I’ve been an SEO for so many years I stopped counting a long while back, but the last thing I want to write is a history of SEO post. What I do want to think about is what it means to optimize, what we are optimizing, and who we are optimizing for.
Optimize is such a great word. Who would not want to be optimal and have optimal marketing and optimal websites? The reality is, optimal might be an impossible objective. We can probably get very close though. Let’s have a dictionary moment.
optimize
verb
- make the best or most effective use of (a situation or resource). “we manage our time so that we optimize our productivity”
I always think definitions are important. They constrain what things are and, more importantly, what they are not. So it looks like as a profession, SEO might be about:
Optimal Content
One of the questions I like to ask at the moment is “who has optimal content?” The more markets I analyze, the more I see that the winners have more and better content than the other competitors in their market. In other words, most websites have suboptimal content. This is not a post of answers to questions such as “how do you create an optimal content strategy for a market?” It’s a post designed to see whether the questions I ask myself will resonate with you. Are these the right questions to help us optimize for search engines? What other questions should we be asking? “What is the optimal amount of content to have in your market?” When thinking about the answer I can tell you that the only place to start is with the consumer. The people doing those 3 billion searches a day. Those people are your customers and they want to find your website to gain knowledge, make lists, compare options and features, find the best price, and more. They want to use a full-stack of devices to access your content and might want to move from your app to your website seamlessly. And, most importantly, those people have given you clues about everything they want to read in the keywords they typed in, and whether you see a list of keywords or deep insights into your consumer will often be the difference between a good and great content strategy. Optimal and suboptimal. Because we’re playing mostly in Google playground we’ve got to play by Google’s rules. Google has given us all some pretty big clues in their Quality Guidelines. But don’t expect any surprises in this chunky document.
Optimal Websites
Content is more visible on websites that have been optimized for search engines, devices, and consumers. This means that SEO is a fusion of technical and architectural skills, directed by a desire to help the consumer find the “great content” that has been crafted for them. Could your website:
- Be better optimized?
- Have better information architecture?
- Load faster?
- Offer a better multi-device experience?
- Have fewer crawl issues?
- Have better markup?
Without good answers, your website is suboptimal and traffic will suffer.
Optimal Links, Mentions, Shares
This is important. Not because it’s part of the ranking algorithm, but because it’s a good measure of website and business health. Great brands with great products and content that are engaging with their various stakeholder audiences (customers, journalists, and bloggers) should get mentions, links, and shares. Getting this in an optimal way means answering the big question: Why? Why would these audiences mention, link to, and share what you’d like them to? It also means engaging. If you don’t make the calls, you don’t make the sales. Are you having an optimal number of conversations?
Optimal Resources
Then, of course, you’ve got the idea of optimizing resources. What still amazes me is how underinvested organic search is as a channel when compared to other available marketing/media channels. An opportunity missed or plain insanity? How about both! It turns out that most companies are executing a suboptimal SEO strategy with suboptimal resources and wondering constantly why they aren’t winning their market or even moving in the right direction. When were you ever asked, what is the optimal amount of resource needed to achieve business objectives and if you had more resources, what could be achieved? Optimal will depend on your current situation, market, opportunity, and ambition. Your resource shopping list will include people with specific knowledge and skills, technology, and data. It might also include organizational structure, teamwork, and partners like agencies.
Optimal Behavior
The final area of optimization that makes all the difference is one of attitude and behavior. A can-do, sleeves rolled up, hard-working attitude matched with action can achieve amazing things. There’s no magic button that makes SEO happen. At least I haven’t found one. There is the ability to plan well, work hard, and get the rewards.