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SEO (SEARCH ENGINE OPTIMIZATION)ARTICLES
Ten Ways to Get SEO Clients
. . . beginning with your local market
By Robin Nobles
If you're a professional search engine optimizer,
the field is wide open for you as far as clients
are concerned. But how on earth do you find them?
Let's face it: virtually every single business Web
site is a potential client. But if you send out
bulk e-mail, you risk getting tar and feathered
by the E-Mail Spam Police. So, how can you get started
in this industry if you have little to no advertising
budget, and how can you build a clientele?
1. Consider starting on a local level where you
have some personal connections. Join your area's
Chamber of Commerce, and make it a point to meet
and get to know as many of the members as you can.
Once you find out that they have an online business,
ask them about their business and their traffic.
How pleased are they with the results they're getting
from their Web site? That's a perfect opportunity
for you to casually explain your services and how
you can help them.
2. Form relationships with area Web design firms,
hosting companies, and Internet Service Providers.
Offer them a referral fee for any SEO clients they
send you. Then, turn around and send them business
as well.
3. Look into other local clubs and organizations
that you might consider joining. Examples might
be the Kiwanis Club, the Lion's Club, or the Rotary
Club. Even if you don't join, let it be known that
you'd enjoy speaking to the group about search engine
marketing, which is certainly a topic of interest
to anyone with a Web site.
4. Consider purchasing a small ad to run in your
local newspaper advertising your services. Your
ad doesn't have to be long or expensive. What about:
Do you have a Web site that is struggling for traffic?
Do you know that Web sites don't attract traffic
by themselves? http://www.yourwebsite.com
5. Try to get on a local radio or TV station to
talk about search engine marketing.
6. Is there a Board of Realtors in your area? A
legal association? A convention and tourism office?
What other industry is known for having Web sites?
Any of those would be excellent places to recruit
new clients. Again, work out a relationship that
will benefit all parties. Offer a discount to anyone
who is a member of the tourism bureau, for example.
Offer to speak at one of their meetings. Offer multi-site
discounts for any clients with more than one site.
7. Work hard for all of your clients, going much
further than giving them 100% in the beginning until
you can prove to them that you know what you're
doing and can bring results. Those clients will
begin recommending your services to other clients,
and your business will continue to grow, eventually
outside of your local area.
8. If you're going after many clients in a local
market, consider purchasing a couple of local domains
yourself, using your locale in the name of the domains.
In other words, set up a directory of Web sites
for your location. This will help you build link
popularity for your clients. Plus, you can allow
other local businesses to submit their sites, which
are now prospective clients for you as well. Offer
services like enhanced listings, positioning services,
directory submissions, affiliate offerings, and
so forth.
9. Set up a domain to advertise your services, and
then get it listed in all of your area's online
yellow pages and business directories as well as
the major search engines and directories. Believe
it or not, I know many professional SEO's who don't
even have their own Web sites!
10. Write articles, both for your local newspapers,
as valuable content for your site, and to submit
to related online resources to "prove" that you're
knowledgeable in search engine marketing. Always
list your name, company name, and URL at the bottom
of your articles in your byline. Then, spend some
time promoting your articles online. You'll be building
name recognition, credibility, and link popularity
at the same time.
Let me give you a final bonus . . . #11.
11. The Academy of Web Specialists (http://www.academywebspecialists.com)
and Search Engine Workshops (http://www.searchengineworkshops.com),
in a joint effort, are in the process of having
a job data bank set up to where companies who are
looking for full- or part-time SEO's can search
through the database for trained optimizers. Optimizers
will be able to enter their data, and companies
can search through a variety of variables, including
location, experience level, training, full or part
time, etc.
Students who have taken a class under me in the
past, through the Academy, or through Search Engine
Workshops are eligible to enter their information
in the database. We're hoping that the job data
bank will be open for business within the next month
or two. This will be a wonderful resource for both
trained search engine optimizers looking for work
and companies
who are looking to hire optimizers.
In Conclusion
Search engine optimization as a full- or part-time
career choice is wide open with possibilities. If
you'll start with your local market first, you'll
rapidly gain clients and prove yourself in the industry.
From there, only the "Web" is the limit!
Robin Nobles, Director of Training, Academy of Web
Specialists, (http://www.academywebspecialists.com)
has trained several thousand people in her online
search engine marketing courses (http://www.onlinewebtraining.com)
and is the content provider for (GRSeo) Search Engine
Optimizer software (http://www.se-optimizer.com).
She also teaches 3-day hands on search engine marketing
workshops in locations across the globe with Search
Engine Workshops (http://www.searchengineworkshops.com).
Copyright 2002 Robin Nobles. All rights reserved.
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