Hello and welcome to the eCommerce Podcast with
Matt Edmundson:me, your host, Matt Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:This is a show all about helping you deliver eCommerce wow.
Matt Edmundson:And to help us do just that today, I'm chatting with Steven Schneider from Trio
Matt Edmundson:SEO about why, you should still have a blog on your eCommerce site and how to
Matt Edmundson:get content right on your product pages.
Matt Edmundson:We're getting into all of that kind of stuff.
Matt Edmundson:Oh yes.
Matt Edmundson:So you want to.
Matt Edmundson:Grab your notebooks, you're going to want to grab your pens, I think you're
Matt Edmundson:going to be taking a lot of notes from this episode, but of course, if
Matt Edmundson:you're listening to this in the car, or you're walking the dog around the
Matt Edmundson:park and you don't have said notebook and pen, we've got you covered.
Matt Edmundson:Just head over to ecommercepodcast.
Matt Edmundson:net, all of the notes, the links, the transcript, everything will be there.
Matt Edmundson:And of course, if you sign up to the newsletter, you'll Then it'll all
Matt Edmundson:come to your inbox automatically.
Matt Edmundson:You don't even have to go to the website.
Matt Edmundson:It just ends up in your inbox, which is a beautiful thing.
Matt Edmundson:So make sure you go ahead and do that.
Matt Edmundson:And of course, if you're new to the show this week, this is your
Matt Edmundson:first episode of the eCommerce podcast that you've listened to.
Matt Edmundson:It's great to have you with us.
Matt Edmundson:My name's Matt and I just love doing the whole podcast thing.
Matt Edmundson:It's just, it's such great fun.
Matt Edmundson:We get to chat to amazing people like Steven.
Matt Edmundson:We're gonna have a great conversation.
Matt Edmundson:So hopefully you enjoy it.
Matt Edmundson:And subscribe to the show, join in the community and all that sort of good
Matt Edmundson:stuff, but a very warm welcome to you.
Matt Edmundson:Now let's chat about Steven, the maestro of Trio SEO, where
Matt Edmundson:he transform, transforms?
Matt Edmundson:No, he transforms even, blogs into lead generating machines, previously
Matt Edmundson:ruling over a domain of 40 blogs and churning out 400 articles a
Matt Edmundson:month to hit seven figure Nirvana.
Matt Edmundson:I don't know.
Matt Edmundson:I love that.
Matt Edmundson:He now joins forces with Connor, Nathan, who has been on the show
Matt Edmundson:actually we'll get into that.
Matt Edmundson:And the trio SEO talents to make content your business's best friend.
Matt Edmundson:Oh yes.
Matt Edmundson:Together, they are turning the digital world into a customer catching carnival.
Matt Edmundson:That's a good alliteration.
Matt Edmundson:Steven, welcome to the show, man.
Matt Edmundson:Great to have you on.
Matt Edmundson:How are we doing?
Matt Edmundson:Thanks
Steven Schneider:Thanks, Matt.
Steven Schneider:That's quite the intro to have to carry, just carry my life in buckets
Steven Schneider:and just follow me around wherever I go.
Steven Schneider:That was the best way to start my morning.
Steven Schneider:If I can get that just as a automatic alarm clock, that's magnificent.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah just take the clip, just turn it into an alarm clock.
Matt Edmundson:And why not?
Matt Edmundson:And why not?
Matt Edmundson:It's funny how you said, this is great for you to start the
Matt Edmundson:morning and I'm ending my day.
Matt Edmundson:Such is the beauty of time zones and worldwide conversation.
Matt Edmundson:But we were talking before we went on air.
Matt Edmundson:You're from London.
Matt Edmundson:You're based, I don't know if you're from Seattle, but you're in Seattle, right?
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:Just about an hour north.
Steven Schneider:Born and raised.
Steven Schneider:Been here all my life.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic, which means you're on the other side of the world.
Matt Edmundson:Now, if you're regulars to the show will know that last year I took a trip
Matt Edmundson:to the US and I took a slight detour.
Matt Edmundson:I went over to SubSummit which I'm going to again this year, by
Matt Edmundson:the way, if you're going to be at SubSummit, anybody listening, come
Matt Edmundson:say how's it'd be great to see you.
Matt Edmundson:But yeah, I was, I took a sort of slight detour.
Matt Edmundson:I went to Oregon.
Matt Edmundson:To Astoria, Oregon.
Matt Edmundson:So the furthest I've ever been west in the United States the
Matt Edmundson:home of the Goonies which is just, you know what, it is famous.
Matt Edmundson:The only it's a beautiful part of the world.
Matt Edmundson:Claim to fame is the Goonies movie.
Matt Edmundson:And short circuit the film there.
Matt Edmundson:I think there's a few others that I can't remember the names of.
Matt Edmundson:Oh I think Arnold Schwartzenegger shot a movie there, but it is
Matt Edmundson:a beautiful part of the world.
Matt Edmundson:I can see why you would wanna live on that side of the of the Americas.
Steven Schneider:Yeah, no, it's a nice little oasis.
Steven Schneider:We only get two months of sunshine a year, but take what we can.
Matt Edmundson:Welcome to England.
Matt Edmundson:We don't even get two months.
Matt Edmundson:I'm not even sure,
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:Hard to complain when you're preaching the choir,
Matt Edmundson:yeah, it's just one of those, right?
Matt Edmundson:Oh boy, yeah, that was a little bit sun stunned.
Matt Edmundson:I'm looking out the window now.
Matt Edmundson:Don't know where it's gone now.
Matt Edmundson:Behind a cloud somewhere.
Matt Edmundson:So Trio SEO, working with Nathan, what's that
Steven Schneider:it's been great.
Steven Schneider:Yeah we met out of a really random spur of events, just connected through LinkedIn.
Steven Schneider:Small talk led to another as I connected with Connor Gillivan,
Steven Schneider:who's been a long time SEO.
Steven Schneider:And yeah, we just started talking about each other's backgrounds.
Steven Schneider:Obviously, I was aware of their free up success.
Steven Schneider:My background in blogging, which we dive into and all this sort of stuff
Steven Schneider:just came serendipitously to the perfect match and started discussing what would
Steven Schneider:it be like to create a blog writing agency, given all of our expertise and
Steven Schneider:just the kind of demand out there and this unmet match between people in the
Steven Schneider:eCommerce space, people in other spaces looking for SEO, but also not really
Steven Schneider:knowing how to, tread into SEO because it is this abyss of unknown territory
Steven Schneider:for people who think it's, Black magic.
Steven Schneider:Other people think it's out of reach and they think it's just
Steven Schneider:never going to happen for them.
Steven Schneider:So we're trying to take a really simple approach to delivering results
Steven Schneider:and just keeping that our core offer.
Steven Schneider:And it's been working really well.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:Now, Nathan Hirscher, dear listeners, you may or may not remember if you're a long
Matt Edmundson:time listener, I say long time listener, he was on a couple months ago, Nathan,
Matt Edmundson:and I'd not spoken to Nathan before, I think we'd connected either on Facebook
Matt Edmundson:something before he came on the show.
Matt Edmundson:And so as I always do before we get to record an episode, I do a little bit of
Matt Edmundson:stalking on our guests to find out some information, and I saw that he was friends
Matt Edmundson:with Jared Mitchell, who has also been on the eCommerce Podcast and someone
Matt Edmundson:who I've become great friends with.
Matt Edmundson:And so when Nathan came on, I'm like we're just going to We're
Matt Edmundson:going to get Jared on as well.
Matt Edmundson:It was the three of us just chatting.
Matt Edmundson:I totally sprung that on everybody.
Matt Edmundson:Which was quite good fun.
Matt Edmundson:The only time I've ever had a co host on, on the eCommerce Podcast.
Matt Edmundson:I'll remember that.
Matt Edmundson:And Nathan was a good sport.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it was good fun.
Matt Edmundson:So let's get into it then.
Matt Edmundson:You mentioned you've got a blog writing agency.
Matt Edmundson:Can I start off then with a slightly contentious question?
Matt Edmundson:Cause I know the answer, but surely blogs are dead, aren't they?
Steven Schneider:We would be out of business if that was the case.
Steven Schneider:So thankfully it's not.
Matt Edmundson:Yep.
Steven Schneider:Yeah, no blogging is far from dead.
