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How AI makes paid search audits faster and better

How AI makes paid search audits faster and better

Paid search audits are essential. But let’s face it: they can be a beast to do. 

It’s not just about understanding complex strategies; it’s about meticulously reviewing every setting, campaign, keyword, and ad, then translating all those details into actionable insights for stakeholders who may not be PPC experts.

Before AI, I spent countless hours refining audit checklists and presentations, constantly second-guessing myself. 

  • Did I miss a crucial setting?
  • Did I fully grasp the account’s nuances and how they align with business goals? 

I even resorted to downloading templates from other experts for reassurance.

Now, AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Gemini have transformed my entire auditing process, bringing a new level of thoroughness, clarity, and actionability. 

They help me avoid missing critical details and analyze data faster than I ever could, freeing up my time for strategic thinking.

Read on to learn how AI can help you conduct comprehensive, insightful, and actionable paid search audits that drive better performance.

Streamline your initial account review

Feeling overwhelmed when reviewing a new account? I used to, as well. 

Now, I simply open the account and dictate my observations directly into a Google Doc using my phone’s text-to-speech feature. 

I cover everything – from account structure and campaign settings to keyword choices and ad copy.

Next, I feed this raw data into my AI chatbot, asking it to organize my thoughts and structure the observations. 

I can even paste the campaign structure for the chatbot to analyze, identifying issues like overly broad keywords or illogical setups. 

Suddenly, I have a clear, concise account overview, ready for deeper analysis.

Explain complex topics with AI

Explaining bid strategies or match types to someone unfamiliar with PPC can be challenging and frustrating. 

I’ve always struggled with this, especially after analyzing data all day. 

AI chatbots excel at simplifying complex concepts and translating technical jargon for stakeholders.

For example, if you’ve identified a suboptimal bidding strategy, instead of a technical explanation about value-based bidding, you can ask the AI to tailor the message for different audiences:

  • For an executive: “The current bidding strategy is likely costing us money by not focusing on the most valuable conversions.”
  • For a marketing team member: “We can improve our bidding to reach more of the right customers and reduce wasted ad spend.”
  • For a paid search manager: “I recommend transitioning to value-based bidding, as it helps inform the ads platform that we prioritize form submissions over phone calls.”

Similarly, rather than saying, “The search terms report shows a high volume of irrelevant queries,” the AI can rephrase it as “We’re wasting money on clicks from people who aren’t interested in our products.”

This approach ensures your insights are clear and actionable for all stakeholders. 

AI helps turn what’s in your head into polished presentations with actionable steps businesses can easily implement.

Flag high-cost, low-converting campaigns, ad groups, or keywords

AI chatbots aren’t just passive note-takers. They can be proactive analysts. 

Once you’ve provided the AI with account data, you can ask it targeted questions like:

  • “What are the biggest opportunities for improvement in this account?”
  • “Are there any red flags I should be concerned about?”
  • “Which keywords have high cost but low conversions?”

The AI can analyze the data and provide insights you might have missed. 

For example, in a recent audit of a luxury car accessories campaign, I analyzed a search terms report and asked AI to flag potential inefficiencies. One standout issue was high-cost, low-conversion keywords.

The term “premium leather seat covers” had 128 clicks, a CTR of 4.6%, and only two conversions, resulting in a cost per conversion of $180 – much higher than the account’s target. 

Meanwhile, “heated seat covers for winter” showed a strong CTR of 25.8% and a conversion rate of 1.25%, but its cost per conversion was still high at $161. 

This data indicates a need for lower bids, better use of negative keywords, or landing page optimization. 

A high CTR combined with a low conversion rate suggests that while users are clicking, they are not converting – highlighting clear opportunities for improvement.

Once I used AI to identify the opportunities, I can use AI to communicate this concept to an executive:

  • “We’re seeing some instances where we’re paying a lot for clicks, but those clicks aren’t turning into sales. This is often due to targeting the wrong keywords or sending people to landing pages that aren’t optimized for conversion. By addressing these issues, we can reduce wasted spend and improve our return on investment.”

This concise explanation focuses on the issue’s financial impact and potential for improvement, which is what executives typically care about most. 

It also avoids getting bogged down in technical details, like negative keywords, which is crucial when communicating with non-PPC experts when delivering audits. 

Believe me, when you start talking about negative keywords or match types with an executive, you’ve lost them! As subject matter experts, it’s so easy to get caught up in the details. 

Still, AI has been monumental in helping me bridge that communication gap and communicate what is important.

Dig deeper: 7 tips for conducting Google Ads audits

How to analyze your account with AI

Remember to apply the process of analyzing data with AI at every level of the account hierarchy. 

Start with campaign data, then drill down to the ad group level within each campaign, and finally, review the ads and keywords.

Analyzing campaign data with AI

  • Download the relevant campaign data from Google Ads.
  • Upload it to ChatGPT (or another AI tool).
  • Ask targeted questions like: “Which campaigns are underperforming?” or “Which campaigns have the highest cost per conversion?”

Analyzing ad group data with AI

  • Download the relevant ad group data from Google Ads.
  • Upload it to your AI tool.
  • Ask questions like: “Which ad groups have the lowest click-through rates?” or “Are there any ad groups with high impressions but low clicks?”

Analyzing keywords and ads with AI

  • Download the relevant data (e.g., search terms report, keyword data, ad data) from Google Ads.
  • Upload it to your AI tool.
  • Ask targeted questions like: “Which keywords have high cost but low conversions?” or “Suggest new negative keywords.” or “Which ads have the highest conversion rates?”

AI analyzes the data and provides insights within seconds, saving hours of manual review. This helps you quickly identify areas for improvement. 

As the human expert, you can then determine the best course of action, such as adding negative keywords, adjusting bids, or optimizing landing pages. 

You can also use AI to analyze your current audience targeting settings and suggest improvements, such as layering demographics, interests, and behaviors for more precise targeting.

By applying this process at each level, you gain a comprehensive understanding of the account’s performance and can develop targeted recommendations for improvement and incorporate into your audit.

Auditing ad copy with AI

AI can be a valuable tool for generating ad copy variations and incorporating feedback on ad copy into your audits. 

With the rise of responsive search ads (RSAs), which allow for up to 15 headlines and four descriptions, it’s easy to overlook the importance of solid ad copy. 

We’re often stuck in a situation where many headlines or combinations simply don’t get served, making it difficult to know which ones are truly effective.

By leveraging AI to analyze existing ad copy and campaign data, you can provide specific, data-driven suggestions for improvement directly within your audit reports. 

This enhances the value of your audits and streamlines the optimization process for your clients.

Here’s how to use AI to enhance your paid search audits:

  • Upload your campaign data to the AI platform, including ad copy, impressions, clicks, conversions, and other relevant metrics.
  • Ask the AI to analyze the data and identify the top-performing ads in terms of key performance indicators (KPIs) like conversions or click-through rates (CTR). For example, you could ask: “Analyze this ad copy data and tell me which ads are driving the most conversions. Then, generate 3 new ad copy variations based on the top performer.”
  • Filter the suggestions to align with your brand voice, character limits, and other campaign requirements.
  • Incorporate the AI-generated suggestions into your audit report, providing specific, data-backed recommendations for improvement.
  • Advise clients to A/B test the different variations to identify the most effective ad copy.

Using AI to analyze your RSAs can help you uncover which headlines and descriptions are actually working and generate new variations based on those insights. 

This allows you to make data-driven recommendations for improving ad copy, even with the added complexity of RSAs.

Gain competitor insights with AI

Including competitor insights in paid search audits helps clients understand their market better and find ways to stay ahead.

While there are tools available that provide competitor analysis, manual review and analysis of publicly available data can uncover valuable insights that might otherwise be missed.

One powerful application of AI in this context is competitor website analysis. 

By providing the chatbot with your competitors’ websites or ad copy, you can ask it to:

  • Analyze their strategies.
  • Identify their strengths and weaknesses.
  • Suggest opportunities for differentiation. 

This allows you to gain valuable insights into the competitive messaging landscape and refine your own approach to copy.

Another application is to look at websites like Amazon or Reddit. 

For example, you could gather competitor reviews from platforms like Amazon and use AI to analyze the sentiment and identify recurring themes. 

You could also read what customers are saying about a brand on Reddit.

This can help you understand what customers like and dislike about your competitors’ products or services, which can inform your ad copy and messaging. 

You can even ask the AI to generate ad copy variations based on these insights, ensuring your ads stand out from the competition and resonate with potential customers.

Including this level of competitor intelligence in your audits shows a strong market understanding and gives clients actionable strategies to stay ahead.

Get the newsletter search marketers rely on.



Overarching vs. in-depth audits

It’s important to remember that paid search audits can vary in scope. Some audits require a high-level overview, while others demand a deep dive into every aspect of the account. 

AI can be adapted to both scenarios. For comprehensive audits, you can use AI to analyze vast amounts of data and pinpoint areas for improvement across all levels of the account. 

For more focused audits, you can use AI to examine specific aspects, such as ad copy testing, keyword research, or campaign structure.

Automate reporting with AI

Compiling the findings into a clear and concise report is one of the most time-consuming aspects of paid search audits. 

This is where AI can shine, helping you automate the reporting process and create professional presentations with minimal effort.

Here’s how you can leverage AI to streamline your audit reporting.

Create a comprehensive audit template

  • Develop a spreadsheet template that captures every single setting in the advertising platform you’re auditing (Google Ads, Bing Ads, Facebook Ads, etc.). 
  • Include checkboxes for items that meet best practices and text fields for observations or recommendations. 
  • This template serves as your standardized audit checklist.

Populate the template

  • As you conduct your audit, meticulously fill out the spreadsheet, checking boxes and adding notes where necessary.

Leverage AI for report generation

  • Once the template is complete, upload it to your AI chatbot. 
  • Provide clear instructions on the desired output. For example:
    • “Generate a PowerPoint outline for a paid search audit report based on this spreadsheet. Include a slide for each section with key findings and recommendations. Highlight any critical issues or opportunities.”

Refine and customize

  • The AI will generate a PowerPoint outline based on the data in your spreadsheet. 
  • Review the output, refine the language, add your own insights, and customize the formatting to create a polished and professional presentation.

This process allows you to leverage AI to automate the tedious aspects of report generation while maintaining control over the content and ensuring that your expertise shines through. 

Combining a standardized audit template with AI-powered reporting can save significant time and deliver high-quality audits that impress your clients.

Dig deeper: 3 steps for effective PPC reporting and analysis

A glimpse into the future of creative collaboration with AI

While AI may not be a complete replacement for human expertise just yet, its rapid evolution hints at an exciting future where it significantly enhances our skills and knowledge. 

We all have strengths and weaknesses, and AI has the potential to bridge those gaps effectively.

For example, I used to rely on a colleague with a knack for data visualization. I’d describe a concept, and they’d effortlessly create a compelling visual. 

Today’s AI tools are starting to offer similar capabilities, though they often require more guidance.

Recently, I needed a flowchart illustrating the Google Ads auction process. I provided a detailed prompt to Canva’s AI, outlining the steps and desired visual elements. 

The result was a decent starting point, but it wasn’t quite what I envisioned. (See my prompt and the AI’s output below.)

This experience highlighted the iterative nature of working with AI. It’s like a dance where both partners are learning and adapting. 

As we refine our ability to communicate effectively with AI, and as AI technology itself advances, the results will become increasingly impressive.

Imagine a future where we can dictate a flowchart, outline complex processes with ease, and AI generates a stunning visual that surpasses anything we could create with traditional tools like Mermaid. 

This level of creative collaboration could revolutionize how we visualize and communicate information.

My prompt:

“Create a flowchart illustrating the Google Ads auction process. The diagram should show the following steps:

  1. User Search: A user searches for a query on Google.
  2. Ad Auction: Google’s ad auction determines which ads to show based on factors like bid amount, ad quality, and ad relevance.
  3. Ad Serving: Google serves the ad that is predicted to maximize the advertiser’s goal (clicks, conversions, or conversion value).
  4. User Interaction: The user may or may not interact with the ad (e.g., click, convert).

Use simple shapes and arrows to represent the flow of the process. Label each step clearly. Consider using different colors to distinguish between user actions, Google’s decisions, and advertiser goals.”

