Ability to view details of the SERP results
B
Bryce Johnson
After SERP results are displayed, it would ideal to see the word count of each article, and outline of each article showing all H1-H6 heading information to be able to specifically select that information for the new outline.
Also to be able to see all keywords that are pulled from the SERP so we can make sure the article includes or excludes specific keywords from the SERP.
C
Chris
+100 with regards to being able to preview and select headings and sub headings from the SERP results using pro mode.
Scalenut has a great implementation of this if you need an example of how to do this.
The key benefits of this approach are:
1/ You see all the potential headings and sub headings at a glance to better understand the topic
2/ This enables you to cherry pick which headings and sub headings to use in your own article
3/ Ensures you get 100% coverage of topics so you can create an article that is better than what is in the SERPS by combining the best from all the ranking articles
Best practice implementation based on using different systems:
-Once you fetch the SERPS, take us to a dedicated page with two panes: On the left the BLANK article outline editor, and on the right the SERP results and their H1, H2, H3 headers with a total word count.
-On the left pane you can add a button to suggest an outline (as you do now), but also enable users to pick Headings by clicking headings from the right pane to build the article outline.
(OPTIONAL improvement) -The left pane can also have a button to open a pop-up to manually add headings in bulk (whilst still being able to see the outlines of the SERP on the right panel)
(OPTIONAL improvement) - The left pane can also have a button to automatically rewrite all the headings in the outline editor (which we copied from the SERP results) to make these unique.
This will greatly improve the process of creating epic articles that rank.
Thanks
Pushkar Kathayat
Merged in a post:
More SERP selection options
B
Bryce Johnson
With only 10 to select from, sometimes 8 out of 10 are too redundant. For example, I just did one for the new GoPro Hero13 and 7 of the top 10 SERP results were from gopro.com. I want blog articles on the product not product links from the manufacturer, so I was only able to select a couple of blogs to pull information from the SERP. Hopefully that makes sense. Or even better if the SERP can detect if it's links that aren't ideal for your target article
Pushkar Kathayat
Thanks for sharing your suggestions