content strategy Archives | Schema App Solutions End-to-End Schema Markup and Knowledge Graph Solution for Enterprise SEO Teams. Fri, 06 Sep 2024 16:30:53 +0000 en-CA hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.5 https://ezk8caoodod.exactdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/SA_Icon_Main_Orange.png?strip=all&lossy=1&resize=32%2C32&ssl=1 content strategy Archives | Schema App Solutions 32 32 How to Optimize Your Content Strategy Using Your Content Knowledge Graph https://www.schemaapp.com/schema-markup/how-to-optimize-your-content-strategy-using-your-content-knowledge-graph/ Fri, 30 Aug 2024 16:45:20 +0000 https://www.schemaapp.com/?p=15133 In today’s digital landscape, marketers face the ongoing challenge of creating consistent, high-value content that meets consumers’ constantly evolving needs. The rise of AI in search has heightened concerns about the accuracy and trustworthiness of content, with instances of AI-generated content being misinterpreted. As a result, users and search engines are increasingly focused on accessing...

The post How to Optimize Your Content Strategy Using Your Content Knowledge Graph appeared first on Schema App Solutions.

]]>
In today’s digital landscape, marketers face the ongoing challenge of creating consistent, high-value content that meets consumers’ constantly evolving needs. The rise of AI in search has heightened concerns about the accuracy and trustworthiness of content, with instances of AI-generated content being misinterpreted.

As a result, users and search engines are increasingly focused on accessing high-quality, reliable information. This shift has led many organizations to revise their content strategies to maintain accuracy, relevance, and trust in this evolving environment.

To develop a successful content strategy in this new search experience, marketers must address several critical questions on an ongoing basis:

  • How can you maintain an up-to-date content inventory?
  • What content gaps exist, and where are opportunities for new high-quality content to be added?
  • Which existing content pieces require improvement or disambiguation?
  • How has your content impacted your website’s performance as search evolves?

While your website content is a rich data source, it’s often unstructured. This makes it difficult to analyze and answer these questions at scale. Many marketers manually review and revise content to inform their strategy, which is time-consuming and inefficient.

So what if you could automatically structure your content to make high-level analysis fast and easy? Good news, a content knowledge graph can be leveraged to do precisely that. This approach is particularly valuable for large websites or organizations managing multiple sites, where understanding the full scope of covered topics can be challenging.

This article will explore how leveraging your content knowledge graph can support and enhance your content strategy.

By harnessing the power of your content knowledge graph, you can make well-informed decisions that drive your content strategy forward in today’s competitive digital landscape.

Understanding Content Knowledge Graphs

At Schema App, we define a content knowledge graph as a graph that represents entities (things), their attributes, and the relationships between them on a publicly-facing website.

Like a general knowledge graph, it uses a standardized vocabulary or ontology (such as Schema.org) to create a structured, reusable data layer. This structure enables machines to discover new insights through inferencing, helping to explore and understand the connections between various entities in your content.

At Schema App, we build content knowledge graphs by mapping the content on your website to specific types and properties in the Schema.org vocabulary. This results in a precise and organized framework that accurately reflects your content’s meaning and relationships.

While Schema.org provides an excellent foundation for knowledge graph creation, its available types and properties can be limiting. That’s why Schema App created the Omni Linked Entity Recognition (Omni LER) feature, which automatically identifies entities in your content that have been described in external authoritative databases such as Wikipedia, Wikidata, and Google’s Knowledge Graph. This process is known as entity linking, and it offers two significant benefits:

  1. Improved SEO: Embedding these entities in the Schema Markup on your pages helps to disambiguate them, which enhances search engine optimization for queries related to those entities.
  2. Content Inventory: Identified entities also function as an inventory of what’s discussed in your content, offering valuable insights for content strategy planning.

By leveraging both the Schema.org vocabulary and Omni LER, the content knowledge graph provided by Schema App gives you a comprehensive understanding of your content architecture. This enables you to make data-driven decisions to optimize your content strategy for search.

