Interviews in the SEO world can be tough.
Every SEO professional has a different opinion regarding search ranking factors and their importance, and the answer “it depends” is a common industry saying for a reason.
Your day-to-day job isn’t the SATs… it’s more important to try and get an idea of how candidates think than if they’ve memorized all the meta tags.
You still need to ask questions in an interview, but what are good questions to ask?
Instead of putting together questions that feel like a test, these are questions that focus on the candidates’ ability to explain what they know and why they know it.
Many of the questions below are nothing more than a jump-off point to a discussion. Interviewing candidates needs to be a conversation, where you’re both working on the best fit.
It’s not always about the correctness of the answer but their ability to demonstrate their knowledge of a topic, and if their experience aligns with your needs.
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While these questions can lead to discussions on the candidates’ experience and specific SEO strategies, they don’t necessarily have to go in that direction.
These questions are a primer for the experience and strategy questions to come.
This is a good baseline – you want to start by establishing the foundation of what the candidate believes the role of SEO to be.
This ensures that the interviewee is applying for the position you have in mind or to see if you have two different ideas as to the nature of what will be expected of them.
You’re looking for insight into the candidate’s overall interest and passion in SEO. Look for clues as to whether or not they are a self-starter or fell into SEO following the path of least resistance.
Who do they listen to? Where does their interest come from?
Their answer here could tell you a lot about what kind of employee they will be.
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You want to get a sense of the candidate’s educational process, and how engaged they are.
Specifically, you want to know how much time they invest in education, the resources they utilize, and the people they follow to stay up to date.
How they answer this question will tell you quite a bit about their knowledge and skill level overall. If they don’t know the difference, then you’re looking at someone extremely green.
If they do know, they should be able to provide some strong details and examples of those differences.
This is a question you can ask to get more of an idea of your interviewee’s hands-on experiences with SEO.
This question helps you make sure that you and the candidate are on the same page in regard to successful SEO.
You should be looking for answers that go beyond “top search engine rankings” and into the realm of actual business improvement issues and KPIs.
Every SEO professional has different lines they will push and lines they won’t cross. You want to know where this candidate falls to ensure it’s a fit with your needs.
More importantly, however, is to find out if the candidate can adhere to the lines you establish.
They want to be as aggressive as you need but not so aggressive that they cross lines you don’t want to be crossed.
What you are looking for is how familiar the candidate is with the world of search outside of Google.
Aside from Bing, the candidate should have at least surface knowledge of Duck Duck Go, Yandex, and Baidu.
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This can be especially important for international SEO professionals. Knowing what search engines are dominant in different countries is essential.
The candidates may want to discuss how the various search engine algorithms differ. The crux of their answer should indicate that proper SEO is good for all search engines.
They should be clear on the point that you should not tailor optimization for one specific search engine.
The candidate should also demonstrate knowledge of specific architectural issues that will need to be addressed when optimizing internationally.
The candidate should be able to provide a layman’s explanation of PageRank.
If the position requires direct interaction with non-technical people, it will be important that they are able to explain this in an easy-to-understand way.
Google makes updates every day, but there are always a handful of them that stand out.
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You’re not looking for a complete history of Google algorithm changes or even the names of them, necessarily. The most important thing is they know how search engines are changing and what things they look for.
Search engine results pages are much more than a list of paid and organic links. Local results, answer boxes, carousels, and more are all important parts of search results.
The candidate should demonstrate a knowledge of these SERP features and how they factor into their optimization efforts.
You’re not looking for exact percentages but rather a general idea of how the candidate sees organic search falling into the overall spectrum and what other areas contribute to a site’s success.
The candidate should show that they understand the value of bringing in traffic from multiple sources, not just Google (or organic search).
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Every SEO professional focuses on different things and has different priorities.
You’re not looking for a “correct” answer. Instead, assess the answers given, which will tell you a great deal regarding what each candidate finds important.
Even though there may be no right answers, that doesn’t mean there are no wrong ones, so keep on the lookout for anything you know to be unimportant. That’s a giant red flag.
Just as in the question above, you want to know what the candidate sees as important for off-page optimization.
These answers don’t need to be specific to SEO, and in fact, a good SEO pro should know a few non-SEO factors that are important.
This could be a controversy-stirring question, and deliberately so. You want to hear their opinion on specific “known” ranking factors where they disagree with conventional industry wisdom.
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Whether you agree or disagree with their answers is beside the point (unless they’re just so far off base it’s ridiculous).
What you should get is an impassioned, reasoned, and thoughtful analysis of why this factor is not relevant.
Same as above but with the broader canvas of off-page optimization.
On both this and the question above, you can solicit more than one example. Just leave time to discuss each thoroughly.
Where the questions above focus on SEO misconceptions, this one focuses specifically on bad SEO practices or mistakes that impact the success of SEO. The list can be almost endless.
What you want to see is an awareness of things beyond optimization strategies.
This will tell you what the candidate will keep an eye on once they start working for you in order to ensure the work they do for you is successful.
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This should include a discussion of both incoming, outgoing, and internal linking, and how the search engine algorithms factor them.
Don’t let them get away with simplistic “quality over quantity” answers.
The candidate should be able to articulate the value (or lack thereof) of each of these tags and why they are important – or not – to the SEO campaign.
Since tag length changes frequently, this is not an important aspect of the question, though they should indicate that they understand how tag length can impact optimization.
