Learn how to get the best out of the relationships between words, topics and pages to maximize your SEO results.
As search engines evolve to understand language in a more sophisticated way, relationships are becoming ever more important in SEO. Semantic search is here to stay so it’s time to pay attention to connections and associations to take your SEO content to a new level.
Using entities in your content can help you produce higher-quality pieces.
Linking these pages, guides and sections of your website together can help to maximize relationships even further to achieve some outstanding results.
So how can you get started?
Terminologies you’ll need to know
Natural Language Processing (NLP): The process of understanding text and speech words like a human being does. It’s a branch of AI computer science that helps machines to interpret and understand the true meaning behind words. Google uses NLP to better understand our search queries and to serve the best results to those queries.
Entities: Google defines an entity as a thing or concept that is “singular, unique, well-defined, and distinguishable.” These entities are identified and labeled, helping search engines to understand their meaning based on their relationship with other entities.
Semantic search: The process of providing a user with the best possible results to their query based on the true meaning of that query. The search engine uses language and entity relationships to understand search intent, and the context of that query and serve up results grounded in actual meaning rather than keyword matching.
How are all these connected?
NLP and the understanding of entities are the keys to making semantic search work successfully.
If Google didn’t have a good grasp of how we really use and understand language, it could easily misinterpret certain search queries.
Equally, incorrect labeling of what an entity is could produce some confusing search results.
As humans, we make these connections naturally due to the context in which we experience them. AI has to learn these connections based on contextual cues.
Over recent years, Google’s Hummingbird, BERT and now MUM updates have all been building toward a more sophisticated semantic search. (You can find out more about Google’s use of AI in search here.)
With all this in mind, it’s time to delve into the multiple facets of leveraging relationships to get better SEO results.
1. Content
Writing great content for semantic search goes way beyond simple keywords. It must contain the relevant entities and consider the relationships between them.
Why do entities matter in SEO content?
Entities are important for SEO content because they are connected by relationships. These entities and the relationships that associate them are what Google is using to determine meaning and context within any piece of written content.
All these things and concepts are related to other things and concepts.
Some of these relationships are very strong, others are weaker.
Some entities are widely used in text across the web in lots of different contexts, and others are used sparingly in specific circumstances.
For a well-recognized entity like the Empire State Building, you can see a really rich knowledge graph panel that includes basic information, address, opening hours, busy times, reviews and even recent news.
This could help to answer a whole host of users’ queries before they have even asked them.
Semantic search learns from all these connections to determine the information that’s going to be most relevant to a user’s query.
So, why should this matter for SEO?
If you want Google to serve your content as one of the top results for a certain set of queries, it’s crucial to include the entities with the strongest relationships to those queries.
This requires a thorough understanding of a topic and the entity relationships involved.
How can I use relationships to write better SEO content?
When we appreciate how important entities are in search, it’s easy to see why considering which entities relate to the topics we’re writing about is vital for serving users’ queries.
If you want to write better content, you need to thoroughly explore the entities and relationships involved.
If you were writing about the theory of evolution, for example, your content would be lacking if it didn’t mention Charles Darwin, natural selection, humans, history, and ancestors.
In fact, you can see a lot of these entities connected to the topic using Google’s image search: