What's your biggest challenge as an enterprise SEO?
Overcoming technical site issues? Perhaps.
Increasing content production? Maybe, especially if you’re not a writer.
My guess is that the one issue you struggle with the most is gaining buy-in for SEO.
In fact, our clients tell me often about the red tape and internal politics that hinder so many of their efforts.
Many tell me how limited they feel in their organizations. Others share tales of the lack of buy-in blocking them from various opportunities.
They recall how IT departments disregard their requests for code revisions. Some complain at PR and marketing teams not cooperating in content production or link building, or how other teams lack the insight on why they should even want to help and how.
In this post, I decided to share some ideas to help you overcome the buy-in challenge.
You’ll learn three strategies that will help you:
I don’t know a better way to convince someone of the power of SEO than by showcasing your every win, regardless how small.
For example:
Have you increased search visibility in one of your target industries? Fixed site issues that obstructed customers on their journey through the site? Created a high-trafficked piece of content?
Although each might seem small to an onlooker, those achievements directly affect the company’s bottom line.
Higher rankings translate to greater traffic and include potential for conversions. An optimized customer search experience can make visitors more prone to engage with your brand. Viral content could help raise brand awareness, among other things.
However, no one else in the organization would know how these results happened unless you share the results and the process to achieve these results.
Here are some suggestions to get you started:
Communicating your wins is just the first step. Next, analyze who engages with this information and use it to build strategic connections in the organization.
Communicate with them regularly. Include them in relevant decisions regarding SEO. Reference their input in presentations and reports.
In doing so, you’ll quickly develop a network of SEO evangelists to draw from when you need others to help.
A friend of mine - a former enterprise SEO – used a simple trick to evangelize the search among his peers.
In his last SEO job, he requested a permanent, short time slot at the monthly management meeting. He’d use the few minutes he had to show slides showing one thing only:
How SEO helped each of the departments represented at the meeting.
The result? An incredibly strong buy-in for his ideas, and the willingness to help from all those departments.
The reason for that is simple. Every month, he got a chance to remind various managers that SEO is a way for them to boost their results too.
Unfortunately, pressed for time, the company eventually took his time slot away. As he told me, the interest in SEO among managers dwindled quickly.
There are two lessons in my friend’s story. To evangelize SEO, you must:
Here are some things you should remember when educating your peers about SEO.
They included tasks like:
Although seemingly insignificant, they helped him create better content, discover new keywords or target seasonal events.
Why, because showing those actions every month embedded them in his audience’s minds. They acted like triggers to remind them to think of SEO while going about their work.
Another variation of this strategy is running SEO lunch-and-learn meetings. Sure, they might take a bit more effort to organize, but these sessions would also give you more space to introduce and evangelize SEO better.
I’ve already talked about the benefits of finding SEO evangelists and engaging them further.
You could take this strategy to the next level, too. By building strategic alliances, you could create a network of SEO stakeholders, willing to help when the need arises.
Connecting with the marketing team could help you receive far better content. PR teams could help you acquire more links. Developing strong relations with IT would result in technical issues being solved much faster, and so on.
Here are some suggestions for making it happen:
Without buy-in, most SEOs struggle to scale their strategies fully. But with the help of other departments, their ideas begin to thrive. Use these three proven ways to evangelize SEO in your organization and get everyone on board with your strategies moving forward.