AI’s result:

AI-generated - Google Ads auction process visualization

This visual isn’t accurate, but I believe as technology and prompting improve, we’ll reach a point where accurate diagrams and charts can be created quickly for presentations.

AI-powered paid search audits: Faster, smarter, and more actionable

AI technology is evolving rapidly, changing how marketers approach their work. 

Integrating a chatbot into your paid search audit process can help you deliver better results faster by automating tedious tasks. 

However, remember it is a tool to assist you, not a replacement for your expertise. 

Always review and refine the chatbot’s output, and use your judgment to ensure the quality and accuracy of your findings.

Embrace these advancements, and you’ll be well-equipped to navigate the complexities of paid search and achieve outstanding results.

Dig deeper: How to maximize PPC and SEO data with co-optimization audits

Read more at Read More

How volatile have Google rankings really been?

How volatile have Google rankings really been?

Some things in life are constant – Google rankings aren’t one of them.

If you’ve been paying attention (or just reading this website), you’ve likely noticed that rankings are becoming increasingly unstable. Industry veterans, with years of context, may feel this shift the most.

That’s why I believe SEO is evolving into something new.

What that means – and whether the industry is adapting well – is a discussion for another time (TL;DR: we’re not doing great, but we’re not failing either. Change is hard).

One key driver of this shift is SERP instability.

What I’d like to do here is explore that notion and give some concrete facts. 

The average level of volatility in 2024

Rank was 26% more volatile in 2024 than in 2023. 

It’s not as simple as it sounds, which is why we’ll look at multiple metrics to create a data picture as best we can. 

However, if you looked at how much rank volatility increased in 2024 and compared it to how much it either increased or decreased in 2023, the answer would be 26% – at least on desktop. 

Top categories by volatility change 2024 vs 2023 - US Desktop Data

Now, that’s not universal across every sector of the web.

For example, as you can see above, certain niche industries saw far higher volatility increases in 2024 relative to 2023.

If your site helps folks relish information about their favorite snack, it might be over 50% more volatile (for the record, relish is no one’s favorite snack).

However, what was almost universal was that all but one of the vertical’s Semrush tracks saw an increase in rank volatility in 2024:

Average Volatility Level by Categories

All but one vertical (Real Estate) saw what I would call a “noticeable” increase in rank volatility over the course of 2024 compared to 2023 (which itself was “noticeable”). 

I want to highlight that the data shows average volatility – already high in 2023 and even higher in 2024 (except for Real Estate).

I don’t always report on desktop versus mobile when discussing Google algorithm updates

In general, the numbers across devices are close enough that it doesn’t justify wasting your time. 

In this case, the difference between devices was clear – a full 10 percentage points.

Top categories by volatility change 2024 vs 2023 - US Mobile Data

While the desktop SERP was 26% more volatile in 2024 than in 2023, the mobile SERP was “only” 16% more volatile.

The disparity between devices continued all the way down to the niche level.

On desktop, the Health vertical, for example, was not one of the niches that saw the most increased volatility in 2024. On mobile, as shown above, it clearly was.

That’s not because keywords associated with the medical field were so much more volatile on mobile.

The numbers for the Health niche are quite similar across devices. The disparity is largely due to other verticals having higher rates of volatility in 2023 on mobile than on desktop:

Average Volatility Level by Categories - US Mobile Data

If you look at ecommerce, the vertical had literally the same level of rank volatility on both desktop and mobile in 2024. However, on mobile, the volatility average was 5 points higher.

The gap between the mobile and desktop volatility increase is due to the higher levels of mobile volatility in 2023, which resulted in less of an increase relative to 2024.

However, the levels of absolute volatility are the same across devices. (Again, using the Shopping vertical, the average volatility was at 8.5/10 on both devices in 2024.)

By the way, a volatility score of 8.5 is out of this world.

All these numbers, when factoring in the volatility levels in 2023 and then the increase of them in 2024, are out of this world.

The SERP is not safe.

Dig deeper: How to diversify your traffic sources

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Is increased rank volatility a lasting trend or a temporary spike?

An increase in average volatility in 2024 doesn’t tell the whole story.

We need to determine if a single event skewed the data – perhaps one or two months of extreme volatility.

The answer? No. 

Volatility in 2024 was widespread. Except for July (and to some extent August), the year was consistently more volatile from the start.

SERP Volatility Trend by Monthly Average Volatility - US Desktop Data

July 2023 is interesting to recall because there was no official update. 

The volatility you see above in July 2023 was the result of an odd and ongoing period of extreme rank volatility that happened around the middle of that month:

SERP Volatility - July 2023
Image courtesy of Search Engine Roundtable

The upshot and the importance of the data is that it means we’re not just in a more volatile rank period that may or may not abate. 

Rather, it would appear we’re in a new scenario of what volatility on the SERP looks like. 

I can only speculate that it will get worse as Google has been reported to say they are moving to continuous and ongoing algorithm updates. 

How drastic is drastic? 

Another question neither the average level of volatility nor the volatility trends answer is how volatile? 

Meaning, how drastic is the rank movement? 

It’s entirely possible that smaller micromovements are a big part of the more volatile SERP (which, for the record, was already incredibly volatile for years – more on that later). 

Standard deviation is one of the best metrics to measure rank volatility. 

When you look at the baseline and how far off the volatility is, rank volatility is noticeably less drastic:

Image courtesy of Search Engine Roundtable

Every vertical saw a decrease in the standard deviation relative to 2023, aside from one (and the “news” SERP is its own beast).  

Now we have a scenario where the “amount” of volatility increased, but the extent of the movement itself decreased relative to 2023. 

Do not mistake that for “Oh, rank isn’t fluctuating in a drastic manner.” It’s relative to 2023, not in absolute.

If we take the Dolorean to 88 mph, we’ll see that back in 2021 standard deviation, outside of News, ranged between 1.15 and 1.69: 

Standard Deviation for Each Category - 2021

That range in 2024 (again outside of News) is 1.3 – 2.5. Rank is not “less volatile” over time. 

The average level of rank fluctuation may not be as drastic as in 2023, but as a paradigm, we are not even close to the levels seen in 2021 and have surpassed the higher extremes of rank movement seen in 2020. 

Back in 2020, we were looking at standard deviations above 1. Now, we’re talking about deviants above 2 (of which I have four above 2 at home). 

We can still pull back another layer. 

Is the reason the standard deviation is higher overall related to a few strong spikes of colossal rank volatility? 

Difference Between Max and Min Score Each Year

That doesn’t appear to be the case. 

The above graph shows a narrowing of the gap between the minimum and maximum levels of volatility. 

The difference between minimum and maximum volatility in 2023 was 8.1 points, down to 7.2 in 2024. 

That’s a less drastic “spiking” of max volatility (relatively speaking). 

There are two (if not more) possible reasons for this: 

  • The minimum score was higher, meaning we started at a higher level of volatility, which would make the gap between the minimum and maximum levels of volatility narrower. 
  • There were fewer large spikes but overall more “less drastic” rank movement so the levels just never got as high in 2024. Thus, the gap between the minimum and maximum levels of volatility is narrower. 

If you look at all the data together (see, there’s a method to my madness), some signs point to more volatility that is less drastic overall. 

Why?

  • The average amount of volatility is up in 2024.
  • The rank movement is less drastic overall in 2024 (see standard deviation).

Thus, to apply Occam’s Razor (which has nothing to do with actual razors), the most likely scenario behind the narrowed gap between minimum and maximum volatility is that the volatility, while more frequent, did not get as many “highs” as it did in 2023.

However, the counterargument would be the month-by-month volatility trends we saw above (adding here again for convenience), which show that the jump in the amount of volatility was steeper in 2023 than in 2024:

SERP Volatility Trend by Monthly Average Volatility - US Desktop Data

It’s not hard to see. August 2023 and August 2024 show just about the same levels of volatility. But look where the amount of volatility started in 2023, far lower than in 2024. 

One might speculate that if the amount of volatility spiked like it did in 2023, so did the levels of volatility.

This is a fancy way of saying, I don’t know – which I am not supposed to say in official SEO articles. (So you didn’t read that). 

But it also brings me to my next data point. The pivots are so good here it feels like a podcast. 

Things are volatile, but who’s counting? 

Me.

I am counting. 

Did you know that Semrush only recorded 15 days or low volatility in 2024? 

Of course, not. Who would actually know that off the top of their heads? That’s just weird. 

But it’s true. 

On desktop, there were just 15 days of low volatility and just 83 days of “normal” volatility.

For the record, yes, 2024 has 366 days, not 365. It was a leap year. I know how to add numbers. 

So, just assume there is one less day of high volatility to make yourself feel better.

Volatility Level Breakdown by Year - Desktop

By the way, that means a 64% reduction in the number of days of low volatility in 2024 and a 39% reduction in days of normal volatility. 

Conversely, there was a 19% increase in “high volatility” days in 2024 and an absolutely massive increase of 80% in “very high volatility” days! 

Slightly different on mobile with a few more days of low volatility throughout 2024 (although the number of high volatility days was the same): 

Volatility Level Breakdown by Year - Mobile

However, there were 12 fewer “very high” volatility days on mobile in 2024, so that’s good. 

But mainly, none of it is good.

Roughly 78% of 2024 was volatile, with 36% of the year being very volatile (desktop). That feels like a nightmare. For many, it was and still is. 

More volatility? Who freaking cares?! (Or as most Search Engine Land articles put it: why we care)

You. 

At least you should. Our conception of what Google is as a marketing channel is starting to shift. 

First, the results are less than stellar at times. 

I was Googling a medical condition, and I was forced to choose between the same content from different websites such as the Mayo Clinic, Web MD, whatever, or Reddit. 

That’s like having to choose between strawberry ice cream or strawberry ice cream with nuts.

Then there’s the whole LLM thing, AI search engines and AIOs, AI-generated content, AI something whatever, and yada, yada, yada.

And then, on top of that, content consumption trends have totally changed IMHO (they’re constantly changing, BTW).

Oh, and I forgot about Reddit being firehosed into the SERP. (Would you like sprinkles on that ice cream?) 

On top of all of that, the SERP is a heap of volatility. That’s a lot. 

It’s like Thanksgiving dinner with your family and your in-laws, and all that’s being served is boiled tofu. 

Also, they don’t have a TV, so you can’t watch football, and they don’t have beer; they have Zima from 1992. 

So what should you do about it? 

I didn’t say I was giving advice; I was just showing why you should care.

What you should do about it is a whole other conversation. And yeah, it goes far beyond “diversify your channels” or “aim for owned audiences.” 

Personally, I think it means taking a very hard look at how we approach audiences and resonate with them. 

Let that sink in for now.

Dig deeper: SEO beyond Google: Building your brand on Reddit, Quora, TikTok and more

Read more at Read More

Product studio now available within Google Business Profiles

Google Product Studio is now available within Google Business Profiles. This allows you to edit the background scenes of your products within your local listing using Google’s AI features. Product studio is already available within Google services including Google Merchant Center and Google Ads, and is now available within Google Business Profiles.

More details. Google community manager, Kara, posted about this news in the Google Business Profile forums and wrote:

“We’re excited to announce that you can now change the background scene of your product with Product Studio, a generative AI tool which helps you create engaging imagery to showcase your products.”

Here is what the feature looks like in my account – it says “Transform your product images with Al Quickly generate lifestyle scenes. To get started, upload a product image and select a theme.”

How it works. Google has a more detailed help document on this feature over here but here is how to quickly access this feature in your Business Profile.

  1. Go to your Business Profile. Learn how to find your profile.
  2. To generate a scene for your product, click Edit products  Get started.
  3. Select the image you want to edit.
    • Wait until the background from your image is removed.
  4. Select a theme for your product.
    • Choose a generated image from the editor.
  5. If you’re satisfied with the image, click Add image to product.
  6. You’ll receive a confirmation to save the image, click OK.

Once you saved the generated image for your product, from the product editor:

  1. Fill out the fields in the form.
  2. To submit your product, click Publish.

US only. Google did not that “Only merchants in the US can use scene generation in product editor.” Google added, “When you use Product Studio, you agree to the Terms of Service (TOS).”

