Through her career in SEO, Natalie has learned that despite not being a big name, and despite not having big investment, traffic to your site can be grown exponentially, and you can beat the big names in very competitive markets, and even make the Sunday Times Tech Track 100 list. The talk will give tips on how smaller companies (not always SMEs, but just smaller brands) can grow using a well thought-out strategy, combining Technical SEO, Content, and Digital PR, alongside Partnerships, to compete with the big names in their industry. Strategy based, you will take away tips on: Building an expert team from scratch Prioritising tasks Finding efficiencies Focusing on what you do well Selling the above to stakeholders (if necessary)
This talk can is relevant to agency, client and freelance/contractors, particularly those who have smaller clients and teams as a step up to management.
7. #BrightonSEO @__nca
Craft things
your way
Find what makes your
business different
Invest in a quality
team/your skills
Don’t be afraid
to test
Be aware of external
factors
Find your
allies
Know what
stakeholders look for
Find what you do well
- and run with it
… enjoy the
process!
9. #BrightonSEO @__nca
Location Product offering Brands & brand
partnerships
Ways to pay Your team … or something else!
Find out what makes your business
or client unique...
27. #BrightonSEO @__nca
Craft things
your way
Find what makes your
business different
Invest in a quality
team/your skills
Don’t be afraid
to test
Be aware of external
factors
Find your
allies
Know what
stakeholders look for
Find what you do well
- and run with it
… enjoy the
process!
31. #BrightonSEO @__nca
Further Reading & Resources
IPM Webinar: The importance of strategic brand partnerships in the light of Covid-19
and beyond
Why sex startups face uphill payments battle
Deepcrawl Webinar Recap: Your SEO Experience is Holding You Back (by Emily
Potter)
Free Training Resources for Digital Marketers - Aira
Tactics for Landing Big Links on a Shoestring Budget - Shannon McGuirk
Building an Effective Team - UC Berkeley
Animal Crossing GIF maker
Editor's Notes
I’m an SEO Consultant - both in house and freelance! Some might say I have the best of both worlds.
I’m based here in Brighton, in the UK
I’m missing being here at the Brighton Centre - bet you all are too!
In the past I’ve worked with and for a number of brands - as you can see and expect from the brands on here, SEO and Digital Marketing budgets, alongside those for branding and other trad marketing channels really does vary
Small
Budgets
… do they really suck?
Today I’m going to speak to you about punching above your weight. In terms of this, it won’t be something temporary, and it won’t be super short term.
However, making sure you get what you need done, is incredibly important for growth. But how do you get it done? How do you prioritise tasks, get stakeholder buy ins, grow, and train a team?
I thought I’d share with you what I’ve learnt so far in my SEO career, and hoping you’ll be able to take at least something away with you today - even if it’s a new game or some property inspiration!
I want to make sure that you are aware that small budget SEO might not mean that you’re a small brand or have a small site. This presentation aims to help those with small budgets, that are small to medium sized brands, but this does not reflect on the size of a site. You could have a site with a million plus pages but a small budget and tiny team like one of the current sites I’m managing. Or you could be a small in house team working on a small to medium sized site - where I refer to small, I don’t always mean an SME with one person working on a small brochure site.
Starting small can be daunting, but also advantageous - I like to see it as room to grow and to help a site reach its full potential
You’ll see that I’ve got a running theme in this presentation - Animal Crossing
When you play Animal Crossing you start off with pretty much just yourself and a tent, but you really can build and create something rather wonderful if you put in the effort
Going back to basics can be incredibly beneficial - no matter how far you are in your SEO career
Let’s take a look at what you need to have a good website before we look
Good content - pages, blog posts, hub pages, link worthy content, faqs pages, conversion pages etc etc
Crawlable, indexable site
Good site structure
Easy to navigate
Great UX
Branding
Calls to action
Trust (inc brilliant backlink profile)
Great speed
This can be overwhelming when you have a small team, small budget, little support from other teams and stakeholders. But you can do this, I believe in you
Craft things your way
Not every website is going to be built in the same way - and that’s good. Every business has different markets and as with all things in SEO - it depends
Whether it’s crafting a website, a Digital PR campaign, a content hub or another type of project, things will vary depending on your business. So enjoy it. Take advantage of what makes your business unique
Obviously you need to keep in mind what makes a good website - from a search and beyond position
Maybe you have great technical seo already and want to build out your content or backlink profile, or maybe you’ve got great content that’s not performing as well due to lack of inaccessiblity to search engines and users
Location
Despite looking like the top-secret underground lair of a villain bent on world domination, this is actually the office and data center for Swedish internet service provider, Banhof.
Their office was originally built as an atomic bomb shelter below the streets of Stockholm. Nowadays the Banhof office uses waste heat from Banhof’s servers to sustainably warm the office.
The Vegan Kind
Product offering - started off with lifestyle subscription, added beauty, then supermarket, and now adding even more! They aim to stock every vegan product in Europe!
Brands
Ikea, Cath Kidston, Valentino and Marc Jacobs on Animal Crossing - unofficial partnerships which saw some great links and coverage
Partnering up with a bigger brand which you already have a relationship is super helpful
They have the budget you’d DREAM of, but they also want your content! Whether it’s reviews, co-marketing, a competition, a case study - there’s so much that can be mutually beneficial.
It’s great to:
Build brand recognition
Get coverage and links
Expand keyword portfolio
BEWARE OF COLLAB FATIGUE - people get bored of seeing partnership after partnership, especially if it’s TOO irrelevant. In order to be truly groundbreaking and relevant, be original.
Since the Olympics couldn’t go ahead this year due to COVID, Team GB collaborated with TikTok for the #isolationgames in order to raise money for the British Red Cross
The campaign got great coverage, over 1.3 billion views of hashtagged content on TikTok itself, alongside other social channels
Burger King and TESLA hijack
Burger King figured out that Tesla Autopilot’s new “Traffic Light and Stop Sign Control” feature can confuse Burger King signs for stop signs and they quickly turned it into an ad campaign.
The fast-food chain only ran the campaign for a day encouraging people to post to social media the same Autopilot mistake, which they frame as the Autopilot’s artificial intelligence wanting to stop at Burger King.
They encouraged people with “smart cars” to take pictures of the same behavior and share with the hashtag #AutopilotWhopper or #FreeWhopper in order to receive a code for a free burger
I wouldn’t say this was a true partnership as such, but leveraged an opportunity -
Morrisons showed great adaptability at the start of lockdown by partnering with Deliveroo to offer grocery delivery using the Deliveroo app - allowing people to order groceries as you would a pizza, rather than having to queue for delivery spots with rival supermarkets
Ways to Pay
Ways to pay
Not strictly SEO - but if you need customers to pay on your site - whether ecomm, services etc - it is SO important that you offer a seamless checkout experience.
Alongside this, offering the best way to pay for your customers and for your business type.
Did you know, for example, that sex tech brands aren’t allowed to use certain payment methods due to the “nature of their business”?
Also, different locations around the world will have different primary payment methods - it would be fickle to assume that potential markets will all pay with Visa or Paypal.
Offering the best ways for your audiences to pay helps conversions - but also offers you brand partnership coverage; which is helpful to not only you, but can make for great case studies for the payment providers!
Team Members
Everyone in a team has their strengths and weaknesses
You don’t want to go to work and not enjoy the work that you do
We are lucky to be able to work in an industry where most of us (if not all of us) enjoy what we do - not everyone has this privilege!
What do we need in a team to make your SEO budget STRETCH? Do you have that capability in your team, or will you have to recruit, use freelancers etc?
You might have really great technical seo and content skills, but have a gap for link building and digital pr - this is where it’s glaringly obvious that you need to hire/outsource so that you have all aspects of SEO covered.
Don’t be afraid about being the most intelligent person in the room, or in the team, especially if you’re a manager. Instead, you need to know what needs to be done, and who can do it the best, alongside being able to nurture and improve the skills and knowledge of your team, while ensuring that they aren’t hating their job!
Remember to always prioritise your tasks for your client and your team, rather than what people SAY you need to do. This can be difficult to do, which is why creating business cases can help.
Test, test, test!
As SEOs we need to do the same - test!
Some of you might be in house with a small budget - you will still have your time to test. And be adaptable. If something isn’t working - say it’s a test and move on
Those of you in agencies with clients - if you’re able to spend some time testing things on all of your clients - not only can you use this to clients what can go right - you can always write or speak about your learnings on behalf of your agency or team
Some testing will be pushing changes live and waiting to see what happens, and other times we might use testing software.
Big tip - document your testing! Whether it’s successful or not this documentation and measurement can be used for personal and team development, use in talks such as those some of my fellow speakers are presenting today, as blog content, and more!
