Content style guide
Writing for SEO
To learn more about SEO and writing with SEO in mind, we recommend starting with Google’s SEO starter guide and The Moz Blog.
SEO best practices for writing copy
Writing for SEO is more than having meta title tags, descriptions, and keywords. While we want to optimize these SEO elements, the best way to optimize for search is to create relevant content that provides information that people want.
At the foundation of all of these recommendations is to apply them in a way that’s natural and helpful to the user.
- Write content that addresses what people actually search for with high-quality, unique information that’s relevant to that topic.
- Example: Do people really want to know all the awards your office won for customer satisfaction or do they want to know how they can find out the status of their application?
- Use the primary user search phrase or keyword in the H1 (page title), H2 (section headers), and intro text.
- Don’t have more than one H1 on a page. Use the H1 only for the page title. See our guidance on page titles.
- Integrate the primary or secondary keywords throughout the body copy, H2s, and H3s. But never “stuff keywords” for its own sake. That practice is contrary to creating helpful relevant content.
- Use H2s and H3s consistently to structure content hierarchy as sections and subsections. It helps organize content into scannable chunks, and also helps SEO (for example, so H3s can get easily featured in list snippets in searches).
- Write content and navigation elements that can be easily scanned and understood by the user. Include the primary keyword in the URL if possible.
- Avoid “thin” or “lite” pages—pages that just don’t have enough content. According to Moz (On-page SEO), “Google is clear that you should have a comprehensive page on a topic instead of multiple, weaker pages for each variation of a keyword.”
- Try to include personalized, conversational questions and answers that answer the user’s actual search query. This can help increase content relevancy in personalized searches.
Meta properties
Writing for SEO is more than having meta title tags, descriptions, and keywords, but we still want to include them and make sure that we’re using them consistently.
Each page needs a unique title tag and meta description. Don’t use the same title tags and meta descriptions on multiple pages. Duplicate title tags and descriptions are bad for SEO and confuse users on search results.
Why they’re important
- Title tags and descriptions help people identify what the page is about in search results and decide whether to click on your page from the results.
- Having a consistent standard for title tags and descriptions also helps ensure that our search “branding” looks consistent and unified in search results.
- It helps communicate VA’s brand as the authoritative source for VA information for Veterans.
- It also helps people tell quickly which content comes from VA versus non-VA organizations that may also be providing VA benefit information.
Meta descriptions
Meta descriptions provide a high-level summary of a page. While they aren’t crawled by search engines, they are displayed in search results to users.
- Keep meta description text to less than 300 characters (including spaces).
- Try to use the primary keyword or phrase at the beginning of the description, within the first 155 characters. (Google sometimes changes how many characters it shows on searches.)
- Work in a secondary keyword if it fits naturally.
- Incorporate a call to action if there’s space.
- Use the active voice and our plain language, conversational voice and tone.