Questions to Ask a Potential Search Engine Optimization CompanyPart Three
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by Scott Buresh October 18, 2006
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| Scott Buresh |
Scott Buresh is the CEO of Medium Blue,
a search
engine optimization company.
Scott has contributed content to many publications including
Building Your Business with Google For Dummies (Wiley, 2004),
MarketingProfs, ZDNet, WebProNews, Lockergnome, DarwinMag,
SiteProNews, ISEDB.com, and Search Engine Guide.
Medium Blue, which was recently named the number one search
engine optimization company in the world by PromotionWorld, serves
local and national clients, including Boston Scientific, Cirronet,
and DS Waters. Visit MediumBlue.com to request a custom
SEO guarantee based on your goals and your
data. |
| Scott Buresh
has written 37 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Scott Buresh... |
The first part of this series was about
questions to ask a potential search engine optimization company
regarding the tactics that it will use to optimize your site. These
questions are crucial because there are search engine optimization
companies out there that will use techniques that can put your site
at risk of penalization by the major engines. The second part of the
series covered questions that could determine the competence of a
particular search engine optimization company to determine if you
will be able to trust them with your business.
Now we come to the final part of this
series, in which we will look at business assurances made by search
engine optimization companies. If your prospective search engine
optimization company has satisfactorily answered all of your
questions as outlined in the first two articles, it may indeed be a
perfect fit for your business. However, there are still some
important areas that need to be covered - primarily related to
business assurances and expectations.
Business Assurances
What type of guarantee will you give
me?
Many search engine optimization
companies will tell you that they can’t offer you a guarantee at
all because they don’t control the engines. Other firms will try to
give you a guarantee that is rankings-centric and that is, as
demonstrated in my article Leprechaun Repellant and Guaranteed SEO
Companies – The Disturbing Link,
rather useless unless the search engine optimization company can
prove that all of the keyphrases that will be targeted are both
relevant and popular.
On the other hand, a search engine
optimization company may offer you a truly meaningful guarantee in
the form of one that is traffic-centric and drawn from targeted
keyphrases. In such a case, you will approve the keyphrases and the
search engine optimization company will guarantee a percentage
increase in targeted search traffic. This guarantee is meaningful
because the firm cannot pick unpopular phrases and you will approve
the phrases to be certain that they are relevant. Not all search
engine optimization companies offer this type of guarantee, but it’s
worth looking for one that does.
Will you work with my competitors?
Few search engine optimization
companies will give you a blanket “no.” If they do, ask them to
delineate. It’s rare that a search engine optimization company will
block out an entire business segment, and its idea of what comprises
a competitor may be quite more narrow than yours. Some firms will not
give you any promises regarding your competition. This
response is not satisfactory, as the last thing you want a search
engine optimization company doing is learning about your industry
from optimizing your site and then soliciting your competition, using
the knowledge they have gained to benefit from economies of scale.
Other search engine optimization
companies will charge you extra for exclusivity – which can seem a
bit like extortion. Remember, the vendor does not have control. YOU
are the one paying the bills, and any search engine optimization
company that uses this policy is not worthy of your cash. Quality
search engine optimization companies will ask you to submit a list of
your primary competitors and will not work with any of them for as
long as you maintain a relationship with the firm. Period.
How much work is expected of me?
As discussed in the first part of this
series, quality search engine optimization almost always requires the
creation of new content. But who is responsible for writing this
content? If your company is like most, everyone is pretty busy. If
you embark on an SEO campaign, will you have to pay extra for an
outside copywriting resource? Will you have to give the job to an
overburdened internal person?
Search engine optimization companies
that are interested in taking as much off of your plate as possible
will ask only that you make a resource available for a phone call and
will then handle the copy for you (giving you, of course, the
opportunity to approve it all). You should also be prepared to
provide the firm with any marketing materials, brochures, or
whitepapers that explain your product and your messaging. Since
writing for search engines is a learned art, it is not practical to
expect a new person to come in and get it right the first time. This
means that if a copywriting resource is not available from your
search engine optimization company, your campaign can take much
longer.
Additionally, once your search engine
optimization company has made all of its change recommendations, will
it drop a huge document in your lap and require you to make those
changes? Or will the firm instead make a resource available to do the
implementation at no extra cost? Certainly, there are some sites,
especially those that draw on dynamic content, where you may not want
an external company coming in to make the changes (although you
should still limit your search to search engine optimization
companies that are capable of handling this). Simpler sites, such as
those created using strict html, are easy to change.
Your search engine optimization company
should be able to implement these changes on a test bed site for your
approval before the site goes live. Much like copywriting,
implementation of SEO changes is a specialty that regular designers
do not often face. It is usually faster to have your firm do this,
since it has handled such a task so many times before.
Well, you’ve asked the questions,
narrowed your choices, and now have to select between any of the
vendors that answered satisfactorily. Of course, some search engine
optimization companies will tell you whatever it is you want to hear
to get your business. Your best bet is to take your time and read the
fine print—and make sure that anything of particular importance to
you is added to the contract. I’m not saying that all salespeople
are liars- just the really good ones. But if you’re savvy and ask
the right questions, that shouldn’t be a problem.
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