Steven Schneider:I think everyone is up in arms with just how SEO is changing nowadays.
Steven Schneider:The most recent core algorithm update in March which was really
Steven Schneider:targeting, spammy AI content.
Steven Schneider:I think, without a doubt, we're going to see changes in the foreseeable
Steven Schneider:future when it comes to SEO and how content is created and published and
Steven Schneider:ranked, but blogs aren't going anywhere.
Matt Edmundson:yeah.
Matt Edmundson:It's interesting you mention, we'll get into blogs and obviously how
Matt Edmundson:we do blogs and how your tools and recommendations for that.
Matt Edmundson:But I was smiling because at two, what time is it now?
Matt Edmundson:It's 4 PM.
Matt Edmundson:So an hour and a half ago, I got an email from Neil Patel.
Matt Edmundson:It wasn't a direct email.
Matt Edmundson:I'm on Neil's email list, but apparently Neil and Jared Mitchell, who I
Matt Edmundson:sprung on Nathan, quite good mates.
Matt Edmundson:So maybe we'll get Neil on the show, but he sent an email going through
Matt Edmundson:saying Google's March 2024 core updates was a wake up call for many in SEO.
Matt Edmundson:Outdated practices and shortcuts don't work anymore.
Matt Edmundson:Join our webinar.
Matt Edmundson:To find out why and I thought this is an interesting statement.
Matt Edmundson:So what happened in March, 2024?
Matt Edmundson:You mentioned about how Google are now looking for spammy AI articles or they're
Matt Edmundson:penalizing you for that, but was that it?
Matt Edmundson:Or was there more to it?
Steven Schneider:that was pretty much the gist of it.
Steven Schneider:There's always going to be some minor, tweaks under the hood when it comes
Steven Schneider:to whatever they're changing, but there was a couple of big pillars
Steven Schneider:of what they were trying to shake out and AI content was definitely
Steven Schneider:at the forefront of those pillars.
Steven Schneider:I think that it's been a long time coming, early on, Google said that they even
Steven Schneider:had difficulty in trying to decipher AI versus non AI and human written content.
Steven Schneider:And even if you look at a lot of the tools available where you can go and
Steven Schneider:I can personally upload an article that I've handwritten myself and it
Steven Schneider:might come back as 99 percent AI.
Steven Schneider:And these tools nowadays are just not sophisticated enough
Steven Schneider:to decipher good from bad.
Steven Schneider:And a lot of people are saying do you think Google can really
Steven Schneider:decipher good as bad as well?
Steven Schneider:And so up until this point, it had been this gray area of if you post AI content,
Steven Schneider:be ready for any of the repercussions that might come down the road.
Steven Schneider:And in March 2024, those repercussions finally came to life.
Steven Schneider:And Google took their best stab at trying to pinpoint sites that, were
Steven Schneider:teetering that line or just flat out abusing it and publishing hundreds,
Steven Schneider:if not thousands of pieces of content and was pretty unrealistic in terms
Steven Schneider:of how content should be produced and just the guidelines around it.
Steven Schneider:And they were trying to abuse the system, of course.
Steven Schneider:However, double edged sword of that is that sites that are playing
Steven Schneider:by the rules are not creating AI
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:And are actually top tier sites also somewhat got penalized.
Steven Schneider:So of course, it's never going to be a perfect foot however you look at it, but
Steven Schneider:at the end of the day I think that what it shows is that, you can't really just
Steven Schneider:abuse AI and expect that content to rank.
Steven Schneider:It's going to be looked at differently as it should, people shouldn't be able
Steven Schneider:to post an article from chat GPT about how to cure cancer and expect that to
Steven Schneider:rank, there still have to be guidelines.
Steven Schneider:Given the niche, given the industry and how people are receiving that content.
Steven Schneider:Cause if you rank on Google, there's a lot of trust that
Steven Schneider:comes from being that top result.
Steven Schneider:So if you read that content, you have to assume that there's
Steven Schneider:some legitimacy behind it.
Steven Schneider:Yeah, it was a interesting world and SEO kind of landscape for the last month.
Matt Edmundson:I want to get into that, but before I do, let
Matt Edmundson:me jump forward slightly and then we'll come back if that's alright.
Matt Edmundson:Because we're talking about this topic of AI, and I know, myself included, I have
Matt Edmundson:used AI tools to help me generate copy.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Whether that's, with the podcast, like generating show notes, help
Matt Edmundson:me generate show notes, or whether it's things like I don't know,
Matt Edmundson:just a bit of copy for the website.
Matt Edmundson:I'm sure I'm not the only person that's done that.
Matt Edmundson:So are we safe?
Matt Edmundson:Because I've not done a thousand articles.
Matt Edmundson:I've just done a bit of AI here and there, or should I be in a cold sweat night right
Matt Edmundson:now, rewriting everything that I've done?
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:I would say everything in moderation, if you're changing the primary CTA on your
Steven Schneider:hero section of your homepage, You're not going to be slapped on the wrist for that.
Steven Schneider:But, if you're doing a 200 blog article update, and it's equivalent to maybe
Steven Schneider:100, 000 words of content, you should expect some sort of backlash from that
Steven Schneider:in the event of something happening.
Steven Schneider:I think that to the degree to which you are choosing to engage
Steven Schneider:is going to dictate the end result.
Steven Schneider:And I would say at the other side of that, your ability to take the original piece of
Steven Schneider:content from AI and edit, improve, match it to your brand tone, match it to your
Steven Schneider:formalities and take it from a, say maybe a six out of 10 and then modify it into
Steven Schneider:a 10 out of 10, which I would hope you do to put it on your site and have some.
Steven Schneider:All the other things and guidelines attached to it, that's not going
Steven Schneider:to be an original piece of content, quote unquote, at the end of the day.
Steven Schneider:So if you're strictly just taking it from chat to BT, pasting it onto your
Steven Schneider:site and letting that stand I would say, take it with a grain of salt, that bulk.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:No fair play.
Matt Edmundson:Let's get into it then.
Matt Edmundson:I Let's go back to the beginning.
Matt Edmundson:I mean you said that blogging is not dead So if I am an e commerce on why I'm an e
Matt Edmundson:commerce entrepreneur, we do have a blog so I've got I'm okay I feel like I'm in
Matt Edmundson:safe territory Steven if I'm honest with you, but if I wasn't I If I didn't have
Matt Edmundson:a blog on my established eCommerce site or if I was starting up a new eCommerce
Matt Edmundson:site, why should I think about blogs?
Matt Edmundson:Why should I have one?
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:So it's one of my favorite questions.
Steven Schneider:And I think the reason being is that websites and SEO, like I said, it's this
Steven Schneider:unknown, what is it, how does it work?
Steven Schneider:And so the best kind of description I like to tell people is that.
Steven Schneider:If you want your content or your site to rank organically, meaning there's
Steven Schneider:no paid ads on top of it, you're just popping up in the results, you have
Steven Schneider:to give Google or any other search engine a reason to recognize and
Steven Schneider:understand what your website is about.
Steven Schneider:So if you have, say, 10 product pages, an about page, a Contact
Steven Schneider:page, and a Home page that's pretty much the cap right there.
Steven Schneider:So Google or the search engine can only understand what you have to
Steven Schneider:offer customers based on that content.
Steven Schneider:And so if you have a blog and you have all of these different articles and
Steven Schneider:they're clustered together in terms of the topics and how they're over interwoven
Steven Schneider:and maybe one builds off of another.
Steven Schneider:If you picture an iceberg where you have all of this content below the water, so
Steven Schneider:to speak, of your website, and that's what kind of builds out your topical
Steven Schneider:authority and just helps Google and other people recognize, hey, you are an
Steven Schneider:expert, you are credible, you do have this trust in all of the Kind of EAT acronym,
Steven Schneider:which is your experience, expertise, authoritativeness and the trust built
Steven Schneider:into your site that proves, hey, this brand knows what they're talking about,
Steven Schneider:and we can actually send people to their site with some sort of trust behind that.
Matt Edmundson:So super.
Matt Edmundson:So the reason then for me having a blog is really to help Google rank my website
Matt Edmundson:to let Google know what's going on.
Matt Edmundson:How should I approach my blog then from, I say, a customer's point of view?
Steven Schneider:yeah.
Steven Schneider:Great question.
