How to Find A SEO Guru?
-
How to find a SEO Guru
I am a looking for a SEO to take over our SEO needs for our website.I am not interested in learning SEO and would rather leave it to the pro's.We already have great traffic 800K+ monthly but we need to take it to the next level and beyond.
I have searched through SEOMOZ and read articles everywhere and done all that, I think I am more confused now than when I started on how to find a great SEO. While their are plenty of great SEO guys out their a lot of them I don't feel comfortable putting our business in their hands.Their are some smaller SEO's and some shady SEO's that won't work for us.Then some just don't have the credentials or background for us to hand over our hard earned money and have the future of our businesses in their hands.
We want someone who has worked on big projects and had great success and is a industry leader but is willing to work with me and be hands on just not send me reports and suggestions. I am Trying to find SEO guru who knows his stuff and knows it well.I know i will pay good money for this but would like to find some up and comers so I don't have to sell unborn children to afford their services.
What would be a good way to a great seo maybe even a guru?
Finding the right SEO has become a daunting task.
-
@chrisyak said in How to Find A SEO Guru?:
Well, I think I have run into a wall in my search, most of you gave some great device advice on where to look. The list of SEO on seomoz is great if I could afford any of them.I have learned a valuable lesson this week about the cost of SEO's.When i see prices of 5-10K for site audits and $200 per hour I know I am barking up the wrong tree.
Now I think I would just like a good SEO that knows his stuff well and won't charge me a small fortune.
Chris, I'm sorry that you're going through this. In all honesty, your budget is something under a few thousand dollars a month for a site that has 800,000 visitors. I don't want to make you believe that you're going to find a good SEO for $200 or something a month doesn't happen.
It takes us years to get to where we are. As you know, the amount of traffic that you're dealing with is valuable if you want to increase your website's terrible traffic even more web presence.
Therefore Traffic you are, so you will need to spend quite a bit of money to find someone that's any good. I'm just honest.
Unfortunately, the people I recommended will charge much more than what you want to pay, so that you know, to save you some time.
-
@chrisyak
Hi Chris
I don’t want to toot my own horn but I am in the top ten on Moz for replies to questions.I would recommend my good friend Bill Slawski he is the writer and owner of SEO By The Sea & head of SEO at Gofish Digital we host a weekly YouTube SEO hangout
You can also look at https://www.brainlabsdigital.com/ (now own, Distilled.net)
I know it doesn’t sound great to recommend yourself but here it goes.
https://moz.com/community/q/user/blueprintmarketing
I have a lot of experience with large sites & have had great results.tzickell@blueprintmarketing.com
603-978-1964I hope this helps,
Tom -
Hi, I agree with you that Ross Hudgens is an excellent SEO specialist, our company has dealt with him and were very pleased!
-
I agree with everything that's been said before, and will just add this. You're in the LA area, right? There are a lot of good SEOs there. My recommendation would be to contact either Ross Hudgens of Siege Media or Adam Piotrowski of apkedge.net. Ross runs his own agency, and even if he's not a fit, he could probably point you in the right direction. Adam is an in-house SEO, but can probably connect you with a potential SEO
-
Well, I suppose I actually have run into a wall in my seek, most of you gave a few fantastic tool recommendations on which to appear. The list of search engine marketing on seomoz is super if I may want to manage to pay for any of them. I actually have discovered a valuable lesson this week about the price of search engine optimizations. like here you can see on the espresso machine website.
-
I optimize for the time period myself, and whilst different SEO humans would possibly bristle-like DLL Files Download, humans nonetheless look for search engine marketing authorities irrespective of bristling.
-
Excellent reply. Too often as SEOs, as we get deeper into the community we care more about what other SEOs think and how to create content for other SEOs than for our actual clients.
I'm just as guilty as anyone, as my posts tend to get a bit technical.
But the first principle of SEO is keyword research. And if the keyword research shows that SEO guru is a searched term with opportunity, go for it!
-
Irrelevant? Alex, Google is a database. Each search is a database query. If you don't have an education in systems analysis, you might be a decent SEO, but you aren't going to have original thought or do any ground-breaking stuff. You're just doing what you've learned on the internet.
It's like knowing how to use a calculator really well, but not understanding why 2 + 2 = 4.
And if one has never written an algorithm, how could one propose to be an expert on algorithms? In order to best understand the algorithm, an SEO should be able to write an algorithm. Otherwise, it's just a guy in his basement testing correlation and causation...which Google goes out of it's way to foil.
-
I'd say what an SEO studied at school is often irrelevant, and marketing would be more appropriate than many computer-related studies.
-
It may be used by egotistical people Tom; or it may be used by a legitimate SEO who knows that potential new clients (such as the poster of this question) search for an SEO guru.
I optimize for the term myself, and while other SEO people might bristle (I have no idea why), people still search for SEO gurus regardless of bristling.
