Wednesday, August 31, 2011

SEO | How To Rank Highly In YouTube Searches

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Posted 31 August 2011 10:16am by Marcus Tober with 1 comment

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Just as you can use traditional Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) techniques to make your web pages more visible in online searches, you can optimise your videos to make them more visible on YouTube.

This is certainly a desirable goal. Research has found that video is the universal search category that is most visible in Google searches, and YouTube content was found to be most prominent when video integrations do appear on Google.

And of course, as the most important video platform and video search engine in the world, YouTube has the potential to be a powerful marketing tool. So what factors do you need to consider?

As with traditional SEO, elements such as titles, descriptions and tags all play a role, as do the quality and volume of incoming links. YouTube also measures and evaluates user signals (such as click-through rates, bounce rates, feedback etc.) among its important ranking factors.

Here are my thoughts on some of the key YouTube optimisation issues when it comes to your titles, descriptions, tags and links.

Titles

It goes without saying that you should try to include the important keywords related to your subject in the title of your video (try to arrange for the most important ones to appear first if possible).

Ideally you should also include your main keywords in the filename corresponding to the title, but remember that titles are generally cut off at around 60 characters in YouTube searches.

Descriptions

When drafting your video’s description, you should try to include the main keywords more than once and also bring in additional, semantically related words (while avoiding keyword stuffing, obviously).

While it’s true that only the first 55 to 70 characters of the description are actually displayed by YouTube, you should aim to write four to five sentences (there’s evidence to suggest that even the parts that aren’t visible to the user, are still evaluated).

Remember that external links (for example, affiliate links) can also be integrated into the description.

Tags

You should try to assign up to 10 tags, reflecting the most relevant keywords.

Links

External links are an important factor in YouTube video optimisation. And similar rules apply here as with traditional link building.

The construction of a good link profile with thematically relevant links is crucial, with most experts agreeing that links from social media are also assessed.

User Signals

In general, YouTube wants to make videos that are relevant and engaging more visible, and it evaluates signals from visitors/users to work out which these are.

So, for example, YouTube tracks how long users have stayed watching a video and at which point they left, which is why it has been able to make click-through rates (CTR) and bounce rates an important factor for determining video rankings.

If you’re sneaky and try to use misleading or irrelevant keywords and/or titles to attract visitors, then high bounce rates will tell YouTube to make your content less visible.

Here’s a list of some of the other important user signals that YouTube takes account of:

The number of times the video has been viewed (within a set time frame). The more often it’s viewed, the more prominently it will be displayed. And in an ideal scenario it will land in the YouTube’s top lists.

User feedback in the form of comments.

The number of times the video appears in user playlists.

The number of positive ratings the video has received.

The number of blogs that have posted the video (which obviously also increases video impressions).

In a similar way to the Google AdWords Keyword Tool, the YouTube Keyword Tool provides the opportunity to examine search volumes for individual keywords.

Using this, you can quickly understand which keywords are suitable for optimising your video.

Keywords that have a high search volume within YouTube are also often displayed right at the top of the Universal Search integrations within the normal Google search engine rankings pages (SERPs) and therefore have a higher CTR.

A good preview image (thumbnail) increases click-through rates enormously, so it’s important to try to make YouTube select an eye catching and distinctive image from your video.

YouTube will tend to take the thumbnail image from one of three positions within your video. So after you have uploaded the video, you can use ‘Edit’ to select between one and three thumbnails to be made available by YouTube.

A rule of thumb for calculating where in your video YouTube will look to capture your thumbnail is:

X = Length of video in seconds.

Y = X divided by 4.

Thumbnail 1 = Y.

Thumbnail 2 = Y x 2.

Thumbnail 3 = Y x 3.

In other words you need to edit your video so that you have the optimal thumbnail in the right position.

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