Why we care. If you manage products within your Google Business Profile account, quickly being able to make those products look more appealing to searchers might be a great thing to increase conversions and sales. Of course, you want to make sure you are happy with how Google’s AI improves your images and only accept changes that you feel will make a positive change to those images.

Read more at Read More

How to Sell SEO Services in 5 Steps+ Expert Tips & Templates

Learning how to sell SEO isn’t easy.

Why?

Your prospects don’t want to buy SEO—they want to buy results.

I learned this the hard way.

After years of trial and error, I found a system. It consistently delivers what people want: more customers, revenue, and growth.

In fact, I’ve maintained a 75% close rate by focusing on one thing: demonstrating value before asking for the sale.

Think about it:

AI advancements. Nontraditional search results. Constant algorithm shifts.

SEO looks different every year. But these changes have made skilled SEOs more valuable than ever.

In this guide, you’ll learn my exact process for selling SEO services, backed by insights from industry veterans who’ve closed millions in SEO deals.

1. Prepare Your Sales Toolkit

As the saying goes, “Failing to prepare is preparing to fail.”

In other words, don’t wing it.

Sure, you can eventually throw stuff at the wall and see what sticks.

But if you want to successfully sell SEO services, you’ll need a few essentials.

Build Trust with Case Studies

Case studies are your bread and butter of selling.

They’re proof you know what you’re doing and an opportunity to show exactly what you can accomplish for your clients.

The key is to be specific.

You didn’t just increase demo requests.

You grew inbound leads by 40% with conversion-focused content marketing.

See the difference?

The more detail you provide, the easier it is for clients to envision these results for themselves.

And the likelier they are to trust you.

Taylor Scher – Case study

It’s especially helpful if you have a case study that addresses each client’s specific needs.

Kevin Indig, a growth advisor who has worked with companies like Nextdoor, Dropbox, Hims, and Reddit, believes there’s nothing more powerful than demonstrating real results.

Build out references and projects you can showcase. Very early on, it’s important to be able to show what the work for a client could look like at the hand of a live example.


If you’ve done it for someone else, you can do it for them, too.

Another perk?

Case studies are versatile.

Present them during client calls to get buy-in.

And highlight them on your site for prospects to read.

Skale – Highlighted case studies

Pro tip: New to SEO? Exchange free or discounted SEO work for case studies and testimonials. For example, offer a free technical audit to a small business. Once they start seeing results, ask if you can document their success story.


Collect High-Impact Testimonials

Case studies are great.

But testimonials hit differently.

Why?

Because they come directly from your happy clients.

Taylor Scher – Testimonials

When clients explain the impact you’ve had on their business, it boosts your credibility with prospects.

So, let them be your ambassadors.

Follow these steps to collect testimonials:

  • Text or email clients a short feedback form
  • Ask them to share specific results (metrics help)
  • Keep it simple: “What was your biggest win from working with us?”
  • Offer to draft it for them (just get their approval)

Even better: Ask for a video testimonial.

If clients are willing to have their face and brand associated with your business, that’s a ringing endorsement.

It doesn’t get much better than that.

No matter how you collect the testimonial, what matters most is that it comes from a reputable person in the company.

Aim for a VP of marketing or founder for the most significant impact.

Pro tip: Place your best testimonials on high-traffic pages, such as pricing, services, and contact pages. Highlight them in post-discovery call emails and on social media to seal the deal.


Create a Lead Qualification System

Time is money.

Don’t waste it on unqualified leads.

Before you even have a first call with your prospects, ensure they fit your ideal client profile (ICP).

Make sure they:

  • Are the right type of company you want to work with
  • Are actually in need of your services
  • Aren’t looking to just sell you on something (it happens more often than you think)

Pro tip: Asking for project details is usually the best way to qualify a lead. It also helps you set expectations for your role and prepare for the initial discovery call. This way, you come to the meeting with a personalized approach that reflects what they actually need and explains how you can help.


So, how do you have a qualifying process before a prospect even reaches out to you?

Your contact form is your best friend here.

Add qualifying questions that will tell you from the get-go if this lead has potential.

Contact form in lead qualification system

Here’s what your contact form should ask:

  • Budget range
  • Services they need
  • Project details
  • How they found you

In my experience, the responses will tell you whether they’re a legitimate lead 95% of the time.

Further reading: What Are Lead Magnets?


Invest in a CRM

I won’t lie—not having customer relationship management (CRM) software was probably the worst mistake I’ve made as a consultant.

It took me around six months to finally realize this.

That’s six months of lost revenue, wasted time, and unnecessary stress.

If I ever had more than five leads contact me at once, it was just pure chaos managing them with a spreadsheet.

If you’re a solo SEO consultant or freelancer, I can’t recommend using a CRM enough.

You’ll be able to:

  • Manage and track your prospects
  • See which leads are hot, warm, or cold
  • See how long it’s been since a lead contacted you
  • Qualify that lead by seeing which company they’re from

I would personally recommend HubSpot as the best all-in-one CRM–especially if you’re a new SEO.

It can manage all your sales data and give you access to a full range of marketing tools.

HubSpot – CRM for Small Business

But a few other CRMs worth looking into would be:

  • Semrush
  • Apollo.io
  • Salesforce
  • ClickUp

Decide on Your SEO Services

Want to know why many SEOs struggle to close deals?

They’re not specific enough about the SEO services they offer.

Here’s what I mean:

Don’t just say you “do SEO.”

Instead, decide what services you’ll offer and be specific when you describe them:

  • Technical SEO for enterprise companies
  • Content creation for B2B SaaS
  • Link building for ecommerce sites

Skale – Specific services

Niche down whenever possible.

Once you control a niche, whether B2B SaaS, home care, or legal SEO, it will be much easier to grow from there.

Rankings – Control your niche

I learned that the hard way when I first started posting on LinkedIn.

My niche and SEO posts were too broad.

The posts helped grow my followers quickly but not my revenue.

The majority of my followers were SEOs, not my actual ideal client profile.

So, I wasn’t generating leads.

That changed pretty quickly after I nailed down my niche.

After focusing my posts on B2B SaaS to help target my ICP—marketing VPs—I saw better results.

LinkedIn – Taylor Scher – B2B SaaS

Instead of competing with every SEO agency out there, I have an easier time being seen by my ICP.

Plus, they know my services are designed specifically for them.

Another important decision will be how you want to structure your services.

Kevin recommends creating a clear distinction between freelancer and consultant work.

You need to know very clearly whether you want to do the work (freelancer) or guide/advise (advisor). Early on, I did a lot of the leg work because that’s where I felt most comfortable, but that didn’t match the advisor prices I charged and wasn’t what I actually wanted to do.

So, it’s important to know what work you want to do and where you can provide the biggest impact. If you want to advise, don’t agree to do any busy work. Focus on the strategy.


You’ll likely have to learn your preferences by trial and error at first.

But don’t be afraid to adjust if you have to.

Choose Your Pricing Model

Like your services, you’ll want to have your pricing figured out upfront, too.

This works well for a few reasons:

  • You understand your worth before going into a client call
  • You can use it to qualify leads before they reach out
  • You avoid being lowballed during calls

Let me break down the four main ways to price SEO services:

First, there’s retainer pricing.

Clients pay a fixed monthly fee for ongoing SEO work. You commit to a set number of hours each month.

Next, there’s package pricing.

Taylor Scher – SEO Pricing

This is what I use. Clients can choose from different packages that best suit their needs for SEO.

Here’s how I structure it:

  • SEO audit: $1,500
  • SEO consulting: $2,000
  • Fractional SEO: $3,500
  • Full management SEO: $6,000

Your third option is value-based pricing.

It’s riskier but can pay off big. You set goal targets with clients and get bonus compensation when you hit them.

Finally, there’s hourly pricing.

You bill based on actual time spent on SEO tasks. This is great for one-off projects.

Pro tip: Price your services based on value. Low rates might seem like a path to more clients, but they can attract lower-quality clients. My highest-paying clients are always my best clients—they pay on time, are pleasant to work with, and trust my expertise.


Keep in mind that every model is dependent on what works for you.

I’m personally a big fan of package pricing.

But that’s because I want my work to prioritize value over output.

Optional: Gather Proof You Can Rank

Want to know one of my best-selling tools?

My own SEO results.

SEO results – Top pages

Think about it:

What better way to prove your SEO skills than having prospects find your website through Google?

It’s an instant trust signal.

In fact, organic search is one of my most consistent channels for new leads.

But here’s the catch:

Don’t just rank for random topics.

Rank for topics related to your services:

  • Best SEO agencies for lawyers
  • Technical SEO for Shopify websites
  • B2B SaaS SEO consultant

Google SERP – B2B SaaS SEO Consultant

There’s no denying that building SEO authority from scratch is tough.

I learned this firsthand when launching my site.

Competing against established SEO websites with zero website authority? Not easy.

Here’s my best advice: Run PPC campaigns while your SEO compounds.

PPC campaign

This keeps your lead pipeline full while you build organic visibility.

2. Find Prospects

Successful SEO sales require a reliable lead-generation system.

Here’s how I use both inbound and outbound marketing to build a steady stream of qualified prospects.

Inbound Prospects

Inbound marketing is the process of creating valuable content that attracts potential customers to your site when they’re actively looking for solutions.

This is the channel I’m most familiar with.

And the one that provides the most long-term value.

With inbound, you can build a long-term community that’s invested in your brand and create a stronger pipeline for leads at a much lower acquisition cost.

So, how do you find high-quality leads? It depends on your services and industry.

Personally, I’ve found the most success with:

  • SEO: Targeting high-intent searches coming directly from my audience
  • Reddit: Answering questions on subreddits where my ICP is
  • YouTube: Creating videos that help my audience overcome industry challenges. Works great for repurposing content, too.
  • Email marketing: Nurturing my email audience by sending them highly valuable content directly to their inbox
  • LinkedIn: Posting thought leadership content that establishes me as an expert within my field

LinkedIn –Taylor Scher establishes as expert

As you can see, organic search and social are among my top traffic sources:

[missing ss]

When you’re starting out, I recommend playing around with each channel.

Once you find the channel that works, double down on it.

Pro tip: Don’t stretch yourself too thin. If you’re solo, it’s better to comfortably handle one or two channels than struggle with five. The goal is to build a community interested in your brand through quality content—not spam your audience.


Outbound Prospects

Outbound marketing is when you reach out to prospects through various methods rather than waiting for them to find you.

While I’m pro inbound marketing, it can be inconsistent.

Outbound can make up for that.

There are a few different ways you can target outbound prospects.

But the ones that work the best for me are:

For example, I use a template similar to this to reach out to potential prospects through email:

You can also use LinkedIn for outreach, but don’t expect to take the same approach as email.

Focus on social selling.

Interact with your ICP and find something in common with them.

LinkedIn – Taylor Scher comments post

Then, reach out to them.

Don’t treat them as just another automated message.

Focus on building an actual relationship with them.

Then, once the time is right, see if they’d be open to a coffee chat.

Ask if they’re facing any challenges with SEO and offer advice on how to help.

Chances are, they might just be willing to delegate that to you, anyway.

But when you’re deciding which marketing channels to use, I recommend this approach:

Pro tip: Blend one outbound channel with one inbound. Outbound brings quick wins, while inbound builds long-term success. Together, they offer a balance of quick wins and sustainable growth for long-term success.


3. Offer Strategy Calls

This step is often called a “discovery call.”

But I recommend using strategy call instead.

Why?

Well, you want to demonstrate perceived value before prospects even contact you—an additional incentive for them to take that next step.

And “strategy” implies they’ll get something tangible out of this call.

For example, point out issues they can fix right after the call. It’s an easy way to show you’re invested in them and have done your research.

Taylor Scher – Book a Strrategy Call

Use this call to discuss your services and offer a glimpse into what working with you looks like to see the best conversion rates.

Learn More About Your Prospect

Use the first call strictly as a way to understand the company and what’s currently going on with its marketing efforts.

I even recommend using a questionnaire to help you run through the call.

Here’s what I ask every prospect:

  • What do you hope to achieve with this call?
  • What are your long-term SEO goals?
  • What’s your current SEO strategy?
  • What makes your product unique?
  • Who are your decision-makers?
  • How does your sales process work?
  • What sets you apart from competitors?

