1. Is There
Enough Search Volume?
This is the first
sanity check for any search engine optimization campaign. Are your
prospective customers searching for what you’re offering?
Assuming they are in
fact searching, then the next question is whether or not they are
searching enough to drive the sales volume you expect to generate from
SEO. Remember that not everyone who searches is going to click on your
website. Even if you’re ranking #1, you can only expect about 30-40% of
all the searches will click through to your website. If you’re ranked
lower then you’ll get much less.
Now don’t forget that
not everyone who clicks through to learn more on your website is going
to make a purchase. Typical conversion rates are closer to 1-2%.
Armed with these
estimates you can now estimate what is realistic in terms of driving
sales from your SEO campaign.
2. Is There An
Opening In the Competitive Landscape?
The next place to look
is the competition for your relevant keyword phrases. How strong is the
competition and is there a clear opportunity to overtake them in the
search results?
Competition is all
relative to your website. First, go to the Moz Link Explorer to
evaluate your website’s domain authority and number of links. (Another
favorite tool of ours is Ahrefs.com). Next, evaluate the websites that
are already ranking for your target keyword phrases.
How do you stack up?
Remember, Google is
only going to rank 10 websites on the first page for any given keyword.
If all 10 of the websites are well-optimized for the keyword, have much
stronger domain authority, and thousands of more inbound links, then
it’s going to be a long, uphill battle to get your website on to the
first page.
Alternatively, if the
competition is relatively weak, that should give you more confidence to
go full steam ahead.
3. Are You
Giving Searchers What They Want?
The first two questions
are to evaluate your SEO opportunity so that you have the right
expectations about how easy or hard it will be to get your website on
the first page of Google. The last two questions are to evaluate
whether or not you’re going to convert those prospects after they
search and click on your website. There’s no point ranking #1 if you
don’t generate any sales, right?
The question you need
to answer is, what do your prospective customers want after they search
in Google? Do they want to make a purchase right on your website? Or,
do they want more information to learn about the product or service?
Or, do they need to demo the product first?
In other words, what’s
the typical buying behavior for your product or service? If you’re
selling high-priced products or services, then chances are pretty good
your prospective customers are not going to buy without first talking
to someone. This is obviously important to understand so that you’re
focused on the right offer and you have realistic expectations about
driving sales from SEO.
4. Is Your Offer
The Best Option Available?
Finally, while we’re on
the topic of your offer, take a look at what else is available. Is your
offer really the best option after you review your competition? With
SEO, you’re not selling in a vacuum. Your prospective customers can
(and most certainly will) click on other results to do their homework.
That means your offer
must be truly compelling compared to the competition. Otherwise, you
should not expect to drive many sales from your SEO campaign.
When it comes to SEO,
most people only think about rankings and traffic. But the true measure
of success from an SEO campaign is an increase in sales (so you
actually generate a return on your investment). And you need to be able
to answer all 4 of these questions in order to have a truly profitable
SEO campaign.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment