Understanding the SEO Industry
by Scottie Claiborne
Published on this site: July 13th, 2004

One of the challenges facing any new industry is creating a demand
for and an awareness of the industry in the mind of the consumer.
Since many Website owners have only a general idea of what search
engine optimization (SEO) is and how it works, I've come up with
an analogy from another industry that makes it easier to understand.
Search Engine Marketers = Ad Agencies
Search engine marketers dealing with paid listings are very similar
to ad agencies in offline media. They work with the message and
the creative to get people to take action: to buy, subscribe or
register. They have budgets and are able to monitor results and
tweak campaigns to get the maximum return for their clients.
It's pretty easy to see the parallels between SEMs and ad agencies,
but a little harder to understand the role of search engine optimizers,
as they relate to the "free" search listings.
Search Engine Optimizers = Public Relations Firms
A search engine optimizer is actually very similar to a public
relations firm in the offline world. Public relations firms try
to get their clients mentioned in news stories and featured in print
and broadcast media, i.e., they obtain "free" publicity.
An SEO consultant attempts to get their client's site listed highly
in the "editorial" or "free" listings of the
search engines. As with offline media, the editorial content (or
listings) often carries more credibility with consumers.
Just as a public relations firm carefully writes press releases
and formats them in a way that is favorable to the news media, a
search engine optimizer adjusts the code and wording in a site to
present it in the way that the search engines prefer to read it.
A good SEO (just like a good PR firm) will create content that is
interesting and useful, making it much more likely to be ranked
well (or be newsworthy).
PR firms often act as image consultants as well, working with the
company and its executives to make sure they present the best possible
impression when meeting with the press. They make sure their message
is consistent and in keeping with their brand, to help firmly cement
the company's image in the mind of the customer. A professional
SEO often does the same thing for a site, making design or usability
recommendations to ensure that once people arrive they will easily
be able to find what they need.
Not All Search Engine Optimizers Are the Same
There are different kinds of SEOs, just as there are different
kinds of PR firms. Some PR firms merely churn out press releases
on a regular schedule. They spend their time faxing and following
up on items that may or may not be newsworthy. They make very little
attempt to be creative or find truly newsworthy events within the
company -- they simply send a regular stream of minor happenings
out via press releases. They may even try to sneak releases past
screening personnel or exaggerate the truth in order to get a mention
in the media. Ineffective PR firms waste your money; an unethical
one can even hurt your company's image.
The parallel in the SEO industry is those SEOs that use deceptive
practices to place their clients' sites in the engines. One such
tactic would be the use of software to churn out keyword-stuffed
pages instead of attempting to improve the site itself. Another
tactic would be showing search engines different content than a
human visitor would see. These are strategies that work in the short
term. But just as a newspaper editor will eventually start throwing
out all of the low-value press releases from a company that has
proved they don't provide good content, a search engine will eventually
do the same to pages using deceptive techniques and which don't
provide any value to site visitors. Eventually, those SEOs will
find that their clients' sites are penalized or banned.
Neither public relations nor search engine optimization are forms
of black magic; anyone can learn what needs to be done to get a
company noticed. There are PR companies who see the media as something
to be manipulated, just as there are SEO companies who see the search
engines that way. However, you'll find that it's much more productive
when an SEO actually works with the search engines, rather than
against them.

Scottie Claiborne is the owner of Right Click Web Services
(http://www.rightclickwebs.com),
a firm specializing in usability, search engine optimization, and
Internet marketing. This article originally appeared in the High
Rankings newsletter (http://www.highrankings.com/issue074.htm).

|