Should we fire our SEO Vendor?
-
Dear SeoMozers,
We are working on ranking towards some hyper competitive keywords (each query has millions of searches a month) and working with an external SEO Vendor. We were not satisfied with the progress, therefore we asked them to send a revised SEO Plan.
Here's what they proposed:
1. On Page Optimization (standard techniques)
Off Page Optimization
1. Directory Submissions (100)
2. Article Marketing (Two unique 300 word articles to be submitted to 300 directories)
3. Press Release (Two Press Releases to 100 PR Sites)
4. Classified Ads Submissions
5. Business Listings
6. Link Reinforcement (Create wheel to circulate traffic)
7. Blog Submissions, Commenting, Forum Posting
8. Web 2.0 Link Building (Squidoo Lens, Hub Page, Link Wheel etc)
9. One Way Links (Not Specified how many)
Our concern is that this sounds like low quality link building. We've given them 19 top keywords to achieve rankings for and will be paying $20-25K to achieve Top 3-5 rankings for the targeted terms.
Do you think this strategy would work or should we change the SEO Vendor?
-
This made me smile! HA
-
Is that one of Distilled's link building packages?
-
The "plan" doesn't look much like a plan... more like a list of (as already mentioned, low value) seo tactics to me.
Has anyone suggested tackling some less competitive, but related keyword terms first? It's easier to climb the tree from the bottom than to try and jump onto the top of it and you get to pick some low-hanging fruit on the way up.
What is important to the business - ranking for these highly competitive terms or more traffic/conversions now. Don't lose site of the business goals.
If you look at the sites that are currently ranking for your competitive search terms, can you honestly say that your site, your content delivers better value to the potential visitors and deservers to rank up there?
-
I think that's a great clarification. Paying $20-25K for someone to build authoritative, trustworthy links and content to drive you to the top on competitive keywords could be a bargain. Paying that for someone to create junk is worse than a rip-off - it could kill your rankings. Off-page (1)-(8) all look low-value to me, and (9) is ambiguous.
-
Also feel free to create a private question and ask for a second opinion from the Moz staff and associates. Those questions aren't indexed, and they're not viewable to anyone who is not Moz staff or associate, and you can share your URL and other details there if you would like.
-
Yep ... it is a public secret that once u rank first for some keywords and people get to know you you start ranking automatically for others too because people spread the word. And optimizing the next 5 is easier and thus less costly.
-
I totally agree with him here.
-
I completely agree. For that budget I would expect a select amount quality links rather than a large quantity of spammy ones, but who knows... maybe the company is working on relationships to get some really good quality links and is just doing the run of the mill directories in the mean time (playing devils advocate here a little because I don't believe that is the case).
I think the on page SEO is just as vital too. If the website in question is the one in the OP profile then I would question that a little too.
The homepage seems to be targeting 3 key phrases plus the brand name which isn’t ideal, especially not with very competitive key terms.
I could go onto the categories too - you have the category which is targeting the key phrase for men, women and children when there are separate sections for each which could target the male, female and child’s keywords while the main category page targets the general term.
I think in 6 weeks it can be difficult to judge the link building strategy but taking the on page SEO into account I would say you might be better changing...
-
Can you throw one of your keywords your targeting into the mix, this will allow others to give you an indication on what type of link building worked for competitors and thus an idea what kind of link building you should be doing.
-
You should definitely find another vendor that does not use spam techniques because the recent google panda update really hits them very hard.
-
One thing I will say is targeting that many keywords in one go is way to much, take 5 of the keywords, work on ranking them first, then once they are ranked, start on the next 5 and at the same time keep maintaining the first.
-
I am not saying the budget is over the top ... I am saying that if they are spending it for the services they listed it is not well spent.
-
We are working on ranking towards some hyper competitive keywords...
I do not believe that the work that they propose will be effective for your "hyper competitive" keywords.
