Rebuild
Website or Perform SEO?
By Chris Genge (c) Nov. 05, 2004
http://www.1stonthelist.ca
Rebuild Website or Perform SEO - which should
you do first?
A lot of website owners are interested in rebuilding
their website and in performing search engine optimization (SEO),
but can't. Budget constraints won't allow for both and so they
struggle with which one to do first. Rebuilding a website is a
great idea. Performing SEO on it is better.
The Internet is vast...truly vast. It is comprised
of, at last count, over 3 billion web pages and that number increases
daily. People need a map to chart this unimaginably large landscape
and search engines are the maps. SEO provides pointers to your
business on the maps; rebuilding your website does not.
If you understand the following statement, then
the decision is very easy to make - in order to become visible
to their second audience (the visitors), websites must first receive
adequate top rankings (the first two pages of listing results)
by their first audience (the search engines).
Search Engine Optimization
Search engine optimization is probably the single
most important marketing technique that a website owner can do
to increase visibility and visitors. Greater visibility and highly
targeted visitors improve sales, which in turn, improves the bottom-line.
Numerous studies have proven just how important
SEO is for online businesses:
- 50% of those who bought from online retail
sites arrived via the search engines.
- Between 85 and 90% of people use search engines
to find websites they've never visited before.
- The Financial Times reported August 2002, that
every day over 340 million web users rely on search engines
to locate new businesses.
- 57% of Internet users search the web each day,
making search the second most popular Internet activity next
to checking email (81%).
Studies have also proven that SEO has the best
return on investment (ROI) of any form of advertising in terms
of cost-per-acquisition (CPA). Savvy website owners who realize
just how fierce competition on the Internet is use SEO to position
their business ahead of their competitors. If you are not incorporating
SEO as part of a website marketing/promotion strategy you are
losing out, because your competition mostly likely is!
If done properly, the results from SEO are very
impressive. One of our long time clients in the printing industry
has been operating the same site for almost five years. Instead
of rebuilding their website which has a very simple design, they
decided to perform SEO. That same site now delivers so much business
that SEO is the only form of sales and marketing they use (both
online and offline).
Another client now does as much business in
one day as it used to in seven. And this client originally wanted
to rebuild their site first. And to this day, the site is still
the same except for some minor regular updates. In the past, the
client did a lot of print advertising, but because of great SEO
results, they have cut their advertising costs in half and achieved
sales growth of 700%! For more great examples, read the case studies
on the Search Engine Marketing Professional Organization (SEMPO
- http://www.sempo.org/) website.
Rebuilding a Website
Rebuilding a site makes it look nice, provides
fresh content, and sometimes improves navigation. Will any of
these lead to increased visitors? Most likely not. Making aesthetic
changes does very little to increase a website's visibility on
the Internet.
It is estimated that 56% of ALL websites are "lost in cyberspace"!
What is the point of spending money on rebuilding a site if no
one ever sees it? It would be a complete waste of time, money,
and effort - all of which translate into a very poor ROI.
Your website is competing with over 3 billion
(at last count) other pages on the Internet. It will be "lost"
by not having it visible to the search engines - akin to putting
up a flashing billboard on a deserted island! It can be the greatest
billboard ever designed, but because of its isolated location
very few people will see or read it, and thus, it will be a poor
source of revenue generation.
The fact is, there are lots of great websites
on the Internet. So what? What's the use of having a great website
if no one knows about it or can find it? And even if people do
know about it, you are still not reaching the largest Internet
demographic: the 85 to 90% of ALL Internet users who find what
they are looking for by conducting searches on search engines!
The top-4 search engines are Google, Yahoo,
MSN, and AOL. How do they compare in terms of traffic? The info
below shows the top 5 results of the Top-50 Internet Property
Rankings for October 2003 (ComScore Media Metrix, Nov. 2003).
Keep in mind that the table shows total number of unique visitors,
not total number of searches. So while MSN is tops in terms of
traffic, Google is still the king of search.
Rank |
Property |
Unique Visitors (in thousands) |
1 |
MSN-Microsoft sites |
109,334 |
2 |
Yahoo! sites |
108,673 |
3 |
AOL Time Warner Network |
108,394 |
4 |
eBay |
62,454 |
5 |
Google sites |
58,209 |
The point of the table is that four out of
the top five most-visited sites are search related sites. SEO
is your mechanism for becoming visible to this group. SEO is critical
to the success of your online venture. Rebuilding is also important,
but it can wait.
Other Considerations
Ask yourself, what will deliver more results
to my business: rebuilding or SEO?
What is the purpose of your site? If you use
it to bring in customers or sell products, then SEO is definitely
the one to do first. If visitors and sales aren't important, but
having a beautiful, stylish site is, then by all means rebuild
it.
To deliver maximum benefits your website has to be both people
and search engine friendly. Will rebuilding accomplish this?
Some owners think they'll rebuild the site first
and then perform SEO, only to discover afterwards that their budgets
won't allow for it. Ask yourself, do I want to be stuck with a
nice looking site that delivers NO more traffic than its predecessor?
Your website should be an asset, not an expense.
It should be generating you income or leads, or providing useful
information about your company. If it isn't, then why have it?
In the US, 13% of traffic to a website comes
from search engines, up from 8% for the previous year. International
figures were even more striking with some countries having search
engine referral rates as high as 21%! SEO makes your site search
engine friendly. Rebuilding it may or may not, depending on how
skilled in SEO your webmaster is. There's far, far more to SEO
than just inserting META tags (title, description, keyword tag).
SEO First, Rebuild Second
It really is a much wiser choice to perform
SEO first. Later, if the results indicate the need to make improvements,
then proceed with rebuilding your website. Involve your SEO in
the rebuilding process - their input/ advice will be invaluable!
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