EDITOR’S NOTE: When you’re just starting your business, your budget for scalable growth is obviously going to be much smaller than it would be if you’ve been an established brand for a while. The good news is that SEO, or search engine optimization, does not require a big budget and has the potental to bring in free traffic that grows almost on autopilot in the long run. Investing in SEO for startups is one of the best ways to get your website to grow as quickly as possible. Once you figure out your SEO goals, you can utilize free SEO tools, begin playing around with premium tools, or hire someone with SEO knowledge or skills. These tools or people will monitor your technical SEO to make sure your website is free of any technical errors. Once that’s out of the way, you can optimize your SEO by completing keyword research. This will show you which keywords people are actually searching for and what pages they’re already clicking on to find it. Once you analyze these keywords, you can either edit content that you currently have to help spruce up the SEO or create new content from scratch using those keywords and search intent. When your SEO content is complete, you need to make sure you drive links to it. If you have any questions about your SEO strategy or want us to handle it for you, reach out to us at Prebuilt Sites or The BBS Agency. We’d love to help you out!
SEO doesn’t require a big budget and, if done correctly, brings free traffic that grows almost on autopilot. What’s more, it can boost other marketing tactics and influence every phase of the marketing funnel. So if you want to start doing SEO for your startup, you’re in the right place.
In this article, we’ll cover the following:
If you still have doubts about whether SEO is suitable for you or need some data to support your SEO plan, here are three reasons to do SEO in a startup.
In 2014, Google and Millward Brown Digital conducted a study on the research and purchase habits among B2B decision-makers. That study revealed that 71% of B2B researchers start their research with a generic search (instead of a branded search).
As Google itself said, “They’re looking for [a] product first, not for you.”
Even if your product is really niche, people are likely still searching for it in one way or another.
For example, take something like animal-free dairy (real product category). While there may be little search demand for “animal-free dairy” (because this is a new concept), there is tangible demand for related searches like “vegan,” “lactose free,” or “low lactose.”
Photo: Ahrefs
We currently get about 1.1M monthly visits from search engines alone. If we had to buy that traffic using PPC ads, it’d cost us an estimated $2M per month:
Photo: Ahrefs
So while SEO is never truly free because you have to invest in content creation and optimization, you don’t need to pay for every user and every visit—unlike with ads.
Follow these eight steps to start doing SEO in your startup the right way.
Who do you need to convince to start doing SEO in your startup? The CMO, CFO, CEO, investors, your marketing team, or maybe yourself? Whoever it is, it all boils down to improving the bottom line, right?
First of all, SEO is an investment that won’t pay for itself overnight. It takes time to do keyword research, create content, and promote it. It even takes time for Google or any search engine to crawl and index your content.
But SEO can pay off unlike anything else, and Ahrefs is living proof of that. We’re an eight-figure ARR company with a marketing strategy built upon SEO content.
If the person you need to convince is interested in marketing, an excellent way to get buy-in is to start with the benefits of SEO.
You can explain the benefits of SEO by illustrating the marketing tactics that it fuels, mainly content marketing. Content marketing serves many different purposes:
Content marketing also has compounding results, as I’ve already mentioned.
In other words, if you use SEO to create content, the attribution of SEO will touch every phase of the marketing funnel.
But if you need to convince someone who only cares for the impact on the company’s revenue—that’s OK too. You just need to speak that person’s language, e.g., use a chart that visualizes the break-even point of your investment:
Photo: Ahrefs
Learn more: How to Convince Your Boss to Invest in SEO
If you already have a green light for SEO, it’s time for the next step: set your goals and prepare resources for the trip.
The ultimate goal of SEO is to reach prospective users through organic search and convert them into customers. But this is a top-level goal, and it’s quite hard to work with because it doesn’t tell you how you will get there.
A much more efficient approach is to divide your grand, top-level goal into smaller “bites” that can get you closer to the outcome.
You can envision your SEO goals as a pyramid, with the outcome at the top and smaller goals that lead there at lower levels. The idea is to start at the bottom and work your way up.
For example, let’s say your goal is to rank in the top three for a keyword in six months. The goal pyramid for this outcome could look something like this:
Photo: Ahrefs
As you can see, we dissected something that cannot be done by one single action (ranking higher for a keyword) into smaller, doable tasks that have a high chance of influencing the outcome.
Equally important to setting smaller, doable steps is defining how you will measure them. In the above example, we’re using Ahrefs’ Site Explorer to measure how many backlinks we get.
Learn more: How to Set the Right SEO Goals with 3 Examples
Resources mean costs, and startups need to be careful about them. While SEO doesn’t require any ad budget or super expensive tools, this is not a costless process.
SEO needs these things in order to work:
If you’re a team of one with no budget for building a team or outsourcing, there is no other way besides learning all those things and doing the work yourself on top of anything else you’re currently doing. But no worries. With the right advice, prioritization, and tools, this is doable.
If your startup has some budget for an SEO-related role, here are your options:
Next stop: tools.