Steven Schneider:So at True SEO, we take a, what we call as like a BowFu bottom of funnel
Steven Schneider:approach to all of our content.
Steven Schneider:And we start to prioritize your content based on however we can get
Steven Schneider:people who are closest bottom of the funnel engagement to your site.
Steven Schneider:So if it's an eCommerce product, we might talk about like how to guides or
Steven Schneider:maybe it's a versus guide or, A versus B, or it could be all these different
Steven Schneider:things that might help people make that decision or that, click in their
Steven Schneider:head that says, Oh, I'm ready to buy.
Steven Schneider:Obviously, as you move away from that funnel, there's going to be
Steven Schneider:different levels or different types of content that kind of work people in.
Steven Schneider:But overall, it adds this cohesive strategy that allows Google and
Steven Schneider:everyone else to understand that, Hey, maybe I need a couple extra minutes to
Steven Schneider:decide, and I'm going to go read this article and bounce back to the product.
Steven Schneider:And within that entire experience.
Steven Schneider:The readers are still met with CTAs or maybe an accident to have pop ups.
Steven Schneider:So they're still, in touch with the brand and kind of all that process.
Steven Schneider:But at the end of the day, we like to think about blogs and specifically
Steven Schneider:the keywords that we merge within blogs as doors to your website.
Steven Schneider:So even though an article might go after a primary keyword.
Steven Schneider:Within the outline of the body of that article or that blog, we might
Steven Schneider:add in 15, 20 secondary keywords.
Steven Schneider:And those are then entry points for people to find your website based
Steven Schneider:off FAQs or an H2 heading that could be like what is a blank, et cetera.
Steven Schneider:So we're trying to always.
Steven Schneider:Pinpoint what people are going to be searching for and then how we can
Steven Schneider:bake that into the blog experience and just drive traffic to the site.
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Steven, there's a lot there.
Matt Edmundson:Jeez.
Matt Edmundson:We'll get into that.
Matt Edmundson:So just explain.
Matt Edmundson:Some terminology for me if you can.
Matt Edmundson:So Bofu, bottom of funnel, what do you mean when you say bottom of funnel?
Steven Schneider:So bottom of funnel, there's, that's going to be the
Steven Schneider:closest people who are ready to buy.
Steven Schneider:So if we look at like top of funnel, these are more of the people who are
Steven Schneider:just doing research, anything of how much does a, XYZ costs, like they
Steven Schneider:might be closer, but they're not ready.
Steven Schneider:They're just getting their feelers out there.
Steven Schneider:Middle of funnel is going to be people who are in between.
Steven Schneider:So they are closer along.
Steven Schneider:Maybe they're looking for something else to make that decision for them.
Steven Schneider:And then that's that kind of end result.
Steven Schneider:And then bottom of the funnel is if you're looking for something, a product brand
Steven Schneider:name specific with a serial number, like chances are you're looking to buy that
Steven Schneider:on the go, or if you're an eCommerce website, like best articles, like best.
Steven Schneider:Hiking jacket or best, et cetera.
Steven Schneider:Like they're looking for the best product and they're ready with their credit card.
Steven Schneider:So in an eCommerce landscape, if you were to curate a roundup of the top
Steven Schneider:10 best ski jackets, and you were ranked for that organically, Against
Steven Schneider:REI, whoever's out there, good luck.
Steven Schneider:Chances are you're gonna be getting a lot of traffic and a lot of sales because
Steven Schneider:people are looking for that product.
Steven Schneider:They're already envisioned, they've already gone through all
Steven Schneider:the work and they're just saying, gimme the best product here.
Steven Schneider:I'm bottom funnel means.
Steven Schneider:Bottom of the funnel if you think about conversion tactics
Steven Schneider:like they're ready to convert.
Steven Schneider:They're ready to go.
Matt Edmundson:So this is interesting because years ago when blogs, not
Matt Edmundson:when blogs started out, blogs started out in some respects before eCommerce
Matt Edmundson:did, but a while ago when we started doing the blogs in eCommerce, we were
Matt Edmundson:always told top of funnel, right?
Matt Edmundson:Go and create articles for people, top of funnel, get them onto your website,
Matt Edmundson:get their email address, nurture them through your email sequences,
Matt Edmundson:and then hopefully you'll buy.
Matt Edmundson:What you said is slightly different to that tactic in the sense of you're writing
Matt Edmundson:articles to people who are bottom of funnel, they are ready to buy which sounds
Matt Edmundson:to me like a very deliberate choice.
Matt Edmundson:Or are you doing I assume you're doing both is reality is what is
Matt Edmundson:happening, Steven, but I've not really heard that distinction before.
Matt Edmundson:In terms of blog writing before, so has that been successful for you guys?
Matt Edmundson:And I guess, how did you stumble across this concept?
Steven Schneider:Yeah, so two questions I'll start with the latter.
Steven Schneider:So my background is in kind of the large scale blogging aspect So this is like back
Steven Schneider:when SEO was the Wild West and you can get away with a lot more you know back in
Steven Schneider:the day we had 40 different blogs each in hyper focused niches and We went after all
Steven Schneider:of those bottom funnel keywords because they were affiliate style articles.
Steven Schneider:So it'd be like best XYZ.
Steven Schneider:We'd post about that.
Steven Schneider:So having that bottom of funnel kind of idea wasn't really new news when
Steven Schneider:we talked about trio SEO because at the end of the day, the other side of
Steven Schneider:that conversation with anybody who's looking to SEO is there's this Kind of
Steven Schneider:double-edged sword dilemma where people want to invest in SEO, they want to
Steven Schneider:have all the benefits of it, but they also don't wanna wait a year for it.
Steven Schneider:And SEO is such a game of delayed gratification that when you look at how
Steven Schneider:do you balance those two worlds, you have to say anybody who's in business,
Steven Schneider:regardless of what you're doing.
Steven Schneider:Is ROI focused?
Steven Schneider:Agree.
Steven Schneider:So at the end of the day, you can't be spending 6 to 12 months
Steven Schneider:of someone's time and resources going after the wrong content.
Steven Schneider:So what we do is we go after high intent keywords that are closely related
Steven Schneider:to ideal customers for that brand.
Steven Schneider:And then outside of that, do a reverse funnel approach.
Steven Schneider:We'll go bottom, middle, top.
Steven Schneider:Because at the end of the day, if SEO is not working and driving
Steven Schneider:results, What's the point?
Steven Schneider:Obviously, you might get backlinks, you might get other leads, but everyone who's
Steven Schneider:engaging in SEO wants the cream of the top organic traffic that leads to more sales.
Steven Schneider:And so by going from bottom first.
Steven Schneider:That's exactly what you get.
Steven Schneider:And then all of the other kind of topics between middle and top are more of
Steven Schneider:what we call like solidifying topics.
Steven Schneider:And they bake in the the well roundedness of your site and just help
Steven Schneider:strengthen the inner pieces of it.
Matt Edmundson:Super powerful.
Matt Edmundson:So if I'm just looking over here on my shelf because I've actually,
Matt Edmundson:cheap plug, we have a brand.
Matt Edmundson:Which does Omega 3, right?
Matt Edmundson:It's a vegan certified Omega 3.
Matt Edmundson:I could wax lyrical about the amazingness of this product, Steven,
Matt Edmundson:but I won't, because this is not what this product this podcast is about.
Matt Edmundson:But let's say I'm launching, I've got my website, I sell my Omega
Matt Edmundson:3, I don't really have a blog.
Matt Edmundson:Should I then start with something like, the best Omega 3s for vegan and
Matt Edmundson:vegetarians that are out there today?
Matt Edmundson:And then, I would write a blog post that would obviously contain my
Matt Edmundson:Omega 3, as well as, say, the Omega 3 from various different competitors.
Matt Edmundson:Is that what the, these sort of the best of articles are actually about?
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:So in that case, yeah it's also a toss up because nobody who wants to mention
Steven Schneider:their competitors on their site and say, Hey, here's how you direct traffic.
Steven Schneider:So what we can do in that case is, you'd want to shine light on
Steven Schneider:your product, put that first and say, this is why it's the best.
Steven Schneider:And then you can always.
Steven Schneider:Include that and say, here's are some alternative options and here's
Steven Schneider:where we stand, competitiveness and why this is superior.
