Finding a decent SEO is hard
work, and the recommendations you get for selecting your perfect fit will vary
as much as the people providing them.
Whether you're looking for a
consultant or an agency, you don't need to feel alone in your search! In this
week's Whiteboard Friday, Rand walks you through his tips for finding an SEO
that will be the cheese to your macaroni.
Do you have any other tips you've
used to find an SEO that we haven't covered? Leave them in the comments below!
"Howdy SEOmoz fans, and
welcome to another edition of Whiteboard Friday. This week I wanted to actually
take a question from one of our users in the community and that question
was: "How do I find a good
SEO?" They were hoping I would do a Whiteboard Friday on it. So here it
is.
I recommend a lot of things when
people ask me for SEO assistance, consultants, agencies, that kind of thing,
and I do it all the time. But I have a benefit of being in the industry for a
long time and knowing a lot of people and usually knowing pretty well the
people that I'm talking to or asking them a few questions to get those probing,
in-depth answers that can let me know who I should recommend them to. This
process is not particularly scalable, and certainly I can't have everyone just
emailing me and ask. So please everyone who needs an SEO, don't email and ask
me.
But if you're looking for
somebody, I would recommend a process similar to this. I would start with your
network, meaning check out LinkedIn, check out people that you might know on
Twitter and Facebook who have SEO or have SEO experience in their profile. You
could even post something on these sites saying, "Hey, does anyone have someone
that they'd strongly recommend?" I'm not saying that you go directly from
this process to hiring someone, just that you can start with it, any of the web
communities where you participate, your friends and family, business
colleagues.
Even local meet-ups, if you see
that there is an SEO meet-up in your area, that might not be a terrible idea to
actually go, meet some people, get friendly, especially if you find some folks
in that community who don't necessarily offer SEO services – maybe they are in-house
SEOs, they work for software companies, those kinds of things – but they will
often have very good recommendations about who'd they suggest that you use.
That's a great process, find sort of a neutral third party whose only interest
is in helping you, but who knows the field well. That's what I'd be looking for
here, more so than a direct consultant right away.
Second thing, check out SEOs on
the major marketing communities. If you don't have anyone in your network, you
might try going to places like SEO blogs. I think SEO.alltop.com actually has a
very good list of sort of all the popular and major sites in SEO, blogs in SEO.
The SEOmoz Q&A certainly is a great place. This is actually one of my
favorite features of Q&A now. There have been lots of people who have found
their consultants and lots of consultants who have gotten work through Q&A.
So I love that.
Quora is actually a good place to
participate. You can see lots of people both asking and answering SEO questions
there. I think the people who tend to give really good answers on Quora also
tend to be pretty darn good folks. I see Ian Lurie, for example, from Portent
Interactive, which is a great company here in Seattle, giving a lot of good
answers there.
Some of those SEO forums, as
well, if you see someone who not only the content of their answers, but the
style of those answers. They are not reflexive or offensive. They don't get
into arguments all the time. They're very open. They're empathetic. That's
great. When you find people in these types of communities that can be a good
resource. Again, don't just think to yourself, "Oh, well they don't do
consulting, or they're out of my price range." That can be a good thing.
You can reach out to them and get a recommendation. These are the kind of people
you want to find to get that recommendation.
Next, I want you to build a smart
consideration set of the traits that matter to you, and this is certainly not
exhaustive, these six, but these are traits that a lot of people have. So that
could be I want someone who is very experienced, or I want someone who is
relatively early in their career. I want someone whose background is they've
been to college before, they've worked for several agencies, or I'm looking for
an agency that has the background of having worked with several people in my
field, or the opposite. A lot of times when they're seeking SEO consultants,
they want someone who has no conflicting clients who are also in that field so
that the links they build, the content they build, that work will all be for
them exclusively and it won't be partnered out to several different folks.
Geography and location can matter
a lot. I would be cautious about thinking about this one. Just because someone
is not in your geography doesn't mean that you necessarily can't get together
with them in person. If they're willing to fly out to your location or those
kinds of things, I would still put them in your consideration set. I think that
at least one or two meetings in person is a great thing if you can accomplish
it. But geography tends not to be super important for doing SEO kinds of work,
other than being able to connect up in person and sort of shake each other's
hand and that sort of thing.
The agency consultancy size.
Maybe you're looking for a one man operation or one woman operation. Maybe
you're looking for a large agency that's inside a broader ad firm so they can
serve lots of needs, that kind of thing.
Price, obviously, is a
consideration for a lot of people. And timing and availability. Can they start
their work right now? How many people do they have available? All those kinds
of things.
You should add other things in
this consideration set that matter to you. So, for example, values of the
person might be really important. It might be very important to you that the
person fits some particular criteria around what they've accomplished in the
past or that they're much focused, they have a lot of skills on the content
side as opposed to the linking side, or on the technical SEO side and the HTML
and development side versus social media side. Whatever it is that matters to
you, make sure to put that in your consideration set and consider people
equally as you look through there.
