Recherche avancée

Médias (1)

Mot : - Tags -/berlin

Autres articles (111)

  • Script d’installation automatique de MediaSPIP

    25 avril 2011, par

    Afin de palier aux difficultés d’installation dues principalement aux dépendances logicielles coté serveur, un script d’installation "tout en un" en bash a été créé afin de faciliter cette étape sur un serveur doté d’une distribution Linux compatible.
    Vous devez bénéficier d’un accès SSH à votre serveur et d’un compte "root" afin de l’utiliser, ce qui permettra d’installer les dépendances. Contactez votre hébergeur si vous ne disposez pas de cela.
    La documentation de l’utilisation du script d’installation (...)

  • Que fait exactement ce script ?

    18 janvier 2011, par

    Ce script est écrit en bash. Il est donc facilement utilisable sur n’importe quel serveur.
    Il n’est compatible qu’avec une liste de distributions précises (voir Liste des distributions compatibles).
    Installation de dépendances de MediaSPIP
    Son rôle principal est d’installer l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles nécessaires coté serveur à savoir :
    Les outils de base pour pouvoir installer le reste des dépendances Les outils de développements : build-essential (via APT depuis les dépôts officiels) ; (...)

  • Automated installation script of MediaSPIP

    25 avril 2011, par

    To overcome the difficulties mainly due to the installation of server side software dependencies, an "all-in-one" installation script written in bash was created to facilitate this step on a server with a compatible Linux distribution.
    You must have access to your server via SSH and a root account to use it, which will install the dependencies. Contact your provider if you do not have that.
    The documentation of the use of this installation script is available here.
    The code of this (...)

Sur d’autres sites (6714)

  • Google Optimize vs Matomo A/B Testing : Everything You Need to Know

    17 mars 2023, par Erin — Analytics Tips

    Google Optimize is a popular A/B testing tool marketers use to validate the performance of different marketing assets, website design elements and promotional offers. 

    But by September 2023, Google will sunset both free and paid versions of the Optimize product. 

    If you’re searching for an equally robust, but GDPR compliant, privacy-friendly alternative to Google Optimize, have a look at Matomo A/B Testing

    Integrated with our analytics platform and conversion rate optimisation (CRO) tools, Matomo allows you to run A/B and A/B/n tests without any usage caps or compromises in user privacy.

    Disclaimer : Please note that the information provided in this blog post is for general informational purposes only and is not intended to provide legal advice. Every situation is unique and requires a specific legal analysis. If you have any questions regarding the legal implications of any matter, please consult with your legal team or seek advice from a qualified legal professional.

    Google Optimize vs Matomo : Key Capabilities Compared 

    This guide shows how Matomo A/B testing stacks against Google Optimize in terms of features, reporting, integrations and pricing.

    Supported Platforms 

    Google Optimize supports experiments for dynamic websites and single-page mobile apps only. 

    If you want to run split tests in mobile apps, you’ll have to do so via Firebase — Google’s app development platform. It also has a free tier but paid usage-based subscription kicks in after your product(s) reaches a certain usage threshold. 

    Google Optimize also doesn’t support CRO experiments for web or desktop applications, email campaigns or paid ad campaigns.Matomo A/B Testing, in contrast, allows you to run experiments in virtually every channel. We have three installation options — using JavaScript, server-side technology, or our mobile tracking SDK. These allow you to run split tests in any type of web or mobile app (including games), a desktop product, or on your website. Also, you can do different email marketing tests (e.g., compare subject line variants).

    A/B Testing 

    A/B testing (split testing) is the core feature of both products. Marketers use A/B testing to determine which creative elements such as website microcopy, button placements and banner versions, resonate better with target audiences. 

    You can benchmark different versions against one another to determine which variation resonates more with users. Or you can test an A version against B, C, D and beyond. This is called A/B/n testing. 

    Both Matomo A/B testing and Google Optimize let you test either separate page elements or two completely different landing page designs, using redirect tests. You can show different variants to different user groups (aka apply targeting criteria). For example, activate tests only for certain device types, locations or types of on-site behaviour. 

    The advantage of Matomo is that we don’t limit the number of concurrent experiments you can run. With Google Optimize, you’re limited to 5 simultaneous experiments. Likewise, 

    Matomo lets you select an unlimited number of experiment objectives, whereas Google caps the maximum choice to 3 predefined options per experiment. 

