Dwell
Time is the amount of time that a Google searcher spends on a page from the
search results before returning back to the SERPs. Many SEO professionals
consider Dwell Time an important Google ranking signal.
For example, let’s say you search for “grain
free cookies” in Google.
The first result looks like a good fit. So you click on it.
But when you get there, the site is ugly and
hard to use. And the content isn’t helpful.
So after 5 seconds you click back to the
results.
Your Dwell Time was 5 seconds.
And that super brief visit tells Google that
you weren’t happy with that result.
Let’s say you then click on the #2 result.
This time, the content is amazing. And the site
is easy to navigate.
And you spend a solid 4 minutes and 37 seconds
reading every word… then click back to the results to continue your research.
That long Dwell Time tells Google that you got a
lot of value from that result.
And if lots of other people also spend a long
time on that page, Google will give it a rankings boost.
Now, there’s one thing I should point out:
Dwell Time and Bounce Rate are
similar… but they’re not the same thing.
A bounce is when someone visits a page … and
hits their back button without clicking anything on the page.
It doesn’t matter if the person spent 2 seconds
or 2 hours on the page. If a user clicks back to the search results, it’s a
bounce.
Our search engine ranking
factors study did find a correlation between bounce rate and
first page Google rankings.
But that’s probably a case of correlation… not
causation. That’s because Bounce Rate doesn’t tell you much about whether or
not a searcher is satisfied with a particular result.
But Dwell Time does…
Why Is Dwell Time Important?
We already know that search engines (like Bing) use Dwell Time in
their algorithm:
The question is:
Does Google care about Dwell Time?
They’ve never publicly confirmed or denied
anything related to Dwell Time.
But there are some clues and signs that
Google does use Dwell Time as a ranking signal.
For example, a Google Engineer was quoted as saying:
“So when search was
invented, like when Google was invented many years ago, they wrote heuristics
that had figure out what the relationship between a search and the best page
for that search was. And those heuristics worked pretty well and continue to
work pretty well.
But Google is now integrating machine learning
into that process. So then training models on when someone clicks on a
page and stays on that page, when they go back or when they and trying
to figure out exactly on that relationship.”
Put another way:
Google’s Machine Learning algorithm (RankBrain),
pays VERY close attention to how long someone spends on a page.
(In other words, Dwell Time)
Also, a few years ago Google rolled out
an interesting new feature that let you hide a particular
website from the SERPs.
How did they know which sites you wanted to
hide?
Well, if you quickly bounced from a page, Google would prompt you to block that entire site:
That’s how strongly they feel about Dwell Time.
Last up, we have an interesting
correlation study published on Moz.
This study found a clear correlation between
Dwell Time (aka “Time on site”) and Google rankings.
With that, here’s exactly how to improve your
Dwell Time.
Best Practices
“The PPT Formula”
If you want people to spend a long time on your
site, you need to hook them right away.
And that’s where The PPT Formula comes into
play.
It’s a proven content introduction formula
designed specifically to increase Dwell Time.
Here’s what it looks like:
Let’s break it down.
The first line of your content should be a
brief Preview of your content.
This Preview lets Google searchers know that
your content is exactly what they’re looking for.
(Which means they’ll stick around)
Here’s an example from my blog:
Your second and third lines are Proof that
your content can help them. This INSTANTLY shows people that your material is
legit.
Watch how I use proof in this intro:
Finally, cap things off with a Transition.
This transition gently walks the reader from
your intro into the next section of your content.
Here’s an example:
And thanks largely to The PPT Formula (and the
other strategies you’re about to learn about), that post has a time on page of
06:58.
Embed Videos
Embedding videos can significantly boost your
page’s Dwell Time.
In fact, the Wistia blog increased their Dwell
Time by 260% simply by adding a video to their content:
There are a few different ways to embed videos
in your page.
First, you can use a video in place of
text content.
For example, I use a video to explain an SEO
technique from this list post.
That video is 1:13.
So if someone watches that entire video (which
lots of people do), that’s an easy 1+ minute boost to my Dwell Time.
You can also embed videos to related content.