Steven Schneider:But on top of that, if you just strictly post that one article and expect that
Steven Schneider:to rank you just, it's not gonna have the same likeliness of success because.
Steven Schneider:An SEO, the content strategy, you need all of the other pieces of the
Steven Schneider:puzzle in order to bring it to life.
Steven Schneider:And so strictly having that one article doesn't really show Google that you
Steven Schneider:have the credibility to speak on that subject, especially if you're a new
Steven Schneider:website and you have no domain rating.
Steven Schneider:You don't have any backlinks.
Steven Schneider:You don't have anything that points to your site saying, send people
Steven Schneider:to this website, we trust that what you're offering people is factual,
Steven Schneider:realistic, and comes with authenticity.
Steven Schneider:And so sure.
Steven Schneider:It'd be great to start with that article, but at the end of the day, you
Steven Schneider:definitely want to add other content.
Steven Schneider:Maybe it's, what are the benefits of Omega 3s?
Steven Schneider:What are Omega 3?
Steven Schneider:Are there other types of them?
Steven Schneider:What are the downsides?
Steven Schneider:What are the pros and cons?
Steven Schneider:Like all of these.
Steven Schneider:Other pieces of content that when you're reading that guide, you can
Steven Schneider:internally link to other pieces and show people, Hey, if you're unfamiliar
Steven Schneider:with Omega 3s in general, read our ultimate guide on what they are, the
Steven Schneider:benefits of taking supplements like this.
Steven Schneider:So just like with anything, you'd hope that there's a kind of ultimate
Steven Schneider:sphere of content or a library of content that you can refer to if
Steven Schneider:you're a very basic reader and you need to learn everything under the sun.
Steven Schneider:That's how Google looks at it.
Steven Schneider:If you're trying to be this top tier brand.
Steven Schneider:You hopefully should know everything about it as well.
Steven Schneider:And so that's the logic behind why more content is always better,
Steven Schneider:but how you produce that content and how it's connected to each
Steven Schneider:other is the core strategy of what kind of brings it all the way.
Matt Edmundson:So this is this is an important thing actually, because we
Matt Edmundson:often say, I get asked a lot, Steven, if I'm going to start an eCommerce business,
Matt Edmundson:what product should I sell online?
Matt Edmundson:And one of my responses is to show them what I call the product knowledge matrix
Matt Edmundson:sorry, the knowledge demand matrix.
Matt Edmundson:This matrix is, how in demand is the product and the other axis is how
Matt Edmundson:much do you know about the product?
Matt Edmundson:And if you don't know an awful lot, how much can you know about it?
Matt Edmundson:Can you learn about this product quite quickly?
Matt Edmundson:Because you're going to want to be seen as an expert in this whole thing.
Matt Edmundson:And so presenting that knowledge then to the world, not just to Google, but
Matt Edmundson:to your customers, it becomes important.
Matt Edmundson:You mentioned then the structure becomes then the strategy of it, so
Matt Edmundson:what sort of thing should I be thinking about from a structural point of view?
Matt Edmundson:You've just given me 20 titles of a blog post that I could write about Omega 3.
Matt Edmundson:To be fair, we've got them all written thankfully.
Matt Edmundson:But say that I'm just, I don't actually know.
Matt Edmundson:I'm going to ask Jen who will know, but what sort of things
Matt Edmundson:should I be thinking about then from a structural point of view?
Matt Edmundson:You've mentioned things like backlinks.
Matt Edmundson:You've mentioned things like internal links, high intent
Matt Edmundson:keywords, all these kinds of things.
Matt Edmundson:Where do I start with that?
Matt Edmundson:Because it can be a bit bamboozling.
Matt Edmundson:Which is a great word actually, bamboozling.
Steven Schneider:I'm going to start using that.
Steven Schneider:Yeah, there's definitely a lot, there's SEO and that's why you know, at least at
Steven Schneider:TrioSEO, we take a really simple approach.
Steven Schneider:We say, Hey, we'll focus on the content.
Steven Schneider:We'll create the strategy for you.
Steven Schneider:We'll do the outlines.
Steven Schneider:We'll write it.
Steven Schneider:We'll publish it.
Steven Schneider:We upload it as well and make sure that it's a very hands off approach.
Steven Schneider:Alternatively, if you have a team of writers, you can also look at just
Steven Schneider:doing strategy and outlines through us, and then we'll pass that over to you.
Steven Schneider:But like you were saying, when it comes to backlinks, Everyone I think is heard
Steven Schneider:of backlinks, but at the end of the day, it's all about just maintaining
Steven Schneider:partnerships and creating, relationships with people who can offer that trust
Steven Schneider:or that vote of confidence over to your site and link from theirs to yours.
Steven Schneider:So we always suggest that backlinks are like a passive, out of sight, out of mind
Steven Schneider:thing that you should be doing regardless.
Steven Schneider:It's very similar to investing in your retirement starting from age 20.
Steven Schneider:If you're a brand new site.
Steven Schneider:You're not going to touch that money for 40 years, 45 years, but
Steven Schneider:you're going to be thankful that you did it at the end of the road.
Steven Schneider:And so same thing with backlinks.
Steven Schneider:But when it comes to content, the strategy is so difficult to grasp at some degree,
Steven Schneider:because if you don't have the right tools to do the competitor research
Steven Schneider:or perform the gap analysis on your top competitors, You're just throwing
Steven Schneider:darts against the wall in the dark.
Steven Schneider:And that's scary because there's time and resources that go into all of this.
Steven Schneider:And at the end of the day, if you're coming in this with zero SEO knowledge,
Steven Schneider:and you just know that you need content, FAQs are a great place to start.
Steven Schneider:What are your customers asking you about?
Steven Schneider:How can you help them by creating that content on their site?
Steven Schneider:And then maybe if one really is popular, expand on that, take that
Steven Schneider:into an ultimate guide and look at what competitors are doing.
Steven Schneider:You can Google any keyword and probably get an article on it and then take a
Steven Schneider:look at their, the structure of it.
Steven Schneider:What are the headings reading as, what are the subheadings, all that sort of stuff is
Steven Schneider:the outline structure and the psychology that goes into a well rounded article.
Steven Schneider:So there's a lot to unpack, as you said, but I think at the same time, it
Steven Schneider:depends on just taking it slow and coming in with a different set of eyes and
Steven Schneider:looking at it through a different lens.
Steven Schneider:And then as you're reviewing your competitors, you start to see all
Steven Schneider:of these random keywords that you actually just glanced over previously.
Steven Schneider:They're all baked in a copy.
Steven Schneider:They're baked into headings across the site.
Steven Schneider:I think it just comes in with a trained eye, I guess is a
Steven Schneider:different way to look at it.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, I can imagine quite, when you look at content,
Matt Edmundson:you quite quickly pick up, having done it so long, what's going on.
Matt Edmundson:But it's the untrained eye, they look at it and go, I
Matt Edmundson:just don't know, I don't know.
Matt Edmundson:So the tools then that you mentioned there are various tools
Matt Edmundson:out there that I've come across.
Matt Edmundson:Obviously, SEMrush, Ahrefs, these are different pieces of software, which I
Matt Edmundson:think are industry standard these days.
Matt Edmundson:They all want, 50 million a month subscription fee.
Matt Edmundson:I'm jesting.
Matt Edmundson:Obviously, it's not that expensive, these aren't cheap investments, I don't think.
Matt Edmundson:Which is why I do think actually, if you're starting out, do look at an
Matt Edmundson:agency because the costs of learning and the costs of software, the cost,
Matt Edmundson:the barriers to entry are quite high.
Matt Edmundson:And that's before you even think about the expertise and getting
Matt Edmundson:them right from sort of day one.
Matt Edmundson:I liked your analogy on the pension fund of backlinks.
Matt Edmundson:That was quite clever.
Matt Edmundson:Um, but tools wise, what is, we mentioned ChatGPT earlier on, should I just forget
Matt Edmundson:writing content with ChatGPT altogether and just, should I use it to outline?
Matt Edmundson:Should I, I'm curious where you sit with the whole AI thing.
Matt Edmundson:There's like programs I'm just thinking of when we came across SEO Surfer that will
Matt Edmundson:go and analyze and write blog posts for you based on information that it's found.
Matt Edmundson:I guess where should I not play is a good question.