Content Knowledge Graph Use Cases

Now that you’ve been introduced to content knowledge graphs, let’s explore some practical applications and effective ways to leverage this powerful resource to enhance your content strategy.

Improve Content Inventory Organization

When you develop a content knowledge graph with Schema App, you can implement a multi-dimensional categorization method for your content.

Schema App’s Highlighter builds your content knowledge graph by consistently tagging and classifying your website content at scale. This is particularly beneficial for organizations with large websites, a wide variety of assets, and different content stakeholders.

Your content knowledge graph establishes meaningful connections between different content pieces based on entities, types, and properties – not just keywords. For example, a blog post would likely show up in your content knowledge graph as an instance of a BlogPosting with properties like author, datePublished, and dateModified. If Omni LER is also used, additional metadata about the identified entities mentioned within the article body will be added. This enables you to do more detailed content analysis, which we will cover later in the article.

Content Coverage and Gap Identification

By constructing your content knowledge graph with both the Schema.org vocabulary and Omni LER, you can query all of your content with greater precision. Schema.org provides detailed types and properties, and Omni LER adds unique entities for varied levels of granularity in your data layer. When combined, you can leverage your content knowledge graph to help you determine what new content to add or which existing content to improve to better meet your audience’s needs.

This holistic view of the Schema.org types and entities covered by your website allows you to:

  • Identify areas of content saturation
  • Discover underrepresented topics
  • Align your content with current business goals and market trends

Use Case 1: Aligning Content With Business Goals

For instance, one of Schema App’s customers aimed to be recognized for their product’s ease of use. To align their content with this business goal, we employed the following strategy:

1. First, we identified Schema.org types and properties that indicate user support and ease of use. These included:

These content types can represent ease of use by making processes feel manageable and easy to follow, empowering users to self-serve, or simplifying site navigation.

2. We then queried their content knowledge graph to pinpoint where these types and properties already exist on their site and where existing content could be further enhanced to align content with their goals.

3. Finally, we identified opportunities to add net new content in alignment with their goal. For instance, we recommended creating more HowTo content with clear steps and accompanying images and/or videos to support ease of use.

Through this process, our customer identified content gaps that, when addressed, aligned better with their business goals and enhanced the quality of their site’s content.

Just like how content knowledge graphs can identify gaps in your content, they can also reveal how much of your existing content overlaps with desired entities. This information is crucial for ensuring that your content strategy covers all necessary areas and effectively addresses your audience’s interests.

Use Case 2: Assessing and Revising Content Coverage

Consider another example from one of our healthcare customers:

Our customer did entity linking using our OmniLER feature. The feature automatically identified known entities in their content, which revealed an unexpected insight: they had numerous blog posts mentioning COVID-19, a topic they no longer wished to emphasize in their content strategy.

Armed with this information, the customer was able to:

  • Quickly identify all content pieces mentioning COVID-19
  • Assess the relevance and necessity of each mention
  • Selectively remove or update content to align with their updated business goals

This targeted approach allowed the customer to refine their content strategy without needing a time-consuming manual review of their entire content inventory.

Disambiguating Entities to Ensure Brand Name Consistency

Your content knowledge graph can also ensure the disambiguation of your entities and brand voice consistency across your website. This capability is particularly valuable when dealing with ambiguous terms or acronyms that could lead to misinterpretation or unintended associations.

For instance, imagine a scenario where our brand, Schema App, faces a challenge when its name is shortened to just “Schema” in some content. The word “Schema” can refer to various concepts on the web, from psychology to structured data. If machines unintentionally link this shortened form to unrelated information, it could confuse and potentially damage our brand image.