Then I'd go and I'd create a
short list of SEOs from the recommendations that you got. I would also do it,
even if you're sure, absolutely 100% sure. You're like "You know what?
This is the person for me. I just know that they're going to be the right
one." At least talk to a couple of others. The perspectives that you'll
get and the process of that interview is going to be very, very useful for you
going forward and judging the work. You could find maybe you had your heart set
on this person, but they turned out not to be right, and there was some reason.
Just go through this process of at least vetting a couple of vendors.
So I would ask them some things
like some project specific questions, related to specifically what we're trying
to accomplish here at our company and the rankings we're trying to achieve, the
visibility we're trying to get, the people we're trying to draw in, the intent
of the marketing that we're doing. Great, ask them project specific questions,
but also ask them generic SEO knowledge questions. There is actually a great
resource that Joel linked to in the blog post of sort of a ten question litmus
test that I wrote for professional SEOs a couple years ago now, but I think can
still be quite valuable.
Get a reference or three, but be
very careful in the references that you get. This is my experience, time and
again, when reference checking vendors. You ask for a reference upfront, and
you get people who they know will give a good reference. So really all you're
saying is, "Do you have two or three people who will always say nice
things about you?" That's not really a great reference check.
This is what I would do. When you
start talking to them, don't ask for references. Ask, "What companies have
you worked with? Who have been some of your clients over time?" Make sure
to write down that list, and you can prompt them. If they give you a couple,
you can say, "Oh, are there any others? Did you work with anyone in
travel, anyone with a big site?" Whatever the criteria you have. Then
write those all down and go back to LinkedIn or your personal network, see if
you know people at those companies. Reach out to them independent of getting
the reference and ask, "Hey, did you work with so and so? Were you happy
with that experience?" Going that direct route is much better.
Then, I'll add this important
caveat, very important caveat, which it's okay to get a couple of references
that are not great. It really is. If you get one good reference from them and
one of the people that you go back through your network says really good things
about them, and you like them, and one other person that you've gone through
your network says, "Ah, we were not happy," that's okay. It's okay to
have a couple of people. There is no way that you're going to do SEO consulting
or agency work, any kind of consulting or agency work or services work and not
have a few unhappy people in the past. I think that 100% happiness ratio is
extremely rare, and even if they were happy at the time, oftentimes people
become dissatisfied over time with things, and that could be not the agency's
fault, the consultant's fault. So I wouldn't dismiss these, but I would
consider them very carefully, balance them on the whole, and make sure that you
know all the things that are going on. Oftentimes, in any type of a services
organization, it's not one person's fault or always the agency or the service
provider's fault. Oftentimes, fault lies somewhere in between the company and
the agency.
Then I would check out some
online contributions too, places where they've contributed – blogs, social
media, comments, those types of things. It tends to be the case that if you
have people from the consultancy or the agency who've done stuff on the web that
you can observe, you're seeing them in a little bit more of their natural
setting, and you can see what I would call kind of behind the curtain of the
polish that they present to you directly. That can be extremely valuable. So I
love looking at sort of oh, I met someone at a conference and I thought they
did a good job speaking, let go me check out some of their other presentations.
Then I'll check out some of the stuff that they've done online. Boy, I get the
sense that this person is kind of mean and rude on the Internet. I'm not sure
that they're actually a match. That kind of information can be really
interesting and really useful to you.
You'll also get a sense for how
knowledgeable they are. They can seem very knowledgeable in person, and then
you go on the web and you sort of get this sense of, oh, actually this person
seems to be giving bad advice or asking questions that don't seem like they
know what they're doing. Unfortunately, because the SEO field is so easy to
enter, you do have a lot of folks who just got started in the industry, maybe
are looking for their first clients still, or folks who have been operating who
may not necessarily be SEO experts, maybe they're great at other parts of web
agency work but not SEO.
Finally, my last piece of advice
on this process is very careful about choosing exclusively on price or
experience. Now, price is an obvious one. You sort of go, "Yeah. I'll get
what I pay for and choosing the lowest price vendor might not be a great
idea," and those kind of things. That's true. But experience is a
dangerous one also. I see a lot of folks saying, "Ah, you worked with our
big competitor," or "You worked with someone else in the field that
we respect and admire, therefore, we're picking you." We lose track of all
the other important traits and criteria. Just be cautious about that. I think
that there is something to, whether you're hiring someone onto your team, we do
a lot of hiring here, and one of the things that I see is relevant experience
does not always trump sort of that excited newcomer. As long as they have the
chops to do the work, sometimes that passion and that lack of experience can
actually open up a lot of opportunity for you. So be careful about choosing on
those alone and hopefully this process will work for you.
I would love if you're an agency
or a consultant or someone who has found SEOs in the past and you have
additional things that you'd like to add to a process like this, please include
them in the comments below. I would love to see those.
All right. Thanks everyone. Take
care. We'll see you again next week for another edition of Whiteboard
Friday."
Source : https://moz.com/blog/how-do-i-find-a-good-seo
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