    Objectives are criteria the underlying statistical model will use to determine the best-performing version. Typically, marketers use metrics such as page views, session duration, bounce rate or generated revenue as conversion goals

    Conversions Report Matomo

    Multivariate testing (MVT)

    Multivariate testing (MVT) allows you to “pack” several A/B tests into one active experiment. In other words : You create a stack of variants to determine which combination drives the best marketing outcomes. 

    For example, an MVT experiment can include five versions of a web page, where each has a different slogan, product image, call-to-action, etc. Visitors are then served with a different variation. The tracking code collects data on their behaviours and desired outcomes (objectives) and reports the results.

    MVT saves marketers time as it’s a great alternative to doing separate A/B tests for each variable. Both Matomo and Google Optimize support this feature. However, Google Optimize caps the number of possible combinations at 16, whereas Matomo has no limits. 

    Redirect Tests

    Redirect tests, also known as split URL tests, allow you to serve two entirely different web page versions to users and compare their performance. This option comes in handy when you’re redesigning your website or want to test a localised page version in a new market. 

    Also, redirect tests are a great way to validate the performance of bottom-of-the-funnel (BoFU) pages as a checkout page (for eCommerce websites), a pricing page (for SaaS apps) or a contact/booking form (for a B2B service businesses). 

    You can do split URL tests with Google Optimize and Matomo A/B Testing. 

    Experiment Design 

    Google Optimize provides a visual editor for making simple page changes to your website (e.g., changing button colour or adding several headline variations). You can then preview the changes before publishing an experiment. For more complex experiments (e.g., testing different page block sequences), you’ll have to codify experiments using custom JavaScript, HTML and CSS.

    In Matomo, all A/B tests are configured on the server-side (i.e., by editing your website’s raw HTML) or client-side via JavaScript. Afterwards, you use the Matomo interface to start or schedule an experiment, set objectives and view reports. 

    Experiment Configuration 

    Marketers know how complex customer journeys can be. Multiple factors — from location and device to time of the day and discount size — can impact your conversion rates. That’s why a great CRO app allows you to configure multiple tracking conditions. 

    Matomo A/B testing comes with granular controls. First of all, you can decide which percentage of total web visitors participate in any given experiment. By default, the number is set to 100%, but you can change it to any other option. 

    Likewise, you can change which percentage of traffic each variant gets in an experiment. For example, your original version can get 30% of traffic, while options A and B receive 40% each. We also allow users to specify custom parameters for experiment participation. You can only show your variants to people in specific geo-location or returning visitors only. 

    Finally, you can select any type of meaningful objective to evaluate each variant’s performance. With Matomo, you can either use standard website analytics metrics (e.g., total page views, bounce rate, CTR, visit direction, etc) or custom goals (e.g., form click, asset download, eCommerce order, etc). 

    In other words : You’re in charge of deciding on your campaign targeting criteria, duration and evaluation objectives.

    A free Google Optimize account comes with three main types of user targeting options : 

    • Geo-targeting at city, region, metro and country levels. 
    • Technology targeting  by browser, OS or device type, first-party cookie, etc. 
    • Behavioural targeting based on metrics like “time since first arrival” and “page referrer” (referral traffic source). 

    Users can also configure other types of tracking scenarios (for example to only serve tests to signed-in users), using condition-based rules

    Reporting 

    Both Matomo and Google Optimize use different statistical models to evaluate which variation performs best. 

    Matomo relies on statistical hypothesis testing, which we use to count unique visitors and report on conversion rates. We analyse all user data (with no data sampling applied), meaning you get accurate reporting, based on first-hand data, rather than deductions. For that reason, we ask users to avoid drawing conclusions before their experiment participation numbers reach a statistically significant result. Typically, we recommend running an experiment for at least several business cycles to get a comprehensive report. 

    Google Optimize, in turn, uses Bayesian inference — a statistical method, which relies on a random sample of users to compare the performance rates of each creative against one another. While a Bayesian model generates CRO reports faster and at a bigger scale, it’s based on inferences.

    Model developers need to have the necessary skills to translate subjective prior beliefs about the probability of a certain event into a mathematical formula. Since Google Optimize is a proprietary tool, you cannot audit the underlying model design and verify its accuracy. In other words, you trust that it was created with the right judgement. 

    In comparison, Matomo started as an open-source project, and our source code can be audited independently by anyone at any time. 

    Another reporting difference to mind is the reporting delays. Matomo Cloud generates A/B reports within 6 hours and in only 1 hour for Matomo On-Premise. Google Optimize, in turn, requires 12 hours from the first experiment setup to start reporting on results. 

