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Realistic SEO Expectations
by Jill Whalen
In Advisor Issue #140
(http://www.highrankings.com/issue140.htm#seo)
I talked about setting SEO client expectations in terms of their role in
creating a successful campaign. Today, I'm going to talk about client
expectations in terms of realistic results.
Those who've been in the SEO biz for a number of years know how much
more competitive it is these days as compared to a few years ago. The
number of web pages indexed by search engines has doubled, tripled, and
quadrupled in past years. On top of that, a good portion of site
owners and webmasters know just enough SEO to be dangerous. In the
golden age of SEO, the vast majority of websites hadn't given a
thought to the search engines, and when they did, it was only to place
some keywords in their Meta tags. (Which, incidentally, didn't help
then either.) Those were the days when anyone who knew even the
slightest bit about SEO could easily rank highly in all the major
search engines, with very little effort. Even competitive areas were
doable with just a little more work than their non-competitive
counterparts.
These days, it's almost the exact opposite. Even keyword phrases that
nobody's searching for can sometimes be difficult to obtain high
rankings with unless you really and truly know what you're doing. And
even then, those rankings may be here one day, and gone the next. The
problem is magnified for new businesses and new websites. If your
site isn't at least a few years old, your SEO efforts will be less
likely to provide the results you want. This is one reason why your
website optimization should always be seen as a long-term proposition.
As we move forward in this industry, webmasters, site owners, and SEOs
need to shift their focus from that of asking how they can get this
keyword to this position in this engine to how they can get more
targeted traffic and convert it into customers. Unfortunately, a
large portion of those looking into SEO services are still seeing the
small picture. For instance, on the contact form on my site, I ask
people to tell me a little bit about their "business goals." A good
portion who fill it out want something like "top-5 rankings in Google
and Yahoo for this keyword." Huh? That's not a business goal! A
business goal is more like "Bring more people to my website who are
searching online for the types of products we sell." (As a side note,
soon after writing this, I got an email from someone whose goal was to
have their Flash site be "#1 in all the search engines for the word
'spring.'" I kid you not!)
Don't get me wrong, I very much understand why people would love to
move their rankings up from #11 to #1 for a highly sought-after and
targeted keyword phrase. I'm quite sure it would very much increase
their targeted traffic and their sales (assuming they're doing
everything else right). My frustration lies in the fact that there
are people who believe that somehow an SEO company can magically snap
their fingers or wave their magic wands and make it so. They probably
found my site at #2 in Google for search engine optimization and
expect that I can just do to their site whatever it was I did to my
site, and voila -- instant rankings!
Even the best SEOs are not magicians. They can't simply place a site
at the top of the engines when there are hundreds of thousands (if not
millions) of others that offer basically the same thing, and provide
basically the same information. If they could, you'd see a whole lot
more millionaire SEOs.
Does this mean that SEO is dead?
Absolutely not! But SEO that focuses on rankings for the most highly
sought-after keywords in any given space is most definitely dying.
This doesn't mean that you have to settle for keywords that receive
few searches. It just means that you have to broaden your horizons
and see the big picture.
Almost every time I review one of those "put me at #1" prospects'
websites, I see tons of opportunities for fixing the site in general
so that it will work better for both their users and the search
engines. They are almost always so focused on their "money phrases"
that they completely neglect many areas of their site. Instead they
put their special phrase on every page and never research the
thousands of others that are being typed into search engines every
day.
Another trend I've been seeing a lot lately is the creation of content
simply for the sake of creating content. What's that all about? SEOs
certainly throw the words "good content" around a lot, but why is it
that nobody seems to know what that means? We now have a whole cottage
industry of companies who will allegedly write "good content" for you.
Worse, there's even one that will *rent* you content! Newsflash...good
content has nothing to do with the history of your products. Nor is
good content a bunch of madlib spam pages where you simply substitute
keyword phrases from one page into the other. Good content isn't
stuff you write for the search engines.
Good content is unique. Really and truly unique. It is creative
ideas that simply popped into your head which nobody else in your
space has thought of yet. The key to good content is creativity.
Unfortunately, creativity itself seems to be a dying art. Being
creative isn't looking at what your competitor is doing and copying
them. It's being a leader, not a follower. It's having your own
voice and your own opinions and expressing them, regardless of what
others might think. It's pouring your heart and soul into your
website, not looking for the next quick fix. And it's (say it with
me) making your site the best it can be for your site visitors AND the
search engines. It's what's made my site rank highly for the most
competitive phrase there is (among thousands of other phrases), and
it's what will make your site rank highly for whatever phrases relate
to it. But it's not easy, and it's not fast. And it can't be done
with the flick of a switch.
So please...if your pet phrase isn't ranking highly enough, don't call
me and don't email me. In fact, don't call or email *any* SEO
company. Instead of calling, you need to reassess your goals. No SEO
company in the world will be able to help you unless you are ready to
forget about what you think you want, and learn more about what you
really need. Read that last sentence again until you really
understand it. Forget about what you think you want, and learn more
about what you really need.
And remember, there are plenty of companies that will say they can do
whatever you want them to do. You want to be #1 for spring? Sure, no
problem. They will happily take your money, do some work, and
promptly get no results. Don't blame them though -- they were just
telling you what you wanted to hear.
Jill Whalen of High Rankings®
is an internationally recognized search
engine optimization consultant and host of the free weekly High Rankings®
Advisor search engine
marketing newsletter. Jill's handbook, "The Nitty-gritty of Writing for the
Search Engines" teaches business owners how and where to place relevant keyword
phrases on their Web sites so that they make sense to users and gain high
rankings in the major search engines. Jill specializes in search engine
optimization, SEO consultations , site analysis reports, SEM seminars and is the
co-founder of the new search marketing
and website design company, Search Creative, LLC.
Contact WingsDove for effective
web design solutions and
search engine
optimization.
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