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:So start by saying, I would not suggest writing a full article with ChatGPT.
Steven Schneider:I think it's a great tool.
Steven Schneider:I think it works great for ideas around FAQs.
Steven Schneider:If you were to say, here's a topic or my brand or my niche and mega threes,
Steven Schneider:for example, give me a set of customer focused FAQs that might be useful
Steven Schneider:to someone learning about Omega 3s.
Steven Schneider:That's your Chachapiti prompt right there.
Steven Schneider:Switching gears and looking at things like Surfer SEO, great tool.
Steven Schneider:We use SEO Wind, which is a very similar aspect of that.
Steven Schneider:And what it does is it uses AI to analyze the top 10 search results for
Steven Schneider:a given keyword and then scans what headings they're using and then allows
Steven Schneider:you to create an outline based on that.
Steven Schneider:So you have a competitive edge and you can alleviate having 10 million
Steven Schneider:open tabs trying to sit between all of them and read them and memorize them.
Steven Schneider:So anything to save time on that aspect.
Steven Schneider:We use Ahrefs, as you were mentioning, which is a more data analysis tool
Steven Schneider:to look at keywords specifically.
Steven Schneider:But with that, you can look at an average estimated monthly
Steven Schneider:search volume for any keyword.
Steven Schneider:You can also look at the competitiveness of that relative to what's ranking.
Steven Schneider:You take a look at people's backlink profiles.
Steven Schneider:So if you went and looked at a competitor site and saw that they had a bunch
Steven Schneider:of links from someone you never even thought about, maybe it's a different
Steven Schneider:podcast or a publisher, whatever it may be, reach out to them and say, Hey, I
Steven Schneider:noticed you have a podcast and I know that you've talked about mega threes a lot.
Steven Schneider:I'd love to come on your show and talk about it as well.
Steven Schneider:So just creating those relationship industries, however, you're looking at it.
Steven Schneider:There's a ton of resources out there, but yeah, we kind of stick to the
Steven Schneider:heavy hitting ones, like you said, they are spendy, but when you take a
Steven Schneider:look at the fact that Ahrefs would be impossible, like not having Ahrefs,
Steven Schneider:it's impossible to have our business.
Steven Schneider:Like the ROI on Ahrefs is pretty successful, in terms
Steven Schneider:of how it's leveraged.
Steven Schneider:Yeah, it really comes down to what you're in need of at that time.
Steven Schneider:But I think if you're a beginner who's looking to DIY it, SEO wind, Surfer
Steven Schneider:SEO, you can get pretty far with those.
Steven Schneider:But to your point, if you're looking to make SEO a serious investment over.
Steven Schneider:A six to 12 month plus timeline agency is definitely gonna be best bang for
Steven Schneider:your buck, especially with trio, SEO.
Steven Schneider:Because not only do you not have to learn everything, we have the expertise,
Steven Schneider:we have the infrastructure and system to take it from zero to 10, but at the
Steven Schneider:same time, even if you were to hire an in-house person, it's probably gonna be.
Steven Schneider:That's going to be two or three times more expensive than an agency.
Steven Schneider:So you have to weigh out your options and see what's best for you.
Matt Edmundson:So I guess then some deep practical questions if I can, Steven.
Matt Edmundson:If I'm writing a blog post, how long should it be?
Matt Edmundson:I imagine that's quite a common question.
Steven Schneider:it is, yeah.
Steven Schneider:So we usually aim for 1500 to 2000 words with an asterisk on that.
Steven Schneider:And what I mean is that if there's a topic out there that is likely
Steven Schneider:going to exceed that, we're not going to cut out information.
Steven Schneider:If it's a one off thing, maybe it's like the ultimate A to Z guide on Omega 3s.
Steven Schneider:I would hope that there's more than 1500 words of information about that.
Steven Schneider:But
Matt Edmundson:Depends
Steven Schneider:devil's advocate, exactly.
Steven Schneider:You also don't want, nobody wants to read a 6, 000 word article.
Steven Schneider:So there has to be this thing where people say you're writing
Steven Schneider:content for Google at that rate.
Steven Schneider:And you're trying to stuff keywords and do all this sort of stuff.
Steven Schneider:And on the flip side of that, we say not really, because, we understand the logical
Steven Schneider:flow of how someone gets on that page and what information you're looking for.
Steven Schneider:If it's something about, like a off brand thing, we might add in like a TLDR
Steven Schneider:snippet at the top and try to summarize different sections of it because it's.
Steven Schneider:We can, we just know how people are gonna lose interest over anything over
Steven Schneider:4, 000 words, even that thousand words.
Steven Schneider:You have to keep that in mind, but yeah, to play rule of thumb, 1,
Steven Schneider:500 is probably a good ballpark.
Steven Schneider:But don't be afraid to go over or under.
Steven Schneider:I've even ranked articles that are 500 words.
Steven Schneider:If it's an FAQ don't expand on it.
Steven Schneider:Like we always like to say, there's nothing worse than trying to find a
Steven Schneider:recipe and having to read 6, 000 words of content about your grandma's historical
Steven Schneider:pastime, making cookies in her kitchen.
Steven Schneider:And it's nah, just give me the recipe.
Steven Schneider:That's what I
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, I guess you are right, yeah.
Matt Edmundson:The one of the most annoying things, isn't it, about recipe sites is you
Matt Edmundson:have to scroll right down to the bottom just to actually get to the recipe.
Matt Edmundson:And you just okay, I understand why you've done it, and I appreciate,
Matt Edmundson:you've got to make a living from this, but blimey, can we think about this
Steven Schneider:put the recipe at the top and just put everything else below
Matt Edmundson:please.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, so I guess about 1, 500 words.
Matt Edmundson:Should I, how does this work?
Matt Edmundson:I feel like I'm getting a lot of free counsel here on Omega 3s,
Matt Edmundson:but let's say I want to throw in some video aspects as well.
Matt Edmundson:Does could I take my 1500 words, use that as a video script, create a talking head
Matt Edmundson:video for YouTube, throw in some nice B roll or whatever add that to the article.
Matt Edmundson:Does that help?
Steven Schneider:Yeah, definitely.
Steven Schneider:So that's where we look at what's called off page SEO.
Steven Schneider:And so off page is like anything that is outside of your website, but has the
Steven Schneider:intent to point back to your website.
Steven Schneider:So if you posted that content on YouTube and then you embedded that YouTube
Steven Schneider:video in that article, and that would be like a supplementary resource for
Steven Schneider:that reader, that's going to be a great engagement tool, not only for the reader,
Steven Schneider:but it shows Google that, Hey, Your competitors don't have a video on this,
Steven Schneider:like maybe that has value to offer people.
Steven Schneider:So however you can bake in more value overall is going to be
Steven Schneider:a win at the end of the day.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:No.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:So internal linking, just explain what you mean by that and why that's so important.
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:So internal linking a great way to visualize that is if you picture a spider
Steven Schneider:web and the center of the spider web that kind of holds everything together, it's
Steven Schneider:going to be your core homepage or like the main page of your content or your site.
Steven Schneider:And then if you picture like each ring of that spiderweb as it expands
Steven Schneider:out is going to be a content hub or what we call a content cluster.
Steven Schneider:So maybe if it's Omega 3s, maybe it's about I'm just making stuff
Steven Schneider:up like the history of Omega 3s.
Steven Schneider:And then you can go into all the articles of, where they were
Steven Schneider:discovered, why are they important?
Steven Schneider:How long have they been used?
Steven Schneider:And those are going to be like little string subjects off that.
Steven Schneider:And then maybe it goes into.
Steven Schneider:Production.
Steven Schneider:How are they made?
Steven Schneider:Where are they made?
Steven Schneider:How often are they produced?
Steven Schneider:How often should you take them?
Steven Schneider:And it goes into all of these different little subcategories.
Steven Schneider:And then once those pieces of content are produced, you start to find
Steven Schneider:keywords within the body of the content that relates to a second article.
Steven Schneider:So you'd link that article from A to B.
Steven Schneider:And what that helps Google do is crawl your website more efficiently.
Steven Schneider:So if you have a ultimate guide and you're like enjoying this guide, learn
Steven Schneider:more about the history of Omega 3s.
Steven Schneider:History of Omega 3s, quote unquote, would then be linked to a guide
Steven Schneider:about the history of Omega 3s.
