Article by : - Craig Reardon is a writer, educator and operator of independent web services firm for SMEs, The E Team.
I’ve just returned from a seminar on search engine
optimisation for smaller business operators presented by the operator of an
up-and-coming provider not far from where I live.
And it turned out to be one of the better ones run
by the business group concerned.
It was brilliantly presented, informative, clever
and interactive. It provided a clear and detailed rundown on how smaller
businesses could improve their lot on Google and other search engines. And
there were more questions than the presenter could hope to field in the time
available.
The organisers couldn’t really be happier with the
presentation.
Blinded with science?
But looking around the well-attended room and
hearing some of the comments being murmured during the presentation, it was
clear that despite the clear and articulate presentation, many attendees were
quite befuddled by a field much more science than art.
So, inadvertently (or perhaps not), the presenter painted as much a case for ‘this will overwhelm you’ as he did ‘this will help you’. And when it comes to smaller business, he is not alone. Because it’s a dilemma every smaller business operator soon gets to know well:
Do I invest my time and money in learning to do it or do I pay someone else to do it for me? And just as every business is different, so too is the answer.
Working in or on the business
Of course the ‘work on rather than in the business’
exponents will push the ‘pay someone else’ line, while others will insist on
the DIY approach.
Others simply won’t have the resources to hire
someone to do it so will either have to rely on favours from friends and family
or learn it themselves; which, in turn, means they are spending valuable time
on something they are not proficient in at the expense of earning more doing
what they do best.
In practice, I’ve found this kind of knowledge
breaks into two distinct levels of understanding – the ‘what and why’ and the
‘how’.
The ‘what and why’ level is about understanding the
reasons behind your business decision.
So, in the case above, the ‘what’ is search engine
optimisation – the practice of arranging your website to best attract the
attentions of search engines for the most prominent positioning and the ‘why’
is fundamentally to achieve better Return On Investment for your marketing
dollar.
The ‘how’ revolves around a growing range of
techniques to best optimise your website and, if necessary, supplement it with
paid advertising.
It’s the role of all business operators to have an
understanding of the what and why of any business discipline that affects them.
The ‘how’ though may well be better left to experts
who can do it better, faster and potentially cheaper than the DIY path.
An aid to decision-making
The beauty of events like the one I went to is that it helps business operators decide which course of action is best for them:
- Learning the skills themselves
- Training a staff member to learn them
- Hiring a provider to manage it for them
Although, another decision that you need to make is whether you need a
search engine specialist or an online marketing generalist.
Whether it’s in-house or outsourced is up to your
resources, how close it is to your core business and ongoing plans for your
marketing.