}
A complete set of templates, checklists, and tools for professional wedding planners.
Business
Wedding Planning
Marketing
Day in the Life
Self Development
Friday Favorites
5 SEO Mistakes Wedding Planners Keep Making
I know you’re working hard to increase your visibility, and in many cases, that means trying to do SEO on your website. You’ve read a few articles, and you’re doing your best to follow the SEO rules you know.
Unfortunately, I’m here to tell you that not every wedding planner SEO article you’ve read is up to date for today’s best practices.
As someone offering wedding vendor SEO services, I often discover in my SEO Roadmap process that wedding planners are following outdated or spammy practices. They may have heard from a friend that these things work, or they may have read an article from 2013 about a tactic that used to be OK.
So today, let’s talk about 5 big mistakes wedding planners are making with SEO and the tactics you should stop using.
Contrary to popular belief, the wedding planner that uses their city’s keyword the most is not the one who shows up first in Google.
Every day, I see wedding vendors who are trying to use their focus keyword (“wedding planner in Tucson” for example) as much as humanly possible. It’s in their blog post titles, on every page, at the bottom of every blog post, etc.
This is known as keyword stuffing, and Google doesn’t like it. Over-use of your keyword may cause Google to view your website as spammy.
Instead of stuffing your focus keyword absolutely everywhere, here’s what I recommend
Somewhere in SEO history, someone wrote an article that said you should include all sorts of keywords in your image names and alt tags to rank on Google.
Forcing keywords into image names may have worked in 2010, but it should be avoided today.
Google’s Search Engine Optimization Starter Guide specifies that you should use “brief, but descriptive filenames and alt text.“ They tell us to avoid “writing extremely lengthy filenames” and “stuffing keywords into alt text.“
When it comes to images, do:
Do not:
To rank in search engines and really help users, web pages need words.
I know the temptation is to just write a brief introduction to a wedding in your featured gallery or in a blog post, and then to include tons of images to tell the story.
Unfortunately, that doesn’t really help Google to know what your page is about and if they should rank it in search results.
Instead, write a longer post that introduces the couple, shares the details, explains why some of the decisions were made for venue and decor, explains your role in the planning and wedding day, and includes creative details.
I tell my clients to aim for at least 500 words per page or post, and bonus points if they can get it to 750-1000. I know that is a ton of writing, but this will clearly differentiate your site as the most helpful and relevant.
If you want searchers to click on your website in search results, you have to make it interesting!
You do that first with your meta titles and descriptions.
These are the title and small paragraph that show in search results for your website.
Did you know that you do have some control over these? While Google will sometimes pull in other information on the page to show in search results, it will do that less if you write an engaging, unique title and description.
I recommend writing custom meta titles and descriptions for your home page, major inner pages, and key blog posts.
Where you enter these meta titles and descriptions depends on your website platform and how your website was built. Either ask your web designer or search the help articles for your platform.
The last most common mistake I see is the complete abuse of categories and tags on blog posts.
So many wedding planners think adding 30 similar tags to a blog post will help it rank. Unfortunately, this is another type of keyword stuffing. It’s spammy, and it should be avoided.
Instead, use categories and tags to actually group similar content together. If the user wouldn’t want to click on a tag to see similar blog posts, the tag shouldn’t be used.
Here are a few examples of relevant, helpful blog tags:
Overall, the goal in today’s SEO is to provide helpful content for your visitor. It is not to stuff keywords everywhere or use your target keyword the most. If you keep your website visitor and what they need top-of-mind, you are likely to win in both search engine rankings and in inquiries.
This is a sponsored post from Sara Dunn. Sara is the geeky best friend to creative wedding pros. As a wedding SEO consultant, she helps wedding planners, photographers, venues, florists, and more reach rockstar status on Google. If you’d like to get more inquiries so you can be choosy about taking on the clients you really want, Sara’s SEO services and advice can help you drive the traffic you need. https://saradoesseo.com/
A complete set of templates, checklists, and tools for professional wedding planners.
Business
Wedding Planning
Marketing
Day in the Life
Self Development
Friday Favorites
Get the Free Guide: 20 Low-Cost Marketing Ideas for Wedding and Event Planners
Check your inbox for your free marketing guide!
PLANNER’S LOUNGE © 2023 | Website Design by Megan Martin Creative | Terms & Conditions
Comments Off on 5 SEO Mistakes Wedding Planners Keep Making
share this post on