Steven Schneider:And it just helps Google crawl and understand your website
Steven Schneider:better as it does readers.
Matt Edmundson:And is there, I guess I, as I'm listening to you talk, I'm
Matt Edmundson:thinking of a particular website that I know about where there is no real internal
Matt Edmundson:linking, but there's 400 blog posts on it.
Matt Edmundson:And I'm thinking, Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:And how in the world will someone's got to read 400 blog posts to figure
Matt Edmundson:out what's being said where, and then have that understanding of the
Matt Edmundson:content to then create those internal links based on what's going on.
Matt Edmundson:Is it as old school as that, or is there something out there that can
Matt Edmundson:help me create these internal links?
Matt Edmundson:Please, God, let there be something that will help me.
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:So there are definitely tools out there when it comes into I think Surfer has a
Steven Schneider:tool built in that kind of offers that.
Steven Schneider:I'm old school, so I have always steered away from tools like that because.
Steven Schneider:What I've learned over time is that they're good, but they're not perfect.
Steven Schneider:And so it might offer something that's not the greatest link
Steven Schneider:opportunity, or at the end of the day, they just show you all of them.
Steven Schneider:And maybe someone actually goes, yeah, click add all.
Steven Schneider:And maybe that's 15 links.
Steven Schneider:You should only aim for 3-5 internal links.
Steven Schneider:In some cases, they're just not the most optimized.
Steven Schneider:They're getting better.
Steven Schneider:But what we do at Trio is we'll start with all of the content on the site,
Steven Schneider:throw that into what we call an internal linking library, so that all of the
Steven Schneider:writers moving forward then have access to those links and can just crawl that
Steven Schneider:spreadsheet and say, This is what Perfect.
Steven Schneider:There's a link on this or an article about this.
Steven Schneider:I'm just going to bake that into my content.
Steven Schneider:So that when we go and upload it, it's already there.
Steven Schneider:But to your example, if you have a ton of content on your site that hasn't been
Steven Schneider:internally linked, it's definitely going to be a one time push to get that done.
Steven Schneider:It's probably going to suck.
Steven Schneider:I don't know.
Steven Schneider:There's just no, no way around it.
Steven Schneider:But at the end of the day, like internal linking is probably one of the more.
Steven Schneider:Underappreciated and overlooked strategies that can move the needle for a site.
Steven Schneider:So if that person had zero internal links across 400 articles and you
Steven Schneider:look back two months later, they're all perfectly internal linked.
Steven Schneider:That site's definitely going to benefit from it.
Steven Schneider:It's going to be a big win.
Steven Schneider:But yeah, it's always better to do it in the process while you're doing anything
Steven Schneider:rather than going back and doing it later.
Steven Schneider:It's just, I used to do that and I learned once you got to
Steven Schneider:touch the stove to know it's hot.
Steven Schneider:That's never going back.
Matt Edmundson:It used to be that I what you see now is you'll see in an article,
Matt Edmundson:an internal link on a specific phrase, which I'm assuming is deliberate in the
Matt Edmundson:sense that phrase will be a keyword of some point that will rank on Google.
Matt Edmundson:It used to be that you would just put tags at the bottom, almost like
Matt Edmundson:hashtags on an Instagram post, at the bottom, we're going to put a little
Matt Edmundson:tag cloud in and this is about Omega 3s, this one over here is about Vitamin
Matt Edmundson:D, and we'll just, we'll tag all these different things at the bottom of it.
Matt Edmundson:Do we still do the tags or are we actually putting the internal links on the text?
Matt Edmundson:Sorry to get granular, but I was just curious.
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:So the internal linking with the text is like a non negotiable.
Steven Schneider:And what you described is like that keyword being optimized is
Steven Schneider:you get the nail on the head there.
Steven Schneider:What I usually say is the anchor text or that keyword that you're linking should A.
Steven Schneider:Describe what the other piece of content is about so you can
Steven Schneider:be able to look at that and know exactly what's on the other end.
Steven Schneider:And it should also match or be close to the primary keyword that
Steven Schneider:you want that piece of content on the other side to rank for.
Steven Schneider:So if it's History of Omega 3s, and that's the keyword you're trying
Steven Schneider:to go for with that second guide, that should be what's linked.
Steven Schneider:But you want to be able to use some variants, you don't want to
Steven Schneider:repeat it over and over again.
Steven Schneider:To your second question about the tags, it's pretty dated, I would say
Steven Schneider:very, probably a few people are using those cluster clouds like we used to
Steven Schneider:see on the widgets of the sidebar and all that sort of stuff but categories
Steven Schneider:are still a great, very effective way to organize your blog and we always
Steven Schneider:encourage them to because, just people usually see the blog on the footer.
Steven Schneider:If you have seven or five other categories that are worth reading, we'd put those
Steven Schneider:on your footer, put them somewhere else and people can just quickly access them.
Steven Schneider:And there's a lot of like tips and tricks you can do to increase
Steven Schneider:the efficiency of your SEO.
Steven Schneider:And so categories is definitely a great way to do that.
Matt Edmundson:If I was if I was thinking then of doing a blog and I have a site,
Matt Edmundson:say on a standard eCom platform, I'm going to pick, I'm going to pick on Shopify
Matt Edmundson:because it's the one people know about.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:I personally can't tell you if Shopify has an inbuilt blogging platform.
Matt Edmundson:I know it didn't have necessarily, and there were some apps that
Matt Edmundson:were able to help you do that.
Matt Edmundson:I don't know whether that's still the case, but do I, what software?
Matt Edmundson:Out there, if I've got to say a Shopify site, should I go and say this is a
Matt Edmundson:great blogging platform that I can use for my eCommerce website, and I'm going
Matt Edmundson:to put all my blogs on this, and it'll probably be a, I don't know, blog.
Matt Edmundson:shop.
Matt Edmundson:com domain name or something like that.
Matt Edmundson:Do, what would you recommend?
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:So Shopify, they have a built in blog.
Steven Schneider:Component.
Steven Schneider:It works really well.
Steven Schneider:I've seen tons of sites crush, SEO from their blog through Shopify.
Steven Schneider:The way it's set up is it's not even on a subdomain, which is, you don't have to do
Steven Schneider:like a blog.brand.com, they just have it as an extension, as a secondary folder.
Steven Schneider:So it'd be.com/black blog, excuse me, and then whatever that slug is gonna be.
Steven Schneider:So yeah, it is pretty streamlined nowadays and very efficient
Steven Schneider:if you're using Shopify.
Steven Schneider:Even if you're like using WordPress and WooCommerce, WordPress
Steven Schneider:is a great blogging platform.
Steven Schneider:Squarespace.
Steven Schneider:They're all, it's, yeah, it's 2024.
Steven Schneider:Everyone has that
Matt Edmundson:Everyone's doing it right.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:So you don't need a separate blog these days.
Steven Schneider:And I wouldn't even recommend that even if it wasn't an
Steven Schneider:option because you're pretty much then essentially having to build two sites.
Steven Schneider:So you want all of that domain authority and your brand credibility in one place.
Steven Schneider:Again, I think going back to that iceberg mentality.
Steven Schneider:You want the deepest, biggest iceberg in the water.
Steven Schneider:You don't want two smaller ones.
Steven Schneider:It's just, you don't want to build two brands.
Steven Schneider:You don't want to have two different things going hyper focus
Steven Schneider:everything at once, put it there.
Matt Edmundson:That's really interesting.
Matt Edmundson:Really interesting.
Matt Edmundson:So the what about companies that have multi site as in or for
Matt Edmundson:example, our business, we have our main website, but then we have a U.
Matt Edmundson:S.
Matt Edmundson:version of the site.
Matt Edmundson:There's like an Australian version, a Canadian version, I
Matt Edmundson:think there's an Irish version.
Matt Edmundson:There may be a British version.
Matt Edmundson:A Spanish version of the website, all with their own domains in some respects.
Matt Edmundson:So actually no, it's all, as I'm saying this out loud, I'm
Matt Edmundson:answering my own question because it's all on the same domain.
Matt Edmundson:It's just got the language tag after it to give you the different languages.
Matt Edmundson:Should I be blogging therefore in different languages as well
Matt Edmundson:as doing multi currencies?