Fortunately for startups, there are a lot of free and freemium tools in the SEO realm. We’ve already gathered a list of the 45 best ones in this article.
With SEO tools in a startup, you basically have two options:
Technical SEO is the process of optimizing your website to help search engines like Google find, crawl, understand, and index your pages. Unless Google can do all of the above things, the chances of ranking are slim to none.
The tl;dr, beginner-friendly answer to technical SEO is this: fix the issues that a tool like Ahrefs Webmaster Tools (AWT) will bring to your attention.
One of the many functions of AWT is monitoring your website’s health for over 100 SEO issues, including technical ones. If Google or any other search engine has a potential problem with crawling and indexing your website, AWT will usually let you know.
For example, it may find that there are pages with a noindex tag stopping search engines from indexing them. When you click on that problem in your report, you’ll get an explanation of what it means and how to fix it:
Photo: Ahrefs
To complement AWT, we’ve got an entire section in our knowledge base dedicated to understanding SEO issues and fixing them.
Another cool thing about AWT is that even if you forget to check your website’s health regularly, you will get regular emails (like the one below) that show the status of errors:
Photo: Ahrefs
Learn more: Technical SEO: The Beginner’s Guide
Keyword research is where you find what your target customers are searching for in Google, then analyze and compare those terms to prioritize the best opportunities.
You can learn how to do that in our beginner’s guide to keyword research. But as most startups have little to no “authority” and brand equity, we recommend initially targeting low-competition keywords that you can rank for without many backlinks or high website authority.
So, for example, pet insurance startups will likely have a hard time ranking for a keyword like “pet insurance” because the #1 SERP (search engine result page) is dominated by pages with lots of backlinks.
Our Keyword Difficulty (KD) score suggests that you’ll need backlinks from about 932 websites to rank in the top 10:
Photo: Ahrefs
But within that broad topic, you can find low-competition keywords like “french bulldog pet insurance.”
Photo: Ahrefs
You can find low-competition keywords at scale using a keyword research tool like Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer. Just enter a topic there, go to the Matching terms report, and set your KD to max 20.
As a result, for a “seed” keyword like “pet insurance,” you’ll get 426 potential low-competition keyword ideas you can create content for.
Photo: Ahrefs
Note that these are your potential keyword ideas because you need to consider a few more factors before finally selecting a keyword—e.g., search intent, competitors’ brand equity, and traffic potential. We explain how to assess those factors in our guide to finding low-competition keywords and in this video.
Beyond this, you can also take inspiration from your competitors’ low-competition keywords.
Here’s how to find those in Ahrefs’ Site Explorer:
For example, if you run a design software startup and compete with Invision, you can see all the low-competition keywords it ranks for:
Photo: Ahrefs
Then it’s just a case of sifting for worthwhile targets. In this case, that may be “red color palette,” as it has a low KD score and reasonably high search volume. Also, you can easily create the kind of content searchers seem to be looking for (listicle of red color palette inspiration):
Photo: Ahrefs
Now that you have an idea of which keywords to target, you need to create high-quality, optimized content that will attract organic traffic. There are a few pieces to this puzzle.
Knowing what people search for online is powerful. However, relying solely on SEO metrics can make you lose focus on the people reading your content. That’s why you sometimes need to broaden your research and tie your SEO findings to your market research.
The one element of your go-to market strategy that has critical importance to the selection of topics for your content is your target audience. So make sure that you have your buyer persona ready before creating your first piece of SEO content.
A buyer persona is a semi-fictional person who represents the common characteristics of your customers (an archetype). Here’s an example for our product:
Photo: Ahrefs
Search intent refers to what the searcher is looking for. It’s important because Google wants to rank content that’s helpful, so you’re probably not going to rank unless your content aligns with user intent.
To understand the intent behind a keyword, you should analyze the search results for what we call the three Cs of search intent:
Let’s quickly analyze one example. Here’s what we can see after plugging in “SEO tools” for the U.S. into Ahrefs’ Keywords Explorer:
Photo: Ahrefs
Can you identify the three Cs here?
If you don’t use Keywords Explorer, you can use our free SEO Toolbar to view the SERP for almost any country:
Photo: Ahrefs
You probably have dozens of content ideas at this stage. So how will you manage and create all of that content?
A common practice among professional content creators is keeping a content calendar. It is a system used to organize, manage, and schedule content production.
There is no one way to create a content calendar. First and foremost, a content calendar should be usable for you and your organization. You can use a Google calendar, create a kanban in an app like Notion or Trello, create a project in the likes of Asana, or keep everything in a good ol’ spreadsheet.
Some types of information worth keeping in a content calendar:
At Ahrefs, we use Notion to keep everything in one place (the calendar, attachments, comments, etc.). Here’s a content calendar card for one of the articles we did:
Photo: Ahrefs
When it comes to the very act of writing, recording, and creating content, this is a somewhat personal thing. After all, people have different styles of working and staying creative. Especially in a small startup, tasks tend to have a fair degree of autonomy, so most things will be just “up to you.”
