This post is dedicated to
those hard-working white-hat SEOs helping websites obtain top search engine
rankings the right way. Sometimes we have to remind the client that slow and
steady wins the race. However, the majority of the time the client doesn't want
to hear that, especially if they are paying for SEO services month after month.
Yes, SEO is an investment;
however, showing them that they are investing in your services and skills
requires a little more than just performing SEO services. Due to the search
share click distribution, the client can’t really expect major
increases in traffic until they reach the first page of the SERPs. Sometimes
they can see instant increases in traffic via long-tailed terms after
completion of thorough on-page optimization. But, for the most part we have to
educate them so that they will be patient. Remember, they hired you because
they are not experts in SEO, it’s important to teach them the benefits as well
as the slow process of organic SEO.
Below are five things you
can do to help your client rest assured that you are doing an effective job,
and with time, traffic will come.
Rankings reports and keyword improvements
This is kind of a given,
because traditionally all we could do is show the client that we helped them go
from the 100th position to 50th position. That almost never reflects more
traffic, but it does show improvement. It also shows effort, and if you get two
consistent upward movements, you can show that there’s a trend in their favor.
Another keyword improvement
you can show them is total keywords bringing traffic to their website in Google
Analytics. If you go to Sources > Search > Organic,
then scroll down to bottom right, you can see how many total keywords have
brought traffic to their site in the current date range. If you change the date
range to a range pre-SEO work and that number is smaller than the most recent,
you can say that you are increasing their overall visibility. So, if you can
show improvement in rankings and that they are getting more organic traffic via
more keywords on the SERPs; you are showing them that they are making progress.
For most clients, this is enough.
Working logs
Every once in a while, a
client may want some updates on how the SEO is going because they aren't seeing
an increase in traffic or conversions. In other words, they want to know what
you have been doing.
I recommend recording all
work you've done for the client regardless of the complexity and time it took.
Create events in Google Analytics or your SEO tool software. These are easy
ways to document your work while showing correlations with traffic. Another way
I've satisfied my clients is having something like BaseCamp or a time tracker
that they can sign in to and see what has been accomplished.
Behind the scenes, we know
things are going good and we know that we are doing work to get those rankings
up, however the client doesn't. Anything you can do to allow the client to
check on what you've done for them, whenever they want, can sometimes prevent
emails or phones calls questioning your efforts.
Summary reports and updates
Sometimes, emailing the
client or getting on the phone with them weekly or bimonthly is all they need.
When you reach out to the client before they reach out to you, you are
squashing embers before the fire starts. It shows them that you are proactive
and more importantly that you haven’t forgot about them. Emailing or calling
them just to let them know that you've accomplished something or that you were
thinking about them while working on their account can go a long way.
I believe this is arguably
the most important thing you can do to build long term relationships with your
clients. It can be something as simple as "Hey, I just wanted to let you
know that we wrote up some content, emailed a few webmasters and been working
on your rankings. Just an FYI, give you more details in the monthly
report." This communication can make a client’s day and maintain their
trust for you and your services.
Other metrics to report
Assuming that you are doing
your job, you can report other metrics to the client if rankings and traffic
have not kicked in yet. Metrics such as total links contacted out of total link
goals, total tweets, fans, +1s, shares, pages per site visited, site bounce
rate, conversion rate, total live links, subscribers, etc. Anything that will
show them that the website is doing better than when you started. However, in
order to provide these types of stats, you have to create a benchmark to show
how where they are now is better than where they started.
Resources vouching that SEO takes time
In the case that the client
is still skeptical and the results are not yet able to prove your work, the
best thing you can do is show them that even the authorities such as Search Engine Watch, Search Engine Journal, Google, etc., all
confirmed that rankings don't happen overnight. Perhaps you can do a better job
educating them about the fact that it’s a campaign to catch up with the
competition; that the competitors who are ranking high have performed a long
list of tasks over years to get to where they are, and you are emulating them
in the most efficient way possible.
So...
...there you have it, five
ways to let the clients know that you are doing what needs to be done in order
to obtain top rankings. Just don’t forget that the client may still need to
trust that the tasks you are accomplishing actually works. So you may have to
prove to them that your strategies have helped other clients, or that you are
doing what the algorithm, case studies and the competition proves needs to be
done.
I hope this helps my fellow
white-hat SEOs performing legit services keep good relationships with their
clients.
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