As a marketer or someone involved
in SEO, you’ve probably heard of Schema markup, but if you haven’t, it’s okay.
While frequently viewed as a relatively new technology to increase search
engine rankings and the accessibility and usability of your pages, the markup
has actually been around for years. If it’s not currently part of your SEO
strategy, now is the time to make a change.
Keep reading to learn more about
the basics of schema markup, along with 3 compelling reasons to start using it
on your website today.
What is it and How Does
it Work?
According to Dan Shewan at WordStream, schema is “a
type of microdata that makes it easier for search engines to parse and
interpret the information on your webpages more effectively so they can serve
relevant results to users based on search queries.”
To make that even simpler, schema
markup takes the information that matters most for search engines to find your
information, puts it front and center as far as the backend of a website is
concerned and serves it up to increase the odds of a website using the markup
standing out above a website that does not. It’s wholly designed to increase
the ease and effectiveness of search engine crawlers.
Additional information is
available on Schema.org,
launched in 2011 as a result of the Schema project – a collaboration between
multiple large search engines like Google, Bing and Yahoo!. The site brings
Schema markup to the forefront of website design by providing a large
collection of schemas – largely viewed as html tags – that can be used by web
designers, developers and average users to improve search engine placement.
Schema works similarly to other
markup formats by applying microdata to page content by easily defining – in
html terms – exactly what a webpage contains and how it should be treated. It
presents data in an easy-to-read format for search engine crawlers and makes it
more likely that relevant information will be presented to searchers. It makes
the crawlers’ jobs easier and is therefore generally rewarded.
1. Matt Cutts
has Been Recommending it For Years.
Matt Cutts – head of Google’s
Webspam team, single-handedly responsible for shutting down multiple websites
utilizing questionable SEO strategies and other actions – has been recommending
schema markup for years. This is big – as someone who has helped to write the
technology behind the largest search engine in the world, his words carry
weight.
Back in 2012, in a webmaster help video, Cutts shared the
following information about schema markup.
“Just because you implement
schema.org doesn’t mean you necessarily rank higher. But, there are some corner
cases, like if you were to type in ‘lasagna,’ and then click over on the left
hand side and click on ‘recipes,’ that’s the sort of thing where using
schema.org markup might help, because then you’re more likely to be showing up
in that at all.”
While he was reluctant to
outright say that it would help rankings, he made it clear that it definitely
wouldn’t hurt anything. Coming from one of the top names in Google, these
matters.
2. Rich Snippets, Like
Those Featured in Google SERPs, Result in Higher CTRs.
Schema markup leads to tangible
benefits, including enhanced search engine results pages – SERPs – that stand
out among the competition. While these results generally include items like
titles and snippets of a full webpage, targeted
schema markup can be created to
include customer rankings, photos and more.
Yes, visually it’s more
appealing, but, it’s also more effective. Information shared by Search Engine Land indicates that rich snippets, listings
that include more information than standard search engine listings, can
increase click-through rates by 30%. Thirty percent more web traffic can do a
lot to take a company to the next level, while looping back and increasing
search engine visibility even more. Schema markup allows for this circle and as
such, should be a serious consideration for increasing rankings and website
effectiveness.
3. Pages with Schema
Markup Rank an Average of 4 Positions Higher on Google
A recent study by Searchmetrics revealed that while less than 1
percent of sites on the Internet have implemented Schema markup, those who have
done so rank an average of 4 positions higher on Google. That can mean the difference between page 1 and page
2, or being displayed in the top results or being buried, never to be found by
searchers and prospective clients.
The study goes on to explain that Google shows results for sites
with Schema markup – like those mentioned in reason number 2 – for over 36% of
keyword queries, while keywords without markups are shown less frequently.
The bottom line is simple. Schema
has been recommended by individuals behind the top search engines in the world
and cannot hurt anything, the rich snippets that the practice enables lead to
higher click-through rates and those with the markup rank higher in search
engine results than sites that do not. Not using the markup – based on these
reasons alone – just doesn’t make sense.
If you’re ready to put schema
markup to work for your site, or are interested in learning more, check out
Schema.org’s getting started
guide. The time to start is now.
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