The candidate should demonstrate a working knowledge of what does and does not constitute duplicate content along with how search engines treat it.
Let the conversation move into areas of duplication of distributed content to partial duplication of product descriptions, etc.
Don’t worry about discussing strategies here, but rather the impact of various forms of duplicated content.
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The candidate should demonstrate sufficient knowledge regarding how search engines view exact match domains and how that impacts the success of your site specifically.
Hint: Exact match domains have very little, if any, relevance to search, but there are other benefits the candidate should be able to articulate.
The candidate should be able to thoroughly explain the differences between the two.
However, the more important aspect of this question is if they understand how search engines treat each of these two options.
It bears asking.
The candidate should be able to articulate the difference between a friendly and non-SEO friendly URL accompanied with discussion as to when a site should or should not change its URLs.
This should be a discussion not just of the search relevance of these issues but also of the impact they might have on the visitor.
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Lead the candidate to tell you when and why URLs should (or shouldn’t) be redirected and what problems are created when not handled properly.
Candidates should be able to outline tactics and tools they use to review how frequently Google crawls the website.
This should include a healthy understanding as to why crawl information is important.
The interviewee should be able to provide one or more ways they can check a page’s indexed status.
More importantly, they should be able to outline the importance of getting this knowledge and how they integrate it into their SEO campaign.
There may be no right answer to this question, but there are plenty of wrong ones.
They should demonstrate an understanding of search engine crawling, indexing, and rendering, and what specific marketing efforts factor into it.
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This is probably the closest to a “Gotcha!” question on this list, though it’s not intended to be.
What you want to learn is how often the candidate would revisit the page and to outline when and why they would make changes to it.
If you get an answer that indicates they make changes to a page without any real strategy behind it, this is likely not the candidate for you.
The correct answer here varies from site to site and the candidate’s answer should reflect that.
This can also merge into a discussion regarding how long it takes for SEO changes to produce strong, measurable results.
Candidates should demonstrate a knowledge of various types of pages and content.
Specifically, they should be able to outline several page/content types that are better kept from search engines.
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You want to make sure the candidate can articulate the importance of having a mobile-friendly website. The discussion should cover both search and usability issues.
If your interviewee can articulate what mobile-first crawling is and how Google sees mobile sites, all the better.
The candidate should be familiar with responsive sites. You should get a clear understanding of why they prefer one over the other.
They should also demonstrate knowledge of Google’s preferences as well.
The detail provided in this answer will tell you quite a bit about the candidate’s knowledge on the subject. They should be able to explain why site speed is or isn’t too important.
Bonus points for bringing up different speed metrics.
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As with the question above, you’re looking for a reasoned explanation as to why they believe as they do.
Many SEO pros disagree on the level of importance of any aspect of SEO, but every SEO professional should understand the issue’s complexities, and impact beyond just SEO.
The candidate should understand the potential ramifications of poorly constructed code and how validation factors into preventing it.
Validated code is decidedly not important to the search engine algorithms, but good code is important.
The candidate should be able to explain what the robots.txt file is used for and outline some of the dangers of misusing this file, as well as ways it can be used for good.
Especially with regards to SEO crawlers outside of search engines.
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The candidate should have a solid understanding of how this file is used to help (or hurt) a web marketing campaign.
Most SEO pros agree that PPC does not have any impact on organic rankings, though there are some that vehemently disagree.
Overall, you want a candidate that can explain the value that PPC brings to organic even without impacting the organic rankings specifically.
Most things described as penalties from Google are not penalties, just negative repercussions from doing something they don’t like.
The candidate should be able to distinguish between an active penalty and a negative result.
This question is designed to see how forward-thinking the candidate is or if they merely react to known Google algorithm updates.
They should be able to articulate a solid understanding of the purpose of the algorithms and what they are ultimately trying to achieve.
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Even not actively articulating “E-A-T,” they should understand how Google values results with authority and trust.
You want to make sure that your candidate doesn’t have SEO tunnel vision and can see the bigger picture when it comes to digital marketing.
You want to hear how they believe social media, content strategy, link building, and even PPC can be a factor in helping SEO succeed.
The candidate should be able to demonstrate an ability to think beyond rankings and talk about users. They should outline a number of ways to find keywords, and discuss how they are valued.
Their knowledge should extend to understanding other signals consumers provide that tell us more about their interests.
Keyword optimization is less about optimizing phrases into a page than it is about addressing the overall topic.
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The candidate should have an understanding of topical optimization as well as finding and using related words in the content being optimized.
Both long- and short-tail phrases have value. Let the candidate explain to you how each is important to the overall success of the campaign while also highlighting their weaknesses.
This is where you find out what content management systems the candidate has experience with and whether or not they’ll be ready to jump into the CMS your own site uses.
They should demonstrate an understanding of the pros and cons of their favorite CMS as it pertains to SEO.
This last question is to see how much they have thought about the future of SEO and what changes are coming our way.
If they haven’t given it much thought, it’s possible they are reactionary rather than visionary.
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That may not be a deal-breaker for you, but it can be important when you compare them to other candidates.
The questions outlined above cover a spectrum of SEO knowledge. These questions are designed to go beyond the scope of the specific question itself.
There should be plenty of room here for the candidate to demonstrate their full knowledge.
Let the conversation meander a bit. Let the candidate talk. And by the end, you’ll have a strong feel for what they do (or don’t) know.
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