I'll keep optimizing for that keyword and all the rest of the SEO guys and girls can just smugly think how cool they are for not using that term...that potential clients use all of the time. I'll stick with the general public, since SEO experts generally don't want to hire me anyway.
Finally, if not earning clients is enough to convince you: Google uses the term "expert" as a synonym for "guru".
In other words, the Googlebot associates "guru" with expert and the words are interchangeable in the SERPS, for the most part.
Google thinks guru = expert.
Clients think guru = expert.
SEO people think guru = egotistical con-artists.
Broad-sweeping generalization, but I can live with it. I still deliver the goods.
-
Honestly, not trying to be a smart ass here, but I would just Google "SEO guru." Then, pick someone from page 1 who has a decent website and lives in the same country as you.
Clearly, if you need an SEO guru to help you do well in Google, I would start by asking the Googlebot who it determines would rank for such a term.
Make sure the person you pick has a very high AuthorRank and regularly publishes content, either on his own blog or other important websites. Someone who offers "white hat" SEO or is a "white hat SEO guru" would be ideal. Like you said, you don't want your credentials turned over to just anyone.
If you need help with local SEO, why not search for a local search guru? Or even a Google local search guru?
I also happen to know that one of those SEO gurus (that ranks in the first few results in Google) is just now currently taking clients.
The interesting thing is that when people are looking for an SEO guru, or expert, or consultant, or what have you-- they often place a classified ad or perhaps post in a forum such as this. But all you need to do is "Google it."
The first thing you should ask an SEO person is: What do you rank for? What longtail keywords do you rank for?
Next: What did you study in school? (If it's not computer-related, you can probably move on.) Personally, I think a strong understanding of systems analysis and database development is the most useful.
Google is a system. A good SEO analyzes that system, so an SEO is really just a systems analyst.
**Edited: And I agree with Alex below. Marketing helps too, when it comes to search engine marketing (such as PPC and landing pages), R&D, maybe copywriting. But for organic SEO, my opinion is to hire an experienced systems (DB) analyst. **
And be sure to ask what kind of link building they engage in. You don't want to get nailed by a penguin.
-
Assuming that there aren't any Q&A restrictions around posting a question like that, I think it's best to create a new thread.
Fwiw, I don't think you'll have a hard time getting a site audit for that budget... It might not have too much competitive research and whatnot, but I think you can probably get enough to give you and the SEO action items. I mean, if a potential client asked me to do an audit at or around $2k, it'd be lighter than I'm used to, but I could do it.
With regard to the monthly budget, that might be a bit tougher just because you'll be such a small client for most SEOs that they might not feel it's worth it. Either way though, I'd start a new thread and see what you get. Depending on how you site is staffed though, you might get more bang for your buck if you had the SEO train and/or consult someone on staff to do everything that needs done. For me, things like that tend to be most common when the client doesn't have a big budget.
-
Thank for the reply, would it best to start a new thread or is their a category where I should post it?
I would like a extensive site audit and have around a 2K budget for it and would like to work with a company monthly as well, also would like to work with the company on a monthly basis with a $250-400 monthly budget. Is SEOmoz the best place to post for this type of requirements? I would be scared to place it on odesk...lol...
-
Best of luck. I'm sure you can find someone if you post your budget here honestly. Also, the definition of a site audit is pretty broad because it depends so much on the client's site, what they need, etc. For example, I not long ago did a site audit for one client for $10k, but just did another one for a different client for $3k, so depending on what you need, you might be able to find someone that fits your budget if they don't just give you a boilerplate response.
-
Well I think I have run into a wall in my search, most of you gave some great device advice on where to look. The list of SEO on seomoz is great if I could afford any of them.I have learned a valuable lesson this week about the cost of SEO's.When i see prices of 5-10K for site audits and $200 per hour I know I am barking up the wrong tree.
Now I think I would just like a good seo that knows his stuff well and won't charge me a small fortune.
-
I agree with everything that's been said before, and will just add this. You're in the LA area, right? There are a lot of good SEOs there. My recommendation would be to contact either Ross Hudgens of Siege Media or Adam Piotrowski of Livestrong.com. Ross runs his own agency, and even if he's not a fit, he could probably point you in the right direction. Adam is an in-house SEO, but can probably connect you with a potential SEO.
-
The SEOmoz recommended company list is a good starting point. Have you read Google's advice on hiring an SEO?
I guess you may have already read these:
http://www.seomoz.org/blog/how-to-recruit-an-seo-the-seo-industry-leaders-reveal-their-secrets-14183 http://searchengineland.com/attributes-to-look-for-when-hiring-an-in-house-seo-41852 (may be a bit outdated by now)Make sure it's someone who keeps up to date with this ever changing industry and ask them how they keep up-to-date.
And perhaps the best, most established SEO will pay multiple times over for your unborn children
-
If you actually find someone marketing themselves as an "SEO Guru", I'd advise to stay well, well away.
