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A New Era of Enterprise SEO: 7 Opportunities to Embrace Today


January 2020 ushered in not only a new year but the beginning of a new decade.

And although there are no hard stops and starts as far as eras of innovation go, it’s clear that we’re entering a new realm of enterprise SEO that is going to transform the way we do business.

Enterprise SEO has gone mainstream and become a multi-billion-dollar industry alone.

This new era of enterprise SEO has us moving beyond duplicating our efforts in multiple markets with customizations for broad traits such as language, geopolitics, regional weather trends, and local holidays.

Equipped with the right technology (and people who know how to use it), brands can take advantage of the opportunity to trigger meaningful real-time personalized experiences based on any number of demographics, traits, and/or individual behaviors.

As organic search share continues to grow, this can be replicated and impacts multiple types (all) industries.

The past few years alone have thrown AI, BERT, Hummingbird, and RankBrain into the SEO mix – not to mention massive changes and growth in mobile and voice search.

So, how can you make the most of the search channel in this new era of enterprise SEO?

Here are seven areas of opportunity you don’t want to overlook.

1. Embrace New Opportunities in Every Channel

There is no one-size-fits-all SERP, and one type of content may not even be the best place to answer any given query.

What’s more, there are now hundreds of variations on the search results page.

Brands need to understand their greatest opportunities to appear and convert whether that’s in the Local Pack, on video, in an Instant Answer box or in paid search for any given query.

Beyond search, SEO now often holds the keys to omnichannel marketing success.

Understanding searcher intent is key in delivering the right resource to either answer their question or move them to the next desired action in the funnel.

Content format and substance must reflect the needs of the consumer whether the message is delivered on mobile or desktop, by voice or text, via social media, SMS text message, or email blast.

Search provides a wealth of data to inform content creation and targeting.

But there’s no possible way to create and optimize dynamic content like this in real-time without a solid underpinning of enterprise SEO software.

2. Embrace Innovation

Is your SEO tech still serving your needs?

A lot of today’s seasoned SEOs came up in the era of having to cobble together disparate solutions, creating their own workarounds to get some semblance of a complete view at their data.

Automation was used to make repetitive tasks less onerous; to free up time spent on auditing, competitive research, etc.

Only the most advanced AI-powered platforms can give us the power to go further, not only gathering data but analyzing massive amounts of it and then taking action, as well.

As consumer behaviors and expectations change, you might find new gaps in your tech’s capabilities. You may identify new data governance issues, permissions needed, or opportunities to engage others in:

In addition, point vs. platform is a major consideration nearly every enterprise-level SEO will face at some point as too much data and too many tools cause chaos.

These are all considerations that should be reevaluated on an ongoing basis.

3. Empower Your People

SEOs tend to wear many hats, especially at the enterprise level.

Consider that the typical in-house SEO team consists of just 2 to 5 people, regardless of whether the business has fewer than 100 employees or more than 1,000.

As an SEO, you might have your hands in (and hopefully are consulting on) web design and development, local and mobile marketing, business data analysis, copywriting, email marketing, and more.

Analytical reasoning, Natural Language Processing, business analysis, digital marketing, competitive strategy, data science – these are among the hard skills companies need most right now.

Often, these are the skills of an SEO pro. SEOs are the hybrid marketers that companies need to bring both analytical and creative thinking to a campaign.

Obviously, you need to stay up to speed with the rapid evolution of the search space.

But enterprise SEO teams can also benefit from training in:

This is especially important as the rest of the organization looks to marketing for insights, as SEO has an opportunity to step up and lead.

4. Protect the Quality & Integrity of Your Data

High-quality, clean, trustworthy data is critical not only to the success of your campaigns but to SEO’s reputation within the enterprise, as well.

You’re trying to communicate that SEO drives revenue, builds brand awareness and visibility, fuels the performance of your other channels, and more.

You want SEO to be a reliable source of truth for your organization.

Now imagine offering up your SEO insights to bolster a business decision, only to be proven inaccurate at a later date.

How would you recover from that inevitable erosion of trust in your data?

Getting corporate decision-makers to buy into the value of search data requires that we protect the integrity of that data at all costs.

This ties in directly with both using the right technology and training your SEO team members to use it correctly and to its full capability.

If budget and buy-in are issues, focus on one area and make sure you’ve got it right.

Learn how to communicate the value of that one set of insights.

Only then can you begin to scale and grow SEO’s influence internally.

5. Collaborate Closely with SEM

The days of PPC and SEO duking it out for a share of the marketing budget should be long over.

With all of those hundreds of variations of SERPs, you need to know where PPC can augment your presence and where the money is better spent elsewhere.

There’s no point in cannibalizing one another.

Smart remarketing can also be incredibly effective, but organic and paid need to work together closely to ensure that the messaging being delivered to prospects across platforms is cohesive and logical.

All of these different touchpoints form one customer’s journey.

It’s no longer about whether a person came from organic or paid or social, but how each channel met their needs and moved them along to the next step.

6. Champion SEO as the Voice of the Customer

Different enterprise stakeholders are looking to SEO for different insights.

The CEO of the company doesn’t want to see keyword ranking fluctuations or a list of how many technical errors were resolved on-site this month.

She wants to see the brand’s revenue driven from search, share of voice, and other results tied directly to business goals.

Similarly, product development doesn’t want to see share of voice or revenue driven from organic search.

They want to see sentiment analysis from reviews, search queries reflective of customers’ current needs, and specific customer feedback to help inform future iterations of the product.

Across the organization and with every department, champion SEO as the voice of the customer.

Deliver the insights each stakeholder needs and your job of evangelism becomes far simpler, as the results speak for themselves.

7. Elevate & Scale SEO With Centers of Excellence

Establishing Centers of Excellence helps enterprise organizations scale across business units, teams, and physical locations.

Project management, workflow, and roles must be clearly defined and documented.

Your approach to auditing and sharing your wins should make clear the benefits of your SEO program to all business stakeholders, from the front lines to the C-suite.

“Lead, follow, or get out of the way.” –General George S. Patton

The new era of enterprise SEO is rife with opportunity as the influence of search grows and permeates every aspect of the digital business.

Are you in a position to lead?

This Post was originally published on www.searchenginejournal.com

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