PR (both digital and traditional) is an important part of any SEO strategy, and vice versa. By informing and working alongside your SEO team for an upcoming activity, you can ensure maximum online impact for your PR campaigns. SEO will also benefit by improving keyword rankings and content performance on your website. Continue reading to understand exactly how important the PR and SEO relationship is.
The Importance of Digital PR to Search Engines
Earlier this year John Mueller from Google Tweeted on the importance of digital PR and search visibility, saying it was as critical to get right as Technical SEO issues.
Often PR teams work with little or no SEO input. With Digital PR this makes no sense, and even traditional PR teams should consider the online impact their messaging could have. Does that Sunday magazine post have a killer Tag Line, what happens if I search that tagline? You wouldn’t believe the number of times PR teams fail to check this. That potential search traffic goes into the internet void and gets lost forever.
Make sure you search that clever tagline to see what comes up in Google, then have a page on your website optimised for that term so you rank for it.
Digital PR is more of an obvious fit. In-article links or brand mentions can not only increase brand awareness, but drive direct traffic and increase organic searches. They can also add to the Trust and Authority of a website if the site carrying the release in an online publication with good readership levels and a high domain rating.
Search engines still rely on links to associate and rate websites to each other and how they should rank for specific search queries. Often SEO link building campaigns are far from great quality. Digital PR campaigns that place high quality, original content in topically related, high authority sites are gold dust to organic performance.
PR & SEO Combined for Extra Impact
As you can see, combining SEO and PR can give a bigger combined visibility impact. The same is true of social media whose aspects should also be considered, from reviews, Tweets, shares, and posts on your business’s social channels in addition to the article comments section. This all helps to widen the reach of the initial release. Paid Social could also play a part here in boosting various posts to a wider audience.
Linking to the press release from your own website makes sense in a few ways:
- Firstly, it will associate that page value to your linked page
- It will expose your brand to that page readership
- It will increase brand/product awareness
- Google will see the association between your brand and the copy content
SEO links and PR links do have a different initial focus, SEO links are focused on the ranking opportunity presented according to the:
- Location of the Link
- The content context surrounding the link
- Anchor text
- Domain & Page Trust and Authority
For PR links the focus is usually:
- Exposure in terms of views/clicks the link has the potential for acquiring
- How the link will look on the page and that page content to align with the brand/campaign
- Brand association
So, while the focus of digital PR and an SEO link may differ, in many ways they match up and can be complementary to each other.
As many PR campaign managers find out, the copy they send over is not always presented in the way they write it. Often online publications will not include links, and certainly not a follow link that passes page value and association. In which case it is good to know that your company/brand/product/service getting mentioned in a quality (topically related) article still allows Google to associate your company with the page copy and website it is on.
Digital PR SEO Tactics
So how can an SEO team add value and help the PR offering? While digital knowledge in the PR world is now part of the mix, there is still limited understanding on how search engines work and how they work out the value of a mention or link. So, the first thing an SEO person can do is educate the PR team on how earned media can impact search visibility.
Your PR team should:
1. Always ask for a link.
2. If no link is available, then the company name and homepage URL in the text (a good idea anyway).
3. Link structure – Use relevant (ideally brand or product name) anchor text in the link and link to the most relevant page on your site, not just the homepage.
4. Look for high domain authority coverage.
a. PR judge on readership, target audience and perceived quality within the industry – SEO will look at domain/page authority, topical relevance, and yes quality of publication and content, so similar enough.
5. The article/post should be topically related to your brand and quality original copy.
6. At best the link should be within the post as a text link surrounded by copy relevant to the linked page.
7. Always search in Google for your Article title, are you just up against the top competition, if so changing the title can make all the difference while still being on audience target.
8. Communicate with the Web and SEO team to align with what marketing they are up to, so they can prepare the target page so its optimisation matches the copy on the referring page.
Speaking of referring page – Your marketing team can use Analytics to benchmark the target landing page metrics and track referrals from link traffic from the post. Analytics will also show any increased awareness that it might have generated in terms of organic and direct traffic.
9. If allowed you could add campaign tracking to the link for better analytics.
10. Get the SEO/Social team to share and amplify that external content across their owned social media. A PR campaign that ends up having the extra metrics of referral traffic, organic, direct, and social traffic as well as increased noise and awareness can measure any success.
If the ongoing PR campaign is getting links and mentions on trustworthy and high Authority sites this will have beneficial effects, including:
- That Trust and Authority will get passed onto (by a reduced margin) your website. Google prefers higher Authority, higher trust websites in their results, so any association to those sites reflects well on your own site.
- Your website and the section the keyword within the post or article is placed on becoming related with one another – For example, if a Women’s fashion Ecommerce site, has a PR release placed in the Sunday Times Style magazine online – the website will become associated to the fashion sector and gain authority from the ST Style standing in that space. The keywords that Google are associating to that page and surrounding section will also be passed in some small way to your linked to (mentioned) page. So, if the page is about Kaftan Wrap Dresses, your Kaftan Wrap page being linked to will get a stronger Google association to those keywords and hopefully rank better for those associated terms.
Good PR takes time, money and effort to achieve valuable earned media on strong sites. So it makes sense to add in SEO knowledge to maximise the online impact of that PR, while amplifying and measuring that impact.
Our SEO team at Bell can offer training, reviewing of PR campaign content and measurement to show impact.
Get in touch if you are interested or have any questions. Follow us on LinkedIn, Twitter and Facebook for the latest updates.