How Is SEO Like a 401(k)?

November 30th, 2011 Nick Stamoulis Posted in seo, seo campaign No Comments »

On first glance, it’s hard to draw any correlations between developing an SEO campaign and investing in your 401(k). The two have nothing to do with each other, right? Actually, your business’s SEO campaign and your personal 401(k) have a lot more in common than you might think.

Diversify your portfolio
Most financial advisers will talk about the importance of “diversifying your portfolio” when it comes to your 401(k). Basically, they want to invest small portions of your money into many different stocks and bonds. That way, if one or two stocks take a nosedive you don’t lose all of your money in one fell swoop. The same holds true for your SEO. You never want to rely on just one source of traffic to your site because it leaves you vulnerable.

Let’s say the vast majority of your traffic comes from Facebook. What happens if Facebook goes dark for a few hours? A few days? Forever? Your site disappears right along with it. Or maybe most of your link portfolio is comprised of blog comments. One day Google declares blog commenting to be a black hat link building tactic and your site is flagged for it. Your link portfolio just became useless.

Long term investment
Depending on when you start investing in your 401(k), it can easily be 40+ years before you actually get to enjoy the money you’ve earned. But for 40 years you tucked away a small percentage of your paycheck because you knew that one day it would be well worth it. SEO is the same way. I’m not saying it will take 40 years for your website to reap the benefits of your SEO campaign, but you shouldn’t expect a miracle overnight. Depending on the age and trust factor of your site, the competitiveness of your industry, how aggressive your SEO campaign is (and many more factors) it could take anywhere from a few months to a year before you see measurable ROI from your SEO campaign. However, that doesn’t mean that it wasn’t on your behalf the whole time.

Builds upon itself with time

Two words—compound interest. The longer your money sits in a 401(k) the more valuable it becomes. Even upping your contributions by an additional 1% per paycheck can have a dramatic effect in the long run. SEO works in a similar manner. The more great content you have on your site, the more chances you have to target relevant keywords and the more likely you are to rank well for those searches. The more articles and blog posts you write the more likely people are to link to them, increasing the SEO value of each article. A social profile (which starts out as nothing more than a link and gateway to your website) becomes a branding platform and opportunity to interact with and engage your target audience. The more you put in to your SEO, and the longer you keep at it, the more you will get out in the end.

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Don’t Let Your SEO Go to the Side

August 31st, 2011 Nick Stamoulis Posted in long term seo, seo, seo campaign No Comments »

For all intensive purposes, the US space program is done and over. After 135 missions over 30 years, the last shuttle launched and landed this past July. Some blame the program’s slow demise on cost, others site lack of interest from both the public and corporations who could have helped shoulder the expenses. Whatever the reason, it seems like the US is done with “the final frontier.” Sometimes your SEO might feel a little bit like a space mission. You’re heading off into the unknown, not sure what you’re going to find, how long it is going to take to get there or if it’ll prove worth it in the end.

Don’t let your SEO stop and go to the side like the space program!


One of the hardest things for site owners to come to grips with when it comes to SEO is that it is long-term. It takes at least 6 months to get to Mars (and that’s if you have a rocket to speed things up), and it could take just as long (if not longer) to really see the true ROI from your SEO. For many site owners, this can be very frustrating. Most businesses operate under strict deadlines and have quotas that need to be met in order to appease management. They want every penny accounted for and proven ROI before they are willing to invest more. Great SEO won’t happen in a given amount of time. There are so many variables (many of which you can’t control) that there is no way to look at a calendar and pick a day when it’ll “happen.”

Because SEO is so long term, it’s very easy to look at your analytics three months in and decide it’s not working and pull the plug on the campaign before it really gets a chance to get off the ground. Don’t let your SEO fizzle out on the launch pad! The hardest part is getting over that first hump, especially for new sites lacking search engine trust. SEO builds on itself over time, but getting the ball rolling is the hardest part.

There are a lot of benefits to sticking with your SEO campaign. Increase brand recognition and online presence, upswings in traffic to your site, increased conversion rates, a strong online reputation, better relationships with your customers and more. But none of these things are going to happen particularly fast. Patience is a virtue, as the old adage goes, especially when it comes to SEO. You have to be willing to put in the time and effort if you want your SEO to succeed. In time, you’ll get back what you put in, if not more.

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