For example, in this post I briefly touch on
click-through-rate.
Instead of linking to a blog post, I embed a
YouTube video that explains the process in detail:
Write Longer Content
This is simple math:
It takes longer to read a 3,000-word article
than a 300-word blog post.
To be clear:
I’m not saying that you should stuff your
content with fluff and filler.
Instead, you want to publish quality content
that’s VERY thorough and in-depth.
For example, this guide to link building from
my blog is 4,732 words long:
Even though it’s on the longer side, my guide is
packed with meaty, actionable strategies:
Which makes people stick on my page for 04:21
minutes on average:
Community and Comments
A Google employee once
said that a community can help “a lot” with rankings:
Is community a direct ranking signal?
Or is it that having an active community
indirectly helps you rank better?
They didn’t say.
Either way, in my experience, having a community
DEFINITELY improves your page’s Dwell Time.
Here’s why:
First, comments are actually content that people
want to read.
For example, discussions like this keep people
reading so they don’t hit their back button.
Also, people that leave comments obviously spend
extra time on the page… which boosts your page’s average Dwell Time.
Maximize PageSpeed
It’s no secret that people online are impatient.
And if your site takes forever to load, people
are going to click away before they read the first word.
That’s why you want to make sure that your
important web page’s are optimized for
PageSpeed.
PageSpeed is a confirmed direct ranking signal:
And it impacts whether or not your visitors
stick around.
That’s why it’s smart to do as much as you can to
improve your site’s loading speed.
Break Content Into
Chunks
I get comments like this at least once per week:
Is it because I’m an amazing writer? Nope.
It’s because I make my content SUPER easy to
read.
Specifically, I break my content up into chunks.
For example, take a look at this SEO site audit post from
my blog:
I use H2 subheaders to separate each topic into
distinct sections:
I also use bullets to make lots of info easy to
skim:
Finally, I use A TON of visuals and screenshots.
These visuals not only help people implement the
material… but they break the content up into bite sized pieces.
Mobile Optimized
This sounds simple, but stay with me:
If your site is hard to use, people WON’T stick
around.
Unfortunately, I still see lots of sites that
still aren’t mobile optimized.
To check if your page is optimized for mobile
devices, head into the new Google Search
Console:
Hit “Mobile Usability”.
And it’ll let you know which pages on your site
Google considers a bad mobile user experience:
You even get details on what the problem is… and
steps on how to fix it:
Measuring Dwell Time
How do you actually measure Dwell Time?
There’s no “Dwell Time” report in Google
Analytics or the Google Search Console.
That said:
Google Analytics DOES let you know about your
site’s “Avg. Session Duration”. This is the average amount of time someone
spends on your site after they land on that page.
Which is a pretty darn close to Dwell Time.
Here’s how to do it:
First, login to Google Analytics.
And click on “Behavior” → “Site Content” –>
“Landing Pages”
Then, setup a segment so you’re only looking at
“Organic Traffic”.
And voila!
You can see exactly how long Google searchers
spend on each page of your site:
What can you do with this information?
First, see what’s working… and apply that to
other pages.
For example, when I look at my Google Analytics,
this post stands out:
And when I take a look at the page in detail, I
can see that:
- It’s broken up into lots of
different sections.
- The page contains a lot of
custom visuals.
- I mentioned lots of quotes and
statements from YouTube.
- I used internal linking to
feature other content that people might want to read.
You can also improve pages that have a bad Dwell
Time.
For example, this page from my site has a Dwell
Time that’s 38.5% below my sitewide average:
That’s a page I’d want to tweak.
And in some cases (like if the page doesn’t have
match my keyword’s User Intent),
completely overhaul the content.
What’s a “Good” Dwell
Time?
Short answer: it depends.
Long answer:
A “good” Dwell Time is dependent on dozens of
factors, including:
- Your niche
- The type of content
- The search query people use to
find your page
- Seasonal trends
- And more
So instead of worrying about an arbitrary
number, I recommend focusing on improving your sitewide Dwell Time using the
strategies you just learned about.
Source: https://backlinko.com/hub/seo/dwell-time
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