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Small Business SEO

Small Business SEO Partnerships

As a small business, it can be hard to outrank larger companies with in-house SEO experts and huge marketing budgets. SeoPro delivers SEO designed just for you, using advanced technical SEO strategies to achieve organic search results within your budget so you can hold your own against the competition.

Small Business SEO

Keyword Strategy

Intuitive keywords are selected by SeoPro that match commercial, volume, and competition levels to deliver new customers.

Unmatched Technical SEO

SeoPro ranks high value geo-specific pages using 200+ optimization factors to outpace and outrank your competition.

Small Business Link Building

The SeoPro combination of technology and people can acquire unlimited hyper-targeted links with Google-approved metrics from new referring domains to any desired page on your website.

Build your small business

Dominate your competition with process-driven SEO

Future customers want to find your website. With every search query, they are putting in the keywords related to the services, products, and information you have to share. When you use small business SEO to target these search queries or keywords, your business is more likely to appear for those future customers.

In other words, let’s not make them hunt exhaustively for it. Let’s give them what they want. SeoPro SEO does this every day for all sorts of small businesses and large businesses in every location and industry. Let us help you optimize your site today. We’re the small business SEO agency you need to reach your website goals.

SEO for Small Business

5 tactics for small business SEO success

If you’re a local business owner or marketer looking to get started on small business optimization today, skip ahead to section three, where I provide 5 tactics for optimizing your site for local search and small business search:

How SeoPro takes SEO ROI

Campaign Metrics

eCommerce
Goal Tracking
Revenue
Call Tracking

Ecommerce tracking works similarly as goal tracking but the metric tracked differs slightly. For businesses whose POS (point of sale) is directly on their website, ecommerce tracking provides a comprehensive overview of data during an SEO campaign and allows businesses to see opportunities in scalability and in increased revenue. By channeling the data through filters like organic search, social media, email, etc. we can trace the origin of traffic which helps determine which channels are most effective through SEO and analyze and improve where needed.

Depending on the size of business, goal tracking, and eCommerce tracking help communicate the effectiveness of an SEO campaign. All SeoPro SEO campaigns use goal and eCommerce tracking to show just how effective the SEO is working. Tracking these metrics shows how increased traffic turns into increased leads and increased leads turn into an increase in revenue.

ROI is the ultimate metric of success in determining the ways SEO has boosted organic traffic to your website and your search engine result page ranking. SeoPro reporting provides detailed metrics that focus on revenue generated and return on investment to see notable wins, as well as areas for improvement. By analyzing the source from which the revenue was generated, like organic traffic or email sequences, SeoPro can determine active channels and optimize appropriately.

Many businesses get most of their conversions from phone calls, whether it’s a doctor’s office or direct service providers like lawyers and plumbers. Call tracking provides the sources of your phone calls and conversions using a different phone number to track the source of the call – organic, pay-per-click, and even offline advertising. Using dynamic number insertion, SeoPro can also track the keyword, source of conversion, and other pertinent information about the call to accurately track SEO ROI and conversion rates.

Campaign Metrics Dashboard View
2018 SEO Market Leader

Why choose SeoPro?

Increase organic traffic. Land first page search results. Collaborate with some really cool people. Need we say more?

Education and Empowerment

Transparency is the priority. Trust in the SeoPro SEO strategy is founded on educating and empowering each client to better understand the SEO process and campaign. SeoPro' strategy is a point-by-point plan with a full explanation of why each step is necessary, how it will impact SEO, and what results can be expected. Have a question about the lingo or how a strategy was developed? We'll answer it. There is no question too big or too small - and we'll never tell you that it's all in the "secret sauce."

Education and Empowerment

Scalable Campaigns

Launching a startup with limited capital? No problem. Want to test our process before ramping up your budget? Sounds good to us. With SeoPro, all campaigns are structured to allow for seamless scalability. We'll prove our model, and you'll see revenue soar.

Scalable Campaigns

Dedicated to Data

Smart data for smart people. Each SEO campaign with SeoPro is rooted in hard data collected, sorted, and analyzed by SEO experts. By taking the guesswork out of the process, the campaign is designed to reach your target audience.

Dedicated to Data

Seamless Team Integration

Gain a dedicated in-house SEO team without hiring a dedicated in-house SEO team. SeoPro works as an extension of your team in collaboration with your ideas, goals, and marketing initiatives. Meanwhile, you gain valuable SEO insight from a collective group of SEO experts that share challenges and solutions for ever-improving SEO strategy.

Seamless Team Integration
Why SEO matters

A Brief History of Digital Marketing for Local Businesses

Last year, one of the architects behind Facebook’s ad system encouraged local businesses “NOT to spend on ads until they’ve exhausted other marketing activities,” because “it’s too easy to spend a lot on ads without great results.”¹

Did I hear that right?

One of the minds behind the leading digital advertising platform instructing local business owners to stay away from advertising because it’s easy to overspend and see little return? The sentiment has me left wondering whether the ex-Facebooker was unhappy with his day job, or paid ads are really not all they’re chalked up to be.

In an industry in which Pay-Per-Click advertising promises a world where businesses “pay only for results”, one has to wonder whether digital ads are, in reality, the equivalent of choosing Tinder dates over marriage and McDonalds over a nice piece of steak – choosing instant gratification at the expense of long-term satisfaction and sustainability.

Nonetheless, local businesses continue to increase investment in digital advertising.

According to an eMarketer report from January 2017, 40% of local businesses planned to increase digital marketing budgets last year.² Safe to say, those businesses followed through on their planning and by June 2017, digital ad spend outpaced television ad spend for the first time in history, ringing in a new era in advertising – one that is primarily Facebook and Google-centric.

This rapid shift in marketing activity poses an urgent question for local business owners and marketers alike: how does a local business grow in a sustainable way using the limited time, resources, and budget available?

In this article, I’ll make a case for why search engine optimization, or seo for small business websites – not the paid advertising channels mentioned above – are the most scalable, sustainable marketing initiative for small businesses in 2018. If you continue reading, you’ll be exposed to:

1) Why Google’s search engine is the cable TV of today
2) A cost-benefit analysis of the two primary methods to increase visibility in Google search: SEO and Pay-Per-Click (PPC)
3) 5 SEO tactics local businesses can implement today to improve search visibility today

  • An Intro to “Search Intent”
  • Comparing SEO vs. PPC for Local Businesses
  • First Steps for Any Local SEO Campaign

An Intro to “Search Intent”

For decades, families gathered around the television night after night to watch their favorite shows. During the commercials breaks, individuals were strategically introduced to local and national businesses that spoke to the needs and desires of the family, and thus, TV provided a channel for local businesses to get their products and services directly into our living rooms, creating a huge opportunity for ROI and local expansion.

In 2018, families gather around the smartphone, meaning that attention has shifted from cable to the digital channels accessible via smartphones – specifically search engines, social media apps, video streaming services, and blogs. These mediums have largely taken TV’s place, boasting unprecedented business-to-consumer and business-to-business for local businesses.
To combat this change in consumption, national businesses with spending power have largely chosen to focus marketing endeavors on building and promoting a brand via social media.

However, recent data trends emphasize that in order to be successful, local businesses must rely much more heavily on small business search engine optimisation to expand their reach.
The data proves search’s value to local businesses:

86% of consumers use the Internet to find a local business.
72% of consumers prefer to find information on local merchants via search.
29% of consumers search for local businesses at least every week.³

This data supports a widely accepted conclusion that thousands of local businesses have already begun to adopt – namely, that anytime a person is on the hunt for a solution to a need within their specific locale, there is a very high likelihood that they use Google to do so. Long story short: if your business serves a specific geographic region, yet you’re not visible on Google, you’re missing out on daily opportunities to attract, convert, close, and delight new customers.

Let’s take a closer look at a classic local business – a legal practice – as an example of how search can improve marketing efforts and impact the bottom line.

In Q1 2017, ILawyerMarketing published a study surveying 400 participants who hired a lawyer in the recent past. To no one’s surprise, it was a law firm’s presence on Google – specifically it’s Google reviews – that were chosen as the single most sought-after piece on information before choosing to move forward with a firm. In fact, in 60% of cases, Google reviews on a Google My Business page (which we’ll get to later) mattered most.

In addition, nearly 75% of participants indicated that their searches for a law firm were hyper-localized, stating they were willing to travel up to 30 miles from their home to law firm, but no farther.

Local businesses now have the ability to determine whether or not they will be visible by their target audience, with an unrivaled level of geo-specificity. Follow along to part 3 of this post to learn more about the small business search engine optimization tactics required to get there. But first, let’s talk about why SEO versus paid advertisements on a more granular level.

Comparing SEO vs. PPC for Local Businesses

The perceived value of advertising on Facebook and Google is simple: the opportunity to drive quick, tangible dollars and cents by tailoring ads to target specific audiences. But there is more to paid acquisition than meets the eye.

Here are the 5 biggest strengths of digital ads as they pertain to marketing your local business:
Visibility. Paid search takes up lots of real estate at the top of Google results pages. With somewhere between two to four ads on desktop and one to three ads on mobile, a user will almost always see Google ads, even if they scroll past them.
Targeting. PPC provides a laser-targeted way to get in front of potential customers. Ads can be optimized based on target keywords, time, date, geography, language, device, and demographics of past visitors.
Speed. It’s self-explanatory – Google Ads can be created in minutes and adjusted on a daily basis. There is no faster way to make your business visible on search than to pay-per-click for advertisements.
Marketing intelligence. Since the most recent Safesearch update, Google has hidden vast amounts of keyword data from organic search traffic. One of the benefits of PPC is that no such restriction exists.
A/B testing. Using Google AdWords, small businesses can easily test ads, landing pages, and call-to-action buttons to determine which strategies perform the best and drive the highest ROI.

Meanwhile, just below those ads lies Google’s natural, organic search results, derived via an ever-changing algorithm that aims to provide searchers with the best possible result for his/her query. Organic search first came into view as a marketing channel nearly 20 years ago when marketers first identified that Google’s algorithm and the sheer reach of its search engine proved to offer a viable opportunity for businesses to drive quality traffic to their site.

Here are the 5 biggest benefits of engaging in SEO for small business websites:
Credibility. Ranking well in organic search drives a perceived credibility with the audience looking for your services. In fact, a recent study showed that 85% of all clicks on Google occur not on paid ads, but their organic non-paid counterparts below. Why? Because organic results convey credibility and ads are ads.

Cost Effective. On average, cost per click (CPC) for organic traffic is significantly lower than paid traffic because while instead of paying for each and every visitor to your site (as is the case with ads), organic visits are free once the site has been optimized.
Better ROI. Organic traffic offers significantly higher ROI than PPC, and any other form of paid media. For local businesses that utilize a sales process, tools like Call Rail’s call tracking and Google Analytics goal tracking can help to effectively track ROI.
Sustainability. Unlike paid traffic, organic traffic isn’t lost the moment you stop paying. As such, investing in a small business SEO company for your SEO needs is a long-term play that can help sustain a business during times of feast or famine.

Competitive advantage. How long does small business SEO take? Somewhere between 4-6 months for a local business looking to get on the map. But once a site has established itself firmly within organic results, competitors will have a hard time overcoming, which means a strategic advantage for businesses that prioritize small business search engine marketing now.

What are the major takeaways from a cost-benefit analysis of PPC versus SEO for small businesses? Search Engine Land summarizes the value of SEO versus PPC for tactics perfectly:

“A hyperlocal business… could likely develop good visibility in the local and organic search results with a little spend or some DIY SEO.”*
Does the quote above describe you? If so, keep reading for a list of how to get started on DIY SEO today. It might not make you a small business SEO consultant overnight, but it’s a good starting point.

First Steps for Any Local SEO Campaign

1. Google My Business Setup + Optimization
The first step to building a presence in local search is creating and optimizing a Google My Business account.