It's a horrible term, generally used by egotistical con-artists.
-
I have some ideas on what I think we need in terms of SEO but of course I would be open to the SEO's suggestions.What is the best approach when contacting these companies?
Tell them everything I think is relevant , needs, goals and so on in email phone / call? ask for a proposal?
-
Hey Chris, i agree with masdigitalmedia. Look at that SEOMoz recommended list. Look for somebody local in your area if you can and if not, at-least somebody who can visit you every once in a while.
If you have specific questions, there's always SEOMoz Q&A
Good Luck.
-
Hi,
SEOMoz has a list of recommended companies that you could consider. They post the list here.
http://www.seomoz.org/article/recommended#seo-consulting
You get the benefit of a team of people to work on the your project.
Thanks
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
-
What are other SEO's calling themselves now?
I am piggy backing off of Rand's latest Whiteboard Friday: http://www.seomoz.org/blog/why-we-cant-just-be-seos-anymore-whiteboard-friday (It is an awesome post if you haven't checked it out yet.) I just want to hear some feedback from other industry professionals. Have you started defining/communicating your business as more than just, I do SEO? If so, what are you calling yourselves now and why? How has that been working out for you?
Industry News | | VentaMarketing1 -
A suggestion to SEOs that cold call potential clients
Learn some basic salesmanship. Do you realize that business owners are getting 3-4 phone calls and emails a day from other SEOs claiming to be the best? Be polite, ask questions, and don't insult me or yourself through ignorance. Ask questions. You might just discover that we could work together. When you tell me that I'm not ranking for "competitive keywords" it tells me that you don't know what I'm trying to rank for. When you tell me you can get me to the top of Google in 3 months or less, you're still telling me that you don't know my business and what I want from my website. Who said I wanted national ranking anyway? Oh right, not me because you never asked. And if I answer the question "Do you want more business/leads?" with "No." Then politely end the conversation and move on. The rare time that I do get asked about my current efforts, don't insult me by calling me an amateur. I may be one, but talking down to me, or trying to make SEO sound like you're turning lead into gold will get a quick hang up from me. If you want a contract with me, learn to negotiate based on my needs, not your process that you feel married to. There are a lot of business owners out there that would be willing to work with you if you treated you leads with respect rather than iteration 23 of your cold call script. And in response to the person this morning that sent a "free report" of basic SEO fixes for my website, make sure you put that report together using **my website. ** I know you're working from a template, so it should be really easy to remove the info from the wedding company and the lawyer's webpages before you email it to me.
Industry News | | wreevesc0 -
Looking For A reliable Japanese Based SEO Agency
Hey everyone, my company is looking for a reliable SEO agency to help with our Japanese site. I was wondering if anyone had any possible positive experiences with one? Carl
Industry News | | geekdesign0 -
SEO Agency Recommendations
I'm looking for recommendations for SEO agencies for an e-commerce site in the cell phone accessories niche. The list of companies recommended by SEO Moz are out of our budget, as we are looking to stay under $3k/month. Looking for an agency that will focus especially on link building efforts, as there has been minimal white-hat link building implemented for the site in the past. Many of the agencies we've talked to are relying entirely too much on easy wins like directory submissions and we are looking for an agency that will be able to garner us quality links as opposed to a huge amount of mediocre links. Any recommendations for reasonably-priced, quality SEO agencies? Thanks!
Industry News | | eugeneku0 -
SEO-contests like “hochgeschwindigkeitsSEO” worldwide?
In Germany people out of the SEO industry seem to love SEO contests - the latest one being to bring up the keyword “hochgeschwindigkeitsSEO” on Pos. 1 on Google until a set time (contest entry example here). There obviously is a price (newest iPhone) and a sponsor (Randolf Jorberg), but for the most part it's a contest which holds the Olympic thought: Being there just means most of it 🙂 So I was wondering: are there any other countries where such contests are being held? I have not heard of any examples and I am quite curious if any other SEO communites out there have something similar going on 🙂
Industry News | | blueSummit1 -
Recommended marketplace for SEO
Hi Mozzers! With the shut down of the SEOMoz marketplace what are some other resources for finding people to help with SEO tasks? Craigslist seems like the best resource for this, but are there any other good ones?
Industry News | | ProjectLabs0 -
Node.js for SEO
We've got a client building a site using node.js (http://nodejs.org/) I'm not at all familiar with this and of course need to know how nodejs impacts SEO? Are you familiar with it? Any sites you know of using it? But as I said, bottom line - how will it impact the SEO on the site?
Industry News | | VMLYRDiscoverability1 -
How many small businesses use SEO?
I'm looking for data (not opinions) on how many small businesses use SEO, that is, either do it in-house, hire a firm, or hire a freelancer. I've poked around on SEMPO and eConsultancy but can't find what I'm looking for.
Industry News | | jsteimle0