Why Do Many
Small Businesses Fail at SEO?
We’ve helped thousands
of small businesses with SEO through our online SEO training,
newsletter, and SEO management packages. When we see small business
owners struggling, it’s usually for one of the following reasons:
- They
don’t fully understand what SEO is. The most common mistake we see
here is people who think SEO is all about getting keywords onto
the page—lots and lots of keywords. Choosing the right keywords is
part of SEO, but it’s only one part of it. Plus, if you overdo it
on the keywords, you can actually end up hurting your rankings
instead of helping them.
- They
don’t have a strategy to improve their SEO. If you’re going on a
road trip to a city you’ve never been to, do you just wing it or
do you use the navigation on your phone or car to help get you
there? You need a clear strategy to map your way to SEO success.
- They
get impatient and focus on the wrong things. It takes time to get
results from SEO—sometimes a matter of weeks, other times, it can
be months before you start seeing an uptick in rankings and
traffic.
- They
lack the time to put in the effort. This is a major factor for
business owners. SEO takes consistent effort, and many small
business owners lack the time to put in the work to get results.
If that’s the case for you, consider working with someone else on
your team to train them on SEO, or outsource your SEO to a digital
marketing agency.
What Is SEO?
First, let’s talk about
what SEO isn’t. It’s not a magic
bullet, nor is it a quick process. It’s also not the holy grail of
digital marketing. There are plenty of other techniques to generate
traffic and leads, from social media marketing to Google Ads.
SEO, or search engine
optimization, is all about making Google’s ranking factors work in your
favor. Google has several different factors that determine how well
your website or page helps a person using a specific keyword to search
for a topic. Of these factors, some are weighted more heavily than
others. You can roughly group Google ranking factors into three
categories:
- Content
Relevance:
Google also determines how relevant your content is to the search
term being used. When all else is equal, Google will rank the more
relevant site higher.
- Technical
Factors: Google
evaluates several technical aspects of your site as a means of
assessing the overall user experience you provide. These are
generally easy fixes, especially if you use WordPress or
Squarespace.
- Domain
Authority:
Finally, Google looks at how much authority your website has,
giving preference to sites with higher authority.
The American Dental Association will outrank an individual dental
practice for the same piece of content, for example.
To thrive at SEO, you
have to look at all three of these factors and put in the work to
consistently improve them.
How Do I Create
an SEO Strategy?
Forget about your SEO
plans—create a strategy instead. Plans are
flawed because they have a start and a finish, and the outcome we’re
looking for is outside of our control. This means that once you reach
the end of your plan, it’s easy to feel like it didn’t work if you
didn’t get the rankings you wanted. In contrast, a strategy is built
with the expectation that you’ll encounter some bumps in the road and
that the work is ongoing. Think of SEO not as a sprint to win a race,
but an ongoing marathon where being at the front of the pack pays off
in rankings and website traffic.
To start, know the
keywords you want your website to rank for. Some keywords have high
buyers’ intent and lower volume; these keywords can be easier to rank
for, so you’ll be able to see ranking changes more quickly when you
focus on these. Other keywords have high research intent and higher
volume; these phases usually have more competition and it can take
longer to see ranking changes.
As part of your SEO
strategy, you’ll want to continually improve the different metrics that
contribute to Google’s ranking factors. You’ll be competing against
yourself and your own rankings, and also your competition—which means
you should know how you compare to your competitors, too.
To thrive at SEO, it’s
important to put consistent effort into all three groups of ranking
factors; it’s this consistent effort that will ultimately change your
rankings, rather than one specific action.
How to Focus on
the Right SEO Metrics
Not only do you want to
know which keywords you’re targeting, you should also know why you’re
targeting them. Keywords with high buyers’ intent are the ones that
generally lead to more sales, but the traffic is lower. These are
typically the keywords you’ll optimize for first.
High research intent
keywords are the ones that will help users solve problems before they
make a purchase. These keywords don’t convert to sales as easily, but
the traffic will be higher. Target these keywords after you’ve achieved
good rankings for keywords with high buyers’ intent.
It’s also a good idea
to focus on what work is being done each month to contribute to your
three ranking factor groups. If you’re seeing improvement in these
individual ranking factors, you can be confident that the rankings will
follow.
Need Help with
SEO?
Click here to request an
SEO quote
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