    When you configure a test experiment and want to quickly verify that everything is set up correctly, this can be an inconvenience.

    User Privacy & GDPR Compliance 

    Google Optimize works in conjunction with Google Analytics, which isn’t GDPR compliant

    For all website traffic from the EU, you’re therefore obliged to show a cookie consent banner. The kicker, however, is that you can only show an Optimize experiment after the user gives consent to tracking. If the user doesn’t, they will only see an original page version. Considering that almost 40% of global consumers reject cookie consent banners, this can significantly affect your results.

    This renders Google Optimize mostly useless in the EU since it would only allow you to run tests with a fraction ( 60%) of EU traffic — and even less if you apply any extra targeting criteria. 

    In comparison, Matomo is fully GDPR compliant. Therefore, our users are legally exempt from displaying cookie-consent banners in most EU markets (with Germany and the UK being an exception). Since Matomo A/B testing is part of Matomo web analytics, you don’t have to worry about GDPR compliance or breaches in user privacy. 

    Digital Experience Intelligence 

    You can get comprehensive statistical data on variants’ performance with Google Optimize. But you don’t get further insights on why some tests are more successful than others. 

    Matomo enables you to collect more insights with two extra features :

    • User session recordings : Monitor how users behave on different page versions. Observe clicks, mouse movements, scrolls, page changes, and form interactions to better understand the users’ cumulative digital experience. 
    • Heatmaps : Determine which elements attract the most users’ attention to fine-tune your split tests. With a standard CRO tool, you only assume that a certain page element does matter for most users. A heatmap can help you determine for sure. 

    Both of these features are bundled into your Matomo Cloud subscription

    Integrations 

    Both Matomo and Google Optimize integrate with multiple other tools. 

    Google Optimize has native integrations with other products in the marketing family — GA, Google Ads, Google Tag Manager, Google BigQuery, Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP), and Firebase. Separately, other popular marketing apps have created custom connectors for integrating Google Optimize data. 

    Matomo A/B Testing, in turn, can be combined with other web analytics and CRO features such as Funnels, Multi-Channel Attribution, Tag Manager, Form Analytics, Heatmaps, Session Recording, and more ! 

    You can also conveniently export your website analytics or CRO data using Matomo Analytics API to analyse it in another app. 

    Pricing 

    Google Optimize is a free tool but has usage caps. If you want to schedule more than 5 concurrent experiments or test more than 16 variants at once, you’ll have to upgrade to Optimize 360. Optimize 360 prices aren’t listed publicly but are said to be closer to six figures per year. 

    Matomo A/B Testing is available with every Cloud subscription (starting from €19) and Matomo On-Premise users can also get A/B Testing as a plugin (starting from €199/year). In each case, there are no caps or data limits. 

    Google Optimize vs Matomo A/B Testing : Comparison Table

    Features/capabilitiesGoogle OptimizeMatomo A/B test
    Supported channelsWebWeb, mobile, email, digital campaigns
    A/B testingcheck mark iconcheck mark icon
    Multivariate testing (MVT)check mark iconcheck mark icon
    Split URL testscheck mark iconcheck mark icon
    Web analytics integration Native with UA/GA4 Native with Matomo

    You can also migrate historical UA (GA3) data to Matomo
    Audience segmentation BasicAdvanced
    Geo-targetingcheck mark iconX
    Technology targetingcheck mark iconX
    Behavioural targetingBasicAdvanced
    Reporting modelBayesian analysisStatistical hypothesis testing
    Report availability Within 12 hours after setup 6 hours for Matomo Cloud

    1 hour for Matomo On-Premise
    HeatmapsXcheck mark icon

    Included with Matomo Cloud
    Session recordingsXcheck mark icon

    Included with Matomo Cloud
    GDPR complianceXcheck mark icon
    Support Self-help desk on a free tierSelf-help guides, user forum, email
    PriceFree limited tier From €19 for Cloud subscription

    From €199/year as plugin for On-Premise

    Final Thoughts : Who Benefits the Most From an A/B Testing Tool ?

    Split testing is an excellent method for validating various assumptions about your target customers. 

    With A/B testing tools you get a data-backed answer to research hypotheses such as “How different pricing affects purchases ?”, “What contact button placement generates more clicks ?”, “Which registration form performs best with new app subscribers ?” and more. 