-
Hello, First and foremost - thanks for the great responses. The reason why we posted this question here was because when we received the report, we were very unhappy with the quality of links that were being built. We have not been with this vendor for long (about a month and a half), but overall - for over 77% of the keywords, rankings have declined (though we are aware that its too early to judge). What concerns us the most is those spammy .edu links, blog commenting, thin articles, bad directories and so forth. The budget that we have set is to achieve the Top 3-5rankings, from thereon - we do have a maintenance budget to retain the top positions.
-
Not sure if I agree that the budget is way over the top for what you are trying to achieve if the keywords really are 'hyper' competitive. It depends how it has been structured - is it $25k when they achieve the rankings or $25k for the time period (3m, 6m, 1y) regardless of results?
In terms of their plan I agree with the others that sounds of the link building does sound a little low quality but even today those links can still get people ranked highly if done correctly (high quality directories, relevant one way links etc) and the on page stuff is good.
I don't like the way they state how many of each link you will get, that does sounds spammy and automated but there is know way of knowing if the 'one way links' are going to be high quality or not because there is no detail.
To me it all comes down to results - how long have you been with the company and how far have you progressed?
-
The price you are paying is GIGANTIC .... You can get what they are offering for like 250$ per keyword. and you are paying 100 times more.
And as the other guy said most of it is rubbish ... what they are offering is a lot of low quality links and what you need is not so much high quality links.
Regarding your content :
Google and people and "our world" basically favors quality over quantity. For the price you are paying you can get someone to "rework" your content so that it is professionally made like apple's content for the users and also keyword targeted for your searches. In other words REAL on page optimization.
Regarding your social networks status :
Also you will get professionally made profiles in all the social networks (VERY high quality backinks from them too) As Gillian (The president of seomoz ) told me when i last met her ... "it is all about gathering and nourishing your community". You will start gathering the community of your real fans... the real people that like you and will really spread the word about you.
Regarding links :
You can get links to relevant sites to yours and high quality ones. For example the 1 link you get from YouTube which has Page Rank 9 is worth 10 000 of the links you are buying for 100 000 times lower price ... Also the open directory and so on. I am from Bulgaria and I always do quality work here ... it is amazing how great it works on the low markets ... I get a clients website to top 1 on all keywords for 2-3 weeks just including them to like 20-40 websites like youtube, dmoz , facebook , linkedin , and websites from their area. The days of "automatic seo" are over man it has SO LOW value that it is not worth it.
Advice : You should be paying someone to research your busyness and figure out link bait techniques, find high quality relevant websites you can make link partnerships with, understand your busyness and advise you on how to spread the word and go social, work on your content and do some usability work and so on.
Regarding your vendor :
The services you listed are the lowest quality possible and are being almost surely done with automation software which sooner or later gets "caught" by Google.
Advide : Totally YES ... change the vendor. You can find lots of great people that can do that for you here in the seomoz community ... including my company ( a bit of shameless self promotion here for the time i spent answering )
-
Personally (and many may disagree) but:
1. On Page Optimization (standard techniques)
Off Page Optimization
1. Directory Submissions (100) (could do this yourself)
2. Article Marketing (Two unique 300 word articles to be submitted to 300 directories) (rubbish)
3. Press Release (Two Press Releases to 100 PR Sites) (ok'ish)
4. Classified Ads Submissions (rubbish)
5. Business Listings (ok if its yahoo directory and some of the big ones)
6. Link Reinforcement (Create wheel to circulate traffic) (not worth the effort)
7. Blog Submissions, Commenting, Forum Posting (spammy)
8. Web 2.0 Link Building (Squidoo Lens, Hub Page, Link Wheel etc) (this works for me)
9. One Way Links (Not Specified how many) (?)
Basically you got $1000 to spend on each keyword, id use the other $5000 for onesite SEO and a tidy up (if needed)
I would then take the 1k and spend most of it on having content generated targeting the keyword and throw it out on, your own site, guest blogging, squidoo, hub pages and a few other things.
