Is Your Brand Too Big For SEO?

Posted on 02. Jun, 2009 by admin in SEO

I spent the first cou­ple years of my SEO career in the B2C arena and every­body wanted and needed SEO to estab­lish their pres­ence online. Indi­vid­u­als really under­stood that they needed SEO to make an impres­sion on the inter­net. A few years later, I moved into a pre­dom­i­nantly B2B mar­ket and the love for SEO just wasn’t there as much.

Many of the larger com­pa­nies that I have worked with tend to think that they are already big enough when it comes to online brand aware­ness or that their new micro-site is aimed at such a small, focused group of con­sumers that they don’t need SEO.

Large com­pa­nies tend to have mar­ket­ing mes­sages and branded mate­r­ial that they’ve used for years and they’re not very inter­ested in hav­ing some­one else write the con­tent for their new web­site. Nine times out of ten they do not even take into con­sid­er­a­tion that the web is an entirely dif­fer­ent medium then what they’re accus­tomed to writ­ing for.

Granted, most con­sumers aren’t going to search for “lux­ury auto­mo­bile” and then sud­denly remem­ber BMW, but what if I asked them to name 10 of the top depart­ment stores? Of course they are going to be able to name at least 10, but are they going to name your com­pany?
One of the biggest chal­lenges that I have faced is try­ing to edu­cate mar­ket­ing depart­ments on the fact that not every­one thinks the way they do. As SEO’s, key­word research is usu­ally our first indi­ca­tion that the gen­eral pub­lic thinks and talks about their com­pany in a slightly dif­fer­ent way than indus­try professionals.

Show Them Results

One of the best ways I have found to con­vince larger cor­po­ra­tions that they need SEO is to actu­ally show them with results how much bet­ter their pages can per­form on the search engines.

1.I usu­ally start off with baby steps: by rec­om­mend­ing that I rewrite just one of the website’s exist­ing pages, I can usu­ally avoid major hur­dles with cor­po­rate approval and exten­sive edits. Ide­ally for this exper­i­ment, you’ll want to keep that exist­ing page online to show them later how much bet­ter your new page is per­form­ing.
2.Optimize the page to the best of your abil­ity and send as many links to it as pos­si­ble. Don’t for­get to focus on fac­tors that can help drive con­ver­sion to really make the most of your test page.
3.In a few weeks, your new page should be rank­ing higher than their exist­ing page, and it should be per­form­ing bet­ter with users as well.
4.Show the results to your client and con­tinue explain­ing the ben­e­fits of SEO as part of a com­pre­hen­sive online strat­egy.
In these tough eco­nomic times it can be hard get­ting a client to sign up with SEO when they already have estab­lished brand aware­ness and respectable online expo­sure. Lure them in with small one or two page addi­tions to pique their inter­est and you can prove the value of SEO by let­ting your results speak for them­selves. Even though they might be doing well, they can always improve their rankings.

What about you? What are some other ways you have con­vinced large com­pa­nies to get into SEO?

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