Matt Edmundson:Should I, if I'm doing, if I've got these sort of multi sites,
Matt Edmundson:like Apple has Apple UK, Apple US.
Matt Edmundson:Should I be thinking about that on the blog as well?
Steven Schneider:I would think about it if your customers are there.
Steven Schneider:If you have a UK audience, like obviously you don't have to write in, the UK,
Steven Schneider:because it's like English is English at the end of the day, but if you have a
Steven Schneider:German speaking audience maybe it makes sense to, transcribe some content over
Steven Schneider:to German and put it on a DE extension.
Steven Schneider:Definitely want to ensure that you have your HREF Page Reference Language Tags,
Steven Schneider:which is a little more technical SEO component, which I don't even want to
Steven Schneider:get into because I don't know technical stuff don't care for it, but yeah, to your
Steven Schneider:question, if people are there looking for it you can't expect everyone to only find
Steven Schneider:it through US or English speaking pieces of content however, what I would say then,
Steven Schneider:too, is that you also can't assume that the same strategy is going to be a one
Steven Schneider:to one fit with that, because back in the day many moons ago, we dabbled in doing
Steven Schneider:affiliate sites in different languages.
Steven Schneider:And just based on the translation, the translations are never one to one.
Steven Schneider:So how people search for content, like instead of it being best mountain
Steven Schneider:bikes in the U S it might be best outdoor mechanical bikes, there's
Steven Schneider:just so many different ways and how
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:differences are.
Steven Schneider:But yeah, to your question, like I would definitely suggest it's more about if your
Steven Schneider:customers are in need of that content, you always have to think customer first.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:No, fair enough.
Matt Edmundson:Fair enough.
Matt Edmundson:So all the principles then that you've just gone and outlined that we've talked
Matt Edmundson:through is it the same principles for on page SEO for say my product page?
Matt Edmundson:Or should I be some thinking about something a little bit different there?
Steven Schneider:Yeah, so with product pages, they're a little bit more unique
Steven Schneider:in that you don't really want to steer too far outside of what's that product is.
Steven Schneider:So you know, if you're obviously talking about Omega 3s and that
Steven Schneider:it's a supplement product page.
Steven Schneider:It probably doesn't make sense to include what are Omega 3s as an FAQ because 1.
Steven Schneider:The reader knows that, 2.
Steven Schneider:You don't want to repeat it across any other pages, and 3.
Steven Schneider:It's just does it actually add value to the page?
Steven Schneider:No.
Steven Schneider:When it comes to product pages, we usually recommend like FAQs are great.
Steven Schneider:Maybe those are company wide term policies, size, packaging,
Steven Schneider:all the sort of stuff there.
Steven Schneider:And then just anything that kind of adds to your brand or that product.
Steven Schneider:Shipping delays or how is it used?
Steven Schneider:Are there any things that you need to be unique clothing wise?
Steven Schneider:How is it washed?
Steven Schneider:Sizes?
Steven Schneider:Really should just be hyper focused on that product specifically, and
Steven Schneider:then you can always use internal links to drive the conversation
Steven Schneider:outward and expand on a specific topic if you wanted to go that route.
Matt Edmundson:So use internal links on the product page if
Matt Edmundson:you feel like it's necessary.
Steven Schneider:Yeah, and even if it's not the product page
Steven Schneider:specifically, they should be absolutely mentioned in the footer of your blog.
Steven Schneider:So maybe you're housing three ultimate guides in your footer, where people
Steven Schneider:just automatically scroll down to see, ultimate guide to Omega 3s.
Steven Schneider:All of owning these and, what have recent customers said?
Steven Schneider:Like maybe it's like you're heavy hitting pieces of content that are
Steven Schneider:just permanently living near footer and then they're currently there,
Steven Schneider:but maybe there's a specific topic you want to highlight in that product
Steven Schneider:page and if so, that's a great way to internally link to that content.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:How important is it I'm, just, I'm listening to the question in my head
Matt Edmundson:and it's a bit of a strange question, but let's talk about Let's talk about
Matt Edmundson:the importance of strategy here, because the reason I'm asking this Steven is
Matt Edmundson:to quote a very good friend of mine who lives in North Carolina it sounds
Matt Edmundson:like you could get busier than a one legged man in a butt kicking contest.
Matt Edmundson:It's that kind of it's one of my favorite phrases, I don't know why but
Matt Edmundson:it's it's one of those things where it sounds like there's a lot to do.
Matt Edmundson:And I'm just thinking of, if I'm starting my eCommerce business or it's still
Matt Edmundson:like a side hustle or, there's just two or three of us in the business,
Matt Edmundson:we're turning over a couple of hundred grand, we've not reached the dizzy
Matt Edmundson:heights for a million a year yet, Steve, and I've not got the staff nor really
Matt Edmundson:the money to go and spend on agency.
Matt Edmundson:How important is strategy here?
Matt Edmundson:And I guess.
Matt Edmundson:How do we start to form the strategy so we don't become busy fools?
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:That's a weird question.
Steven Schneider:So if you're doing like a DIY approach to your SEO and you're still like
Steven Schneider:in that, you Like I said, I focus on how can you ensure that the customer
Steven Schneider:has all that information needed to convert and pull the trigger on that.
Steven Schneider:So what FAQs are they being asked a lot?
Steven Schneider:How are the return policies?
Steven Schneider:What's the shipping like, what's the packaging and handling like all
Steven Schneider:those like easy wins, low hanging fruit, that should be done deal.
Steven Schneider:if there's something that seems like it's a little bit more.
Steven Schneider:In depth, create a blog around it and just know that you're creating
Steven Schneider:that content for customers, not for the ranking purposes that you would
Steven Schneider:hope to get organic traffic from.
Steven Schneider:And then outside of that, look at the bottom funnel and really put
Steven Schneider:yourself into the customer's mindset and take a look at the keywords.
Steven Schneider:You can also use there's a lot of free tools out there that'll get
Steven Schneider:you started and, at least show you what keywords are available.
Steven Schneider:And then what we do is we just put on that customer hat and say,
Steven Schneider:how are they thinking about this keyword and what is their actual end
Steven Schneider:result when there's typing this in?
Steven Schneider:Even take it one step further, go and type it in and Google yourself.
Steven Schneider:See what's coming up.
Steven Schneider:See what people are actually writing content around and then see how
Steven Schneider:you can match that and exceed that content and put it on your site.
Steven Schneider:So yeah.
Steven Schneider:Like SEO is everything is, everything's going to be customer focused.
Steven Schneider:So I feel like a broken record player to some degree, but it's so true, if
Steven Schneider:you're creating content for yourself and because you think it's going
Steven Schneider:to be this great piece of content, it's, you're not the decider at the
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:someone else is.
Steven Schneider:That really just ask your customers, don't be afraid to just say, Hey, what are
Steven Schneider:these topics that are of interest to you?
Steven Schneider:You don't actually have to produce them, but.
Steven Schneider:Start talking to people, getting that, foot in the door and just
Steven Schneider:seeing where that conversation lies.
Steven Schneider:Cause they're decision makers at the end of the day for your brand.
Steven Schneider:So everything should be focused around them.
Matt Edmundson:That's super, super important.
Matt Edmundson:I've often told the story that one of the things that I look back at, my sort
Matt Edmundson:of eCom career, I've been around a little while, we had this one website, which was
Matt Edmundson:a beauty website, it was doing super well.
Matt Edmundson:And I came to a point where I looked at the site and I realised.
Matt Edmundson:I personally was the guy that had designed the layout for every single iteration
Matt Edmundson:of that website up until this point.
Matt Edmundson:And this was maybe, when would this have been?
Matt Edmundson:Maybe seven or eight years ago.
Matt Edmundson:Maybe even 90, it was a while ago.
Matt Edmundson:And I, we'd gone like through four different designs and I'd played
Matt Edmundson:around in Photoshop and gone, I think we could do this, that and the other.
Matt Edmundson:And then we brought a branding guy in and he was like, Oh,
Matt Edmundson:you could redo your brand.
Matt Edmundson:And we redid the brand.
Matt Edmundson:And it was all wonderful.
Matt Edmundson:And then I realized the guy redid the brand, He's cool.
Matt Edmundson:I've laid out the website based on what I know about eCommerce.
Matt Edmundson:I'm okay.
Matt Edmundson:I got some insight into that.