To resolve this issue, we would leverage our content knowledge graph to:

  • Locate all instances where our brand name is inconsistently represented
  • Implement a standardized approach to always use our full brand name, “Schema App”
  • Disambiguate our brand using Schema Markup and entity linking. This ensures our brand is accurately identified and associated with the correct definition in external authoritative knowledge bases
  • Ensure that our brand is consistently and correctly represented across all content

This scenario illustrates how a content knowledge graph enables organizations like ours to:

  • Gain a holistic view of entity usage across our content
  • Identify areas where content should be more explicit based on entity interpretation and their links to external knowledge bases
  • Make informed decisions about content revisions to maintain brand integrity
  • Ensure consistent brand voice and messaging across all content

By leveraging a content knowledge graph, we can proactively address potential ambiguities, maintain brand consistency, and enhance our content’s overall quality and clarity. This approach not only improves user experience but also protects our brand from unintended associations or misrepresentations, ultimately enhancing our performance in search.

Schema App Helps Develop Your Content Knowledge Graph

As explored throughout this article, a content knowledge graph is a powerful tool for optimizing your content strategy, improving SEO performance, and preparing your organization for the future of AI-driven search.

At Schema App, we implement semantic Schema Markup and automate the entity linking on your website to develop your organization’s content knowledge graph.

If you’re a current Schema App customer interested in leveraging your content knowledge graph, we encourage you to reach out to your Customer Success Manager. They can take you through what’s currently available so that you can leverage your content knowledge graph to support and enhance your content strategy.

If you’re new to Schema App and interested in harnessing the power of a content knowledge graph for your organization, now is the perfect time to get started. Our team is ready to help you navigate the complexities of semantic SEO and knowledge graph development, ensuring your content strategy is primed for success in today’s digital landscape.

Don’t let your content strategy fall behind in the era of semantic search and AI. Contact our team today to begin developing your content knowledge graph and optimizing your content strategy for search.

Develop a content knowledge graph for your organization today with Schema App!

 

The post How to Optimize Your Content Strategy Using Your Content Knowledge Graph appeared first on Schema App Solutions.

]]>
How to Improve Website Content Using the Schema.org Vocabulary https://www.schemaapp.com/schema-markup/how-to-improve-website-content-using-the-schema-org-vocabulary/ Wed, 24 Jul 2024 15:05:09 +0000 https://www.schemaapp.com/?p=15043 In today’s rapidly evolving digital landscape, website owners and content creators face a persistent challenge: identifying gaps in their existing content and continuously optimizing it for success and visibility in search. With user behaviors and search engine algorithms constantly changing, it is crucial to ensure that your new and old content remains comprehensive, relevant, and...

The post How to Improve Website Content Using the Schema.org Vocabulary appeared first on Schema App Solutions.

]]>
In today’s rapidly evolving digital landscape, website owners and content creators face a persistent challenge: identifying gaps in their existing content and continuously optimizing it for success and visibility in search.

With user behaviors and search engine algorithms constantly changing, it is crucial to ensure that your new and old content remains comprehensive, relevant, and helpful to humans and machines.

Enter Schema.org, a collaborative, community-driven initiative launched in 2011 by tech giants Google, Bing, Yahoo, and Yandex. The Schema.org vocabulary provides a standardized framework for structuring and organizing data on the web. It offers a comprehensive set of Types and properties that website owners can use to describe the entities and content on their site.

While Schema.org is widely known for helping search engines and machines understand the content on your site, its potential extends far beyond that. This vocabulary can be a game-changing checklist for improving your website’s content and formatting and identifying information gaps on your pages. By aligning your content with relevant Schema.org Types and properties, you can identify opportunities you may have overlooked, enhancing your overall content strategy.

In this article, we’ll explore how you can leverage the Schema.org vocabulary to develop a thorough and robust content strategy for your website.

Identifying Content Gaps on Your Website

Your primary focus should always be creating high-value content that serves your users’ needs. That said, the Schema.org vocabulary can serve as a roadmap during the content creation process, outlining information commonly found on certain types of web pages.