    Such insights can be game-changing when you’re trying to improve your demand-generation efforts or conversion rates at the BoFu stage. But to get meaningful results from CRO tests, you need to select measurable, representative objectives.

    For example, split testing different pricing strategies for low-priced, frequently purchased products makes sense as you can run an experiment for a couple of weeks to get a statistically relevant sample. 

    But if you’re in a B2B SaaS product, where the average sales cycle takes weeks (or months) to finalise and things like “time-sensitive discounts” or “one-time promos” don’t really work, getting adequate CRO data will be harder. 

    To see tangible results from CRO, you’ll need to spend more time on test ideation than implementation. Your team needs to figure out : which elements to test, in what order, and why. 

    Effective CRO tests are designed for a specific part of the funnel and assume that you’re capable of effectively identifying and tracking conversions (goals) at the selected stage. This alone can be a complex task since not all customer journeys are alike. For SaaS websites, using a goal like “free trial account registration” can be a good starting point.

    A good test also produces a meaningful difference between the proposed variant and the original version. As Nima Yassini, Partner at Deloitte Digital, rightfully argues :

    “I see people experimenting with the goal of creating an uplift. There’s nothing wrong with that, but if you’re only looking to get wins you will be crushed when the first few tests fail. The industry average says that only one in five to seven tests win, so you need to be prepared to lose most of the time”.

    In many cases, CRO tests don’t provide the data you expected (e.g., people equally click the blue and green buttons). In this case, you need to start building your hypothesis from scratch. 

    At the same time, it’s easy to get caught up in optimising for “vanity metrics” — such that look good in the report, but don’t quite match your marketing objectives. For example, better email headline variations can improve your email open rates. But if users don’t proceed to engage with the email content (e.g. click-through to your website or use a provided discount code), your efforts are still falling short. 

    That’s why developing a baseline strategy is important before committing to an A/B testing tool. Google Optimize appealed to many users because it’s free and allows you to test your split test strategy cost-effectively. 

    With its upcoming depreciation, many marketers are very committed to a more expensive A/B tool (especially when they’re not fully sure about their CRO strategy and its results). 

    Matomo A/B testing is a cost-effective, GDPR-compliant alternative to Google Optimize with a low learning curve and extra competitive features. 

    Discover if Matomo A/B Testing is the ideal Google Optimize alternative for your organization with our free 21-day trial. No credit card required.

  • 11 of the Most Effective Conversion Rate Optimisation Best Practices

    14 février 2024, par Erin

    Driving more traffic to your website is hard work, but it’s still only half the battle. 

    You don’t just need to acquire new users ; you need to make sure as many convert as possible to make your digital marketing efforts worthwhile.

    That’s why improving your site’s conversion rate is so important. It will also help you get more value from your existing traffic source and keep you in line with your competitors. It’s also probably a lot easier than you think — especially if you adopt optimisation strategies that have been proven to be profitable time and time again. 

    In this article, we’ll show some of the most powerful, innovative and tried-and-tested conversion rate optimisation strategies you can implement immediately. 

    What is conversion rate optimisation ?

    First, let’s look at what conversion rate optimisation means. Conversion rate optimisation is the practice of improving elements of your website to increase the number of users who take a desired action and turn visitors into customers. 

    Common conversion goals include :

    • Making a purchase
    • Adding an item to a shopping cart
    • Signing up for a newsletter
    • Registering for a free trial
    • Downloading an ebook
    • Watching a video

    It doesn’t matter what your goal is. Using one of the following conversion rate optimisation best practices can send your conversions soaring. 

    11 conversion rate optimisation best practices 

    Are you ready to roll up your sleeves and get to work ? Then use one or more of the following best practices to improve your return on investment. 

    Set a clear goals and hypothesis

    When running an A/B or multivariate test, you need a clear idea of what you are testing and why. 

    A goal (a statement about what you want to achieve) and a hypothesis (a statement about what you expect to happen) clarify the problem you are trying to solve and give you a definitive way to judge the experiment’s results. 

    Confused ? Just use this template :

    We aim to [insert goal] by testing [insert test] on [insert page]. We expect that [insert test] will increase [insert metric] because [insert reason].

    Make sure your goals are directly related to the experiment. If you are testing your CTA button, the goal should be getting more users to click the button. It shouldn’t be a goal further down the conversion funnel, like making a purchase. 