If you want to know more about testing for SEO, I really recommend Emily Potter from SearchPilot’s talks on split testing for SEO - I’ve linked to a great one she presented for Deepcrawl earlier this year to the end of this presentation
Training
As a former teacher, training is SO important for me - and it should be for you, too
Not just for new staff, or those new to SEO, but for everyone. But how to do it? Do you invest your own time? Bring someone in? This will depend on your budget, time, and what’s available to you to bring in or buy
Depending on your company you could do training on the job, run classes, or bring someone in.
There’s a wealth of material out there, but if you’re in charge of your team’s development as a manager - and/or your own, make sure to not get sucked down a rabbit hole with regards to training.
We’re SEOs but our investigating shouldn’t just stop at the site, the market, and the competition - we need to continue to develop our knowledge and experience
External Factors
There are lots of external factors which could affect your visibility, funding, link acquisition, and things could even get litigious!
Things to consider - reviews, the impact of staff behaviour, social media faux pas, angry former staff and customers… all kinds of things
At minimum, you should always ensure that your brand has a crisis management plan.
If you are small and competing with big brands, you need to remember that every now and then - they could get litigious.
Don’t let that scare you off!
Sometimes big brands don’t invest in seo, or don’t understand it, and they think that *they* own the space where their brand lives
If you’re a smaller company reselling their product, unless there’s a clause in the reseller guidelines, you can compete organically with them; you’re still selling their product
Despite this, there have been times in the past where I’ve had big brands knocking on doors, angrily demanding that they will set legal on us because of our rankings. The last time that happened, we played ball, We partially removed their branding (which we were legally allowed to use, as a reseller), but even still, kept our rankings. They couldn’t do much else.
Don’t be scared, but be wary
Who are your allies?
As an SEO you could have lots of allies in a company. Some might see them as enemies at times, but you’ll find you’ll be working with the following:
Content
PR (traditional and digital)
Developers
Account Managers
Customer Service
Business Development
Work with them, get to know them. Find out what makes them tick. Find out their pain points. Share yours. You might find something that really helps you.
You’re all working together to reach the same ending - which is more money for your client or business.
Stakeholder Sell In
Who are you selling to? Is it senior management? The C suite? Your head of department? Dev leads?
What are YOUR KPIs?
What are THEIR KPIs?
What do you need to prove - if anything?
Graphs go up?
Specific metrics?
Leads? Conversions?
Things like business cases might work with those who are commercially and financially minded. Time might work with others.
Find what you can do well - and run with it
I would say this applies to you as a person but also as your team and a business
That being said, if you’re lacking on any elements I covered earlier with regards to
How can you get a small, flight search company to compete with the big brands?
This is what we were facing with Alternative Airlines.
Visibility was low, ranking was all over the place, lots of poor quality content and backlinks
Tidied up the site - removed, consolidated and improved what content existed, made sure the site was as technically sound as possible
Content plan
Team collaboration
Open to ideas
Dynamic - if something wasn’t working, we’d move onto the next task
Took advantage of partnership opportunities - payment providers, airlines etc
Jumped onto newsworthy issues and journalist requests
Created GREAT quality content that was better than the airlines and many of the other flight search engines, including some of the meta search companies
This meant that we were able to rank for - and gain relevant, converting traffic for, relevant terms
As you can see from the Ahrefs visibility chart, the journey hasn’t always been perfect, but by building a talented, reactive team we were able to grow - and the team continues to grow the site’s visibility - despite the shocking situation for travel right now
How can you get a small, flight search company to compete with the big brands?
This is what we were facing with Alternative Airlines.
Visibility was low, ranking was all over the place, lots of poor quality content and backlinks
Tidied up the site - removed, consolidated and improved what content existed, made sure the site was as technically sound as possible
Content plan
Team collaboration
Open to ideas
Dynamic - if something wasn’t working, we’d move onto the next task
Took advantage of partnership opportunities - payment providers, airlines etc
Jumped onto newsworthy issues and journalist requests
Created GREAT quality content that was better than the airlines and many of the other flight search engines, including some of the meta search companies
This meant that we were able to rank for - and gain relevant, converting traffic for, relevant terms
As you can see from the Ahrefs visibility chart, the journey hasn’t always been perfect, but by building a talented, reactive team we were able to grow - and the team continues to grow the site’s visibility - despite the shocking situation for travel right now