You Can’t Win the SEO Race if You Don’t Try

October 21st, 2011 Nick Stamoulis Posted in sem, seo, SEO Competition No Comments »

For site owners, there is little more frustrating than feeling like you are doing everything with your SEO and search marketing right and finding that the competition is still two steps ahead of you. Even worse is when it looks like the competition is using black hat SEO to dominate the SERPs. You might think to yourself, “What’s the point of my SEO anymore? It’s not working!” Before you throw your hands up in the air and walk away from SEO forever, remember these 3 things:

Your competition earned it
Your top competitors (providing they used white hate link building techniques) have earned the right to be ranking well in the search engines. They may have been at SEO for a year before they really started seeing any value from their efforts, but they never stopped trying. They produce a great blog, are active in social networks, have carefully selected the right keywords based on months of data, fine tuned the usability of their site and much more. Their SEO success didn’t happen overnight and neither will yours. Don’t get mad at your competition for outperforming your site—they’ve earned it! You can earn it too.

SEO is incredibly competitive

There is only one #1 spot in Bing and Google and hundreds of thousands of sites are vying for that prestigious placement. Big brands have the budget and manpower to fight for broad and highly competitive keywords (shoes, furniture, software, etc) which means smaller brands and websites have to target long tail and niche keywords in order to build their online presence. Everyone knows just enough SEO to make their site a viable competitor for the keywords you are targeting, making it that much harder to reach #1.

Innovation will always lead somewhere
The world of SEM is full of copycats. One site launches a successful SEM campaign and a dozen sites soon follow with a strikingly similar campaign. That is no way to win the SEM race. Before you declare your SEM a failure, take an honest look at your campaign. What have you done to differentiate yourself from the pack? Did you target keywords you actually had a chance of dominating or did you put yourself against the “big boys” in your industry that aren’t going to be moved for anything? Are you finding new ways to connect with your target audience or just going everywhere the competition is? What kind of content have you been creating? You should strive to be better with your SEM, not just a copy of the competition. That is the only way you are going to get ahead.

Above all, remember that SEO and SEM are incredibly long term. It’s easy to lose hope after 3 months, but you haven’t given your campaign enough time to really get rolling. Stick with it and sooner or later you’ll start to see the improvement and results you’re looking for.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

Predict the Future and Grow Your Blog

July 30th, 2010 Nick Stamoulis Posted in search engine marketing, Search Marketing, sem No Comments »

If you own a website or a blog at some point you have to try and predict the future. Yes, in order to really be successful online you might find yourself going to extraordinary lengths in order to really increase traffic and visibility for your website. Try to think about the largest businesses and events in your industry and take this approach.


Product Launches:

Try to isolate some of the biggest companies in your space and set up some Google alerts for all their news related chatter. Look out for chatter for new product launches that might have surfaced and start preparing blog posts surrounding their launch. If you can be one of the first to write a good blog post surrounding a product launch there is a good possibility you can get that post ranking for that specific search term way in advance. A new product is simply that, a new product which is also going to come with an entirely new set of search phrases people are using in order to find information about that product. Put yourself in the shoes of your audience and try to anticipate typical search phrases that might be used around that product and schedule a plan of attack to launch a series of blog posts surrounding that specific product launch. If done right you could see a very nice influx of traffic right to your post.

Events:

New industry events fall into the same category. After every event you are going to get people searching for different keywords and phrases about that event before and after. Whether it is a keynote speaker, a particular vendor booth that maybe stood out or something that occurred at the event people will be searching for it. What they will be using to search who knows? It hasn’t happened yet but if you take this mind set and learn how to take this process for many things that happen in your industry you will be ahead of your competition as far as writing goes and over time you will generate some really nice web traffic to your blog or website.

This process might seem easier said than done but try it out whenever you can. If it is a sporting event try writing as the sporting event is happening and publish that post right before the end of the game. Your post will be one of the first lurking in the search results for that event while many reporters will wait until they get to the office the next morning.

AddThis Social Bookmark Button





OK!