Taking a plastic surgery practice to the next level?
-
We have a plastic surgery client in Las Vegas that we've been working with for about a year. We've got all the technical infrastructure of their site running well (running on Hubspot), we've gotten the appropriate keyword markup done like H1s, title tags, etc. We also disavowed a large amount of spammy backlinks that their previous SEO provider had built that was penalizing them last year. Now our ongoing work is primarily blog content production (topics are split between long-tail procedure-specific keywords and more general health and beauty content), as-needed new web page production, and content sharing over email and social media. Their organic search traffic saw excellent gains for several months, but organic search growth has flattened out now. What should we do to restart organic search traffic growth?
-
What are you thoughts on a strategy like that?
I would not do them. As long as there is other work that could be done on the site, I would not be writing about irrelevant topics.
-
Thank you so much, EGOL! I think the "Common Patient Questions" and "What your physician wants you to know" sidebar lists to articles make a lot of sense. We're having our monthly metrics call with the client next week, and I'll talk through these ideas with them. I think it will make a lot of sense to them as well.
The non-plastic-surgery-related blog articles (places to visit, yoga, green tea, etc.) were being done on the recommendations of another consultant who suggested doing broader health/wellness topics and then socially promoting them to reach a larger audience, to increase the likelihood of getting mentions and backlinks from a wider array of influencers beyond the plastic surgery space. It made logical sense, so we did it for a few months but got little to no traction in terms of mentions or backlinks from others. What are you thoughts on a strategy like that?
-
As you know... there is a lot of competition for these keywords. They are big money. This is not easy turf to take.
Tossing out a few ideas....
This site has tons of content. So, I would put most of my effort into local results, which does not seem to have gotten the same level of attention.
I see the site in the local results and on the map when I search for many different terms. I would review the site thoroughly to be sure that every possible thing has been done for local and review all of the off-site efforts for ranking in the local results.
The site heavily targets the preferred medical terminology such as "breast augmentation". However, there are common usage terms such as "breast enhancement" that get decent amounts of search but few are optimizing for. Also the longer tail "breast enhancement surgery". There might be lots of opportunities there.
This site has a ton of content. There is a lot of content (multiple pages) on many of the primary topics. In my opinion that calls for either... A) category pages..... or... B) beefing up the primary topic page into a category type page. This site has over 100 pages about breast augmentation. So, I would pick the best and most meaningful of these pages and add links to them in the sidebar or at the bottom of the primary topic page and all other same-topic pages on the site. Make it look as nice as possible. Use titles that are as different and in-demand as possible.
I would also make category pages that are a master list of these articles, placing the best at the top, making sure that their titles are different and distinct. Then, a link to these category pages would be in that collection of links that will appear on all same-topic pages.
I believe that a main topic page should have a copious number of links out to other same topic pages on the site and to a category page that lists all good and distinctly different articles for that topic. My sites of similar size all rely on category pages and primary pages with lots of similar topic links. These are the big traffic producers and the pages that perform the best in the SERPs for the most difficult keywords.
That's what I would do. This is by no means a comprehensive review. A person could spend a lot of time reviewing the site and its off-site assets.
===============================
Had to leave... back now to continue....
Why did I suggest the extra links to related content or the category pages? I believe that a page that links out to many related-content pages is more highly optimized than a page that does not. Pages on my site that do this perform very well.
One comment that I have about this site is that it has a LOT of content. However, I think that a lot of that content either was produced without a master plan or it is not being properly used. The physician who owns this site should ask these questions.....
A) What are the most common questions asked by a person who has procedure X done?
B) What information do I want the person who has a procedure done to have but they do not ask?
The site should have all of these articles. And these are the most important articles to link to from the main topic page of that procedure. This information presented for easy access for every visitor is an indication of a good website. Also, google knows what questions are most commonly asked about these topics because that is what people are searching for. If the master page on this website has links to these most commonly asked questions then it is much more relevant than the list of six "related blog articles" that currently appear on the master pages for each procedure. I would replace those with "Common patient questions" and "What your physician wants you to know". Now you have a better website.
I visited the blog and noticed that it contains a lot of articles that are not on the topic of the physicians practice....
** 5 Must-Visit Places in Las Vegas
** 3 Reasons both men and women should practice yoga
** What do green tea, sleep and toothpaste have in common for your skin.
In my opinion, these are a waste of bullets. Dr. Lane Smith should spend his time whipping this website into a better resource for the visitor. He should know the important questions that everyone asks, what they need to know but are not asking, and the information that would surprise them. Get all of those articles written and organized on this website. If they are on this website they are not presented in an organized collection of documents where the visitor has quick and easy access to them. Doing this will better serve the visitor and better optimize the website.
-
Sure thing. The domain is www.smithsurgery.com.
-
Anyone who responds here is going to be shooting into the dark.
The disavow file might have a technical flaw. The disavow file might not address all problems. The content could be targeting common keywords. The content might be pedestrian. The low hanging fruit might have been picked already. Serious competitors from the early days of the web might be commanding the SERPs.
The only way to get valuable input instead of receiving shots in the dark that might completely miss the target is to have a detailed review of the site done by a very experience person. That is quite a bit to ask in a Q&A question, but if you don't have problems with putting the domain out in the forum you might get specific input that is actionable.
-
Their domain authority metrics looks comparable or above their competitors (see Open Site Explorer screenshot). But they still end up ranking well below those same competitors for search terms like "tummy tuck las vegas."
-
How does their organic search compare with their competitors'?
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Transitioning to from Brick and Mortar to Service Area Best Practices
Hi. I am a solo practitioner in a healthcare field. I have had a traditional office for 4 years but have been working virtually since March 2020 . I have decided to give up my office space completely and make an attempt at running my practice virtually. Can anyone share the best practices for making this transition from an SEO perspective? I currently rank between 2nd to 4th for most of my local keywords (so, in the GMB 3-pack). I will be competing against brick and mortar businesses. Is it even realistic to think I can hang onto my current rankings? I have researched virtual addresses and ruled them out. I have considered searching for someone in my industry and/or a landlord who will accept a small fee in exchange for allowing me to use their address on my website and in GMB, but I'm unsure about this as it seems like a rather unstable arrangement and the shared office space aspect may present a problem with google As of now my plan is to change my address in GMB to my home address, which I will hide, and remove the street address from my website, but maintain the rest of the NAP. I will then create targeted pages for the three primary counties I serve. I have also decided to advertise a limited number of home visit options for clients in my home county in order to maintain an in-person component to the business. Does anyone have any suggestions to improve upon this course of action? As for my current local citations, should I just leave them as is (with outdated address), attempt to remove the street address but retain the rest of the NAP, or something else? Any feedback is appreciated.
Local SEO | | custardextract0 -
Location based landing pages best practices
Hello, I am looking for the communities thoughts on location-based landing pages. That is, writing out dozens, sometimes hundreds of landing pages in the format of domain.com/[keyword]-[location] and recycling the same content over and over to localize organic search engine results. i have done it with multiple websites and seen tremendous success, however, i am considering getting rid of these pages and having all of the spammy location based pages 301 redirect to my main page domain.com/[keyword] I am considering this because the above practice seems to be a bit black-hat / spammy and those pages do not offer any unique or valuable content. While i have seen great results from this practice, i feel like Google will eventually penalize this or may already be penalizing me without me knowing it. At the same time, i am hesitant to because these pages are ranking. i.e. domain.com/[keyword-houston] is ranking but domain.com/[keyword] is not ranking Thoughts?
Local SEO | | RyanMeighan0 -
Best Practice For Multisite Targeting Different States With Same Content
I am auditing a Joomla website that uses the MightySites component to create multiple versions of the same site for different state/province areas. For example, the site structure looks something like: example.com/fl/
Local SEO | | MatShepSEO
example.com/mn/
example.com/ny/
example.com/wa/ etc. Each of the state home pages are largely identical and much of the content within each state sub-folder is a copy of the original content on the main example.com site, with minor changes here and there. The client is a national organization and needs to keep this structure to allow each state to be able to edit and change their own content, though as far as I can see content doesn't actually vary much. What's best practice here in reducing duplicate content issues? We can't use hreflang as it is all within one country (although it does also provide two different language versions of content, for which I will use hreflang.) Should we just canonical everything back to the corresponding pages on the example.com site? Any thoughts or recommendations much appreciated.0 -
Community Discussion: Are You Practicing Awareness Of Your Own Marketing Questions?
