1. Interviews
Google rewards those who publish great content for their users. An easy way to publish such content is to interview experts within your industry and publish the interviews—which needn't be done in person.
Check out this example from BrightLocal; the interview might have done by email, over the phone, or in person:
The benefits of interviewing experts are several: The experts would likely link back to you; your users will trust you because they trust the experts; Google will trust you if you have correct coding in place for them to see co-author citation.
You will benefit most if you use rel=author tags in your site and you ask your guest bloggers to add your site in Google+ as a site they contribute to. Watch this video tutorial on how to correctly code authorship markup.
2. Lists
People like to read lists, which are easily generated. They are also unique content that Google will love. All you need to do is express your thoughts on any sort of "top 10":
Need help thinking of types of lists to create? Here are some ideas:
- Google.com: To find past lists people have created, type this into Google.com: intitle:list intitle:[KEYWORD] "top 10"
- Google Images: To find past visual lists people have published, type this into Google Images: intitle:infographic intitle:"top 10" [KEYWORD]
- Google News: To find lists large media outlets have published, type this into Google News: intitle:"top 10" [list] [KEYWORD]
- Google Blogs: intitle:"top 10" [list] intitle:[KEYWORD]
3. Resource Centers
Wikipedia is No. 1 for millions of keywords because it is a resource that provides the majority of what people are searching for: trusted, organized information.
Google does not want you to create a blog and start "blogging" about keywords that you want to rank No. 1 for. No one reads that, and Google will not rank your blog posts No. 1. Instead of writing blog posts merely to publish keyword-rich content, think about creating a resource center.
What is a resource center? It is an educational section on your website that displays information in a way that encourages learning; you design it to "sell" your content.
Here is an example of a resource center (see the Web page):
Which would be more helpful to someone who had to file for bankruptcy in the next 30 days: Browsing through years of blogs posts to see whether Betty Blogger had created a post that answered his questions, or taking a few seconds to browse over her resource center? A resource center would provide more value to users and it would benefit them more quickly.
Google eats up resource centers, because more people link to them, share them, and spend time on them than they do on blog posts. Organize what you would have wanted to blog about into an educational resource center that you constantly update. Do that, and Google will reward you.
4. Social Content
This one is a no-brainer, but it's often missed. Are you updating your Google+, Twitter, and Facebook account when you publish any of the 16 other types of content that is in this article?
When people write "what they are doing" just for the sake of updating their social account—merely because someone told them they should update at least once a day— it's meaningless. No one is going to follow you on social media unless what you update convinces them that they will miss something you publish in the future.
The easiest way to gain real social followers who are potential customers is to prove to them that you are an expert. So create great content, and update your accounts when you publish that content.
5. Polls and Surveys
How many polls and surveys did you see on TV about the presidential election? People digest information when it is presented to them in this format:
For best results, spend the time to (1) poll/survey 800+ people; (2) display your results visually; (3) publish the results on your site; and (4) then reach out to media outlets with additional information, data, and graphics they can use. And example is my Twitter poll that eMarketer picked up.
If you don't have time to meet polling standards (PDF), hire a company to do the poll for you. Remember, if you don't spend them time and money needed to accurately poll a large enough group, highly valued media sites will not pick up the story and Google will not "eat up your content."
6. Revisions/Updates
Wikipedia wasn't built in a day; its content has been written, revised, updated, and revised again and again. So consider: Can the content you created last year on "topic ABC" be updated? Did new research on the same topic come out? Instead of creating a new blog post, why not revise the old one?
One of the easiest ways to update/revise content is to build and update links. Re-read your old content to see whether you've built new pages on subjects you mentioned in the original post. In the following example, perhaps you built a page on "American rock bands" and now you can link to it. Or, perhaps Weezer produced a new song and now you add that link to the original resource.
Taking that approach will help you create great content. Google loves fresh content that updates, and users like finding one great resource that answers their questions instead of having to browse and read 20 blog posts.
Regularly (every month or year, say) go back and update/revise and even merge content for that very reason.
7. Reviews
How can a local service-based business create great content that Google will love? Find popular products that people are interested in and create reviews.
For example, remember all those Olympic beach volleyball players who had that colorful tape all over their body? If you are a chiropractor or sports therapist, why not create a video review of the most popular kinesio tape?
How do you get a link from Time.com? How do you get a video to go "viral?" Have some fun with your content! Check out this iPad parody review.