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Optimize your own Site
Should You Handle Your Own SEO?
Everyone is trying to save money in today's economy - but sometimes when you
think you are saving money you are actually losing more than you are saving.
If you are planning on handling your own SEO, have you considered the
following?
1) Do you have the time to do the work and actually get the job done.
2) That you can get
the results you need, so you actually improve your traffic from top searches.
To determine if you should handle your SEO - ask
yourself these questions.
1. Can you work within simple HTML? At a bare minimum, you need to be able to
add Meta tags to an HTML document. Ideally, you can also bold text, set up
links, change formatting, rename images, move java script into a .js file etc.
2. Do you have enough time to make your site search engine friendly? Plan on a
minimum of 3 hours per week for sites that are in great shape, and up to 25 hours
per week (or
more) for sites that may need a complete overhaul. In our experience, 3 - 6
hours per week seems to be the norm for time spent on updating SEO friendliness issues.
3. Will you have this time for SEO friendliness work within the next week?
Typically, if people don't take action in the immediate future (within the next
5 business days), the project ends up being delayed indefinitely. You need a
clear scheduled start date for your SEO work - especially when the holidays are
approaching! You need to get things going!
4. Can your business afford to "lend" this time to
SEO without experiencing some
other negative impact? If the time is not truly extra time you have, then you
would be "borrowing" the time from another area of your business. Can you do
that without harming another area of your business?
5. If your SEO project becomes bigger than you initially anticipated, will you
have the time and attention to continue dedicating to it until completion?
6. Are you an experienced and competent copywriter? If you said no, do you feel
you can quickly master writing compelling copy that is also keyword rich?
7. Is the content already on your site something you feel comfortable altering?
Often people that have paid for high-end marketing copy on their websites do not
want to make any SEO alterations themselves, for fear of altering the
effectiveness of their current copy - and therefore affecting their conversion
rates.
8. Do you have any prior SEO experience?
9. Do you have the tools or know where to purchase the tools that will help you
in keyword selection, site analysis, reporting and current industry information?
10. Would you rather spend your time working ON your business (i.e., growing it)
than IN your business (i.e., taking care of the nitty gritty details rather than
the big picture)?
11. Do you have a plan in place to make sure you stay current on all SEO trends
and changes so you can maintain your rankings on-going?

Now let's take a look at your answers and what they mean:
1: Can you work within simple HTML?
On-page optimization requires that you work within the HTML on your website. If
you are not able to work with an HTML document and feel confident that you will
not cause any errors or malfunctions, then you simply cannot handle your SEO at
this time.
You would need to learn HTML before you could consider handling SEO. Please
note, if your site is more complex than simple HTML, you would need to be
comfortable working within the code used on your site.
2, 3 and 4: Do you have enough time to make your site search engine friendly?
Can your business afford to "lend" this time to SEO, and therefore experience no
significant negative impact? If the time is not truly extra time you have, then
you would be "borrowing" the time from another area of your business.
You will also later need to write content, alter content and handle various
optimization techniques, but to get started - before you can do anything else -
you need to make the time to get the foundation ready for SEO. If you don't have
time to do this, your project simply won't get off the ground.
Do you truly have the time, or are you just taking it from somewhere else. If
you are taking it from somewhere else, that may be fine - you just need to be
sure that you aren't harming your business in other ways. Getting rankings, and
ultimately traffic to your site will not benefit you if your business falls
apart while you work on the optimization.
The remainder of the questions are details for you to consider. Basically, the
more No's there are, the more likely it is that you should NOT handle your SEO
in-house.
If your results determined you can handle your SEO, here are the final details
you need you consider:
1. What is your time worth per hour? Which option is more cost effective for you
- hiring someone or spending your time?
2. Can you recognize when your choice is not working for you, and are you willing
to try the other option at that time?
3. You must commit to educating yourself and learning all that you need to know
to truly run a successful
SEO campaign. Inadvertently spamming, or using a
questionable technique can result in a temporary loss of results or a permanent
ban from the engines. Be 100% sure you aren't endangering your business.
If your results determined you should outsource your SEO, here are the final
details you should consider:
1. Make sure you know what questions to ask the SEO firm you hire.
2. Plan on spending anywhere from $100 - $1000.00 per month to run an aggressive
SEO campaign.
No one but you can decide - we just wanted to arm you with some things to
consider. It is all in the details, and you should consider them carefully
before making a decision.
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