I usually ask these questions to help prepare myself for the SEO audit in the next step.

Customer Insights Template

But prospects also appreciate that you seem invested in their company.

You’re obviously not just pitching yourself and are actively looking to learn more about them—something that’s often rare during the discovery phase.

Focus on Early Wins

Here’s a persuasive tactic: Give prospects actionable tips during the call.

Point out easy fixes they’ve missed to highlight your expertise and prove your worth.

For example:

“I noticed your product pages aren’t targeting money keywords. Here’s a quick fix that could boost your traffic…”

Or

“I researched some easy keywords you’d be able to rank for quickly. This includes…”

Keyword Magic Tool – How to grow tomatoes – Keywords

This gives prospects a reason to develop early trust with you.

This is something my friend Jacob Statler, founder of Stat Digital, highly recommends doing:

Show your prospects how you can get them quick wins that tie back to revenue. If possible, get them a win before working together during the sales process.
SEOs often give away high-level audits that they auto-generated with a tool, but these are usually not very actionable. I like to create mini-action plans of easy-to-implement opportunities. This builds trust and shows competency.


And if that quick win translates to results, all the better for you.

Highlight What Their Competitors Are Doing

This is such an underrated strategy.

If you think I’m joking, try it out for yourself.

I’ve been stumped before getting clients to commit to something.

But the moment I mention a direct competitor doing something they aren’t, they get tunnel vision.

This includes:

  • Their competitors’ top traffic channels
  • Articles their competitors have that they don’t
  • Articles their competitors created against them (this is my go-to if a client is ever opposed to creating alternative or category content)

Traffic Analytics – World Wildlife – Traffic Journey

It’s almost an immediate way to motivate your prospects, especially if you’re facing early resistance to a tactic you’re recommending.

You can conduct competitor research in a few ways, but I usually recommend using the following tools:

  • Semrush competitor analysis tools
  • SpyFu

Pro tip: Offer the SEO audit at the end of your strategy call or follow up with an email to get it scheduled right away.


4. Schedule an SEO Audit

Think about how many agencies and consultants are pitching your prospects right now. Chances are you aren’t the only one being considered.

If you don’t make an impression, you’ll get lost in the crowd.

The solution?

SEO audits.

Pro tip: Always lock in the audit with a hard date. Leaving the audit timeline open is a deal-killer. I schedule the audit presentation right after the discovery call. Vague follow-ups kill momentum.


Position the Audit as a Roadmap, Not a Selling Technique

Audits are my secret sauce for selling SEO services.

Why do they work so well?

I go above and beyond. While others send automated reports, I tailor each audit to my client.

This means I:

  • Never use a template; I always start fresh
  • Look at their product/offering/industry/ICP to put together my recommendations
  • Focus on specific tactics that drive value and have an expected outcome

I’ve found it not only gets additional buy-in but also keeps leads moving through the pipeline.

Taylor Scher – Audit as a roadmap

Once prospects see the issues affecting their site, they’re way more motivated to get started with services.

But this isn’t a selling technique.

If clients see the audit as a pitch, then you’re just another company pitching them.

When you position your audit as a roadmap, it’s much easier to present a legitimate vision for the client.

Ben Goodey, founder of the SEO growth agency Spicy Margarita, agrees that leading with value is essential.

My top advice for those looking to sell SEO? Know your audience doesn’t want to buy SEO. They’re business owners or team leaders who want to buy results—that is what you should focus on selling.

In my experience closing clients, the more freely you share your “how,” the more trust and enthusiasm you build with a client. So, share your tactics openly—people are typically willing to take a risk working with you if you’re an expert.


Taylor Scher – SEO Audit roadmap

The idea is that the audit should be so helpful prospects can take the information and use it on their own.

“But why would you do that?”

Sure, it sounds like it wouldn’t make sense. But think about most companies that lack internal marketing teams.

Most of the time, they don’t want to handle marketing and SEO themselves.

They would rather outsource it to another team.

So, even though they COULD take the audit and run, chances are they’d rather have someone else manage it anyway.

Plus, if they do decide to move forward, it shows their level of trust in what you’re proposing.

Which is a great sign for longer-term engagements.

If you didn’t schedule the audit at the end of your strategy call, use this template to follow up by email:

Build a Reliable Stack for Conducting Your Audits

I keep my tech stack pretty consistent for most audits.

The ones I find helpful and recommend using are:

  • Google Search Console: Find crawling/indexing issues, quick SEO wins, and potential content topics
  • Screaming Frog: Uncover large-scale technical issues like missing canonicals or JavaScript issues
  • Google Analytics 4: Extremely useful if a client has set up conversion tracking. See what pages have previously driven conversions and how you can double down on that.
  • Semrush site auditing features: Identify housekeeping items to take care of, such as orphan pages, broken links, and redirect chains

Site Audit – Backlinko – Overview

Focus on Value, Value, Value

When you’re delivering the audit, focus on value.

And I don’t mean to just stuff it with data and overwhelm the client.

Remember: This is also for you, not just the client.

I find it helpful to start with an overall strategy, like how I’ll increase revenue by X% through SEO.

SEO Strategy Objectives

Then, I recommend SEO tactics that will help the client achieve the goal.

But this isn’t the time to be vague—I show exactly how I’ll hit that number.

SEO Tactic Objectives In Order of Priority

When you start with a goal, the client has an easier time understanding what you’re recommending and why.

So, let’s say the goal for a B2B SaaS company is to increase demos and freemium signups through SEO.

You’d focus your audit on:

Side note: There will be times when clients still choose not to work with you despite all your work—and that’s okay. As long as your overall close rate increases, that’s all that matters.


5. Send a Proposal or SOW

Now comes the easiest part.

Sending out the SEO proposal or statement of work (SOW).

If you ran your audit properly and the client showed interest in what you had to say, the proposal should be a piece of cake.

Still, there are a few things to keep in mind during this step of the process.

Include Audit Findings

For the beginning of the proposal, include findings from the audit.

It doesn’t have to be anything fancy.

I usually use:

  • Google Docs for the template
  • Canva for custom graphics
  • Data screenshots if I have access to GA4 and GSC
  • Google Sheets if forecasting is involved

You’ll want to touch on the recommended priority tactics and how you’ll approach them.

SEO proposal for "x client"

You can also include a monthly timetable to visualize how you would structure each month of the engagement.

For me, it usually looks like this:

  • Month 1: Start with conversion rate optimization, technical SEO, optimizing your product pages, going after quick wins, and taking care of any on-page housekeeping
  • Month 2: Continue going after quick wins, start building out BoFu content
  • Month 3: Continue creating BoFu content, creating link assets, and backlink opportunities
  • Month 4-6: Build out a solid profile of MoFu content, continue going after quick wins

Help your clients understand how you’ll approach each month for the engagement.

This way, they’ll have a better reference point for understanding what you’ll be working on.

The success behind selling SEO comes from value, trust, and transparency.

Don’t neglect any of them.

Highlight Your Goals/Strategy/KPIs

This will be similar to what you did for the audit but in more detail.

First, lay them out as a goals section.

Then, explain specifically how you’re going to work towards those goals.

Here’s an example of what this looks like on my proposals:

Highlight your SEO Goals

Now, let’s break this process down.

First, I summarize each goal:

“Goal #1: Increase the quantity and quality of demo requests and signups coming from SEO.”

Then, I add more detail to show I understand what success looks like:

“The main goal of this engagement will be to increase the quantity and quality of leads from SEO (and other channels). We’ll want to establish a benchmark for demo requests/signups and then measure that against the performance of the engagement.”

Finally, I outline my action plan:

“To do this, I’ll help your team focus on sales enablement content that can help convince users to take that next step. This will also involve building out bottom-of-funnel traffic that can bring in qualified users who are in the market for your type of product.”

I also include a section that discusses the main opportunity behind the project.

Project Oportunity

What’s the ultimate value that’s going to come out of this engagement?

I’ll often structure it similarly to the goals listed above.

But it’s usually a more general overview of the project as a whole.

You can also have a section on KPIs.

I generally save specific KPIs for the actual onboarding meeting (once they’ve signed the proposal), but I’ll usually have a section in the proposal that looks like this:

Success Metrics

So, there are no specific percentages tied to those KPIs, just what we’ll be prioritizing.

Detail Contract Terms (Make Them Fair to the Prospect)

Ahh, the contract terms.

The fun part.

I highly recommend working with a lawyer on this one.

Your contract terms will be pretty consistent across most proposals, but they should be fair to you and the prospect.

The lawyer can help you put terms in place that safeguard you and your business during any engagement.

As for the actual general terms, I recommend including:

  • The hard start date so both parties can prepare appropriately
  • The length of the engagement so clients know how much to budget for
  • The pricing terms and dates
  • If the contract is rolling, month to month, or a fixed date project
  • The flexibility of the contract, meaning if clients are locked in or able to cancel at any time

Surfer SEO Blog – SEO contract template

Once you have that set, all you need now is a signature.

Then, you’re basically ready to get started with your client.

Bonus Tips to Keep in Mind When Selling SEO Services

Are you tired of hearing me talk yet?

I hope not.

I have some bonus tips that will help you refine your selling approach and close more leads.

Master the Follow-Up

My personal motto is simple:

Keep following up until you get a response.

Why?

Most leads won’t respond on the first try. Or the second. Or even the third.

So, reach out to prospects once a week to see where they are in the process.

This is where your CRM becomes your best friend.

It helps you:

  • Track when you last reached out
  • Set follow-up reminders
  • Note any previous interactions
  • Monitor prospect engagement

CRM in the process

But here’s the catch:

This aggressive follow-up strategy works best with warm prospects.

Cold prospects? Not so much.

Cold vs Warm Leads

I won’t tell you to annoy your prospects.

But don’t be shy, either.

Use Traditional Sales Psychology

I can’t believe I’m saying this, but I’m extremely grateful for that Sales 101 class I took in college.

I might’ve treated it as a joke in college, but that class has helped me drive thousands in monthly recurring revenue (MRR) just by using traditional sales techniques.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not a schmoozer by any means whatsoever.

But psychologist Robert Cialdini’s principles of persuasion work extremely well throughout this entire process:

The psychology of persuasion

Reciprocity

People feel compelled to return favors, which is why free audits work so well.

When someone gives us something, we instinctively want to reciprocate.

Taylor Scher – Reciprocity

Not in a manipulative way but as a natural response to receiving something valuable.

This subtle tactic can help you turn prospects into clients.

Social Proof

Your reputation is one of your greatest sales tools.

People want reassurance that they’re making the right choice—especially for something as important as SEO.

You can pitch yourself all you want, but if you don’t have any proof of results, why should they believe you?

The more people who vouch for you, the more people will trust you.

This could be:

  • Case studies
  • Brands you’ve worked with
  • Testimonials

LinkedIn – Taylor Scher – Testimonials

Whatever it is, let your existing/previous clients be your most vocal supporters.

Authority

Establishing authority is huge for building trust.

LinkedIn – Taylor Scher – Establishing authority

When people see you as an authority in your field, they’re more likely to trust what you have to say.

You can:

  • Post content specific to your ICP on LinkedIn
  • Write for highly authoritative websites
  • Collab with well-known industry leaders
  • Be a guest on or host webinars or podcasts

Podcasts – Apple – Taylor Scher

This establishes your expertise and authority in your field.

With that positioning, people already have a sense of trust in me before we even meet on a call.

It also makes prospects more excited to work with me.

My professional reputation adds a perceived value to my services.

As a result, prospects aren’t as likely to question my prices since they know the value my work delivers.

People don’t want to work with the smooth-talking ‘SEO expert’ who promises the world but doesn’t deliver.

They want a partner or team member they can relate to and trust.

Someone who’s passionate about what they do, genuinely invested in helping them, and overall seems like a fun person to work with.

That’s why I’ve been so focused on demonstrating value over selling.

YouTube – Taylor Scher – SEO

Focus on being seen as a partner, not just another vendor.

Scarcity

Scarcity works surprisingly well.

People get FOMO.

It’s a common human experience.

As a solo consultant, I’m not interested in scaling to take on unlimited client profiles.

