This article shows how some small business owners, fed up with wasting
money on expensive SEO consultants, invested time and effort learning and implementing SEO themselves. Had they
known about our cheaper more flexible approach they might have got it done easier!
I Once Was Lost, Now
I'm Found On The Web
Getting your site at the top of the
search listings need not cost much
Andrew Stone.Sunday Times - Small Business Section, 25th of October 2009
During their first six years in
business. George Pallecaros and Jack Panayi struggled to expand their firm, which sold software and equipment for
football coaching. They tried enlisting the help of search engine specialists to boost online traffic, but that
achieved little. “I got people in because I knew the website needed a marketing push, but I did not know what the
missing ingredient was”, said Pallecaros “the people we used were a waste of time and they were expensive - they
were charging £500 a day - I decided to learn how to do it myself”.
He started looking at search
engine optimisation (SEO) forums, signed up to online courses and bought software to help him identify the key
words that would attract new business through his website Soccertutor.com. The changes soon made a difference said
Pallecaros. “The business really began to take off after I started working on the website myself. Before we were
probably doing £15,000 to £20,000 a year. Now, we were doing that much a month, and we see it growing. I have spent
only between £500 and £750 on lessons and software but you see the results. My time has been the main
investment”.
Pallecaros admitted that being
technology savvy and knowing some computer coding helped him when he started learning about SEO. Since then
however, making a website search engine friendly has become much less dependent on technical knowledge, he said.
“Websites are increasingly being built, so you can easily change things. A site with a good content management
system doesn't need you to code HTML tags, so anyone can easily make changes. That is vital if you don't want to
bother your designer every time you want to try a new keyword on your site”.
Anne White had no technical
knowledge, when she started using SEO tools to boost her sales on aloevera-guide.com, her health products website.
“I knew as much about SEO at the beginning as I did about Mandarin Chinese. The business started as a hobby website
and mushroomed from there”, said White. “I knew I could increase sales, if I optimised the
pages”.
Instead of paying an SEO
specialist thousands of pounds she pays BT Business a monthly fee of £79 in exchange for reports and advice on how
to optimise the website. “You have to do some of the work and implement the changes yourself, but you can talk to
experts and ask questions on the phone. It has given me a clear focus on where to improve
things”.
“Optimising your website need
not cost the earth if, like White and Pallecaros, you are prepared to do some of the work yourself”, said Bill
Murphy, managing director of BT Business which launched its SearchSmart service to provide SEO expertise for small
firms. “There is a tendency to see SEO as an exotic science, but it is not a mystery. It can be done effectively
and easily if you are prepared to spend 20 minutes a day perfecting the formula for your own business. You just
need to focus on getting the right key words for your business as well as assessing the data so you know how many
people are coming to your site”.
There is plenty of free or
inexpensive help for those wanting to get to grips with SEO said Jeremy Spiller of the White Hat Media consultancy.
“Buy a book and check out some of the forums where you will find some very good how-to guides. The second step is
to install Google Analytics on your web site; knowing your traffic is vital”.
“After that, identify
reasonable objectives and work out how to reach them. Local businesses should include their local area in keywords.
Listing on Google Local should also help. It's all about understanding the sector you're in and finding the best
keywords to match your products”. “People can also make short videos is very inexpensively. They showcase products
well on a website and they are usually well indexed by Google. You can also use YouTube to promote your products
this way and it's free.
Genuine links with other websites are
also important set Spiller. “About 65% of the reason for a Google ranking is back-links to other sites, and we
spend most of our time building back-links for our clients. You must create genuine back links though, deals with
East European link farms are no use and can be harmful, whereas press releases, articles and mentions in social
media very important. Something as simple as getting a link on your local Chamber of Commerce, or an item in local
paper can make a difference”.
Pellecaros said there were
other ways to boost your search engine rankings. “SEO is a big part of driving traffic to your site but don't
forget the other things around that - for example, building a good e-mail list and using it in e-mail campaigns or
writing an article or a blog using the right keywords.”
It's also important to look
optimising at a website regularly said Spiller. “It's not something you do as a project and then stand back. You
should look at it much more like tending a garden”.
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