Answering these questions will help you to
build a framework for your SEO project and
establish limitations for the size and scope of
the campaign.
Ready: How
Search Engine-Compatible is the Site Currently?
Something I find very useful before quoting
on any SEO project is to produce what I call a
Search Engine Compatibility Review. This is
where I carry out a detailed overview and
analysis of a site's search engine compatibility
in terms of HTML design, page extensions, link
popularity, title and META tags, body text,
target keywords, ALT IMG tags, page load time
and other design elements that can impact search
engine indexing.
I then provide a detailed report to potential
clients with recommendations based on my
findings. It just helps sort out in my mind what
design elements need tweaking to make the site
as search engine-friendly as possible. It also
helps marketing staff prove to an often stubborn
programming department (or vice versa!) that SEO
is necessary. You might consider preparing
something similar for your site or clients.
Steady:
Requirements Gathering
Next, you need to establish the project
requirements, so you can tailor the SEO campaign
to you or your client's exact needs. For those
of you servicing clients, this information is
often required before you are able to quote
accurately.
To determine your project requirements, you
need to have the following questions answered:
1) What technology was used to build
the site? (i.e. Flash, PHP, frames, Cold
Fusion, JavaScript, Flat HTML etc)
2) What are the file extensions of
the pages? (i.e. .htm, .php, .cfm etc)
3) Does the site contain database
driven content? If so, will the URLs contain
query strings? e.g. www.site.com/longpagename?source=123444fgge3212,
(containing "?" symbols), or does the site
use parameter workarounds to remove the
query strings? (the latter is more search
engine friendly).
4) Are there at least 250 words of
text on the home page and other pages to be
optimized?
5) How does the navigation work?
Does it use text links or graphical links or
JavaScript drop-down menus?
6) Approximately how many pages
does the site contain? How many of these
will be optimized?
7) Does the site have a site map
or will it require one? Does the site have
an XML sitemap submitted to
Google Sitemaps ?
8) What is the current link
popularity of the site?
9) What is the approximate Google
PageRank of the site? Would it benefit from
link building?
10) Do I have the ability to edit
the source code directly? Or will I need to
hand-over the optimized code to programmers
for integration?
11) Do I have permission to alter
the visible content of the site?
12) What are the products/services
that the site promotes? (e.g. widgets,
mobile phones, hire cars etc.)
13) What are the site's
geographical target markets? Are they
global? Country specific? State specific?
Town specific?
14) What are the site's
demographic target markets? (e.g. young
urban females, working mothers, single
parents etc.)
15) What are 20 search keywords or
phrases that I think my/my client's target
markets will use to find the site in the
search engines?
16) Who are my/my client's major
competitors online? What are their URLs?
What keywords are they targeting?
17) Who are the stake-holders of
this site? How will I report to them?
18) Do I have access to site
traffic logs or statistics to enable me to
track visitor activity during the campaign?
Specifically, what visitor activity will I
be tracking?
19) How do I plan on tracking my
or my client's conversion trends and
increased rankings in the search engines?
20) What are my/my client's
expectations for the optimization project?
Are they realistic?
Answers to the first 10 questions above will
determine the complexity of optimization
required. For example, if the site pages
currently have little text on them, you know
you'll need to integrate more text to make the
site compatible with search engines and include
adequate target keywords. If the site currently
uses frames, you will need to rebuild the pages
without frames or create special No-Frames tags
to make sure the site can be indexed, and so on.
This initial analysis will help you to scope
the time and costs involved in advance. For
those of you optimizing client sites, obtaining
accurate answers to these questions BEFORE
quoting is absolutely crucial. Otherwise you can
find yourself in the middle of a project that
you have severely under-quoted for.
The remainder of questions are to establish
in advance the who, what, where, when, why and
how of the optimization project. This will help
you determine the most logical keywords and
phrases to target, as well as which search
engines to submit the site to.