5 Steps to Execute a Site
Redesign without Compromising SEO
You've spent years investing in SEO, and now
your company dominates the rankings, but your site is outdated, isn't
mobile-friendly, and you know it's time for a redesign. You've heard all the
horror stories of how a site redesign can kill rankings, so you've held off as
long as you can, but now it's time.
Here are five steps to ensure that you are able
to successfully execute your site redesign without compromising months or
possibly years of investment in SEO.
Step 1: Evaluate Your SEO
Strategy
A site redesign is the perfect time to evaluate
your SEO strategy and figure out which keywords and landing pages are providing
the most value, and which ones are providing the least. This will allow you to
know which keywords and landing pages to prioritize during the redesign.
During this process, you may find keywords that
rank well, but perform poorly at delivering quality traffic. These keywords may
not be worth including in your post-redesign SEO efforts, which presents a
great opportunity to refine the keywords you're targeting to ones that will
drive higher quality traffic to the site.
When evaluating your SEO strategy, you may also
find that certain landing pages fail to engage visitors and convert them into
leads or sales. A site redesign presents the perfect opportunity to address
page level engagement and conversion issues as well.
Ironically, by evaluating your SEO efforts prior
to a site redesign, and addressing issues that you may have otherwise
overlooked, you can actually end up with a better performing SEO campaign after
the redesign.
Step 2: Keep the Same URL
Structure or Implement 301 Redirects
As it pertains to SEO, it is ideal to maintain
the same URL structure when executing a site redesign, but this not always
practical. You may be moving the site to a new platform that requires a
different URL structure, or you may have reorganized your content, which
resulted in changes to the URL structure. In any case where changes to the URL
structure are necessary, implementing page level 301 redirects is a necessity.
A 301 redirect is a permanent redirect from one
URL to another. It helps retain rankings by guiding search engines from the old
URL to the new URL where the requested content now lives. 301 redirects also
preserve inbound links and internal links, both of which also help retain
rankings.
Retaining a positive user-experience is just as
important as retaining good rankings. By preserving inbound links and internal
links, 301 redirects prevent visitors from being greeted with a "404 Not
Found" error message when accessing the site through inbound links or
navigating the site through internal links that point to URLs which no longer
exist.
Step 3: Maintain On-Page Optimization
Maintaining on-page optimization is an obvious
step, but a site redesign can often involve moving, revising, and adding new
content, so with all these moving parts it's easy to forget the basics.
Use this as an opportunity to not only maintain,
but to improve on-page optimization, beginning with making sure any keyword
changes that were made in step 1 are incorporated into the appropriate pages.
Then, review each title and description tag.
Make sure they're unique for each page, incorporate the target keyword(s) for
that page, and accurately describe the content they're associated with.
Review the site's URLs, and make sure they're
optimized for each page. Also, check for broken internal links, and review all
anchor text to make sure it is consistent with any keyword changes that were
made in step 1.
Step 4: Create HTML and XML
Sitemaps
Create HTML and XML sitemaps to help search
engines discover any new content and existing content that has moved to new
URLs. HTML sitemaps are also useful to site visitors, and help them discover
new content or existing content that has been moved as well.
After creating an XML sitemap, be sure to submit
it to the major search engines to expedite the crawling of any new or moved
content. This step, combined with page level 301 redirects will ensure
efficient crawling and indexing of new or moved content.
Step 5: Monitor, Measure,
Improve
Once the redesigned site goes live, carefully
monitor your rankings and traffic data.
·
Are rankings improving or getting worse?
·
Is traffic to the site increasing or decreasing?
·
Are visitors engaging more or less with the site's content?
·
Are visitors converting at a higher or lower rate?
A site redesign should not be a once and done
project. Just like any other marketing effort, the results of your redesign
should be monitored, measured, and improved over time.
Conclusion
By following these five steps, you can not only
successfully redesign your website without compromising SEO efforts, but can
use it as an opportunity to make your SEO strategy even better.
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