The problem with this guy's strategy is that these changes didn't really help his customers. The website didn't provide value. That is, it didn't tell people about the best time to visit, how to survive your first camping trip, or what kinds of animals could be found in the area.
Blogging could have done all of this. It could have made the regular, frequent changes the website needed just by publishing one article per week. And it could have provided value to his customers by giving them answers to any questions they had.
This is the benefit of blogging, and hopefully, you have started doing it for your own company so you can both improve your search engine rank and establish your industry expertise. A blog can be an excellent lead-generation tool and bring in potential customers.
They could be looking for a simple answer to a question, they could be searching for a solution to a problem, or they could be buyers, and they're trying to decide which option is the best one. Think of all the reasons you do web searches. Chances are, when you find answers to your search questions, you found them on a blog page.
The History of Search Engine Optimization
Of course, blogging has its own SEO techniques that can help your website, and they can help your individual blog articles rank higher on Google, too.
First, we need to discuss what does not work. These are techniques that used to work, and some people will still tell you that you absolutely must do them. But they're wrong. These old techniques do not help your search engine optimization. In fact, some of them could cause you to lose ranking positions or even be de-indexed altogether.
Before 2012, these were the techniques you had to do if you wanted to rank well.
Pick one unique keyword or key phrase per article.
Use that keyword in the headline of the article, preferably near the front.
Use the keyword in the meta description and meta keyword tags.
Use the keyword in the first four words of the body copy.
Use the keyword 2% of the time in the article, or two times out of every 100 words. So you had to use it 12 times in a 600-word article.
Use the keyword in the alt tags of every photo.
Write new articles for every variation of the keyword. For example, you would have to write an article for "cloud provider in Israel" and "Israel cloud provider." And an article each for "best cloud provider in Israel" and "Israel's best cloud provider."
You also needed backlinks — links from another site to your website. And if possible, make sure they have keywords in them.
Don't Cheat on SEO. Google Can Tell.
Things are different these days. Google got tired of all the people cheating, so they changed many of the rules and stopped counting a lot of the things that people used to trick the system.
Things like "keyword stuffing," which means cramming as many keywords into a blog article as possible. You would see things like, "If you want free blogging tips, download this free blogging tips article for 30 free blogging tips." But the goal wasn't to get human readers, it was to trick Google's search engine bots, which really didn't care what the words said. They only wanted to see keywords and a lot of filler.
The cheaters would also publish blog articles with only 30 - 50 words in them — this was called "thin content" — and a link that said, "Click here to read more." If you were lucky, that link went right to the complete article. But more likely, it went to another page with the same 30 - 50 words and a link that went to another page, which went to another page, which went to another page. . .
Google stopped using all of these techniques to determine a page's Google rank. Now you could no longer cheat at SEO, and you had to be very good at blogging. And thousands and thousands of websites plummeted in their rankings, many of them even being de-listed and kicked off the search engine entirely.
It sent professional SEOs into a panic because all of their clients suddenly lost their high positions and lost money. A few content marketers actually improved their ranking because they hadn't been cheating in the first place. But the rest of them fought hard to recover from that day.
That doesn't mean the tactics listed above aren't important. They still are, but they don't actually improve your search rank anymore. It just means you won't get beat by someone who used a keyword 12 times in an article when you only used 11.
Google Has Gotten Smarter, Which Makes SEO Easier
Now, Google has gotten a lot smarter, which has made SEO for blogs much easier.
For one thing, Google understands language better and can tell when keywords are being used. So you no longer have to write articles for "cloud computing in Israel" and "Israel cloud computing." Just using those three words somewhere in an article is enough.
You also still need keywords, but only to help Google understand what your articles are about. It's more like telling a librarian where your book should be shelved, rather than trying to get it shoved up to the front of the library.
Finally, backlinks are important, but not backlinks from just anywhere. They have to be from websites related to the subject of your website. That is, our cloud computing website can't have a backlink from a men's fashion website because they're not related. But a link from a cybersecurity blog would be ideal.
So How Do You Do SEO for Blogs?
To start with, use WordPress for your blog and your website. WordPress is now a content management system, and it is used by at least 27% of all websites in the world. That makes it ideal for most company websites, especially if you're going to be sharing a lot of written content.
There are also hundreds of thousands of designers around the world, which means you can easily find someone to fix your problems and make changes without being tied to an expensive web designer who will overcharge for their services.
Second, WordPress gets a lot of its functionality from plugins. Rather than coding a particular function or feature into your blog, you can get a WordPress plugin for that.
A favorite SEO plugin is one called Yoast, which is made in The Netherlands. (I like it better than All-In-One SEO.) It will tell you how well you have optimized each of your blog articles and web pages. It can tell you whether you've used your keywords effectively and the right number of times. It looks at whether you have keywords in your photo alt tags. And whether your meta description is the right length.
There are other SEO plugins, but Yoast is widely used around the world and has been installed more than five million times.
The New Rules for SEO for Blogs