SEO - Needed or Not?
In today’s digital age, there’s millions of YouTubers, marketers, and bloggers are emphasizing the need for SEO. But is it right for you? Find out here.
SEO stands for Search Engine Optimization.
It’s the art of making websites appealing to Search Engines (like Google or Bing) so that they appear higher for certain keywords.
It is a constantly adapting field as marketers adjust to changes in Search Engine algorithms and new technology.
Your website is useless to you unless it’s seen, and websites with high rankings for the right keywords are practically guaranteed more visibility.
You see, research shows that about 50% of people will click on one of the top 3 search results for any given search (not including Ads, Maps, etc.). After that, the chances of a website getting clicked on is significantly smaller, with practically no one going to the second page of Google.
Think about it. How often do you scroll down when searching on Google? When was the last time you went to the second page of Google? Amongst SEO groups, the second page of Google is often metaphorically referred to as, “the best place to hide a dead body.”
If your website controls one of the top 3 spots for a popular search, you will get more visibility than potentially thousands of other websites. For a business, this means more chances to turn website visitors into customers. However, if you don’t control the top 3 spots, then you may have to win at other keywords, or find an alternative method to be seen.
SEO is applied to a website in two ways: On-Page-SEO and Off-Page-SEO.
On-Page-SEO is taking the pages on your website and making them relevant to keywords (words used in Google Searches) you desire to appear in, while appealing to search engines. This involves making sure your website is fast, mobile-friendly, includes a healthy amount of the right keywords, has alt-text for images, linking between pages, not having a high bounce-rate, and more.
Off-Page-SEO is making your website “popular” amongst other websites. The main way of doing this is having other websites link to yours. For example, by getting links from social media (yours or others), local news stations, and blogs, you are telling Google Search Engines that your site is relevant to a specific keyword, and all these other sites agree.
Think of it like how race cars are built. Hours and hours of study have been spent optimizing cars to race as fast as they possibly can be so they can be first in a race. Things like wind, gravity, traction, etc. all have an effect on the car, and the builders have taken the time to find out how to build a car to take advantage of all this.
Let’s take an example. Let’s say you own a Taco Restaurant, and you want to appear first for the search term, “Taco Restaurant Boise Idaho” because you’ve done research and know it’s a search that gets a lot of traffic.
For on-page-SEO, your site would frequently mention the words Taco, Restaurant, Boise, and Idaho. Meanwhile, you’d ensure the website was of high-quality, with fast load speeds, attractive designs, etc. For off-page-SEO, you might ask local review places to mention your restaurant in their posts, get the news station to take a tour, link to the site from your social media pages, and more. Ideally, this would tell Google that your site is relevant to the search “Taco Restaurant Boise Idaho” and rank your site higher for it and other similar searches.
SEO sounds necessary right? Or is it? The results can be worth it, but here are things not everyone will tell you.
- If your site doesn’t end up and remain in the top 3-5 spaces for quality searches, or at least enough mid-traffic searches, then the time and money you invested in SEO will be for nothing.
- SEO is also a field where it’s far too easy to cheat (known as Black Hat SEO), making it harder for companies trying to do it the right way (White Hat SEO). Learn more in the FAQs.
- There is no guarantee of rankings. SEO is a constantly changing environment. Search Engines are changing the rules of SEO all the time. Most of it is small, but a big change could drastically affect your changes.
- Other businesses or advertising companies could be competing for the same spots as you, and even direct bad-links to your website to negatively affect it. It’s like making a bowl of chili while others are adding unknown ingredients.
- It’s consumes a great deal of your time, money, or both. These are resources that could be aimed at more reliable and profitable forms of advertising.
- White hat SEO is a very slow and tedious process. And your best efforts may not bring you to the first page of Google.
- Black Hat SEO breaks Google’s policies. If you or your advertising company uses Black Hat SEO, there is always the risk of being caught by Google, and your site receiving penalties that will make sure it never sees the first page of Google again.
- Black Hat SEO is like taking steroids, it must constantly be applied. If you stop, you will quickly lose the results.
- You are essentially fighting for a digital billboard, one you will pay for whether people see it or not.
While I believe a certain amount of SEO is necessary for every website, is it right for your website and business?
For small businesses, I truly believe you can find more productive and powerful ways to promote your business. Personally, I love to recommend PPC (Pay Per Click) Advertising. Things like Google Ads, Facebook Ads, etc., offer systems where you only pay if a visitor clicks on your ad. In other words, you are paying directly for people to look at your website.
PPC Advertising allows you to directly see the cause and effects of your investment (x amount of money brought y amount of people, leading to z amount of profits). Tracking such results aren’t as clear with SEO, not to mention there’s no struggle for rankings, little guess-work, etc. If you’re paying enough and making relevant ads, then you will be seen.
Other than PPC Advertising, there’s always more creative ways to promote your business as well, whether it be fairs, having the right contacts, etc.
For larger companies with big goals and aspirations, looking to dominate anywhere and everywhere, SEO is likely something for you to pursue. If done right, it can produce amazing results.
For now, feel free to learn more about SEO in the FAQs below.
FAQs
White Hat vs Black Hat SEO
White Hat SEO is doing everything according to Google’s Policies. No cheating. Clean as snow. However, it’s very time-consuming and tedious.
In contrast, Black Hat SEO is optimizing your site to rank while mimicking White Hat SEO so as not to get caught. Slow and steady is the recommended technique. It can involve the following:
- Buying links from sellers online, who build fake websites to promote specific keywords.
- Paying for people to make fake blog posts or social media posts regarding your website.
- Hiding content on your website, making it appealing to Google without clogging up your pages with unnecessary content for site-visitors.
- If you are deep into Black Hat, it is also possible to buy links from websites that people hacked.
Are There SEO Scams to Look Out For?
Unless someone knows something I don’t, if someone says he can Guarantee SEO Rankings, know he is lying. SEO is an unpredictable field with countless factors beyond one’s control. He may be really good at SEO, but that doesn’t mean he’s that good.
Also, a common scam is an SEO person can rank for an uncompetitive keyword, and claim they know SEO. For example, ranking for “Pizza Place Boise” is much harder than “Bob’s Omega Mega Super-Duper-Wooper Pizza Placeness of Awesomeness”. NO ONE is looking for the second search, so it’s less competition for the number one spot. So if the SEO person can rank first for this search, they may try to brag about it and how good they are at SEO, when it’s no achievement at all.
SEO companies can also hire outside agencies and freelancers to help with your SEO. Not that this is always a scam, but, as a buyer, it’s good for you to know if a company does SEO in-house or hires third-parties.
I’m sure there’s others, so please do your research.
How Much does SEO Cost?
It depends on many factors, but $3,000 a month is a good average for most companies. Freelancers usually charge less than that, but can still be pricey.
How Long Does SEO Take to Show Results
To start seeing initial results, it usually takes 3-6 months. But, many factors can affect this, such as how competitive the keywords are, using white or black hat SEO, etc.