Good Afternoon Moz Friends! This week, one of my favorite bloggers in the Local SEO industry wrote a post to celebrate his 5 year blogging anniversary. Phil Rozek has brought an incredible level of knowledge to the industry and one of the things I've most admired about his writing is the consistency with which he tackles common, important problems everyone involved is facing. The tip from Phil's anniversary post that I'd like to discuss with you all this this one, about practicing awareness of the obstacles you encounter in your daily work, for the purpose of investigation and possible public sharing of the solutions you discover: "Jot down every idea you have, every question you ask yourself that stumps you, and every question someone asks you that stumps you. Those are yourraw materials. You probably won’t write on all of them, but you’ll want the ability to cherry-pick." As a Moz staffer and a marketer, I can testify to the fact that my brain exists in a whirl of possibilities, questions and a never-ending search for relevant solutions. Never a day goes by in which I don't say to myself, at least once,"I wonder why that's like that? Why doesn't this work? How do I do that? What is that? Why don't I get that?" or something similar about a new product, new technology, Google issue, customer issue, industry issue or what have you. What I've learned is that if I have a question about something that I can't instantly resolve, chances are, I'm not the only one who has that question. If you're a blogger, a copywriter, an email marketer, a social marketer, if you can solve a common problem, you have just discovered something to share. _But,_if you're not practicing mindfulness, little questions that arise in the course of an 8 hour day can come and go. They can simply get lost. This is why I value Phil's common sense suggestion of jotting each mental query down as it arises. A spreadsheet seems like a great idea for this task. Just think of how many talking/sharing points you could accumulate in a month ... and how that could translate into blog posts, newsletters, tweets, etc. Now, I'd like to ask if you've come up with a method for capturing your own thought process when questions arise so that you don't lose track of what might be some of your best queries and ideas. If you have tips to share, the community could really benefit! Thanks!
Local SEO | | MiriamEllis4 -
How to optimize local practices in a hospital group
We are redoing a hospital site, and one of the goals is to increase traffic for the various practices associated with the hospital. Which brings up an interesting dilemma -- how to optimize these practices with respect to local SEO. Currently, the sites are listed as in a directory, one after the other, with multiple addresses. Would it be best to create individual pages to each one? Should these then link to the practice's website, if applicable? Any other insights would be appreciated.
Local SEO | | SecondSEOMOZAcct0 -
Local SEO Best Practices for 2,000+ 'location' service area business
Hi Moz Community! We operate a business where we have a network of 2,000+ technicians around the country who help people repair their mobile phones. These techs do the fixing at the customer's location, making them service area businesses. Even after scouring all of the go-to places on local SEO, I'm struggling to find best practices for this type of situation - the fact that our techs are operating in service areas presents a number of challenges. The biggest one, it seems, is that inevitably service areas are going to overlap. When I talked to a Google rep on this he said this "might" cause our locations to get de-listed and we'd just have to test and find out. Other challenges include the fact that we cannot bulk upload the service areas of our techs, and we cannot bulk verify - meaning there is a ton of work to do at our scale. Any suggestions on where to go to find resources on this specific topic, or an example of someone doing this well we can model? Thanks everyone!
Local SEO | | JohnGroves1 -
How is it possible to create unique content (never blogged or discussed before) content on common topics? Is it practically possible?
It is a common advise by all seo experts to write unique and useful content in the articles or blog posts. How is it possible to find unique topics when thousands of small business owners blog on similar business? Is it really possible? Any advise on this.
Local SEO | | govi0 -
Im a big fan of niche web develop/seo companies. I was wondering how many clients can you ethically take on in the same field, located in the same city
How do niche web development companies justify having multiple clients in the same field in the same cities. I would love an explanation on how to justify this, and how many clients in the same field/same city is acceptable. A good example would be an seo company for auto dealers or hotels. Thanks
Local SEO | | aholyman0