I want a small batch of handpicked SEO clients who are invested in working with me.

Usually, this comes out to five to 10 monthly clients based on the scope of services.

Taylor Scher – Book an Intro Call

If I stretch myself too thin, I can’t give every client the attention they deserve.

So, if I have multiple prospects who are interested in that last position, my availability becomes scarce.

And as my scarcity increases, pricing can follow.

That’s not to say you should have leads fight over that last spot.

But it is something to mention to your prospects, as it can make you seem like a more desirable candidate.

Keep Leads Interested

While each hard-set date will help keep prospects interested, they can still get distracted.

Other agencies may poach them, they can get pulled in new directions, or their schedule may become too tight.

Even the slightest hesitation can derail your efforts.

So, beyond moving them throughout the sales process, you can keep them interested in a few ways.

Post Client Wins on LinkedIn

Case studies work.

We know this.

But it’s another thing to put it out there for everyone to see–especially when you can use it as an opportunity to explain that case study in detail.

It also makes you way more desirable, so it might even trigger FOMO for them if they feel like others might reach out to you because of that case study.

LinkedIn – Taylor Scher – Case studies work

Even from one case study post, I had three to four qualified leads reach out.

Provide a Reference from a Previous Client

This shows a huge amount of transparency that is surprisingly rare.

LinkedIn – Taylor Scher – Recommendations

Even before they ask, offer them a client referral from a similar industry.

Focus on the Relationship, Not the Sale

People buy from individuals they trust, not just from salespeople.

Especially in the early stages, when a prospect can easily move on to another offering, you can keep yourself memorable by focusing on developing a relationship.

Be likable.

Be funny.

Be authentic.

Be personal.

Go beyond just being seen as an SEO provider.

LinkedIn – Taylor Scher – Relationship

Treat every prospect as an opportunity to develop valuable relationships, not generate sales.

And even if the lead falls through, that relationship still has value.

It can lead to future opportunities like a referral or a personal connection request.

Even if that lead doesn’t work out, it’s still an opportunity to expand your network for future opportunities.

Sell SEO Services Like a Pro

Selling in SEO is just a matter of delivering early value to your prospect.

I’m not even a salesperson.

I’m just an SEO who had to force myself to learn sales.

And honestly, if I can do it, you can do it, too.

Learn how to translate the value of your work into a language your prospects understand.

Now that you know how to sell SEO services, you can start landing clients more consistently.

But first, make sure you have the right tools to deliver the results your clients deserve.

Check out our article on the best SEO agency tools on the market.

Including some free options you can use today.

The post How to Sell SEO Services in 5 Steps<br>+ Expert Tips & Templates appeared first on Backlinko.

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SEO automation: Tools and tips for SEO success

SEO is like a never-ending story. There are always things to do. And these things need your undivided attention, from keyword research to content audits and performance reporting. Many of these are repetitive, recurring, and time-consuming. And that’s why you need SEO automation. 

What is SEO automation?

By automating SEO, you use tools and software to do the repetitive optimization tasks for you. These tools don’t eliminate the need for a person to be involved, but they can do the heavy lifting. These tasks often contain data-heavy and time-consuming work. 

Think of all the manual work you must do to run an SEO campaign. You have to crawl your website for technical errors, do keyword research, track how your ranking develops, and generate insightful reports — important work but tedious. SEO automation tools take these tasks and do them for you. These tools work faster and more accurately than you do. As a result, you can focus on the fun stuff — the creative and strategic work. 

For example, you could manually try to find broken links on your site, but that would take forever. An automated tool can do that in minutes and provide a nice report. For your content, keyword research tools can generate a list of terms to target in just a few minutes. You’ll even get search volume data and information about the level of competition. 

The benefits of SEO automation

Automating your SEO has many advantages. Handing over repetitive tasks can save you a lot of time, leaving you with more time to work on your strategy and content. Automation is also more accurate in handling data, which leads to fewer errors and, thus, more dependable data. SEO automation streamlines your work and allows you to scale quickly once your site grows.

Tasks you can automate right now

Today, most SEO automation tools are designed to handle specific tasks. We’ll list the most common tasks you can automate.

Keyword research

Keyword research is the foundation of SEO. It is also very time-consuming to do manually. You’re looking at search volumes, competition, relevancy, and more, and you’ll have to make deductions from that. It’s not weird that almost everyone uses keyword research tools such as Semrush and Wincher to do the hard work.

Keyword research tools can automatically:

  • Generate lists with relevant keywords for your topic or niche.
  • Give essential supporting data such as search volume and difficulty.
  • Suggest related keywords that you can use to build up your.

Here’s an example. Let’s say you run a gardening blog. Keyword research tools like Semrush can identify not only popular keywords like “best gardening tools” but also related terms such as “gardening tool maintenance” or “best hoes for gardening in specific conditions.” These insights allow you to build content clusters that improve your site’s authority.   

Content optimization

Content optimization is another field in which SEO automation comes in. For instance, Yoast SEO can analyze your content to make sure it is properly optimized for search engines. An SEO tool like this gives feedback on:

  • How you use keywords in your content and suggest improvements to make.
  • How readable is your content, and are your sentences too complex?
  • Where and how you can add relevant links to other content on your site. 
  • Improvements to make to your meta descriptions and titles (with AI in Yoast SEO’s case)

Yoast SEO is a very popular plugin for WordPress and Shopify. It helps you optimize each post or page on your site to make it user-friendly, search-engine-friendly, and, of course, make that process as easy as possible.  

Website audits

Automatically auditing your website regularly is also a popular form of SEO automation. Such an audit can help you catch issues that might influence your site’s performance. These can include:

  • Broken links.
  • Slow loading speeds.
  • Missing meta tags.
  • Duplicate content.  

Tools like Screaming Frog or Sitebulb can perform these audits automatically. These tools even let you schedule recurring audits, so you’re always updated on your site’s health. In addition, the tools provide actionable reports that highlight what needs fixing.  

Rank tracking

There are many ways to gauge your site’s performance; one of the most important is to check its rankings. However, tracking your rankings manually is a lot of work. Luckily, rank-tracking tools such as Wincher, Semrush, and Ahrefs make this incredibly easy. These tools automate this process and provide you with regular updates on your keyword positions.  

Among the things these tools can track are:

  • Changes in your rankings over time.
  • The performance of specific target keywords.
  • Competitor rankings for similar keywords.  

You get all kinds of reporting for your rankings. Plus, with the built-in alerting systems, you are always on top of things without constantly monitoring them.

SEO reporting

Another part of your SEO work that can be automated is reporting. Building custom reports is grueling work that can take hours of precious time. Luckily, tools like Looker Studio can combine data from different sources, such as Google Analytics, Search Console, Semrush, and others, to build custom dashboards that update automatically.  

With proper SEO automation tools, you can create reusable templates for your reports, so you have something predefined to start from. These can also be generated automatically at scheduled times to save you even more time.   

How to get started with SEO automation

At one point, you will be ready to start automating your SEO workflow. But where do you start?

Find the tasks you need to automate

Think about your work and find the tasks that take the most time or recur most often. Such tasks are often the best options to automate. For example, if you spend much of your time on reporting, that would be a good option.  

Choose the right tools

Not all tools are created equal, so choose one that does what you want them to do. Here are some options, but there are many others.

  • Yoast SEO: Optimizes on-page SEO and provides content suggestions.  
  • Semrush: Offers keyword research, content outlines, and optimization
  • Google Search Console: Tracks performance and identifies site issues.  
  • Screaming Frog: Conducts in-depth site audits.  
  • Looker Studio: Automates reporting by integrating with Google Analytics and other data sources.  

Start small

Diving head-first into SEO automation might be exciting, but it will probably not end well. Please start small. Pick a couple of time-consuming tasks and see how you can make them more manageable and insightful. Once you see what works and what doesn’t, build from there.

Final thoughts on automating your SEO

SEO automation is a handy way to save time, improve data accuracy, and scale your work. We’re not looking to replace people but rather support them in their jobs. Tools can do many tasks, from keyword research to audits and data analysis. This leaves you more time for your high-impact work! 

Start small and experiment with a range of tools. You’ll find what works and what doesn’t, which will help you fine-tune your process. Ultimately, you want SEO automation to help you work smarter, not harder. 

The post SEO automation: Tools and tips for SEO success appeared first on Yoast.

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Google reverses stance on Performance Max campaign controls

How to create and optimize Google Ads custom segment audiences

Google acknowledged that Performance Max (PMax) campaigns can be controlled through API placement exclusions — contradicting months of its own documentation and support guidance, according to new research from ad tech firm Optmyzr.

This revelation gives advertisers more programmatic control over their PMax campaigns than previously thought possible, potentially saving significant time and resources in campaign management.

The big picture. Performance Max campaigns, Google’s AI-driven ad format, have been a source of frustration for advertisers seeking more granular control over where their ads appear.

Lead up. Earlier this year we saw that despite Navah Hopkins, Brand Evangelist of Optmyzr, reporting that Google said that API based placements exclusions don’t work for PMax campaigns, multiple advertisers were reporting the opposite.

By the numbers. Optmyzr ran an experiment, running from Dec. 30 to Jan. 21. It showed:

  • Zero ad spend on excluded placements after implementing API controls.
  • Complete effectiveness of API-based exclusions, despite Google’s previous claims.
  • Faster implementation compared to manual UI controls.

Behind the scenes. Google’s documentation and AI help center had explicitly stated that placement exclusions would only work through their user interface, not via API.

  • Multiple support channels reinforced this incorrect guidance.
  • This misinformation was shared for months.
  • Google has since updated its stance after Optmyzr’s findings.

What they’re saying. Following the experiment, Google admitted that placement exclusions work through both the API and UI as we see in this response from Ginny Marvin, Google Ads Liaison:

Why we care. Performance Max campaigns represent a significant portion of many advertisers’ Google Ads spend, but the lack of control over where ads appear has been a major pain point. This situation also highlights a broader point: you shouldn’t take platform limitations as gospel, even when they come directly from Google. Testing and verification could reveal hidden capabilities that provide competitive advantages.

Bottom line. This discovery highlights a broader issue in ad tech: platform documentation doesn’t always reflect actual capabilities, requiring advertisers to actively test and verify functionality.

What’s next. As advertisers, you should:

  • Review your PMax campaign controls.
  • Consider implementing API-based exclusions for more efficient management.
  • Maintain active oversight despite automated controls.
  • Confidently question capabilities they may have strong reason to believe isn’t true.

Between the lines. The finding suggests other undocumented capabilities might exist across Google’s ad platforms, encouraging advertisers to question and test official limitations.

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The top 5 strategic SEO mistakes enterprises make (and how to avoid them)

The top 5 strategic SEO mistakes enterprises make (and how to avoid them)

Enterprise SEO comes with unique challenges: massive websites, coordination across departments, and the need for a strategic vision.

Without careful planning, common SEO mistakes can lead to wasted resources and underperformance in the search results.

This article explores some of the top strategic mistakes enterprises make with SEO and, more importantly, how to avoid them.

1. Failing to secure the ‘right’ buy-in for SEO initiatives

When you get buy-in from the right people in your organization, you can rest assured the SEO program will have more resources and prioritization.

This is not just about the CMO seeing the value in SEO, either. SEO must be seen as a strategic business initiative all the way to the top.

Case in point: An enterprise client of my SEO agency knew that their SEO program would only be successful if every department with a stake in the website’s success were on board.

The company chairman called a meeting to discuss the value of SEO.

This is not common but was necessary for this project. Every key team got behind the SEO program, and the company experienced massive results.

So, what are some of the common challenges when securing buy-in? One of the biggest is a lack of understanding of SEO’s value.

The C-suite is working hard on their own initiatives and areas of expertise. They may not fully grasp how SEO contributes to business growth and revenue.

This is where you come in.

  • Show them the data, like how people are searching for the things your organization provides.
  • Explain to them how SEO supports the customer journey in many different ways.
  • Demonstrate how SEO can support company goals.
  • Illustrate how SEO drives revenue and its long-term ROI compared to initiatives like digital advertising.
  • Address common misconceptions about SEO as a non-essential or supplementary activity.
  • Pilot a small project or address the “quick wins” and give tangible results.
  • Propose an SEO plan that can be executed with current resources, but that could be scaled later.
  • Assign an SEO champion within each department to advocate for best practices and drive implementation across teams.