The Schema.org vocabulary provides a detailed framework for describing the entities on your website and their relationships. By examining the properties associated with relevant Schema Types, you can:

  • Identify potential gaps in your existing content
  • Fill those information gaps for your audience
  • Add depth to existing page content
  • Create new, supplementary content

Whether you’re creating new content or revamping existing pages, Schema.org can provide valuable guidance. Let’s explore a few examples.

For a healthcare organization creating a new page about a medical condition, you’ll need to decide what information you should include. The MedicalCondition Type in Schema.org has a list of properties such as signOrSymptom, possibleTreatment, and more that capture information that is commonly found on these types of pages. Reviewing the full list of properties associated with a Type can spark ideas about what entities are well-suited for supplementing your content.

Recall that you can only mark up content that exists on your page. Therefore, if you want to incorporate content for these properties to give readers more comprehensive information about the subject, you’ll want to identify those opportunities early in the content creation process.

Our customer, Sharp Healthcare, successfully applied the Schema.org vocabulary to form a long-term content strategy. During their website migration process, the Sharp team ensured that each page focused clearly on a specific Schema.org Type when establishing their content structure. They also incorporated content for the properties suggested by Schema.org for each chosen Type.

Enhancing Rich Results Potential

Aligning your content with Schema.org properties not only helps fill content gaps but also improves your rich result eligibility on Google’s search engine results pages (SERPs). Rich results can lead to enhanced visibility on the SERP and increased click-through rates for your website.

To be eligible for rich results, specific content elements must often be present on your pages. Each rich result type typically has both required and recommended properties:

  1. Required properties: These are essential for eligibility and must be on your page.
  2. Recommended properties: While not mandatory, Google has stated that including more recommended properties can improve the quality of rich results for users and that rich result ranking takes extra information into consideration.

By incorporating both required and recommended properties into your content strategy, you can simultaneously improve your content quality and rich result eligibility.

Let’s look at product snippet requirements and recommendations as an example:

Product Snippet
To be eligible for product snippets on the SERP, it is required that you include the following:

  • name (of the product)
  • At least one of the following is required, but all are recommended:
    • review
    • aggregateRating
    • offers

You can further enrich your product rich result by adding content around the pros and cons of your product. That way, you can markup the content using the positiveNotes and/or negativeNotes properties and potentially have these pros and cons show up on your product rich results.

CAPREIT successfully leveraged Schema.org to enhance their rich result potential. By structuring their content according to Schema.org guidelines, they were able to improve their visibility in search results for their property listings and job postings.

Continuous Content Optimization

While Schema.org is an excellent tool for identifying content gaps and structuring information, it’s crucial to remember that creating helpful, high-quality content should always be your primary goal.

You must have substantive, relevant content in place before implementing Schema Markup. Without this foundation, you won’t be eligible for rich results. Moreover, attempting to markup non-existent or irrelevant content could be seen as spammy, potentially leading to penalties from Google.

Use Schema.org as a starting point to spark ideas and ensure your content is comprehensive, but don’t let it constrain your creativity or limit the value you provide to your audience.

By balancing user-focused content creation with Schema.org’s structured guidance, you can develop a content strategy that provides genuine value to your users and enriches the Schema Markup on your site.

Schema App Provides Content Recommendations Using the Schema.org Vocabulary

The digital landscape is constantly changing, and with it, Google’s structured data documentation and the Schema.org vocabulary continue to evolve. By keeping up with the latest updates, you can continually refine your content strategy and ensure your website content remains aligned with best practices.

At Schema App, we help our customers stay current with the latest changes in Schema.org and Google’s documentation. We also provide content recommendations to help our customers improve their rich result eligibility and enhance the richness of their content.

Looking for a strategic partner to implement robust Schema Markup & content recommendations for your site? Schema App can help.

 

The post How to Improve Website Content Using the Schema.org Vocabulary appeared first on Schema App Solutions.

]]>