How to prove SEO ROI and overall business impact
Explain what success means and how to achieve it.
Creating a winning SEO proposal for a new lead is hard work. You need to assess their SEO potential, identify the right strategy for them, and showcase the business value you can create. And then you need to explain it in a way that is meaningful for the client.
A lot of proposals tend to jump directly to how the agency can do that for the lead, yet an important step is missing.
To make your business case compelling, the first thing you need to do is understand what success looks like for your potential client. Then you can speak their language, whether that’s revenue, transactions, conversions, or traffic.
Kevin Gibbons, CEO and founder of Re:signal and SEOmonitor Masterclass educator, points out that what you should do is tie your activity back towards key business outcomes. If you can’t understand and explain exactly what success means and why they need SEO, then there will be no real alignment.
That’s where, Gibbons adds, a reliable forecasting methodology makes the difference. Or as he puts it, a forecast done well will help you define:
- The WHY = What success can look like for the business and its growth potential.
- The HOW = The key areas of the market that the client can grow into.
- The WHAT = The necessary actions your agency can take to achieve those business outcomes.
If the what is pretty straightforward, the why and the how become just as straightforward with the right forecast in place:
Set a realistic business development direction
If you don’t have the bigger picture behind your SEO proposal set, you won’t know where you end up. “The forecast is a great sense check on WHY you are doing this in the first place,” says Gibbons.
This is the step in which creating a forecasting scenario gives you the right overview of the size of the opportunity. You not only get to evaluate if it’s the right lead for your agency but also if SEO is the right choice for the lead’s current business potential.
“You need to give them confidence that the results are realistic. If you’re a new retail brand with very little organic visibility and poor brand awareness/reputation, it’s very unlikely you’re going to be able to start ranking competitively for “sportswear” or ”skirts” overnight,” Gibbons explains.
“Your forecast model should take into account your current opportunity versus the size of the market and break it down into achievable bite sizes so that eventually you can eat that elephant – but you start one achievable bite at a time,” he adds.
SEOmonitor’s forecasting methodology allows you to model the data taking into account all the right inputs that influence your targeted keywords, to create a realistic scenario:
- The CTR value — the average CTR curve for the top 10 positions on each individual combination of SERP features and devices.
- The inertial trend of the non-brand organic traffic, based on search seasonality only (as if the website’s rankings would stand still).
- The Year-over-Year search trend of the keywords included in the Forecast.
- The ranking improvements of long-tail keywords (that are not part of the forecast) and their impact on traffic.