Many marketers and business owners think that SEO is most effective once a website has been designed and developed. There is a belief that SEO and web development and design are inherently different in their ‘philosophies’ (for lack of a better word), whereas they have more in common than you might realise.
It’s hardly surprising why so many websites suffer from issues such as slow responsiveness and speed, poor functionality, and lack of traffic, to name just a few. While a company owner or marketer will likely have made some effort in trying to establish a presence on search engines, sometimes the website itself is just not right and doesn’t accomplish any business goals, or doesn’t reflect the business well enough.
Customers make an informed decision about a website and brand within a few seconds from when they discover it for the first time. If a site does not tick a few crucial user experience and design boxes from the outset, you could be driving potential traffic and customers away in droves. Conversely, you may have spent a fortune on a professional website, but may not be clued into what your audience is searching for, or how to tweak your site in subtle and intricate ways to help it become more visible in search engines.
Both of these scenarios are all too common, which is why it’s important to approach SEO and web design as a collective, instead of viewing them as vastly disparate investments.
Where Do SEO and Web Design Overlap?
SEO and web design work together more harmoniously than most people realise. When you execute both strategies correctly and with the same goals in mind, you can create an easier and more comfortable user experience for people that land on your site and, hopefully, convert into customers. But in what components of a website does its design and SEO strategy intertwine?
Responsiveness
Most search traffic is performed on mobile devices these days, which is why it’s important to ensure that your website is optimised for mobile. Google made mobile-friendliness a ranking factor in 2015, before introducing AMP (Accelerated Mobile Pages) and mobile-first indexing in the years that followed. Therefore, a mobile-first approach to the design – and the potential users using those devices – is crucial to align SEO and web design.
Site Speed
Many websites are built without consideration for speed, and it’s not unusual for developers to realise that plugins or features of a site could be slowing it down significantly. Website speed isn’t just important for user experience, but it’s one of the most important aspects of technical SEO, with Google outlining guidelines – known as Core Web Vitals – to help developers optimise the speed and UX of sites to boost rankings. In short, site speed is a huge ranking signal, and it usually involves diving into the website code.
Security
Nowadays, security is crucial. Buyer habits have changed significantly, with most purchases being conducted online. Therefore, to encrypt sensitive consumer data via the internet, businesses need SSL certification, to ensure every standard HTTP request from a browser to a server is indecipherable. SSL certificates are absolutely vital for websites these days, particularly for brands that run large-scale eCommerce stores.
SSLs are so important now that search engines like Google alert users when they are browsing unsecured sites, and this can have a detrimental effect on conversions. If sites are not using HTTPS and opting for standard HTTP, it will affect their Google rankings over time, as fewer people will use it, and therefore Google will not see it as a trustworthy resource. Therefore, it just makes sense to encrypt your site, to secure (pun intended) buyer trust and search engine visibility.
Site Plan
Sitemaps are crucial to have embedded within your site code to make it easier for search engine bots to crawl your website. A sitemap provides search engines with a guide to all the pages and content on your site, and you can effectively stipulate which pages are the most important.
XML sitemaps also help user navigation and contain important metadata about your pages, therefore helping them rank higher. If you do not align your site plan with your web design, you could risk creating a complex sitemap that makes it more challenging for bots to crawl and users to navigate.
How to Ensure Your Website Performs Well From the Start
To avoid falling into the trap of prioritising a website that’s visually appealing without factoring SEO into the mix until later, it’s important to take the below steps. Ignoring SEO when designing and developing a site can be a huge detriment, resulting in lost business and poor rankings. What good is a website if nobody can find it?
However, taking these steps will help you ensure your website gets off on the right foot, allowing you to manage its performance more effectively.
Depending on your industry and niche(s), you may have ‘SEO’ competitors as well as similar businesses to yours, so it’s worth finding a healthy balance. By understanding what your competitors are ranking for and what they are providing to their customers (or rather, what they are not), you can tap into gaps in your own site and content.
Content marketing and analytics tools will also list how much traffic you’re getting on mobile and desktop, so you can make informed decisions on what to do with pages that aren’t performing well over time.
Therefore, a test server is always useful as a way to double-check whether the updates work or, alternatively, consider paying a third-party development agency to oversee the management of your site, including any patching and security.
Once your site is launched, the writing shouldn’t stop there! Google loves sites that continually add pages of relevant content, usually of topical interest or that reflect new business developments. Adding blogs and articles, in the same manner, is crucial for driving traffic.
In page content, it’s wise to use relevant H1 and H2 tags to break up the text. The H1 and Page Title should be similar but not exactly match. Consider also using bullet points, a mixture of internal and external links, alt text for images, and breadcrumbs to show the user where they are on the site.
If you fall into this category, communicate with them about your goals, targets and what you want to achieve out of your investment. Post-launch, regularly liaise with your agency to ensure you are up to speed with developments. Over time, they will make recommendations to you about how your site can be improved, so take those on board.