Business results, it is one of your competitors.
Citations
A citation is a mention of your business online that
typically references not just your business name but also your NAP (name,
address, and phone number). Think of them as business listings.
If you are a local business looking to rank for
geographically targeted search terms both on the standard SERPs or as part of
the map pack, you simply cannot avoid the importance of citations, given that
they are considered to be one of the main off-page ranking factors.
But one of the keys to success with citations is
consistency.
Inconsistent citations prove a lack of coherency, and, for
that reason, it is important that you take the time to ensure that all your NAP
references match up.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #6: Social Media
It is 2020, and we live in a social-first world. In fact,
97% of digital consumers have used social media in the past month.
Social media plays a huge role in the way we, as consumers,
use the web and search for answers to our questions. Think about it this way,
social media platforms are used as a type of search engine (or answer engine as
we are often now referring to them as).
And let's clear one thing up — social shares aren't a direct
ranking factor.
Treat social media platforms as search engines and discovery
platforms and understand that your presence across social can help put you in
front of potential clients and customers who are looking for answers to their
questions or to engage with the right brands on the social networks that they
are using.
Social media is also often used as a customer service
platform.
A customer wants to speak with your brand to raise a query
or question? Most of your customers will reach out on social as the first port
of call.
It is important that you keep a strong presence, communicate
professionally, and treat social as another brand channel, one that both
existing and potential customers will discover at part of their sales journey.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #7: Forums
You may be surprised to see forums recommended as an
off-page SEO tactic. Why?
Because for years, SEOs spammed forums, comments, and other
UGC platforms to build links (as a way to build not very good links).
For this reason, the attention for many shifted away from
forums completely. But let's look back at one thing again, off-page SEO is about
so much more than just links.
When used as part of a wider strategy, forums can add real
value to your marketing mix. Rather than using forums (including both niche
forums that are specific to your vertical and larger platforms like Quora and
Reddit) to build links, go in with a different mindset.
Think of using forums to get directly involved in
conversations that relate to your ability, to position yourself as an expert,
and quickly rise to be seen as a specialist or expert.
Very few other platforms give you the opportunity to have
open discussions with potential customers who are already asking questions
about what you have to offer, and this is a fantastic way to begin building
relationships and trust.
With a bit of effort and commitment, you can relatively
easily build up a strong community and level of trust from audiences on forums.
Reddit and Quora are key large-scale platforms to use, but forums within your
niche can be just as effective.
Forums have declined in popularity since their heyday in the
2000s, so there is a surprisingly good chance your competitors won't be there,
making it much easier to cut through any noise.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #8: Influencer Marketing
Influencer marketing comes in several different forms in
2020. Rewind a few years, and the tactic was all about bloggers doing sponsored
posts. Today, it's all about Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok.
Don't start using influencer marketing as a way to build
links unless they are nofollowed; links within sponsored content violate
Google’s Webmaster Guidelines.
We see a common theme here — off-page SEO isn't just about
links.
Influencer marketing can be a phenomenal way to build your
brand, amplify your content, and reach new audiences.
We have already discussed how social networks are search
engines in their own right. While they are used in a different way than Google,
they are a form of a search engine where users are actively looking to find
content.
Influencers can go a long way to helping to ensure you are
present, as a business, on these platforms.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #9: Events
Events are making a comeback within marketing strategies
and, unbelievably; they can help to contribute to your off-page SEO strategy.
Now more than ever, the number of online events such as
webinars is significant, and they can go a long way to help build your brand.
Not only can they help to engage your audience, but you will
also receive help from a real buzz around your business, which will drive social
engagement and even links.
Host your event through Meetup.com? That is another search
engine for local niche meet up events.
Don't, by any means, discount using events from your
marketing strategy. Yes, they require effort to run properly, but that buzz can
be difficult to replicate in other ways. They are also a terrific way to also
pick up some fantastic PR coverage.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #10: Guest Posting
Guest posting, when done right, can contribute far more to
your marketing strategy that just being used to build links — it is all about
writing as a guest for someone else's website and supplying value and information
to their audience.