    Start with A/B tests

    A/B testing is one of the easiest and most effective ways to run experiments to improve your current conversion rate. So, it’s no wonder that the A/B testing software market was expected to be worth $1.2 billion in 2023 and hit $3.6 billion by 2033. 

    Also known as split testing, A/B testing allows you to directly compare the conversion performance of two elements on your page, like the colour of your CTA button or your headline copy.

    A screenshot of an A/B test using Matomo

    You can go even further with multivariate testing, which lets you test two or more changes against a single control. 

    For example, the screenshot above shows the results of a multivariate test between a standard header, a wide header and a small header using Matomo’s A/B testing tool. As you can see, the wider header has a much higher conversion, and the increase was statistically significant. 

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    Tweak your CTAs

    Calls to action (CTAs) are page elements that prompt users to respond immediately. They are usually buttons but can also be images or plain text links. 

    What your CTAs say, how they look, and where they are placed can greatly impact your site’s conversion rates. As such, this is one of the elements you’ll want to optimise first. 

    There are several tweaks you can test, including your CTA’s :

    • Colour 
    • Length 
    • Copy
    • Placement 

    You can even test the impact of removing CTA banners and using text-based CTAs on your conversion rates.

    You should test out personalising CTAs, too. Research shows that personalised CTAs perform 202% better than standard calls to action. 

    Revise your web copy

    You can use several strategies to improve your website’s copy and generate more conversions. 

    Optimising copy for search engines can increase traffic and generate more conversions, for example. But that shouldn’t make your copy any less impactful. Bear search engines in mind, by all means, but make sure you are speaking to the needs and desires of your potential customers. Your copy needs to convince users that your product can solve their problems. 

    Nowhere is this more important than your headlines. These will be the first thing users read, so make sure they sell your USP and highlight pain points.

    Don’t just guess at the kind of messaging that will move the needle, however. Constantly test new headlines and continue doing so even after you’ve started seeing success. The results may surprise you. TruckersReport, a site that helps people become truck drivers, boosted opt-ins by 21.7% by revising its landing page headline, among other changes. 

    Make sure there are no spelling mistakes in your copy, either. Misspelt words, poor grammar and bad formatting make your website look unprofessional and untrustworthy. Even if the rest of your copy is incredibly enticing, these rookie errors can be enough to turn customers off. 

    Simplify your site’s navigation

    A website’s navigation is an often overlooked factor in conversion rate optimisation, but simplifying it can make it much easier for users to take action. 

    If you’ve ever used a poorly designed e-commerce store, you know how confusing and overwhelming bad navigation can be. Research shows that a whopping 82% of stores don’t divide their navigation into manageable chunks. 

    The trick is to simplify your navigation as much as possible. As you can see in the screenshot below, our navigation only has five headers and a call to action. It’s easy to find exactly what you’re looking for, and you can’t miss the big green CTA button. 

    A screenshot of the navigation menu on Matomo

    Alternatively, you can test what happens when you completely remove your navigation. Brands usually do this on landing pages where the only action they want the user to take is to make a purchase. 

    It’s exactly the strategy we’ve used on our free trial landing page. 

    Leverage heatmaps

    Analytics tools — and heatmaps in particular — can help you understand user behaviour and optimise accordingly. 

    Heatmaps are a visual representation of user interaction on your page. Red and yellow represent high levels of user interaction, and blue and green represent low levels of interaction.

    Screenshot of Matomo heatmap feature

    As you can see in the screenshot above, our CTA button has some of the highest levels of engagement on the page, telling us that it’s well-positioned. Given the focus on the site’s navigation, we can also assume we are correct to have a CTA button in there — something we can confirm using our web analytics to see how many users click on it.

    Reduce load time

    Speed matters when it comes to conversions. Fact. 

    Research shows a huge difference in conversion rates between quick and slow sites. For example, a site that loads in one second converts three times better than a site that loads in five seconds. 

    That’s why using a web analytics tool is vital to understand page load times and act accordingly if you think slow speeds are hampering your conversions.

    A screenshot of page load times in Matomo

    Identifying your slowest pages is easy with Matomo. Just sort your pages by the Avg. Use the page load time metric on the page performance report to identify the pages you want to drive conversions. 

    Next, take steps to improve your page’s load time by :

    • Compressing images
    • Compressing code files or using a more lightweight theme
    • Removing unnecessary plugins
    • Using a content delivery network
    • Improving your hosting

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    Add more trust signals

    Trust is essential when you’re trying to convince customers to make a purchase. In fact, consumers rate trust as one of the top three buying factors, far above a brand’s reputation and whether they love the brand. 

