The challenge with a great conference like SES is that very useful, multiple presentations can occur on multiple tracks simultaneously. "SEO Competitive Analysis" was a session I did not want to miss, and I was not disappointed! Excellent presentation. I filled page after page with notes, here is an overview.
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Speakers:
Michael Hayward, CEO, ROI Labs
Taylor Pratt, VP of Product Marketing, Raven Internet Marketing Tools
Richard Zwicky, Independent Consultant
Highlights from the SEO presentation included:
"Help! I've dropped in search engine rankings. What am I doing wrong?"
- When bad SEO happens, don't panic. Don't focus just on your website. Look at those sites which have passed you. Evaluate and research their success. Develop a Reverse Marketing Plan - - in effect, reverse engineer your competition.
- Determine your competitive landscape. Who is doing what where?
- Look at the web strategy of competitors, including their source codes, to get drill-down data you can use.
- "To Compete, you must Displace your competition." In other words... Kill, or be Killed.
- Organic Search, Local Search and Social Search are all connected. Don't ignore any of them!
- Proper web analytics tools can help you understand your competition in hours, not days.
- Look exploiting Brand and non-Brand (generic) positioning in organic search and paid search.
- Consider building three matrix evaluation charts, grading current marketing results by 'effective', 'neutral' and 'ineffective':
- SEO Matrix - Organic Search
- PPC Matrix - Paid Search
- Social Media Matrix - Social Sites
- Use analytics for quick (top 5-10) and in-depth (deeper) analysis of keywords. Ask "is that keyword worth the effort and cost?".
- Keyword research tools, free and paid, are readily available to help you evaluate keywords. Tools include Google Analytics, SEObook, SEOMOZ, SEObook for Firefox, CustomRank, Getmelisted, Sycara, Searchmetrics and many others.
- Analyze SERPs from your competitors. Consider:
- Age of the domain. Number of links. Number of ads for keywords, title tags, page urls, keyword density, keyword positioning, anchor text, navigation, back-links, clean HTML, Call-to-Action, etc.
- What else are they doing? Blogs, Conferences? Part of the back-link analysis.
- Compare their webpages to YOURS. Evaluate and prepare. How far do you have to go to be competitive?
- After evaluation, determine rank potential. Look at potential keyword value, ROI and % share of clicks.
- Then ask: "Is it worth your time?". Pick your targets and your battles and implement your strategy.

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