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Category >> SEO

Apr 10
2008

SEO Puts $31,752 Additional Profit in Man's Pocket

Posted by admin admin in serviceSEOMozSEOSalesproject managementmistakescustomercapability

admin

Additional Profit from SEOAt least. Which is a pretty good piece of pocket money. I suspect even Warren Buffet would slow down to pick that up.

I attribute this to SEO because even thought it was a change in business process coupled with good SEO that made it happen it could not have happened without SEO.

Fair warning to people looking for "advanced" techniques - they ain't here. But what I'm going to talk about is a LOT more valuable than a trick that may or may not work with Google next week or next year.

Best Ever YouMoz Article

Let's look at the real money quote that J Kelly Garrett put in his amazingly excellent SEO article at YouMoz. This piece of advice will serve you while you climb up the value chain from a specialist to a trusted business advisor:

I took the pile [of papers, documentation, etc], pushed it aside, and asked him [the business owner] to tell me about himself. This is a common technique of mine, whether it is a small business owner, or the Chairman of the Board for Burlington Northern Railroad.

He wasn't asking to hear about the guy's soccer team, he wanted to get the gestalt around the company. What is important about the environment, goals, challenges, employees, culture, customers, etc, etc, etc.

SEO Is Never Rocket ScienceIt's Not About the Technology

Really, it's not. Not even in SEO. I wasn't about the technology in OO programming. It wasn't about the technology in robotics. It wasn't about the technology during the dang moon shots either.

It's about how the technology serves the business and makes it more successful. Sometimes 'success' means one or more of:

  • Improved profit
  • Increased revenue
  • Decreased risk
  • Stronger resilience
  • Faster new product introduction
  • and on and on...

But if the technology isn't in service to the goals of the business then it will eventually fail.

The $2M Piece of Advice

I know exactly when I finally understood this. No kidding.

I left one job as a consultant making $55/hour doing NeXTStep programming (hey, that was LOT of money back then) and got another one making $75/hour. The had two slots to fill - lead programmer ($50/hour) and technology business advocate ($75/hour).

For some reason, don't know why, during the interview I was homing in on the business objectives of the billing audit system they were building. I kept asking about change management (people, not source!), about deployment, about disruption, etc, etc.

Next thing I knew I was walking about into the freezing flipping cold in Chicago holding onto a 50% raise. Bubba, you don't get too many of those.

If you work that out - 48 weeks a year, 40 hours a week, 40 work years in a lifetime - you find out that that change in focus gets you a $1,920,000 raise.

Actually, it's even more than that because you keep the advantage while you march up the food chain.

Back to The SEO Example

What really struck me about Garrett's example was that the business took the fairly traditional and predictable approach of getting some SEO guys to graft web and SEO onto a traditional "ring and pitch" business.

The SEO guys put together a campaign that generates 2,500 leads and it kills the guy because:

  • ROI goes from "signup" to 2 years.
    • "He is looking at ROIs that should apply to heavy machinery and commercial aircraft."
  • Growth rate drops from 19% to 3% because of process issues:
    • "growth rate has plummeted from 19% per year to 3% per year because he is in the office answering the phone all the time with close rates of 12% [down from 97%]"

Actually, there were a lot of issues, but those are the two killers. Look at what happened - his profits got pushed out a year from acquisition AND instead of looking at an yearly "takehome" increase of $67,032 he was seeing an increase of $10,584. That is an opportunity cost of over $55K!

You can go broke quickly making money that way.

Do The SEO MathDo the math

I'm just going to quote Garrett's point in toto because it sums up the whole problem so neatly:

SEO Firm Declares “Success.” The PPC campaign is bringing in over 2500 hits per month. Closing the sales is not really their job. They just need to work with the business owner to further tweak everything to bring in more hits. “Obviously” the copywriting needs work to further capture the ones that do get there, or there is something wrong with the business, or whatever...but we are getting people to the site. Just wait till the site starts to rank higher with the search engines!

Remember, the owner is now going broke pretty quickly, has sunk a fair bit of capital into the new venture AND is probably pretty much apoplectic. In fact, if he's like any dial-and-smile salesguy I know, physical and financial threats are probably in the offing.

What's the Solution?

I won't repeat the meat of the article but basically Garrett becomes and advisor and helps the owner re-engineer his business so that he goes back to ROI on close. But most importantly the business growth goes back up to the previous 19% and then all the way up to 28%.

So, back to the math - previous to the first campaign the owner was looking at a yearly "raise" of $67K based on growth. The slap-on-SEO campaign took him down to a $10K raise. The SEO+BPR campaign took him to a $98K yearly raise. Thus the title of this post because the SEO catalyzed a $31,752 additional raise.