    Adding trust signals to your landing pages, such as customer testimonials, customer reviews, case studies, and other forms of social proof, can transform your conversion rates. If consumers see real people and businesses buy from you, they’ll feel reassured to do the same.

    Trust signals on the Matomo website

    It’s a strategy we use ourselves. Just look at the screenshot from our homepage above. Immediately after our free trial CTA, we display the logos of well-known brands that use our product. 

    Security-focused trust signals are also powerful if you are an online store. Installing an SSL certificate, showing logos of trusted payment providers (like PayPal and Mastercard) can convince people they are spending money at a legitimate store.

    Improve your site’s mobile experience

    More and more people are accessing the internet via their smartphones. In 2022, for instance, there were five billion unique mobile Internet users, meaning more than 60% of the internet population used a smartphone to browse online. 

    Moreover, 76% of U.S. adults make purchases using their smartphones. 

    That means you need to ensure your site’s mobile experience is on-point to increase conversions. 

    Your site should use a mobile-first design, meaning it works perfectly on smartphones and then scales up for desktop users. 

    Trust the data

    Opinions are a fantastic form of inspiration for new A/B tests. But they should never be trusted over cold, hard data. If your test shows the opposite of what you and your team thought would happen, then trust the data and not yourself.

    With that in mind, ensure you collect qualitative and quantitative data during your experiments. Web analytics should always form the backbone of conversion tests, but don’t forget to also use heatmaps, screen recordings, and customer surveys. 

    Keep testing

    There’s no such word as “finished” in the world of A/B testing. Continual testing is key if you want to convert more website visitors. 

    Make sure you aren’t stopping tests prematurely, either. Make sure every A/B and multivariate test reaches a sample size that makes the test statistically significant. 

    Understand your users better with Matomo 

    Whether you run an e-commerce store, a SaaS company, or a service-based business, implementing these conversion rate optimisation best practices could be an easy way to lower your bounce rate and boost your conversion rates.

    But remember, best practices aren’t clear-cut rules. What works for one website may not work for yours. That’s why running your own tests and understanding your visitors’ behaviour is important. 

    Matomo’s web analytics platform is the perfect tool for doing just that. Not only does it come with the tools you need to optimise your conversion rate (like an A/B testing tool, heatmaps and session recordings), but you can also trust the data. Unlike Google Analytics 4 and other tools, Matomo doesn’t use data sampling meaning you have 100% accurate data from which to make better decisions. It’s GDPR compliant and can run cookieless, so no need for cookie consent banners (excluding in the UK and Germany).

    Discover how you can improve your website’s conversions with Matomo by starting a free 21-day trial, no credit card required.

  • What Is Ethical SEO & Why Does It Matter ?

    7 mai 2024, par Erin

    Do you want to generate more revenue ?

    Then, you need to ensure you have a steady stream of traffic flowing to your site.

    Search engines like Google, Bing and Yahoo are powerful mediums you can use to scale your business.

    Search engine optimisation (SEO) is the process of creating search engine-friendly content to draw in traffic to your website. But, if you aren’t careful, you could be crossing the line of ethical SEO into unethical SEO.

    In this article, we break down what ethical SEO is, why it’s important in business and how you can implement effective SEO into your business while remaining ethical.

    Let’s begin.

    What is ethical SEO ?

    Since the early days of the internet and search engines, business owners and marketers have tried using all kinds of SEO tactics to rank atop the search engines for relevant keywords.

    The problem ?

    Some of these practices are ethical, while others aren’t.

    What exactly is ethical SEO ?

    It’s the practice of optimising your website’s rankings in search engines by following search engine guidelines and prioritising user experience.

    What is ethical SEO?

    Ethical SEO is also referred to as “white hat SEO.”

    On the other hand, businesses that break search engine rules and guidelines to “hack” their way to the top with faulty and questionable practices use unethical SEO, or “black hat SEO.”

    Ethical SEO aims to achieve higher rankings in search engines through sustainable, legitimate and fair methods.

    Black hat, or unethical SEO, aims to manipulate or “game” the system with deceptive strategies to bypass the search engine’s guidelines to rank higher.

    The two core branches of ethical SEO include :

    1. Strategies that align with search engine guidelines.
    2. Accessibility to broad audiences.

    Some examples of ethical SEO principles include :

    • Natural link building
    • Compliance with search engine guidelines
    • Establishing great user experiences
    • Creating reader-focused content

    By sticking to the right guidelines and implementing proper SEO practices, businesses can establish ethical SEO to generate more traffic and grow their brands.

    8 ethical SEO practices to implement

    If you want to grow your organic search traffic, then there’s no doubt you’ll need to have some SEO knowledge.

    While there are dozens of ways to “game” SEO, it’s best to stick to proven, ethical SEO techniques to improve your rankings.

    Stick to these best practices to increase your rankings in the search engine results pages (SERPs), increase organic traffic and improve your website conversions.

    8 Ethical SEO Practices to Implement

    1. Crafting high-quality content

    The most important piece of any ethical SEO strategy is content.

    Forget about rankings, keywords and links for a second.

    Step back and think about why people go to Google, Bing and Yahoo in the first place.

    They’re there looking for information. They have a question they need answered. That’s where you can come in and give them the answer they want. 

    How ? In the form of content.

    The best long-term ethical SEO strategy is to create the highest-quality content possible. Crafting high-quality content should be where you focus 90% of your SEO efforts.

    2. Following search engine guidelines

    Once you’ve got a solid content creation strategy, where you’re producing in-depth, quality content, you need to ensure you’re following the guidelines and rules put in place by the major search engines.

    This means you need to stay compliant with the best practices and guidelines laid out by the top search engines.

    If you fail to follow these rules, you could be penalised, your content could be downgraded or removed from search engines, and you could even have your entire website flagged, impacting your entire organic search traffic from your site.

    You need to ensure you align with the guidelines so you’re set up for long-term success with your SEO.

    3. Conducting keyword research and optimisation

    Now that we’ve covered content and guidelines, let’s talk about the technical stuff, starting with keywords.

    In the early days of SEO (late 90s), just about anyone could rank a web page high by stuffing keywords all over the page.

    While those black hat techniques used to work to “game” the system, it doesn’t work like that anymore. Google and other major search engines have much more advanced algorithms that can detect keyword stuffing and manipulation.

    Keywords are still a major part of a successful SEO strategy. You can ethically incorporate keywords into your content (and you should) if you want to rank higher. 

    Your main goal with your content is to match it with the search intent. So, incorporating keywords should come naturally throughout your content. If you try to stuff in unnecessary keywords or use spammy techniques, you may not even rank at all and could harm your website’s rankings.

    4. Incorporating natural link building

    After you’ve covered content and keywords, it’s time to dive into links. Backlinks are any links that point back to your website from another website.

    These are a crucial part of the SEO pie. Without them, it’s hard to rank high on Google. They work well because they tell Google your web page or website has authority on a subject matter.

    But you could be penalised if you try to manipulate backlinks by purchasing them or spamming them from other websites.

    Instead, you should aim to draw in natural backlinks by creating content that attracts them.

    How ? There are several options :

    • Content marketing
    • Email outreach
    • Brand mentions
    • Public relations
    • Ethical guest posting

    Get involved in other people’s communities. Get on podcasts. Write guest posts. Connect with other brands. Provide value in your niche and create content worth linking to.

    5. Respecting the intellectual property of other brands

    Content creation is moving at lightspeed in the creator economy and social media era. For better or for worse, content is going viral every day. People share content, place their spin on it, revise it, optimise it, and spread it around the internet.

    Unfortunately, this means the content is sometimes shared without the owner’s permission. Content is one form of intellectual property (IP). 

    If you share copyrighted material, you could face legal consequences.

    6. Ensuring transparency

    Transparency is one of the pillars of ethical marketing.

    If you’re running the SEO in your company or an agency, you should always explain the SEO strategies and tactics you’re implementing to your stakeholders.

    It’s best to lean on transparency and honesty to ensure your team knows you’re running operations ethically.

    7. Implementing a great user experience

    The final pillar of ethical SEO practices is offering a great user experience on your website.

    Major search engines like Google are favouring user experience more and more every year. This means knowing how to track and analyse website metrics like page load times, time on page, pageviews, media plays and event tracking.

    8. Use an ethical web analytics solution

    Last but certainly not least. Tracking your website visitors ethically is key to maintaining SEO ethics.

    You can do this by using an ethical web analytics solution like Matomo, Plausible or Fathom. All three are committed to respecting user privacy and offer ethical tracking of visitors.

    We’re a bit biassed towards Matomo, of course, but for good reasons.

