A homepage serves many different purposes. It is your welcoming page and your main user guide for your website. There is, however, one purpose that wefeel a homepage doesn’t have and that is ranking for keywords other than your business name or brand. We have had quite a few questions about that, so it’s something certain website owners think about. The question is: should they?
Homepage SEO
The process of optimizing your homepage for Google, or any other search engine, could be called homepage SEO. Let me make a bold statement right after naming it: We don’t think that homepage SEO exists – as such. That might not be what a website owner wants to hear, especially if they have been trying to rank the homepage for years.
If your website is set up right and you have a nice number of backlinks, your homepage will probably rank for your business name or brand anyway. However, there is an exception to that rule. These days, a lot of websites have keyword-based names like ‘Christmas Cookies’, ‘Grow Trees’ or ‘Cute Socks’. If your ‘brand’ name is a keyword people could use in Google, it becomes somewhat different. There will be more websites targeting these keywords, so all of a sudden you’re facing competition for your site name.
Cornerstone content
As you probably won’t try to rank your contact page, neither should you try to rank your homepage. That also means you don’t need to bother setting a focus keyword for these pages, let alone spend hours trying to get that green bullet.
However, we must make a huge side note. We believe that SEO, in general, will only work when other things like speed, user experience, and social media are taken into account as well. And you could optimize your homepage for that.
Optimizing your homepage: SEO style
Although you don’t have to optimize your homepage for a keyword, there is still work to be done. We have mentioned a few in this article, but there are more. These are the things you can do to optimize your homepage for SEO related things:
1. Make sure the page title focuses on your brand name or main product;
2. Add a clear, recognizable logo in the upper left corner for branding;
3. There should be a clear call-to-action that draws attention;
4. Don’t forget to structure your menu;
5. Provide OpenGraph and Twitter Cards for better social sharing;
6. Make sure the meta description is filled out, that it mentions your USPs and invites the visitor to your website;
7. Product images are inviting, but the page needs textual information or a great tagline as well;
8. Don’t clutter your homepage with a million links. Keep it focused and don’t flood your footer or menu with these links;
9. Contact details should be available on most websites, including social buttons and perhaps a newsletter subscription;
10. If applicable, add a search bar (prominent or as an extra).
This is a small checklist every website owner could use to analyze his own homepage. Have you thought of all of these?