If you haven’t already, log onto Google’s Business Portal using the same email address you use for your Google+ account (you’ll see why in a moment), add a location using the blue arrow in the bottom right hand corner of your screen, and follow the directions provided. If you’ve requested to claim a business, Google will alert you that a verification code is being sent to the physical address you claimed in the mail. Check your mail over the next 7-14 business days for (your first?) letter from Google; enter the code provided inside to verify the location.

Congratulations! You’re now the proud owner of a GMB page! Now, onto the challenging part… optimizing the page to ensure that local searches can actually find you.

The process of optimizing your GMB account essentially involves maximizing every field of your GMB and Google+ page in order to effectively communicate to Google that you’re a local business that cares enough to take full advantage of the opportunities they provide you to get the word out about your business online. As a result, you’re rewarded with better rankings in both maps and organic results.

Here are a handful of specific ways you can go above maximizing both accounts:
Edit your account’s information (categories, hours, business phone, address)
Add geotagged photos of your business’ interior, exterior, staff, and/or product
Name the images after keywords related to the product or service you want to rank for in local search
Add a story to your linked Google+ page, utilizing the keywords above in a natural way
Post your business address to your Google+ page

2. Local Citation Building
This tactic is intuitive. Paper phone books (remember those?!) used to provide households with a directory names, address, and phone numbers (NAPs) for local businesses. If your business was in the phone book, you had a much better chance of being found by folks searching for the product or service you offer.

The same goes for Google’s determination of which local businesses should appear in local search results. If one, consistent NAP is present throughout online directories and citation data aggregators, it’s going to send a clear signal to Google that you’re going above and beyond to ensure searchers aren’t left wondering where you’re actually located or how to reach you.

First, head to a site like Express Update to get a picture of where your business NAP is currently being listed, and then manually reach out to each directory showing an incorrect NAP. Once those are cleaned up, look for new online directories where you can build healthy citations that strengthen your geolocal search presence.

3. Structured Data for Local Businesses
Is your website set up in Google Search Console? If so, you’re in luck.
Schema.org has partnered with Google to offer sites the opportunity to markup their site with something called structured data (think: data that gives search engines more information about your business, products/services, reviews, etc).

This is one of the tactics least embraced by businesses small or large because it can be intimidating. But the good news is that you don’t have to be a software engineer or webmaster to set structured data for your local business. By using a tool like this one, all you have to do is input your business information and voilà, you’ve got the code needed to markup your site. Now, just add the code to your site’s footer and you’re all set.

If you’re still not sure whether or not the structured data is in place, Google’s nice enough to have provided a Structured Data Testing Tool so you can double check whether or not the code has been implemented correctly.

While the 3 tactics above all impact your hyperlocal rankings (i.e. your rankings in Google’s mapstack), the next two impact your general rankings for local search terms

4. Building Location-Specific Pages
Does your business service multiple cities or regions? If so, don’t waste your time building out separate subdomains or sites for each. Instead, add a “Location” links in your Navigation Bar, with a drop down menu that showcases each location. Then, link from each location name in the dropdown menu to a unique location-specific page.

On the page, write 800-1,500 words of unique content that speaks to the specific ways your business meets the needs of individuals from the region. Consider sharing a success story or two from the location, and include as many geo-identifying references as possible to show Google (and people) you really know what you’re talking about. Lastly, write a unique page title and meta description that align with the target keywords you care about, including the specific location associated with the page in each. Don’t forget to check the length of your page title and meta description to ensure neither are at risk of being truncated by Google!

5. Link Building
Once your location pages are packed full of unique, optimized content and metadata that follows SEO best practices, the final ingredient to a successful local SEO initiative is link building – the process of acquiring links from other domains to yours.

Think of each link as a vote of popularity to the page it points at – a reference telling Google that the page is indeed authoritative, chalked full of valuable information, and satisfying to searchers.
Ready to get started on link building yourself? Compile a list of niche websites that interest you, draft up an email template that details why you would make a good guest contributor on their site, and start firing off messages.

Don’t have the time to build links manually? Don’t fret. As a small business SEO expert, It’s our specialty.

Let's give your business the attention it deserves
Let's give your business the attention it deserves