As the head of content for a digital marketing agency, I can spin a convincing argument on the importance of search engine optimization. And because I've been able to produce some pretty solid results—like those elusive featured snippets—it appears to clients that I have some kind of magic SEO formula.

I don't.

What I do have is a background in journalism—which, it turns out, was the best 20th century training in the world if you want to appeal to 21st century search bots that didn't even exist back in the day.

So, although there may not exactly be a magic formula, there are steps you can take to write for humans that will also appeal to the Google bots that determine whether your content will ever see the search engine light of day—i.e., search engine results pages.

1. Stay true to your brand

Patagonia seems to embrace its "why" even at the risk of profit. In 2011, the company took out a full-page advertisement in The New York Times on Black Friday with one of its fleece zip-ups prominently displayed below the callout: Don't Buy This Jacket.

What?!

In an effort to speak to a customer base that believes in the company's products and its belief that "to lighten our environmental footprint, everyone needs to consume less," Patagonia urged consumers to buy fewer products, even if that meant taking a pass on its own brand for the season.

More recently, Nike faced a boycott of its products when it ran a controversial ad in 2018 featuring knee-taker Colin Kaepernick. The company could have capitulated, apologizing for the campaign. Instead, its bold stance sent a message: "This is who we are. If you don't like it, don't buy our products." After an initial dip, Nike's stock price soared, and its sales jumped.

How does this kind of action please an algorithm? Google considers trust, authority, and reputation when it ranks your site. The only way to hit all those marks is to remain true to your core principles as a brand. But first you need to know what they are.

2. Listen to your audience

You can't pitch to an audience if you don't know who that audience is. In the case of Patagonia and Nike, both brands knew their audiences well enough to understand their users would not abandon them—even if the brand took an out-of-box ad approach or a controversial stand on a hot-button issue.

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Four Human Writing Tips That Will Make Search Bots Smile

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Linda Emma

Linda Emma is storyteller-in-chief at CloudControlMedia, where she weaves stories and stats to produce results for cross-vertical clients. Most recently, she spoke at EduData Summit on how to use AI technology for enrollments.

LinkedIn: Linda Emma