Finding Balance Between SEO and non-SEO Traffic Generation
So much SEO.
You might think, from all the buzz about search engine optimization – SEO - that it offers a cure for all the world’s business ills. Somehow, SEO has been propelled from the backwaters of Internet geekdom into the forefront of modern business marketing. For example, if Google’s own search results are any indication, the interest in SEO yields almost 50% of the interest in general advertising. That level of interest seems way out of proportion to the realities of business advertising.
- Have SEO secrets that will help you get an unfair advantage over the next guy;
- Guarantee you a first-page listing for an incredibly low monthly rate;
- Provide hundreds of high page rank sites that will link to your site;
- Give you 5/10/20 quick tips to immediately improve your rankings;
- Tell you what Google/MSN/Yahoo doesn’t want you to know about SEO;
- Tell you that whatever SEO you’re doing is all wrong; or
- Some other variant of the above.
To some extent, this notion of “free advertising” is not altogether inaccurate. SEO can result in your site being found – free of charge – and it can result in traffic to your site that may, in fact, result in new business. But the reality of SEO is not quite that simple.
SEO is far from “FREE”.
SEO takes work… often, hard work. For those that aren’t familiar with what’s involved in SEO, below is a list of some of the typical activities that (as the CREST commercials used to say) “when applied in a conscientious program of regular professional care” will result in higher search engine rankings.
- Researching and selecting keywords that are truly relevant to your desired audience;
- Researching competition for desired keywords;
- Researching and analyzing competitive websites;
- Re-writing and restructuring your website to address desired keywords, to be moreaccessible by search engine “crawlers”, to appropriate label meta tags, headings, and inter-page links;
- Create a program to build links to your site from other sites (directories, exchanged links,article marketing, etc.)
- Create a program to keep content on your site regularly refreshed and synchronized with all the above.
- Regularly (daily or weekly) monitor all the search engines and your competitors positions
Doesn’t quite sound as easy as some people suggest does it? That’s because it’s not. And it’s all the more complicated when you realize that every site on that first page, and on the second and third, is trying to do the same thing – but against you! You boost your rank above them. They go to work and boost their site back above yours. And so on and so on… It’s a war and the SEO “experts” are the arms dealers.
If you’re going to pay good money for SEO, it may also be worthwhile to keep in mind that search engines don’t necessarily have a goal of making you the most findable site on the web. The bottom line for them is making sure that their users finds what they are looking for. Satisfying that requirement may mean that you don’t and should not come up first. Google is the number one search engine for a reason: Google users get results they want. Those may not be the results you want.
In the short run, there may be some serious benefits from investing in SEO to boost your search engine rankings. In the long run, however, there’s probably not much you can do beyond a certain point. Frankly, if you have a finite budget, altering the basic nature of your site and trying to boost how valuable your site is to others (as represented by links to your site) can only be taken so far. After a point, the perfect market characteristics of the search engine will prevail.
What this means is:, yes, do make sure you do the essential SEO necessary to optimize your rankings in search engines. But do it in the context of an overall marketing program. Definitely use SEO to ensure that you get a fair and accurate appraisal by search engines. But also invest in other non-SEO lead-generation methods to bring traffic to your site and business to your table.
Click KLynn Business Consultants to link to the KLynn consulting site.
1 comment:
This is a well thought out post. I agree that everything goes back to the traditional method. See, that's what's happening to plumbing in Toronto these days.
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