Robin will answer any questions related to the search engine marketing
industry. If the question is highly technical, or if she doesn't
know the answer, she'll contact experts in the industry or search
engine representatives for the answers.
Paid
Performance: A New Pricing Structure For SEO Companies
By Robin Nobles
Contributing Writer
"Pricing structures" have always been the source of much
discussion among professional SEO's. Knowing how much to charge
for SEO services is difficult, and it depends on so many factors.
So in the beginning, most SEO's tend to charge less for their services,
then spend hour upon hour getting results for their clients.
From there, those satisfied
customers (hopefully) recommend the SEO to other potential
customers, and slowly but surely, the SEO can raise the price
of his or her work to a more equitable amount.
Besides the wide differences in charges, there is also a wide
assortment of pricing plans, from flat charges to individual
charges for individual services, and even to charges based
on traffic or sales. SEO's are constantly testing out new
pricing structures to try to arrive at one that suits both
the clients and the SEO, one that is fair for both sides.
One professional SEO, Barry Lloyd, has experimented with pricing
structures for several years, and he's arrived at a plan that
works extremely well for him. With his rather unique plan,
the advantages to the client are simple: no relevant traffic
= no cost. The advantages to a good SEO are also simple: usually
a higher income, less hassle, and a client who is no longer
hung up on rankings but who is more interested in relevant
traffic and ROI.
Barry is one of the top SEO's in the UK and is the CEO of
Microchannel Technologies Ltd., which provides SEO/SEM services
through their MakeMeTop brand (http://www.makemetop.co.uk).
Barry is also a regular speaker at Internet marketing conferences
and a senior contributor at many of the online forums.
When asked for background information about MakeMeTop and
his pricing structures, here's what Barry had to say.
"When MakeMeTop first started providing professional SEO services
as a company in 1999, we found it hard to create a model which
was attractive to customers. Few had any real understanding
of the benefits of search engine marketing, and we didn't
really understand what our work was worth. So we undervalued
ourselves, rather than charging what our work was really worth.
"After about a year and having nudged our prices higher and
higher with no real downturn in business, we went the whole-hog
and decided not to accept any work unless the client signed
up for a year, and the annual contract produced a minimum
of $5,000 in revenue.
"At the end of 2000 when paid inclusion, paid reviews, and
PPC really started becoming a part of the SEM mix, we doubled
our prices again and waited for the fallout. It didn't really
happen. Sure, we lost smaller enquirers, but we gained business
from larger organizations. However, by the end of 2001, we
recognized that unless we were giving clients an excellent
return on investment, they were unlikely to stick with us.
"So, we began to work closer with clients to ensure that they
were getting good relevant traffic and (within the limits
of our ability) that it converted to sales. Within a few months,
it became apparent that the marketing departments of our clients
were working out their cost per visitor and their ROI and
comparing it to the costs of both banner ads, other forms
of on and offline marketing, and PPC costs from Overture.
The differences were frightening. On some sites, we were driving
focused traffic for fractions of a cent per visitor, yet their
competitors were willing to pay (in some cases) several dollars
per click and could still make money.
"It became obvious to us that we were still undervaluing our
services, but how could we get this message across? The answer
was blindingly simple!
"Paid performance.
"If you identify the market a potential client is in, you
can identify the 'perceived worth' of traffic in that market.
For example, take 'data recovery services,' which is currently
over $10 per click on Overture to be in the top 3. How much
would it be worth to someone in that industry to have top
10 listings on the major SE's for that and similar terms relating
to that industry? The answer is around $1.
"The sales pitch is simple: instead of paying a $3,000 set-up
fee which covers the first 3 months of services, why not use
our paid-performance plan? You give us a deposit of $1,000,
which is fully applied against click-throughs, and we charge
you $1 per unique relevant visitor. Traffic you get going
directly to your Web site is not charged for -- only traffic
we generate on a separate Web site. You, the client, can get
the results in real- time, and you get charged nothing further
until your click allowance is used up. If it is not used up
within 3 months, you are entitled to your unused element of
the deposit to be returned.
"Our clients have done well with this plan and so have we,
earning four times what we would have charged on our most
expensive plan. Since then, this has been a standard part
of our sales pitch (although the number of $1 per click deals
is low). The average per click price is 22 cents, and over
60 percent of our sales come from this method, yet revenues
have tripled and profitability has soared.
"Due to the growth in recognition of the PPC engines (who
still have a part to play in our SEM strategy), this method
removes the sense of distrust that there can be when selling
SEO services and can provide a method of marketing which can
be beneficial to both the client and the SEO company."
Barry continued by answering the following questions relative
to his pricing plan.
Question:
If I'm understanding this correctly, all visitors are logged
through a special domain specifically set up where you have
full access to the referral logs in real time to make sure
that the traffic generated is applicable to your site, and
the phrases used are relevant to your market and services.
How is this set up? As a separate subdomain of the main site?
Barry:
We are, in essence, selling traffic. A completely separate
and visible domain is created. We don't use subdomains.
Question:
So, you set up another site, related to the clients' domain
or industry, and all the traffic you generate goes through
this domain, and the client can then track it effectively
and accurately?
Barry:
Absolutely. In order to do a decent job, you need to have
an on- theme site with the client's contact details. Everything
is tracked through this site. The site has to be suitable
for DMOZ, Yahoo!, etc. We ask for a deposit to cover the initial
costs of paid reviews, spidering, etc.
Comment:
You mentioned the mistrust of clients when pitching SEO to
them. This is a very real problem for many professional SEO's
and one that many of them wrestle with every day. This pricing
structure appears to be an ideal solution.
Question:
How do you determine the cost per visitor? Which tools do
you use to determine value? Overture?
Barry:
Overture is very helpful. We look at the most important key
phrase price, then look at the secondary phrases to give an
overall average value of the traffic. Obviously this is significantly
less than the top Overture price. Espotting in the UK can
give a great indication, and so does AdWords. We also have
to gauge traffic. It isn't worth doing this plan for an area
where there is no real volume.
Question:
As an example, let's say it's $3 for the VIP phrase and $2
for the secondary phrase. Is the value then 3+2=5/2=2.5 per
visitor?
Barry:
In that case, I would probably pitch at $1.50 to make it a
no brainer for the client!
About the Author: Robin Nobles, Director of Training, Academy of Web
Specialists, (http://www.academywebspecialists.com)
has trained several thousand people in her online search engine
marketing courses (http://www.onlinewebtraining.com)
and is the content provider for (GRSeo) Search Engine Optimizer
software (http://www.se-optimizer.com).
She also teaches 2-day, 3-day, and 5-day hands-on search engine
marketing workshops in locations across the globe with Search
Engine Workshops (http://www.searchengineworkshops.com).