How to create SMART SEO goals (with examples)

SEO is getting more difficult. It's time to get SMARTer. Learn how setting SMART goals can drive your SEO strategy forward.

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Like any endeavor, SEO works best with clearly defined and articulated goals. 

If you only set vague SEO goals like “get more leads” or “get more traffic,” you will lack focus and direction.

Vague goals fail to provide a map forward and feed into wasted time and generalist SEO work that will do little to help your mission. 

This article will provide an overview of why setting specific goals is essential and how it helps push you forward and direct your SEO efforts. 

Why goals matter

A goal provides you with a target to aim at. 

Having a target to aim at allows you to sanity check your actions and ensure the way you spend your SEO time is in service of the goal. 

Goals also help you measure your progress, which in SEO is crucial. You may be making no progress, meaning you must change your tactics or update your goals. 

Likewise, progress towards a goal gives you a feeling of accomplishment and motivation that can help you keep pushing when SEO can sometimes feel overwhelming.

What are SEO goals?

SEO goals aim to progress your SEO and support your broader marketing and business objectives. Typically, you will target awareness and engagement with prospective customers on search engines. 

When looking to improve your SEO, you will look at rankings, impressions, click-through rates, clicks and the subsequent engagement of that traffic. You may also consider aspects such as the size of an opportunity (keyword volume and impressions). 

Creating practical goals is the first step in crafting an SEO strategy, and should consider the following five steps:

  • Specificity: The goal must be clearly defined so it can be measured.
  • Measurable: Goals must be quantifiable so you can track progress. 
  • Achievable: Goals should be realistic within your resources.
  • Relevant: Goals should map to higher-order business and marketing goals.
  • Time-bound: Goals must consider time to aid the measurement.

Fortunately, this being marketing, there is a handy mnemonic to help us remember these critical factors in practical SEO goal setting: SMART goals. 

SMART goals for SEO

The SMART goals framework is not new. It is widely used in project management, personal development and psychology. 

I believe in using time-proven marketing concepts within our SEO work. Often, intersecting your SEO skills with these battle-tested marketing concepts can really drive performance. 

We have seen in our agency that using SMART goals for SEO is a smart move.

Let’s look at how the stages break down and examples of how you can create your own SMART SEO goals. 

S: Specific

Specificity is the first step toward creating actionable SEO goals.

As an example, better rankings are not a specific goal. Ranking in the top 3 results for keyword X nationally is a specific goal. 

A broader yet specific goal could also be improving organic traffic by 25%, but as you become less specific, you must also apply some critical thinking about how you will achieve this and state this in your goal. 

Questions to ask yourself or your team include:

  • What are we trying to achieve?
  • How does this help us achieve our marketing goals?
  • What do we need to do to achieve this?

Then you make this goal more specific:

  • “Improve organic traffic by 25% by improving the rankings for all our commercial keywords on our category pages. “

It is also useful to ensure you build your specific goal on top of clearly defined business and marketing goals. This provides a hierarchical set of goals so you can question whether this SEO goal helps you achieve your marketing goals. 

Your goals should be crystal-clear and connected to our business objectives so that everyone from the boardroom to the marketing department understands what success looks like.

M: Measurable

To understand if you are making progress towards a goal and if that goal is truly helping you achieve the underlying goals, we must make the goal measurable.  

Fortunately, with SEO, we have plenty of touchpoints we can use to track success. 

There are many SEO KPIs, and the right measurement metrics depend upon your goals, but the following should help get you started.

SEO metrics

  • Rank for main converting keywords (local/organic).
  • Rank for secondary benchmark keywords (local/organic).
  • Organic clicks (Search Console).
  • Organic impressions (Search Console).
  • Organic CTR (Search Console).
  • Organic average position (Search Console).
  • Trust and citation balance.

Link building metrics

  • Total links built.
  • Number of links from authority sites.
  • Number of links from relevant sites.
  • SEO Tool Domain and Page Metrics. 

Real-world metrics

  • Increase in organic traffic.
  • Increase in the number of pages on the site that generate traffic.
  • Increase in non-branded search traffic.
  • Percentage increase in organic conversions.
  • Organic Impressions (Search Console).

Just remember to identify metrics that will help you track progress and not just the end goal so you can identify if your tactics are working! 

A: Achievable

When it comes to SEO, how realistic and attainable your goal is requires some soul-searching and hard truths. 

We don’t want to aim too low; goals should be aggressive. However, we must ensure that our goals are realistic within your resources (money, manpower etc) and a sometimes harsh search reality. 

A helpful job here is to search for your keywords and pay close attention to the search results. What do you see? Who is ranking? What types of results are there? Where are the opportunities? What could you do better? 