I'd like to read a lot more articles like this, and I hope he keeps writing.

Mar 11
2008

SEO Has Arrived

Posted by admin admin in SEO

admin

Torchwood SEOI was watching one of my favorite shows, Torchwood, and at a very important point in this weeks space opera episode they have to try to find out the nature of an inter-dimensional creature given just a few words it mutters in their presence.

So they google it.

And I've been doing this long enough to think, wait, these guys are in Wales, which google did they use?

I miss several lines of dialog and have to Tivo backwards.

Once again I have settled down to enjoying the show again when Death gives quite a speech

I am the Hunger that knows no end.  I will feast until eternity and still desire to consume.

At which point the boss-man, Captain Jack (I am not making this up), calls Yanto, the guy back at their HQ, and tells him to find out if there are any historical references.

So he brings up google again, types it in, and says:

I found a lot of references but they all redirect me to Weight Watchers

People, SEO has arrived.

Mar 05
2008

Ramblings

Posted by admin admin in SEO

admin

I sometimes come across things that really really amuse me but aren't, in themselves, post-worthy.  So I do what we all do, have a chuckle and forget about it.  Today I thought I would try to capture some of them and hand them off to you.  A mini-roundup as it were:

  • I was reading an excellent article about how captchya's are being broken left and right and someone suggested that we switch from text to a HotCaptchya.  Go on over and see if you can pass the test 'for the other team.'
  • Back in January we wrote about using Bugzilla to control projects.  We're in the midst of a pretty big project, with hundreds of items to complete, test, and integrate.  And we have people working on the project in three different locations on two different shifts.  I was just able to go through fifteen or so tasks and dispatch them back to where they needed to go with only a few minutes coordination overhead.  All thanks to the lovely and free Bugzilla.  If you do big projects you owe it to yourself to get off the spreadsheet and onto the 'zilla.
  • I just read a really good article about letting Page Rank flow into your Contact page.  I'd never thought about it, but, duh, of course your "Contact Me" page should rank above other people with the same name.  We don't over-tweak our robots.txt file because we decided a long time ago that we'd rather spend an hour writing content than trying to over-optimize search engine behavior.
    • Maybe we're just strange because we rarely no-follow links, except maybe to Wikipedia. <lol>
  •  It's rare for me to find a new SEO/SEM blog and immediately find two great posts, but that's why I was so delighted to find Marios at All Things SEM:
    • Sphinn: Many Voices.  I like analysis based on numbers.  And I really enjoy sphinn, so when you put the two together, well you had me at standard deviation.
    • Scaling SEO Services.  We're all about SEO tools here at Promote-My-Site, so when someone says they're important, well, we love it.
  •  Why pick famous people for their Digg names?  It's not really iikely that Kevin Federline is really my friend on Digg, is it?  is it supposed to make me react to the shout more?
  • Speaking of crazy stuff, we were on a conference call today with a customer discussing, for at least 15 minutes, how to make sure that they had the right licensing paperwork for their servers and laptops when the project is complete.  Ok, reasonable enough, but if you figure that the maximum possible cost for the licenses was under a grand and their cost for my team on the call was about $4K/hour, then that was pretty much a wash. Plus, of course, the answer is that the XP/Vista licenses are glued to the side of the computers and everyone on the call should have known that.
  • I got an email from a client complaining that he was going nuts looking for a simple semi-WYSWYG HTML editor.  I love an opportunity to "give" stuff out.  So I sent him over to the FCKeditor site.  It's an open source PHP based editor, so you can easily install it anywhere on your intranet.  But better yet, they have a "demo" version running on their website, so I can use that when I'm on the road and don't feel like logging into the VPN.  Very very supercool - it has all the basic features and toggles between raw-HTML and WYSWIG.

That's all my scratchings for today!  Have a great day.

Mar 05
2008

117 SEO RSS Feeds Worth Reading

Posted by admin admin in SEO

admin

Speed Read Your RSS FeedI recently did a quickie post on seoMoz about getting your RSS feed right and, in passing, mentioned that I had tested my theory on a LOT of SEO RSS feeds. Funny what people will pick up on - I got a number of requests for my feed list. So here it is:

  1. 10e20 Blog
  2. Affiliate Marketing Reviews
  3. Ask the SEO Guru
  4. Blogger Tips and Tricks
  5. Brent Csutoras
  6. Bruce Clay, Inc. Blog
  7. Colin Cochrane: Web Development - SEO - ASP.NET
  8. ComTech News
  9. Conversation Marketing
  10. Dave Naylor a UK SEO
  11. Dawud Miracle @ dmiracle.com
  12. DerekBeau.com
  13. Google Blogoscoped
  14. Google Operating System
  15. gPowered: By the Power of Google...
  16. Greg Boser - Search Marketing Consultant
  17. Hackosphere
  18. Jim Boykin's Internet Marketing Blog
  19. John Battelle's Searchblog
  20. Joost de Valk’s SEO Blog
  21. Kaptain Krayola - pie 2.0
  22. Michelle MacPhearson
  23. NicheSiteDomination
  24. Official Google Data APIs Blog
  25. Online Marketing Blog
  26. OpenJason
  27. Performancing.com - Helping Bloggers Succeed
  28. ProBlogger Blog Tips
  29. Promote My Site
  30. Read eCopt, Sell More Online - eCommerce Optimization & Marketin
  31. Search Engine Land: News About Search Engines & Search Marketing
  32. Search Engine Roundtable
  33. Search Engine Watch Blog
  34. SEO BlackHat: Black Hat SEO Blog
  35. SEO Book.com -
  36. SEO by the SEA
  37. SEO Consulting Blog - Seo Smarty
  38. SEO Egghead by Jaimie Sirovich
  39. SEO News - All The SEO Scoop
  40. SEO Theory - SEO Theory and Analysis Blog
  41. seoaware.com
  42. SeoUnique Blog
  43. Seth's Blog
  44. Social Desire
  45. social media and green horses
  46. Social Media Mom
  47. Social Media Trader
  48. Social Networking Articles Blog
  49. Social News Watch
  50. StayGoLinks
  51. Stuntdubl Business Search Marketing Consulting
  52. Sugarrae aka Rae Hoffman
  53. Super Affiliate Secrets from Super Affiliate Zac Johnson
  54. Tech-Recipes Blogs Aggregator
  55. The Google Watchdog
  56. The Jason Calacanis Weblog
  57. The Link Spiel
  58. The Worst SEO Blog Ever!
  59. 97th Floor SEO Blog: "Everything is Better on Top"
  60. Aaron Wall's SEO Book.com -
  61. Affiliate Confession
  62. aimClear Search Marketing Blog
  63. All Things SEM
  64. Altogether: Full Service Online & Digital Marketing Agency
  65. Andy Beal's Marketing Pilgrim
  66. BizMord Online Marketing Blog
  67. Blue Hat SEO-Advanced SEO Tactics
  68. College Startup
  69. Daily Bits
  70. Daily Blog Tips
  71. Daily SEO Blog - SEO tips for wordpress and blogger users
  72. DealDotCom
  73. Don Dodge on The Next Big Thing
  74. Dosh Dosh - Making Money Online
  75. eHub
  76. (EMP) E-Marketing Performance
  77. EVERYTHING 2.0
  78. Get Elastic
  79. Graywolf's SEO Blog
  80. Hamlet Batista dot Com
  81. How to Change the World
  82. Internet Marketing Blog for Small Business
  83. John Chow dot Com
  84. Jonathan Mendez's Blog
  85. Karl Ribas.com Blog
  86. KillerStartups.com - all
  87. Matt Cutts: Gadgets, Google, and SEO
  88. Mixed Market Arts
  89. New Media Bytes | Online journalism, web production and promotion
  90. OnStartups
  91. Pandia Search Engine News
  92. Promote My Site
  93. Random babble by Paulh
  94. Read/WriteWeb
  95. Search Engine Journal
  96. Search Engine Optimization Tips | SEONoobs.Com
  97. Search Engine People Blog
  98. Sebastian's Pamphlets
  99. SEO 2.0
  100. SEO Fast Start Portal
  101. SEO ROI Services
  102. SEOmoz Daily SEO Blog
  103. SEOmoz User Generated SEO Blog
  104. SEOptimise | PPC & SEO Blog
  105. SEOspring
  106. Shoemoney - Skills To Pay The Bills
  107. Skelliewag.org
  108. Slightly Shady SEO
  109. Small Business Hub
  110. Techmeme
  111. The Next Web
  112. things of sorts
  113. Tropical SEO
  114. Ventureblogs - A List of Venture Capital Blogs
  115. WebmasterWorld
  116. Winning the Web

Did I miss something? Drop us an email.

Self Promotion Warning

Most importantly is, well, us: Promote My Site Click here to subscribe to our feed.

You can also find the actual file on google docs right here.

What's the Point Jim?

With all that reading, you'd think I'd be smarter by now! Actually, like most people who have large RSS feeds, I don't read as much as I skim the headlines and pick and choose. However, my main justification for the time consumed is that I also use articles as "gifts" to clients - people always appreciate targeted suggestions. Unlike a lot of so-called networking opportunities, sending a potential/customer an article that is NOT self promoting your business and that has value is a powerful behavior.