However, when it comes to creating content for business, it’s good to develop some kind of methodology and get feedback before publishing. A bonus side to this is that developing efficient practices from the start will help you scale your content creation process later on. Here are a few tips:
If you wonder how the content creation process looks like at Ahrefs, here’s a chart explaining that:
Photo: Ahrefs
To make things even more efficient, you can then repurpose some content for multiple channels to get even more mileage out of each piece. This strategy works great for startups and big companies alike, and we do it all the time.
For example, we have a video and tweet about long-tail keywords—both of which we repurposed from the original blog post.
Sometimes the best way to get more organic traffic is to optimize your existing content. There are two reasons for this:
For example, Google has a pretty clear model of what to rank for the keyword “3d printers”: buying guides. It even ranks guides higher than pages from established 3D printer manufacturers—despite them having more backlinks:
Photo: Ahrefs
It seems as if most people searching for this term were in buying mode. Thus, Google tries to match that with pages that offer help with buying a 3D printer.
What’s interesting is that one 3D printer manufacturer ranks high among the guides: Formlabs. It has found a way to optimize its existing content to get as far up the SERP as possible.
It has created a mix of a 3D printer guide and a product category page.
Photo: Ahrefs
Can you spot what it did there?
And what’s the effect of all that from an SEO perspective?
Photo: Ahrefs
Another example: Canva ranks #4 in the U.S. for the keyword “meme generator” with this landing page. As you can see, there’s no reason for Canva to create, let’s say, a blog article to rank for that keyword.
You can learn more about optimizing existing content in part three of our beginner’s guide to on-page SEO.
With your SEO content complete, it’s time to move the needle on arguably the most important ranking factor: links.
Let’s start with something easy: linking between different pages on the same website.
Here’s what happens when you link internally:
To find relevant internal link opportunities, check the Link opportunities report in Ahrefs Webmaster Tools. It shows unlinked keywords that could be used as links to another page.
For example, from a blog post about rank trackers, AWT suggests that we could link the keyword “keyword research” to a list of “keyword research tools.”
Photo: Ahrefs
There are a few more good practices of internal linking. We’ve gathered the most important ones in Internal Links for SEO: An Actionable Guide.
Unless you’re in some kind of “unheard of” blue ocean market, there is someone who has been blazing the trails before you. In other words, another company has already done its keyword research, created content, and built links to its website.
By now, your competitors may be a few steps ahead of you, but the good news is that you can take up where they left off and steal some of their thunder. Sounds interesting?
This link building strategy is all about analyzing your competitors’ links to learn two things:
Getting your product reviewed online has obvious benefits: brand and product awareness, incoming traffic, and, often, valuable product feedback. But there’s another “silent hero” in that story: backlinks.
Let’s say you’re a tech startup making electric scooters. Here are two ideas on how to look for review sites:
Plug your competitor’s URL in Ahrefs’ Site Explorer, go to Backlinks report, and filter the results for referring URLs that contain words like “review,” “guide,” or “best.” This will show you websites that have reviewed your competitor. From there, you can browse through the results and pitch your product to websites that stand out to you.
Photo: Ahrefs
One piece of advice here: Don’t ask for a review only to get a backlink. Above all, think about how the review can influence your product’s sales, and do it only if your product is ready. Backlinks are just the bonus in this game.
Getting your business mentioned by the press is great in itself. But in addition to that, you can boost your rankings through links included in the story.
Startups often possess that novelty factor, which makes them great candidates for press coverage. Here’s an example story from The Next Web on a startup called Sprig that creates an AI-powered tool never seen before (naturally, it features a link to the company).
Photo: Ahrefs
Some of the links you will get this way will be “nofollow” and likely won’t pass “link authority,” but that shouldn’t dissuade you. Even if a link doesn’t directly boost rankings, chances are one story can lead to mentions on other websites; on top of giving you additional recognition, these can boost your rankings.
Here are a few more tips on getting your story covered by the press (and getting a link):
Finally, how do you measure success in SEO? What metrics should you focus on?
That all ties into the goals you’ll set, which I explained in step two of this guide.
Depending on your goals, the SEO metrics you’ll be tracking most frequently are:
You can easily find free tools for tracking all of your most important metrics. Their paid versions usually allow you to reveal more data, use advanced filters, and get more insights (like data trends and history).
You don’t need a large budget to start growing your organic traffic with SEO. You can go quite far with free tools, and the paid tools you’ll need from that point won’t break the bank. If you have the funds for a premium SEO tool, consider an all-in-one toolset like Ahrefs that has everything you need in one place.
As with many things in life, the beginning is always the hardest. It may take some time to get your SEO up and running. But once you do so, you can use the same tactics over and over again for consistent results that have compounding effects.
All we’ve covered in this guide can be a lot to digest. I get it. So whenever you need a reminder on all the important things, you can pull out our SEO checklist.
Got questions? Ping me on Twitter.
Originally posted on Ahrefs.
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