Link building strategy study
When executed properly, guest posting can help you put your
brand in front of a targeted audience, send targeted traffic, and help to
position you as experts in your field.
And the reality is that links shouldn't be the only reason
why you guest post; they should just be an added benefit if they happen.
Your primary goal of guest posting should be to reach a new
audience, get in front of a related site's traffic, and build your brand. When
you approach the tactic with this mindset, you will find that it can be highly
valuable.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #11: Podcasts
Podcasts are insanely popular right now, and they are
continuing to gain more listeners every month. In fact, 44% of Americans have
listened to podcasts at least once in their life, while 73 million Americans
listen to them monthly.
They are important, and if you are not using them as part of
your marketing strategy, you could be missing out on huge opportunities. Keep
in mind, podcasting is work; see this guide on what it entails.
Let's look at the benefits:
Most businesses still aren’t using podcasts as part of their
strategy, and this means that it is a great way to gain a competitive
advantage.
They are a terrific way to reach new audiences, share your
expertise, and to gain visibility on search engines that aren’t Google.
Apple's Podcasts is still a search engine — one that lets
you find relevant podcasts with keywords.
Google Podcasts is another, as is Listen Notes.
Example of listen notes as a search engine
The businesses that recognize that SEO should cover more
search engines than just Google are ultimately those who succeed in building a brand
and finding ways to target their potential audience whichever platform they
choose to use.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #12: Reviews
Your online reputation has never been so important.
Did you know that 93% of people say online reviews affect
their buying decisions? Reviews are important and a massively underrated
off-page SEO tactic, and online reputation management is something that no
business can ignore.
As TrustPilot says, “Perhaps the most underrated benefit of
collecting reviews is that, when implemented properly, reviews can help Google
better understand your site. The common understanding is that Google uses them
to derive brand signals, which can boost your site’s domain authority and
eventually your position in search.”
Once again, we are back to talking about brand signals.
Off-page SEO, when stripped back to basics, all comes back to building your
brand and creating signals that portray you as one that deserves to rank at the
top of the SERPs.
A business that has collected great reviews on third-party
platforms is positioning itself as a brand. Great reviews help to increase
conversions and, once again, trust.
Off-Page
SEO Tactic #13: Content Syndication
Sometimes, a publication will look to syndicate content from
other sources to supplement their own original articles. They do this because
it is easier than creating fresh content all the time.
You often find that content is syndicated across sites that
form part of a network owned by a TV or radio group. But publishers are
starting to also use this to increase the content that goes live on their site
every day.
Yahoo! is perhaps one of the biggest platforms that commonly
syndicate content from other sources.
You might also have considered syndicating your own content
to other publications to increase your reach and readership.
But how does this sit as an off-page SEO tactic?
Let's take a look at what Google says...
Syndicate carefully: If you syndicate your content on other
sites, Google will always show the version we think is most proper for users in
each given search, which may or may not be the version you'd prefer. However,
it is helpful to ensure that each site on which your content is syndicated
includes a link back to your original article. You can also ask those who use
your syndicated material to use the noindex meta tag to prevent search engines
from indexing their version of the content.
Syndicated content often isn't indexed by Google, for
obvious reasons that relate to it being a duplicate of the original, but that
doesn't mean to say it should always be avoided.
Content syndication can help amplify your content, and more
eyeballs on your published work can positively affect brand signals, even when
this results in URLs that canonicalize to the original; something that has been
discussed in detail here.
Make
Sure Your Off-Page SEO Is in Order
You can't ignore the importance of off-page SEO, but it is
important to recognize that it is about so much more than link building.
SEO success comes from building a brand, and off-page SEO
has shifted from a core focus on driving signals that affect ranking factors to
including a focus on optimizing, creating content, and ranking on other search
engines in their own right aside from Google.
You need to be using off-page SEO as part of your wider
digital strategy, and those brands who do enjoy solid growth in an
ever-competitive marketplace.
Think brand-first, and you will go into off-page SEO with
the right mindset to achieve the results that will truly make a real difference
upon your brand's online presence.
Written by Erika Varagouli semrush.com