Aug 15, 2007 at 1:16pm ET by Galen DeYoung
The typical B2B company often has plenty of literature available on its products and services. Once closely guarded as proprietary and available only to prospects vetted by the sales staff, this literature increasingly appears on company websites as B2B companies struggle to differentiate and distance themselves from competitors.
While this is great information for those visiting the website, these assets often sit idle in terms of attracting visitors to the website; these brochures, newsletters, sell sheets, technical papers, white papers, and case studies have been created without search engine optimization in mind.
In some cases, these materials are doing nothing in terms of attracting visitors. In others, the posting of these materials to corporate B2B websites can lead to a negative search experience. I noted one such experience (an American Seating pdf) in the last article. These materials are generally created by advertising agencies, marketing firms, and internal marketing departments. The hard, detailed content of these materials usually comes from company experts who labored over the exactness of the technical information. Each of these parties, however, is generally oblivious to search engine optimization. Due to the time and money that went into creating these assets, they are often viewed as sacred in their original form (likely for hardcopy distribution), and B2B marketers typically fail to go back to these assets and modify them for search. Yes, this may create two slightly different versions of the same piece, but there’s little harm in that.
While reworking an entire B2B website for SEO can be a daunting and expensive task, by simply optimizing existing assets for search engines, you can quickly rework these individual assets to serve as organic landing pages for desired search terms.
After determining the keywords for which you want to be found, determine for which of these keywords your site ranks well. Then, using the remainder of keywords (those for which you currently don’t rank well), review all of the other B2B materials you have on your site to determine what materials can be reworked to serve as organic landing pages.
To be found for a specific search term, there needs to be an optimized landing page on the website that revolves around that search term. Effective search engine optimization requires each significant page in a website have its own song, i.e., each page is optimized to specific search terms. You may be able to get two or three closely related search terms to point to the same landing page, but, typically, if the search terms aren’t very closely related, they should have different landing pages. Even when terms appear to be related, for instance “healthcare consulting” and “healthcare consultant”, given the amount of individual competition in the search engines for these terms, each term will likely need its own landing page.
Reworking existing assets to serve as organic landing pages usually isn’t that hard. The same content optimization techniques used for web pages applies to these assets.
Creating optimized landing pages for all of your desired search terms can be a daunting task. However, you likely have a rich repository of assets that can be modified for search engine optimization. Be sure to leverage what you already have.
Opinions expressed in the article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land.
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I agree. I am actually the sole marketing employee for a B2B company. I started about a month ago, straight out of college. Most of this company’s SEO and SEM has been done by the engineers who work here – the problem? All they have done is racked up an insane AdWords bill. In less than a month I have been able to get our site ranked in organic searches and cut our AdWords bill in half! But thanks for this post, you’ve certainly provided me with some more tips to try to make this less than sexy industry a bit more appealing!
Thanks for an eye-opening article. I recently have got a project to handle but this is a B2C. Do you think both the models would work on the same principles as you have mentioned above?
Shadab, the issues apply to B2C as well. B2B companies, however, seem to be behind the curve in terms of adopting SEO. When they do adopt SEO, they often struggle with how to “create” the necessary content. B2C marketers tend to create a lot more marketing content on an ongoing basis, so they don’t typically struggle with lack of content for SEO as much as their B2B counterparts do.