Social Signals, SEO, and Their Impact on One Another

Matt Cutts shared a video where he discussed the challenge that engineers might have if they had created dependencies between the Google ranking algorithms and social signals. In short, it would be far too risky to build these dependencies in the event the other social media platform either blocked search or fell in popularity.

I have no doubt this is the case, but therumorspersist as search engine professionals often see a correlation between trending social topics and trending search engine rankings. As Matt reiterates, that’s not causation, though. We’ve shared our thoughts on the impact of social media on SEO already, but let’s discuss social signals and how the two are correlated.

Because there’s not a direct correlation doesn’t mean there’s not an impact, though. If I find a great resource or platform on search, I will share it on my social media accounts. If I discover a tool on social media and share it with my extensive audience, it will likely lead to additional articles and backlinks that drive ranking. So while there’s not a direct correlation, there is an indirect causation that each channel can have on the other.

Utilizing both channels will improve the results of the other. Don’t ignore this opportunity! Here are some great tips from Sprout Social for social media managers to align with organic search engine optimization strategies.

Social Media Sharing is Growing

Parse.ly recently released a report that Facebook has now overcame Google as the top referrer to publishers. This decline is critical for publishers to keep in mind. If you’re pouring all of your efforts into search engine optimization and backlink opportunities, and not developing a great social media strategy, the opportunities to reach new audiences is declining.

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