SEO and Competitor Analysis
Running a complete SEO and competitor analysis is always a good idea. This
will help you identify areas of successful optimisation and where you should
focus your attention to level up your visibility and traffic potential.
Given the highly competitive nature of the financial services market,
competitor analysis is non-negotiable. You must understand what your rivals
are doing if you are to outrank them and capture your target audience's
attention and trust.
Big Tech Platforms competitor analysis dives into your competitor's content strategy
and keyword rankings. This information helps our team identify gaps in your
strategy, pinpointing easy wins to enhance your site's visibility and
traffic.
Keyword Research and Use
One critical aspect of on-page optimisations is researching and targeting
keywords.
Search volume and keyword difficulty
You'll likely come across many words and phrases when first researching which
keywords relate to your financial services company and area of expertise.
Typically, these keywords will be displayed with relevant data like their
search volume (how many people search for the term) and keyword difficulty
(how easy it is to rank for).
While many assume the highest volume keywords are the ones to target, it can
be challenging to rank for them immediately. Therefore, it often pays to
initially focus on lower volume, less competitive keywords to build your
reputation as a credible industry authority.
If your company offers financial services to a particular region, you will
want to target local SEO keywords. These usually have lower search volumes
but can help you reach more qualified leads.
Relevance
You'll likely end up with an overwhelmingly long list of potential keywords
in your initial research stages. So how do you choose which of these will be
the most beneficial to target?
Aside from how many people search for them and how tricky they are to rank
for, you'll also want to consider how relevant they are to your financial
services. Remember that you want to encourage those interested in your
business to visit your site. Of course, this will include any keywords,
phrases, or questions people may search for when first developing an
interest in your area of expertise.
Search Intent
Once you have a list of keywords, it's time to start creating content around
them. You'll need to be wary of overusing your keywords as this could end up
making your content hard to read and with Google penalising your page as
spam.
You should prioritise search intent when writing for particular keywords.
Essentially this just means that you need to put yourself in your audiences'
shoes to work out what they hope to find when they search specific terms.
For instance, are they looking to research and buy a service, or are they
just on the hunt for information to clarify certain concepts?
Publish and Update Content
Content should be at the heart of any sustainable SEO strategy. Therefore,
you'll need to ensure you publish new, on-trend, well-written, and
expertly-researched content that adds value to your target audience.
Well-written content will add value for potential clients and allow you to
rank for various keywords according to search intent. It's essential to
maintain a human-first approach. By this, we mean you should write for
people, not search engines.
Generally, this will involve writing a range of informational and
transactional copy.
Producing informational content may not always feel worthwhile. It boosts
traffic but often has a less dramatic impact on conversion rates. However,
publishing helpful and informative copy will help signal (to people and
search engines) that your website is useful. This will further increase your
visibility, providing more leads who may recommend your company or return to
you when ready to take the next step.
When it comes to money, people want to know that they can trust the
information and services you provide. So you'll need to ensure your content
meets Google E-A-T guidelines and provides a positive experience for your
users.
This means your copy should not just be accurate and written according to
keywords and search intent but also be easy to understand and provide
readers with valuable information. You should also audit and edit past
content to ensure all your content is up-to-date and high-quality.
Technical SEO
Technical SEO improvements help search engine bots crawl and index your
financial services website. This involves many back-end elements, but two of
the most important are having a fast-loading, responsive site.
Responsive and mobile-friendly web design
By the end of 2022, over 59% of global web traffic came from mobile devices.
Therefore, a mobile-friendly design is critical because more than half of
your potential clients may view your site via mobile.
You should also have a responsive web design that can automatically adjust to
fit various screen sizes. A mobile-friendly and responsive website will
guarantee that all users, no matter what device they use, can access and
view your website fully.
Fast page load speeds
People are impatient. Studies show that bounce rates (people leaving a web
page) increase as the load time goes up. So your page should load within
just a couple of seconds to keep users happy and prevent them from leaving
Off-page SEO
Off-page optimisations are just as important as those you make on-page.
Backlinks
High-quality backlinks will improve your Google E-A-T quality rating and SERP
ranking. However, backlinks are more challenging to acquire since they link
back to your site from other web pages, meaning you cannot place them.
You can gain backlinks by producing helpful and reliable content that others
want to link to and by creating content for other publications to which you
link back to your site.
Social Media
Social
media marketing is a valuable aid in SEO and digital marketing
generally. Companies in the financial services sector often neglect this
area, but it provides extra opportunities through which you can gain
customer attention and share information.
SEO audits and improvements
As you've likely realised by now, search engine optimisation isn't a
one-and-done practice. It takes time to make the kind of improvements
required for optimising financial services websites.
While the results of your efforts won't disappear overnight (unlike with PPC
adverts), you will slowly lose your rankings and trust ratings if you fail
to keep your site up-to-date with the latest relevant keywords and content.
The best SEO practices and financial industry regulations are liable to
change. If you do not keep up with these changes, you will eventually lose
your authority and trust approval and will no longer rank for search engines
or people.
Regular SEO audits of your site will help reveal where you are succeeding and
where improvements are still needed.