    Matomo offers accurate, unsampled data along with advanced features like heatmaps, session recording, and A/B testing. These features enhance user experience and support ethical SEO practices by providing insights into user behaviour, helping optimise content. 

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    6 unethical SEO practices to avoid

    Now that we’ve covered the ethical SEO best practices let’s talk about what kind of unethical SEO practices you want to avoid.

    Remember, SEO isn’t as easy to manipulate as it once was 20 years ago.

    Algorithms are much more sophisticated now, and search engines are getting better at detecting fraudulent, scammy or unethical SEO practices every year.

    Avoid these eight unethical SEO practices to ensure you can rank high in the long term :

    6 unethical SEO practices to avoid.

    1. Keyword stuffing

    Keyword stuffing is probably the most common unethical SEO practice. This is where someone deliberately stuffs keywords onto a page to manipulate the search engines to rank a web page higher.

    Where this is unethical isn’t always easy to detect, but in some cases, it is. It comes down to whether it’s relevant and natural or intentionally stuffing.

    2. Cloaking

    Cloaking is another unethical SEO practice where someone manipulates the information search engines see on their website.

    For example, someone may show search engines one web page on their website, but when someone clicks on it in Google, they can direct someone to a completely different page. They do this by detecting the incoming request from the user agent and presenting different content.

    3. Deceiving functionality

    Another way companies are unethically implementing SEO tactics is by deceiving people with misleading information. For example, a website may claim to provide a free resource or directory but may intentionally lead visitors to paid products.

    4. Fraudulent redirects

    Another way to deceive or mislead searchers is by creating fraudulent redirects. A redirect is a way to take someone to a different web page when they click on another one. Redirects can be useful if a page is broken or outdated. However, they can be used to deceptively take someone to a website they didn’t intend to view.

    5. Negative SEO

    Negative SEO is the intentional attempt to harm a competitor’s search engine rankings through unethical tactics.

    These tactics include duplicating their content or generating spammy links by creating low quality or irrelevant backlinks to their site.

    6. Hidden text

    Placing hidden text on a website typically has one purpose : keyword stuffing.

    Instead of making it visible to users reading the content, websites will place invisible text or text that’s hard to read on a website to try to rank the content higher and manipulate the search engines.

    3 reasons you need to implement ethical SEO

    So, why should you ensure you only implement ethical SEO in your organic traffic strategy ?

    It’s not just about what’s morally right or wrong. Implementing ethical SEO is the smartest long-term marketing strategy :

    1. Better long-term SEO

    Search engine optimisation is about implementing the “right” tactics to get your website to rank higher.

    The funny thing is many people are trying to get quick fixes by manipulating search engines to see results now.

    However, the ones who implement shady tactics and “hacks” to game the system almost always end up losing their rankings in the long term. 

    The best long-term SEO strategy is to do things ethically. Create content that helps people. Make higher quality content than your competitors. If you do those two things right, you’ll have better search traffic for years.

    2. Great brand reputation

    Not only is ethical SEO a great way to get long-term results, but it’s also a good way to maintain a solid brand reputation.

    Reputation management is a crucial aspect of SEO. All it takes is one bad incident, and your SEO could be negatively impacted.

    3. Lower chance of penalties

    If you play by the rules, you have a lower risk of being penalised by Google.

    The reality is that Google owns the search engine, not you. While we can benefit from the traffic generation of major search engines, you could lose all your rankings if you break their guidelines.

    Track SEO data ethically with Matomo

    Ethical SEO is all about :

    • Serving your audience
    • Getting better traffic in the long run

    If you fail to follow ethical SEO practices, you could be de-ranked or have your reputation on the line.

    However, if you implement ethical SEO, you could reap the rewards of a sustainable marketing strategy that helps you grow your traffic correctly and increase conversions in the long term.

    If you’re ready to start implementing ethical SEO, you need to ensure you depend on an ethical web analytics solution like Matomo.

    Unlike other web analytics solutions, Matomo prioritises user privacy, maintains transparent, ethical data collection practices, and does not sell user data to advertisers. Matomo provides 100% data ownership, ensuring that your data remains yours to own and control.

    As the leading privacy-friendly web analytics solution globally, trusted by over 1 million websites, Matomo ensures :

    • Accurate data without data sampling for confident insights and better results
    • Privacy-friendly and GDPR-compliant web analytics
    • Open-source access for transparency and creating a custom solution tailored to your needs

    Try Matomo free for 21-days. No credit card required.