Having SEO conversations can be an eye-opener for leadership. And it may be just the thing they need to take notice of SEO as an essential marketing program.

Once you get buy-in from the right groups, you can break down those business silos that can slow progress in an enterprise organization.

Dig deeper: How to convince leadership why they can’t ignore SEO

2. Underinvesting in SEO continuing education or training

Continuing education is one of the most powerful tools in your SEO team’s toolbelt.

It can:

  • Help your team stay proactive, not reactive, in the ever-changing world of SEO.
  • Facilitate better collaboration between internal teams and external SEO vendors.
  • Empower your team to innovate and test new strategies.

Any good SEO professional or team will naturally want to stay up-to-date with what’s happening in the SEO world. It’s a requirement to succeed.

But the question is, how are you supporting them in their continuing education?

Make time

Ensure that employees are allowed the time for continuing education, not just working on projects.

For employees, this means not trying to cram learning in after hours but as a part of their regular work week without feeling stressed about it.

Give support

What educational opportunities resonate with your SEO professional or team?

Give them the freedom to choose and the budget to buy. This includes virtual and in-person events, professional memberships and materials.

Foster knowledge sharing

Since you’re working on making SEO a strategic business initiative, all stakeholders will benefit from learning about SEO.

Invest in SEO training for other teams beyond marketing, for example, the C-suite or IT, to create a baseline knowledge of SEO at the company.

Host internal workshops regularly to share insights and updates about SEO, too.

Test what’s been learned

Encourage your team to test what they learn through small-scale experiments or pilot projects.

Dig deeper: 5 questions to evaluate any SEO training course

3. Ineffective hiring and onboarding of an SEO agency 

When companies are ready to partner with SEO agencies, they must hire and onboard effectively for the best chance at a productive partnership.

Missteps here can lead to misaligned goals, wasted resources and subpar performance. So what to do?

When hiring an SEO agency, be sure to:

  • Properly vet the agency.
  • Evaluate the agency’s company ethics and level of expertise.
  • Figure out if the services offered are actually what you require to succeed.
  • Make sure the agency’s processes mesh well with your company culture.
  • Watch out for any red flags that signal a poor-quality agency.

The onboarding process is just as important as the hiring process. Here are some important things to consider as you forge a new partnership with an SEO agency:

  • Make sure they know your business: Share detailed insights into your company’s history, products, services and market positioning.
  • Define roles and responsibilities: Clearly outline the tasks and expectations for both your team and the agency.
  • Establish regular communication channels: Set up consistent meetings and reporting to keep things aligned.
  • Set realistic expectations: Agree on achievable timelines and outcomes.

Dig deeper: How to hire an SEO agency: The definitive guide

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4. Overlooking the value of maintaining high-quality content

Enterprise companies usually need volumes of content for their SEO programs to compete in the search results.

With the sometimes overwhelming amount of content needed, it can be easy to lose sight of quality while trying to hit targets.

With multiple teams and departments contributing content, enterprises also struggle with inconsistency in quality, tone and SEO best practices.

Here are some tips for high-quality enterprise SEO content:

Establish centralized guidelines and quality control

Managing content at the enterprise level requires consistency and collaboration:

  • Create a centralized content quality framework for all departments. Include standards for tone, formatting, SEO best practices and E-E-A-T.
  • Provide cross-departmental training to establish a baseline understanding of SEO principles for all contributors.
  • Consider a dedicated quality control person in each department to review and approve all content before publication.

Prioritize search intent 

Focus on creating content that addresses the needs of your target audience first. Decide how you will maintain this quality while scaling content as needed.

Meeting search intent will result in higher engagement and better rankings than producing high volumes of generic content.

Use tools to monitor and optimize performance

Use analytics to measure content performance and identify gaps. Regularly refresh top-performing, outdated or underperforming content to maintain relevance and effectiveness.

I recommend spending 50% of the time refreshing older content.

Ensure AI-generated content meets quality standards

While AI tools can be valuable for scaling production, human oversight is key.

Have a system in place to uphold quality when using AI-generated content. Make sure it meets your brand’s standards and complies with Google’s quality guidelines.

Dig deeper: How to survive the search results when you’re using AI tools for content

5. Not prioritizing technical SEO 

Enterprise websites can be massive, creating unique challenges for technical SEO. Unfortunately, these challenges compound at scale.

Even the best SEO strategies can fail if technical SEO isn’t handled well.

But technical SEO at the enterprise level isn’t just about fixing bugs; it’s about creating sustainable processes.

Prioritize processes and cross-departmental responsibilities

Enterprise websites need workflows for technical SEO issues. Start by creating clear systems that outline how to identify, prioritiz, and resolve issues.

Assign ownership to specific teams, such as IT or web development, to ensure a quick response when challenges arise.

Finally, educate teams about the importance of technical SEO and their responsibilities.

For example, content creators should structure new pages with proper tags and metadata, while developers should ensure site changes are vetted for SEO implications.

When all departments work together, technical SEO becomes a seamless part of the workflow.

Use automation and tools to manage complexity

With massive websites and multiple teams, automation and tools are helpful for enterprise SEO.

Here are some tips:

  • Centralize and align your toolset: As much as possible, streamline your SEO tools into a unified system that integrates with the platforms you use.
  • Focus on scalable tools: Invest in tools that can grow with your website’s needs.
  • Automate the repetition: Use automation for predictable, time-intensive technical SEO tasks.
  • Monitor, refine, repeat: Regularly audit tool performance and workflows to ensure tools are aligned with your SEO goals as they evolve.

Plan for long-term maintenance

As your website grows, so will its technical challenges. A proactive approach will sustain SEO performance:

  • Schedule technical audits before major initiatives.
  • Stay ahead of the curve by aligning site initiatives with emerging search engine changes.
  • Make sure SEO is built into any major update to a website.

Avoiding common SEO mistakes is the path to enterprise success

Success at the enterprise level is defined by adopting the right mindset and workflows. This means creating a culture that prioritizes SEO as a strategic initiative and embedding it into every department that has a stake in the website.

With a clear vision, a commitment to improvements and the right processes, your enterprise can stand out in the search results and achieve sustained search growth.

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Yahoo testing new AI Search features

Yahoo appears to be testing some new AI related features within Yahoo Search. In fact, some are seeing Yahoo show a banner at the top of Yahoo’s home page that says, “We’re building a new yahoo.com to show more of what’s interesting to you.”

The new search features include:

  • AI powered chat
  • AI generated answers within search

Note, you need to login to Yahoo to see the new Yahoo Search features.

AI chat in Yahoo. For the past week or so, we’ve been seeing signs of Yahoo incorporating AI Chat features in Yahoo Search. Now, we are seeing that more prominently in the Yahoo Search interface.

Here are some screenshots from Sachin Patel on X:

Here is a screenshot of the message about the new Yahoo and I am told the try now link goes to Yahoo Search:

Here is the Yahoo Search home page:

The Yahoo Search bar with AI elements built within it:

Here are what these AI Chat answers look like:

Yahoo AI Generated Answers. Yahoo Search is also incorporating AI generated answers directly in the Yahoo Search results. These seem to be powered by OpenAI and show directly in Yahoo Search, where you see a snippet of the AI generated answer and then can click to expand the answer to show more:

Here are more screenshots:

More information. Is this part of Yahoo’s renewed return to Search from 2023, which we were expecting in 2024. Or is this just some more basic AI licensed services within Yahoo Search. It is hard to tell but we will be watching.

Why we care. With all these new AI elements that everyone is rolling out, differentiating search features can be easier than ever before. Here are signs of Yahoo making some of these efforts.

As I said, we have been expecting Yahoo to make its comeback to search for a while now and it seems we may be seeing some elements of that.

I for one am looking forward to a new Yahoo Search experience.

Read more at Read More

24 Up-To-Date PPC Statistics to Know

Pay-per-click (PPC) advertising is one of the most effective paid channels helping businesses increase visibility and build awareness.

If you’d like to learn about the state of PPC in 2025, find the latest data on PPC usage, most used ad platforms, and PPC benchmarks, we’ve curated a list of 24 essential PPC statistics to help you answer these questions.

General PPC Statistics

  1. Among surveyed pay-per-click (PPC) marketers, Google (98%), Facebook (76%) and Instagram (70%) are the most widely used advertising platforms (Statista

    Advertising Platforms for PPC Marketers

    Here’s a full breakdown:

    Digital Advertising Platform Share of PPC Professionals
    Google (excluding YouTube) 98%
    Facebook 76%
    Instagram 70%
    Microsoft (Bing) 67%
    YouTube 67%
    LinkedIn 48%
    TikTok 31%
    Pinterest 24%
    Amazon 17%
    X (Twitter) 15%
    Reddit 11%
    Apple Search 11%
    Snapchat 9%
    Quora 4%
    Yandex 2%
    Baidu 1%
    Yahoo! Japan 1%
    Other 6%
  2. Among PPC practitioners with a monthly budget between $50K and $500K, Google, Facebook, and YouTube are the top 3 most used advertising platforms (PPCsurvey

    Advertising Platforms for PPC Practitioners

    Here are the exact numbers:

    Ad Platform Adoption ($50K – $500K PPC budget)
    Google (excluding YouTube) 99%
    Facebook 79%
    YouTube 75%
    Instagram 74%
    Microsoft (Bing) 73%
    LinkedIn 46%
    TikTok 28%
    Pinterest 20%
    Amazon 15%
    X (Twitter) 11%
    Reddit 10%
    Apple Search 7%
    Snapchat 6%
    Quora 4%
    Yandex 1%
    Baidu 1%
    Yahoo! Japan 1%
    Other 8%
  3. 73% of B2C marketers stated their organization used PPC advertising in the last 12 months (Content Marketing Institute)
  4. 64% of B2B marketing professionals say they used PPC advertising at their organization in the past year, which is only behind the usage rate of social media advertising at 73% (Content Marketing Institute)
  5. 93% of marketers say pay-per-click (PPC) as a marketing channel is “effective” or “highly effective”, making it the 2nd most effective channel after content marketing (96%) (eMarketer)

    Marketing Channels That Are Effective

  6. Only 10% of surveyed marketing professionals identify PPC as a primary focus for their budget allocation (eMarketer)
  7. Among surveyed marketing specialists worldwide, 49% claim it became harder managing PPC campaigns today than 2 years ago (PPCsurvey)
  8. Among in-house teams, the average monthly PPC spend is $950,000, while freelancers usually manage an ad budget of around $575,000 per month (PPCsurvey

    Monthly PPC spend: In-house vs. Freelancer

    Here are the exact numbers:

    Monthly PPC spend In-house Freelancer
    More than $3M 5% 3%
    Between $500K and $3M 14% 10%
    Between $50K and $500K 41% 38%
    Between $5K and $50K 29% 33%
    Under $5K 11% 16%
  9. According to surveyed B2B marketers, PPC advertising ranks as the most effective paid channel for content marketing activities, with 61% of respondents citing it as effective, followed by social media advertising (49%), and sponsorships (48%) (Content Marketing Institute)

Search Ads Statistics

  1. Paid search spending in the US is estimated to reach $124.59 billion in 2024, showing an 11.1% year-over-year increase (eMarketer)
  2. The average cost-per-click for advertisements on Google ads stood at $1.16 (eMarketer)

    The average CPC for advertisements on Google ads stood at $1.16

  3. The average cost per click for search ads across multiple industries on Amazon was $1.50 (eMarketer)
  4. The average benchmark bounce rate for paid search is 43.9% (Contentsquare)
  5. The average click-through rate for Google search ads is 3.17%, based on data collected from multiple industries (WordStream)

    The average click-through rate for Google search ads is 3.17%

  6. On average, paid search campaigns are reported to generate a conversion rate of 2.55% (Contentsquare)
  7. Paid search accounts for 29.7% of total media ad spending in the US (eMarketer)
  8. Analysis of over 43 billion website visits found that paid search accounts for 23% of traffic share, behind direct (27.6%) and organic search (26.7%) (Contentsquare)

    Paid search drives 23% of traffic from over 43 billion website visits

  9. The share of new visitor traffic attributed to paid search is 27.6%, which is more than any other marketing channel (Contentsquare)
  10. Paid search accounts for 39.5% market share of digital advertising, more than any other advertising format (display, video or audio) (IAB)
  11. In the US, Google dominates the search advertising market, accounting for 50.5% of the total search ad spending (eMarketer)

    In the US, Google dominates the search advertising market with 50.5%

  12. Amazon’s share of the overall search ad spending in the US is 22.3% (eMarketer)
  13. 75.78% of Google’s revenue came from advertising in Q1-Q3 2024 (Alphabet)

AI Use for PPC Statistics

  1. 75% of PPC professionals say they use generative AI at least “sometimes” for writing ads. Other common use cases include keyword research (60%) and writing emails (52%) (PPCsurvey

    PPC Professionals use generative AI

    Here are the exact numbers:

    Use Case Share of PPC Professionals Who Use AI at Least “Sometimes”
    Writing ads 75%
    Keyword research 60%
    Writing emails 52%
    Audience research/analysis 48%
    Writing/editing scripts 45%
    Landing page optimization 41%
    Generating insights and suggestions 41%
    Strategy 38%
    Campaign creation 38%
    Reporting 31%
  2. Among PPC professionals that use AI at least “sometimes” for writing emails, 71% claim they’re satisfied with results generated by AI (PPCsurvey
    Use Case Share of PPC Professionals Satisfied with AI Results
    Writing emails 71%
    Writing ads 69%
    Writing/editing scripts 64%
    Keyword research 59%
    Landing page optimization 55%
    Strategy 52%
    Campaign creation 52%
    Reporting 51%
    Audience research/analysis 51%

The post 24 Up-To-Date PPC Statistics to Know appeared first on Backlinko.