Thats me though and im not a wizard at SEO (yet)
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
Does an external link to an image file on my site help my SEO?
I found a few websites that are displaying images from my site. Curiously, they have also linked these images to the source image file on my website. I found these because Moz showed these sites in my list of backlinks. I assume that means it impacts my Domain Authority. But does this actually help me in search engines since it's not linking to a page on my site?
Link Building | | AlexLenhoff0 -
Do links from such sites as TripAdvisor give any weight or support for SEO
And what about other sites like quora or other niche forums/blogs where one might leave answers, with a link to their profile, which has a link back to the owner's website? _Cindy
Link Building | | cceebar1 -
Negative SEO
I have a client who is being spammed really bad with links. Using porn keywords and keyword with porn in anchor text with the site URL. Anyone had experience with this?
Link Building | | ToddFosterSEO0 -
★Does syndication of a news features from high Profile site like TechCrunch have a negative SEO impact?
As a co-founder of a startup that is weekly featured on high page rank news sites such as TechCrunch, The Next Web, TreeHugger , Yahoo News etc. These types of write ups are "SEO Gold" as they are high page rank sites with high relevancy to our sector and with unique good quality anchor text and copy. However... Within hours of each post going live the content and links are syndicated either via RSS or scraped and appear as duplicate content on in some cases 100's of very low quality and low relevancy content aggregation sites. To give you an example here are just two of the sites that are now appearing as linking domains due to this syndicated content and the links included in the article. Examples : Eco Market, The “Etsy For Eco,” Rebrands, Revamps, Raises & Prepares A U.S. Launch Sarah Perez | Technology | Page 4 The above are just a couple of examples amongst 100's that result from each feature. I would like to hear you opinion on if these links would be considered natural and you feel I should not take action or if you think these need removing by contacting the webmasters or disavowing the links? I am sure I cant be alone in having this problem and look forward to hearing you advice and tips
Link Building | | LiamPatterson0 -
Could I be the victim of negative SEO?
While I was searching for bad links to one of my website, I realized that there were lots of backlinks from trackbacks on various blogs. Most of these trackback links are definitely spammy as they are not relevant with the blog topics and they use exact anchor text. The thing is that I am 300% sure that it has nothing to do with any SEO campaign services I've bought in the past. They link back to pages I've never optimized at all. So could I be the victim of a negative SEO campaign? What do you think?
Link Building | | sbrault740 -
Forgot the name of a cool SEO Tool... Help!
I recently discovered a cool SEO tool. I didn't write it down, save it, bookmark, etc... And now I can't remember the name of the tool for the life of me, but I'd really like to use it again. I was hoping I could list of the features that I remember, and one of you Mozzers know what I'm talking about. It was a backlink analysis tool. It had a free version, and after you performed so many searches/searched so many backlinks, you had to pay. From what I remember it was a fairly nominal fee with the most popular package in around $25. The reason that I liked it so much was you could take an OSE csv file, dump it in there, and it would sort all of the links by link type, i.e, footer, comment, directory, etc... Then it would put it all into a nice pie chart for you and show you the % of the total links that each link type made up. It would also analyze the anchor text and would show you every anchor text used, and the % of the total each one made up.
Link Building | | stevefidelity0 -
Custom Domain Vs Free Sub Domain for SEO
What is your take on custom domain vs free sub domain for SEO? (example.com vs example.blogspot.com) Say if I have 10 links from 10 different domains but all hosted on blogger.com, will it still have the same link benefit as ones hosted on different hosting account? I am assuming it might be less due to the same C class IP appearing for blogger hosting. What do you think?
Link Building | | jombay0 -
Should I outsource any SEO work or can I do it all?
My website needs a lot of improvement and we are working on it but I also don't want to fall behind on the SEO work. I am guessing that I can do much of it myself through SEOmoz.org but is there a part that busy folks should get others to do? Any feedback will be greatly appreciated. Thank you, Utah Tiger
Link Building | | Boodreaux0