Matt Edmundson:And then I realized that actually our customers were 95 percent female.
Matt Edmundson:And I'm like, you've got a guy doing branding and you've got
Matt Edmundson:a guy designing the website.
Matt Edmundson:As much knowledge as we have, I don't know if that's the right thing to do.
Matt Edmundson:So I called a friend of mine, a guy called Rich Wise and lives in Dallas.
Matt Edmundson:And I said, Rich, have you still got, he had quite a few female
Matt Edmundson:designers working for him.
Matt Edmundson:And I said, have you still got that team, of female designers, web designers.
Matt Edmundson:And yeah, I said, I need them to redesign my website and redo the branding.
Matt Edmundson:It's we don't really have any experience in eCommerce.
Matt Edmundson:I'm like, I've got that.
Matt Edmundson:What I don't have is the female psyche, the female knowledge.
Matt Edmundson:So I'm like, can you please just create something and we'll
Matt Edmundson:make it work around eCommerce?
Matt Edmundson:And it's sure, man.
Matt Edmundson:So we did this project together and it was utterly eye opening because
Matt Edmundson:what they came up with, they were thinking about it through the lens of.
Matt Edmundson:them as a customers they were buying the kind of products that
Matt Edmundson:we were selling it's like, we would like this, we would like that.
Matt Edmundson:And it was so far removed from what I did, but the conversion rate went vertical.
Matt Edmundson:It had a big impact on our business.
Matt Edmundson:I'm thinking about some of the other websites, some of the other Ecom
Matt Edmundson:sites, one of the things that we subconsciously done, since that time,
Matt Edmundson:is for example, on the supplements site is predominantly females.
Matt Edmundson:Again, it's not all it's not as heavy as it was on the beauty website.
Matt Edmundson:So the predominant people that write copy are females.
Matt Edmundson:I don't know if that's important.
Matt Edmundson:Steven, maybe you can comment on this that maybe I've got it wrong a little
Matt Edmundson:bit here because If it's predominantly female, I have female copywriters
Matt Edmundson:write the copy who are similar to the target audience, if that makes sense.
Matt Edmundson:So I don't have 20 year olds write to 40 year olds and so on and so forth.
Matt Edmundson:Is that what you guys do?
Matt Edmundson:Am I reading too much into this?
Steven Schneider:No, I think you're on a similar trajectory.
Steven Schneider:I would say that.
Steven Schneider:Less important on maybe gender.
Steven Schneider:And I would say more important on the technical expertise of
Steven Schneider:the person writing the content.
Steven Schneider:For example, some things that come to mind is like legal guides, like what is a,
Steven Schneider:um, what is a letter of intent, something like that, where you probably don't want
Steven Schneider:a generalist writer tackling that subject.
Steven Schneider:You probably want someone who's a legal background, or even if you start
Steven Schneider:dabbling in finance topics, which are always super sensitive, what is a
Steven Schneider:Roth IRA or what is a versus anything?
Steven Schneider:It's those have to be very specific.
Steven Schneider:And Google also takes that into consideration.
Steven Schneider:There are certain niches with that fall within the your money, your life
Steven Schneider:kind of category of health and finance that they need that credible writer to
Steven Schneider:succeed and for that content to flourish.
Steven Schneider:So I definitely think that when it comes down to it, someone who's
Steven Schneider:expecting a technical piece of content.
Steven Schneider:Should be met with a semi technical piece of content.
Steven Schneider:Obviously you want to simplify it, but it shouldn't be as easy as how to boil water.
Steven Schneider:It should, have some depth to it.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, fair play.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, it makes a lot of sense.
Matt Edmundson:It makes a lot of sense.
Matt Edmundson:Listen, Steven, I'm aware of time.
Matt Edmundson:I'm aware I've got 20 more questions, but I'm aware of time and I don't want
Matt Edmundson:to take up too much time from you today.
Matt Edmundson:Is there anything else?
Matt Edmundson:We've had a great conversation, but is there anything else from you that you
Matt Edmundson:want to mention before we sign off?
Steven Schneider:No, I think we've covered a lot.
Steven Schneider:I just want to remind people that, blogging is the iceberg of your
Steven Schneider:brand that you're going to look back on 12, 16, 24 months later and
Steven Schneider:wish you would have started then.
Steven Schneider:We're always helpful and happy to help people.
Steven Schneider:Get on the right track when it comes to their content and driving,
Steven Schneider:qualified people and the right customers to their blog and brand.
Steven Schneider:Yeah, trueoseo.
Steven Schneider:com and learn more about us there.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, and if they want to reach out to you personally,
Matt Edmundson:what's the best way to do that?
Matt Edmundson:Just head to the website or are you on LinkedIn?
Matt Edmundson:Do you do that kind of thing?
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:I'm pretty popular on LinkedIn.
Steven Schneider:I wish I'm just joking.
Steven Schneider:Yeah.
Steven Schneider:Get in line.
Steven Schneider:No.
Steven Schneider:Yeah, we're all on LinkedIn.
Steven Schneider:Me and Connor Gillivan, Nathan Hirsch, all of the trio founders.
Steven Schneider:That's the best way to get like a one on one with me and like talk.
Steven Schneider:I'm always loving to meet people and have coffee calls.
Steven Schneider:But yeah, that's great.
Steven Schneider:You can always reach out to the website.
Steven Schneider:I'm sure it'll find me somehow, but LinkedIn is definitely going
Steven Schneider:to be the best, more direct way.
Matt Edmundson:Fantastic.
Matt Edmundson:We will of course link to Steven in the show notes as well.
Matt Edmundson:And yeah, you can, if you've not got those and you're not subscribed
Matt Edmundson:to the email, but you're not going to get them in your inbox, are you?
Matt Edmundson:If you were, they're going to come to you.
Matt Edmundson:But listen, Steven, thanks, man.
Matt Edmundson:I really appreciate.
Matt Edmundson:Great to meet you.
Matt Edmundson:I've enjoyed the conversation about SEO.
Matt Edmundson:I've got some questions for the team.
Matt Edmundson:There's a few companies I'm going to send your way because I think they're going to
Matt Edmundson:need a little bit of help, but genuinely really appreciate having you on the show.
Matt Edmundson:Thanks for coming and sharing all your wisdom.
Steven Schneider:Thank you.
Steven Schneider:Cheers.
Steven Schneider:It's been great.
Matt Edmundson:Cheers.
Matt Edmundson:Love that.
Matt Edmundson:Cheers.
Matt Edmundson:What a great conversation with Steven.
Matt Edmundson:In fact, I can do this, Steven.
Matt Edmundson:I can do the it was great.
Matt Edmundson:Yeah, there we go.
Steven Schneider:Again, I need the soundbite for my life.
Steven Schneider:This is just, it's been.
Matt Edmundson:Awesome.
Matt Edmundson:Awesome.
Matt Edmundson:Brilliant.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you.
Matt Edmundson:And so let me just say be sure to follow the eCommerce Podcast wherever you get
Matt Edmundson:your podcasts from because we've got more great conversations lined up and
Matt Edmundson:I don't want you to miss any of them.
Matt Edmundson:Any of them.
Matt Edmundson:And in case no one has told you yet today, let me be the first.
Matt Edmundson:You are awesome.
Matt Edmundson:Yes, you are created awesome.
Matt Edmundson:It's just a burden you have to bear.
Matt Edmundson:Steven has to bear it.
Matt Edmundson:I've got to bear it.
Matt Edmundson:You've got to bear it as well.
Matt Edmundson:Now the eCommerce podcast is produced by Podjunction.
Matt Edmundson:You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favorite podcast app.
Matt Edmundson:The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon.
Matt Edmundson:Sadaf Beynon and Tanya Hutsuliak.
Matt Edmundson:Theme music was written by Josh Edmundson.
Matt Edmundson:And as I mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or
Matt Edmundson:show notes to simply head over to the website, ecommercepodcast.
Matt Edmundson:net where incidentally you can sign up to the newsletter if you're
Matt Edmundson:not signed up to it, but do that.
Matt Edmundson:So that's it from me.
Matt Edmundson:That's it from Steven.
Matt Edmundson:Thank you so much for joining us.
Matt Edmundson:Have a fantastic week wherever you are in the world.
Matt Edmundson:I'll see you next time.
Matt Edmundson:Bye for now.