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How To Improve Your Travel SEO In 10 Steps

Travel SEO is about turning strangers into guests.

But it’s no small task competing with major sites like Booking.com, TripAdvisor, and Expedia.

With so many players in the market, standing out in search engine results can feel impossible.

Yet, small players can still succeed.

Live Oak Lake, a boutique resort in Texas built a strong direct booking website that ranks No. 1 for search terms like “waco cabins.”

Google SERP – Waco cabins

They made $1.1 million in their first year and sold the business for $7 million in 2024.

In this guide, you’ll learn exactly how to implement an effective travel SEO strategy, including:

  • How to optimize for travel-specific search intent
  • 10 proven strategies to outrank major OTAs
  • Technical fixes that boost rankings fast

No generic tips. Just proven strategies you can use to increase organic traffic and bookings.

The Travel SEO Playing Field

In the travel industry, the SEO landscape is crowded.

Online travel agents (OTAs), airline websites, and meta-travel platforms dominate search results.

You also have travel blogs, tourism boards, accommodation sites, and tourist attraction websites.

All are fighting for visibility among millions of travel-related searches.

Just look at the 89.3 million monthly searches for keywords containing the word “flights” in the U.S. alone:

Keyword Magic Tool – Flights – Phrase Match – Keywords

But that’s not the only challenge—the playing field itself is constantly evolving.

SERP features for travel-related searches are more diverse than ever. This includes Google’s recent addition: AI Overviews.

These new features reduce clicks on traditional blue links.

As a result, click-through rates (CTRs) drop each year.

Here are key SERP features to keep in mind:

AI Overviews: Concise summaries from Google’s AI for research-based queries

AI Overview – Cost of a trip to Japan

Featured Snippets: Quick answers for informational or question-based searches

Google SERP – Best time to visit Mexico City – Featured snippet

Google Flights & Hotels: Direct flight and hotel listings within the search page

Google – Flights to Barbados

Top Sights, Top Experiences, & Popular Destinations: Popular attractions based on reviews and Google Maps data

Top sights – Experiences – Popular destinations – Collage

People Also Ask & People Also Search For: Related questions to your query

People also ask / People also search for – Collage

Forums: Discussions from trusted sources like Reddit, TripAdvisor, and Quora

Google – Discussions and forums

Some features, like People Also Ask, offer ways to capture organic traffic.

Others, like Google Flights and Google Hotels, keep users within Google’s ecosystem. These limit opportunities for third-party sites.

As these features evolve, staying ahead of the curve is key.

Navigating this shifting landscape requires expertise. Much like guiding travelers through new destinations.

Here’s how to take control of your travel SEO strategy.

Step 1: Define Your Travel SEO Strategy

Creating a solid strategy is essential when tackling SEO for the travel industry.

It helps identify challenges, set clear guidelines, and outline actionable steps.

Diagnose the Challenge

Every website faces unique SEO challenges.

Start by analyzing the current performance of your travel website.

How?

By checking your key metrics.

These include organic search traffic, revenue, and user engagement.

Also, examine mobile usability, loading speed, keyword rankings, and your backlinks.

GSC – Performance report

Next, analyze the competition in the SERPs.

Identify competing websites by evaluating which sites rank for the keywords you’re targeting.

Google SERP – Best hotels in Paris

You can also use Semrush’s Keyword Gap tool.

It finds keywords your competition ranks for, but you don’t.

Here’s how to do it:

Add your website and the URLs of up to four competitors to the tool. Click “Compare.”

Keyword Gap – Booking – Compare

Click the “Missing” tab.

It shows terms that Expedia, Trivago, and Tripadvisor rank for, but your site doesn’t.

Keyword Gap – Booking – Details for – Missing filter

Once you know your competitors’ performance, it’s time to take the next step—keyword research.

Step 2: Conduct Keyword Research

Google advises creating content for users, not solely to rank for keywords.

But if your content isn’t based on keyword research, it won’t rank well or drive SEO traffic and bookings.

Start Broad

Your keyword research will be the base of your SEO content strategy for the coming year(s). So, aim to make it as comprehensive as possible.

Search trends in travel do evolve. But core keywords stay consistent.

If you’re selling a destination like The Bahamas, use all related keywords with its name.

One of the most effective approaches is to use paid tools like Semrush’s Keyword Magic Tool.

It provides data and insights that will help you target the right keywords for your audience.

Keyword Magic Tool – The Bahamas – Keywords

More data isn’t always better.

So, focus on the key metrics: search volume, keyword difficulty, and search intent.

  • Search Volume: The average monthly searches for a keyword
  • Keyword Difficulty (KD%): A measure of how hard it is to rank for a keyword. It’s based on the link profiles of the top 10 ranking pages.
  • Search Intent: The purpose behind a user’s search query. It’s categorized as transactional, informational, commercial, or navigational.

Stick to these essentials to guide your keyword strategy effectively.

Define Commercial Opportunities

The commercial value of a keyword varies for each business.

What may be a high-value commercial keyword for a competitor might not be for you.

For example, let’s say you have top-rated resorts in Mexico. You might see “all-inclusive resorts in Mexico” as a valuable keyword.

Now, imagine you manage one outdated, overpriced resort there. Your chance to profit from this keyword is likely much weaker.

When evaluating a commercial opportunity, ask: Will this page convert visitors?

Categorize each keyword into the following:

  • 0. Not Likely: We don’t offer anything related to the user’s intent
  • 1. Unlikely: We offer something related to the user’s intent, but it doesn’t directly address the user’s needs
  • 2. Potential: We offer a solution that could meet the user’s intent
  • 3. Likely: We provide the best solution for the user’s intent

This approach helps focus your efforts on the most commercially valuable keywords.

Pro tip: Before using a keyword, check its intent. Analyze the top-ranking content in the search results. A keyword like “Mexico vs. Ecuador” might seem perfect for a travel site selling flights to both. However, a quick Google search may reveal that the user intent is related to soccer, not travel.


By knowing what users want, you can avoid irrelevant keywords. This will ensure your content matches user intent.

It also increases your chances of ranking and converting.

Step 3: Create a Keyword Map

Once you’ve gathered your keywords, the next step is to build an SEO keyword map.

Here’s how:

  • List existing pages: Use an SEO spider tool like Screaming Frog. It will list all existing pages.

    ScreamingFrog – Dashboard

  • Filter irrelevant pages: Remove any pages that won’t serve as SEO landing pages. Focus only on those that have the potential to drive organic traffic.
  • Pair pages with keywords: Use Google Search Console (GSC) to find queries that generate the most clicks for each page.
  • Assign target keywords: Assign one keyword from your research to each relevant page.
  • Avoid keyword cannibalization: Target each keyword with only one page. This prevents competition between your own pages for the same search query.

SEO for travel websites often involves optimizing destination-specific and service-related keywords.

These efforts help drive organic traffic to your site.

By mapping keywords to pages, you’ll have a clear strategy. It’ll help you optimize existing content and find gaps for new content.

Step 4: Form a Content Strategy

With your keyword research and keyword map in place, it’s time to create an SEO content strategy.

To maximize organic revenue, prioritize content targeting bottom-of-the-funnel keywords.

These are high-intent keywords where users are closest to making a booking decision.

By focusing on this stage first, you’ll drive more immediate conversions and revenue.

Target Commercial Keywords

In your keyword sheet, filter for keywords with commercial scores of two or three.

This filter will give you keywords with high commercial intent. They’ll match what you offer.

Think “Cancun resorts,” “flights to Hawaii,” “Las Vegas hotels,” or “Punta Cana excursions.”

For each keyword:

  • If a landing page is ranking, optimize its content to boost performance
  • If none of your pages are ranking, decide whether to create a new landing page or optimize an existing one

Finally, create a timeline and roadmap for implementing these optimizations.

This helps ensure steady progress toward your content goals.

Build Topical Authority

After covering your commercial keywords, it’s time to move up to the middle of the funnel.

Focus on keywords like “things to do in Miami,” “best time to visit Japan,” and “best beaches in Puerto Rico.”

These keywords are primarily informational and have lower conversion rates.

But they’re crucial for SEO for travel websites.

Why?

Because they help build topical authority.

Cluster these topics to help search engines understand your content.

Topic clusters

You’ll signal to search engines that your site is a trusted travel resource.

Blog pages often cover these topics best. But you can use landing pages if they fit your strategy.

Create a Topic Map

Up to this point, your SEO content strategy has been based on keyword data.

Now, it’s time to explore new topic ideas by leveraging topic maps.

To do this, use an AI tool like Claude or Chat GPT to uncover relevant topics for specific destinations.

Here’s an example of a prompt you can use:

“Please provide a table listing the key topics related to travel in Mexico. The table should have three columns: categories, subcategories, and subtopics. Each subtopic should have its own row.”

ChatGPT – Prompt – Topic map

Then, copy your topic map to a sheet. Use a ChatGPT plugin like Whimsical Diagrams to visualize it.

Use the following prompt: “Generate a mind map from this table: {paste table}.”

ChatGPT – Whimsical plugin – Mind map

Repeat this process for each destination you serve.

Add any new topics to your content roadmap.

Cover a wide range of content that appeals to search engines and your audience.

This approach fills gaps in your strategy. It keeps your content fresh and competitive.

Tap Into the Travel Content Loop

The travel experience is cyclical.

Here’s how the journey typically unfolds:

  • Inspiration: “That’s beautiful, where is that place?”
  • Education: “Tell me more about this place”
  • Booking: “Let’s go there”
  • Inspiration again: After the trip, the traveler dreams of new adventures. This sparks the loop once more.

Travelers constantly seek beauty, adventure, and new connections.

Your content strategy should reflect this ongoing loop.

Let's book

To build a successful travel content strategy off the back of this loop, think beyond SEO. This is especially true for inspiration, where social media is vital.

SEO is about fulfilling a need for information.

So, focus on education and answering users’ specific questions.

Inspiration, however, often comes to people when they’re not actively searching for it.

That’s why inspirational content must be:

  • Visual and destination-focused
  • Pushed to users, igniting wanderlust

Once the audience is captivated by a destination, they might seek more information. That’s where SEO comes in to guide them further down the funnel.

When planning content, ensure synergy between inspirational and informational content.

For example, let’s say you publish an SEO-optimized article like “The Best Time to Visit Costa Rica.”

Coordinate with your social media team to release visual, inspirational content.

This integrated approach keeps your audience engaged at every stage of their journey. Whether they’re exploring on social media or searching for information online.

Step 5: Establish a Content Creation Process

Your content strategy is ready.

Now it’s time to establish a streamlined content creation process.

Here’s how that might look:

Content Creation Process

  1. Keyword selection: Choose primary and secondary keywords based on your content calendar
  2. Writer briefing: Provide clear, detailed briefs for high-quality content
  3. Write: Focus on comprehensive, unique content that goes beyond top-ranking pages
  4. Edit: Align with the brand’s tone and ensure scannability
  5. Optimize: Fine-tune for SEO—headings, body content, internal links, and meta
  6. Add photography: Use images that follow guidelines and enhance user experience
  7. Publish and promote: Share across social, email, and other channels to maximize reach
  8. Translate: Expand reach by targeting non-English keywords

Pro tip: After headlines, image captions are the most read by users. Add a commercial message or a call to action to your image captions. It will help boost engagement.


To AI or Not AI?

When it comes to your content creation process, a key question is how much of it should involve AI.

The answer depends on your goals.

One thing is certain—it’s tough to stand out in a sea of mass-produced AI content by just publishing more AI content.

Craftsmanship and authenticity are what make content truly stand out.

“To beat AI, become more human.”
– Wesley van der Hoop, PPC + SEO at Unique Vacations Ltd.


For example, let’s say you’re writing about “the best restaurants in Amsterdam.”

Instead of simply copying the list from TripAdvisor, go beyond the surface:

  • Experience the destination firsthand
  • Talk to locals and uncover hidden gems that aren’t widely covered
  • Engage with restaurant owners. Try their signature dishes. Share deeper insights than current online articles.

AI should play the role of an assistant, not the solution.

That said, AI can still assist in the content creation process.

It can help create content briefs, structure the content, and suggest data points.

This lets writers focus on the human elements. They can craft unique, authentic content that AI cannot replicate.

In this hybrid approach, AI handles repetitive tasks.

Meanwhile, your team focuses on insights, experiences, and personal connections.

Step 6: Set Up Tracking and Measuring

Begin by measuring your current performance to understand where you stand.

Define and track both macro and micro conversions. Use your travel site’s analytics tools (e.g., Google Analytics 4).

GA – Traffic acquisition

For most travel websites, the macro conversion will be bookings and revenue.

Micro conversions may include actions like account creation or requests for more information.

They can also involve newsletter sign-ups, brochure requests, and travel guide downloads.

Once tracking is set up, integrate SEO tools like Google Search Console (GSC).

Use a rank tracker to gain deeper insights into what’s happening on the SERPs.

For example, Semrush’s Position Tracking tool tracks keyword rankings over time.

Position Tracking – Rankings Overview – Keywords

Finally, create easy-to-understand dashboards that blend different data sources. They let you track progress and show results to stakeholders at performance meetings.

Step 7: Optimize Your Google Business Profile

Local SEO is essential for improving visibility.

It’s particularly important for attractions, restaurants, bars, and accommodations at popular destinations.

Optimizing your Google Business Profile (GBP) can lead to quick wins.

Here’s how to do it:

Set Up Listings for Each Location

Let’s say your travel company operates in multiple locations.

You should create and optimize a Google Business Profile for each location.

Google Business Profile – Viceroy Rivera Maya

Select the Appropriate Category

Choosing the right primary category (e.g., “Hotel,” “Tourist Attraction,” “Restaurant”) is vital.

GMB – Enter business category

Why?

Because it impacts how your listing appears in search results and Google Maps.

Complete All Profile Information

Ensure your profile is fully completed, including:

  • Business name
  • Address
  • Phone number
  • Website URL
  • Hours of operation
  • Business attributes (e.g., “Free Wi-Fi,” “Pool”)

Write a Compelling Business Description

Custom descriptions aren’t allowed for accommodation and attraction listings.

However, you can still write compelling descriptions for restaurants and bars.

Google – From Per Se

Use relevant keywords to improve search visibility. Ensure it accurately reflects the experience you offer while adhering to Google’s guidelines.

Upload High-Quality Photos and Videos

High-quality photos and videos of your business can boost engagement.

They help customers see what you offer and connect with your brand.

Google – De L'Europe – Photos

These visuals provide potential customers with a more immersive experience. It helps them get a better sense of what you offer.

Be sure to consistently update your media to keep the listing fresh and relevant.

Utilize the Q&A Section

Proactively manage the “Questions & Answers” section by addressing common guest inquiries.

Questions & Answers – Restaurant

Post frequently asked questions yourself.

Cover topics like services, booking policies, or amenities.

Make sure to answer them thoroughly.

Create Regular Updates

Use GBP updates to share offers, events, or new services.

These can improve engagement and keep your audience informed.

GBP updates – Sandals Negril

Encourage and Respond to Reviews

Actively encourage guests to leave reviews, especially after a positive interaction.

Google reviews – Laurel Philadelphia

Respond promptly to both positive and negative reviews.

This shows engagement and demonstrates excellent customer service.

Reviews and responses also boost credibility and influence search rankings.

By following these steps, you can significantly improve your business’s local visibility.

This boosts engagement with potential customers looking for travel services in your area.

Step 8: Ensure Your Content Gets Indexed

A technical SEO audit is one of the cornerstones of your travel SEO strategy.

The reason is simple.

If the copy of a web page isn’t indexed, that page is unlikely to rank in Google’s search results.

In other words, it won’t drive organic traffic and bookings.

So, when auditing a travel website for the first time, use a web crawler like Screaming Frog. It’ll check whether your pages are indexable.

For a more detailed approach, use Semrush’s Site Audit tool. It can help identify technical issues with your site.

Site Audit – Backlinko – Overview

For individual page checks, use Google Search Console. It shows when Googlebot last visited the page and if it’s indexed.

To (re)index the page in GSC, simply click the “request indexing” button.

GSC – URL inspection button

Alternatively, use the “site” operator in Google. Enter this query in the search bar:

site:www.website.com/landing-page

If the page appears in search results, it’s indexed. If not, it isn’t.

Check for Partial Indexing

Even if a page is indexed, not all content may be.

Content that needs JavaScript to load, like a slider or hidden text, is at risk of not being indexed.

To check, use the Web Developer Chrome extension. It will disable JavaScript and reload the page.

Compare it to the original version to identify content not loading—this content is at risk.

You can also use the View Rendered Source Chrome extension. It shows the difference between the raw code and the rendered page.

View Rendered Source – Chrome extension

Headings and paragraphs not in the raw code, but in the rendered code, might not be indexed.

If you suspect specific copy isn’t indexed, use the “site” operator in Google with a query like:

site:www.website.com/landing-page/ "insert copy at risk here"

If the copy shows up where you’d normally find the meta description, you should be good!

If Google returns no results, that content and its links may not be indexed.

Prevent Duplicate Content

Duplicate content can negatively impact your rankings.

How?

Google can struggle to determine which of your pages to prioritize.

Three duplicate pages will all struggle to rank

It can also lead to crawling, indexing issues, and loss of link equity.

In severe cases, it can also trigger manual penalties.

The seven most common types of duplicate content on travel websites are:

  • Destination descriptions: Frequently reused descriptions of popular travel destinations across multiple accommodation pages
  • URLs with filtering parameters: Filtering options (e.g., “?sort=price”) generate different URLs. These may show similar content.
  • Pagination: Ensure paginated lists of destinations or accommodations are distinct or canonicalized
  • URLs with UTM parameters: Parameters like “?utm_source=social-media” track traffic. But they can also create duplicate content issues.
  • Split URL tests: A/B testing may create duplicate content. It does this by generating alternative versions of the same page.
  • Dynamic URLs with session IDs: When indexed, they can cause duplicate content issues
  • M-dot URLs: They’re rare today. But if used, link them to their desktop versions.

Use Semrush’s Site Audit tool to identify duplicate content. Mitigate it by implementing canonical tags.

Site Audit – Issues – Duplicates

Use Structured Data

Structured data helps search engines better understand and display your content.

For travel websites, this can lead to rich results like pricing and star ratings.

These features can help boost click-through rates.

Structured data lead to results

Structured data can also improve your site’s rankings.

How?

By providing search engines with clearer context for your content.

Pro tip: To further enhance SEO, implement structured data using the LocalBusiness schema. This helps search engines understand and validate your business information. It includes key details like category, location, and operating hours. Properly structured data can positively impact your rankings in local searches.


Step 9: Optimize UX with a Mobile-First Approach

Users have been living in a mobile-first world for some time, and Google was quick to follow.

Travelers may book on desktop. But they often make the decision to book on mobile.

Focus on quick load times and ensure strong Core Web Vitals performance.

Search engines like Google favor fast-loading content.

GSC – Core Web Vitals

Here’s how to get started:

Leverage User Data

Analyze your website using Google PageSpeed Insights.

Look at the “Core Web Vitals Assessment.”

It’s essential for understanding how your website performs in real user environments. This data can help you optimize speed and user experience.

PageSpeed Insights – Backlinko

You can see the performance metrics for a site’s Largest Contentful Paint (LCP), Interaction to Next Paint (INP), and Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS).

These are key indicators of how well your site loads and provides a smooth user experience.

For example, the LCP score here shows 3.8s, which is above the recommended threshold. Meaning there’s room for improvement.

Improving these metrics will boost your site’s performance.

It’ll also make your site more search-engine friendly and enhance the user experience.

Make Loading Times a Priority

You can’t do it alone.

You’ll have to get IT resources to improve the loading time of your landing pages, which are likely to be scarce.

If fast loading times aren’t a priority for the business, they won’t be for IT either.

Simply submitting a ticket won’t solve the issue.

Instead, foster a culture where speed is continually measured and improved.

Optimize Landing Pages for Mobile

Ensure the most important content is visible on the first screen users see.

For travel, this often means starting with an engaging visual to capture attention.

It helps users imagine being at their dream destination.

Additionally, highlight your unique value proposition, and provide a clear call-to-action.

Reinforce your credibility with reviews, awards, or endorsements.

Here’s an example from JetStream Voyages:

 

Optimize landing pages for mobile

Step 10: Strengthen Your Backlink Profile

Content demonstrates relevance, while links signal authority.

Both are essential to rank well in Google search results.

Leverage Existing Relationships

Improving SEO for travel agencies means building relationships.

It also means getting links from trusted business partners.

Leverage existing relationships with tourism boards, suppliers, and partners to earn backlinks.

Like this:

Leverage existing relationships

Use Digital PR for Industry-Wide Authority

In the travel industry, digital PR campaigns are one of the best ways to establish authority.

They aim to boost your brand’s visibility and credibility.

How?

By earning high-quality backlinks from reputable websites.

Digital PR campaigns are typically built around link-worthy assets, such as:

  • Data-driven travel insights and reports
  • Unique tools or calculators
  • Interactive maps
  • Comprehensive travel guides
  • Sweepstakes

Work with your PR team. Create campaigns that resonate with your target audience and the media.

For example, Sandals Resorts ran a campaign to find a professional cocktail critic.

Digital PR Campaign

One person was “hired” to collaborate with Sandals’ expert mixologists. Together, they tested and refined a range of cocktails.

This unique and engaging story captured the attention of numerous high-authority travel publishers.

As a result, it drove significant backlinks to their site.

Target Commercial Pages with Guest Posts

To build links to your commercial pages, try guest posting on travel sites.

Guest posting on travel sites

This method lets you target specific keywords. It also generates referral traffic from relevant audiences.

Use internal linking, partnerships, digital PR, and guest posting.

This will help build the authority needed to compete in Google’s search rankings.

Turn Strangers Into Guests with Travel SEO

Mastering travel SEO is about more than ranking for keywords.

It’s about connecting with travelers at every stage of their journey. From inspiration to booking and beyond.

The travel industry is always changing.

But one thing is constant: Travelers want connections, experiences, and reliable information.

Many companies use travel SEO services to rank higher. But the tips in this guide will help you get similar results on your own.

Use creativity and data-driven strategies. Be authentic. Transform your travel website into the top resource.

It can help turn strangers into loyal guests.

Ready to take your travel SEO strategy to the next level?

Download our content marketing template to map out your content.


The tool will help you organize and execute your plan for optimal results.

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