When it comes to deciding what is achievable, this is not always easy in itself. We could look at typical SEO metrics from third-party tools, and that has its place, but I would suggest a more nuanced and qualitative approach. Consider competitor SEO metrics, but focus on what you could do better. 

If your look at “what is achievable” through the lens of “what could you do better” then your SEO strategy is quality driven rather than metric driven. 

This enables you to set more exciting goals and works more with what Google is looking for (to deliver the best possible results). 

Key areas to consider here are:

  • Quality: What can you do better? 
  • SEO feasibility: Are you in the same league as the page 1 results?
  • Situation: Are you in the same league as the big players on the first page?
  • Resources: Do you have the resources to hit these goals?

Sometimes you won’t progress as you had hoped. This is inevitable, and it is just as important, possibly more so, to understand when you are not making progress so you can adjust your strategy accordingly. 

Ultimately, the best SEO goals are never born fully formed; they grow and develop over time as you target them and evolve your approach. 

R: Relevant

It is very easy to end up chasing the wrong goals. 

There are two ways to ensure an SEO goal is truly relevant:

  • Explain how this SEO goal helps you achieve your overall marketing goals.
  • Cross-reference this with conversion data from paid search.

You are looking to come at this from a common sense perspective to explain the theory and then back that up with data where possible. 

By proving from two directions, you help ensure this is a truly relevant goal that will help drive your marketing forward. 

You want to end up with a statement along the lines of:

  • “We want to rank for [x] to improve our visibility and traffic from customers searching for a [x]. This will help us generate more local awareness and drive more enquiries and sales. Paid search data shows us this keyword has a 10% conversion rate so we know this traffic is highly valuable and will drive leads and sales.” 

Ultimately, with relevance, you are just quickly checking in that this is a sensible use of your resources and connects to the overall mission. 

T: Time-bound

All goals need to have a target date to achieve. If you don’t have that deadline, then you don’t know when to give up or assess progress. 

SEO is different from most marketing tactics as it can take longer to achieve. Therefore, we may not see any actual hard results (sales or leads). 

So, introducing time-bound goals for SEO, along with milestones showing progress, is essential to know you are not chasing rainbows and things are moving in the right direction. 

Determining how long how long SEO will take is not easy, so rather than striving for perfection, do your best and then review as you make progress. 

SMARTer SEO goals

To make SMART goals work as well as possible for SEO I propose an additional step being a regular “Review.” By reviewing your progress, you can amend your goal based on the progress. 

For instance, if you are far from the top position and are moving a few spaces forward each month, you may decide this is too slow and is not aligned with needing results within three months. 

To leverage SMART goals for SEO, then factor in a weekly or monthly review to ensure you feed any learnings back into the goal setting. 

Using SMART goals for SEO

At my SEO agency, many inquiries will simply state that they want to rank #1 for a given keyword (or set of keywords). This is not a SMART goal.

SMART goals need to state why that goal will help achieve the business and marketing objectives.

Having this conversation within your business or with an agency is incredibly powerful and helps really dig into what your goals should be. 

SEO is difficult, so by talking goals through thoroughly, you apply critical thinking to goal setting to maximize your efforts in the right direction. 

You should end up with a simple statement that represents your overall SMART goal approach. Often, you will also have statements for the individual goals that the meta goal represents. 

Something like:

  • “We want to achieve leads from organic search by 50% over 12 months. We will do this by moving our target keywords from positions 6-10 to positions 1-5.”

Here’s a breakdown:

  • Specific: We want to increase leads from organic search by 50%.
  • Measurable: Easily measurable through rankings, organic traffic and results.
  • Achievable: We can create better content than what is currently number one. 
  • Relevant: This will help us drive more sales from proven keywords. 
  • Timeline: 12 months gives us a deadline.

This approach also allows you to conduct a simple situation analysis and identify if elements of your digital marketing toolbox are not up to the job. 

Maybe you lack content assets for your SEO campaigns, or your website SEO is just not dialed in.

Whatever the issue, setting SMART goals will help you identify problems and sharpen up your SEO and digital marketing in 2023 and beyond.

SEO SMARTer, not harder

In the rush to go digital, it is all too easy to forget to get the foundation of your marketing dialed in. 

Tools like the 4 Ps, SWOT analysis and SMART goals can ensure your SEO is strategic to maximize results.


Opinions expressed in this article are those of the guest author and not necessarily Search Engine Land. Staff authors are listed here.


About the author

Marcus Miller
Contributor
Marcus Miller is an experienced SEO & PPC consultant based in Birmingham, UK. Marcus focuses on search marketing strategy and helping businesses cut through the smoke and mirrors of SEO, PPC and search marketing. Marcus is managing director of the UK SEO and digital marketing company Bowler Hat that focuses on helping businesses with their SEO & PPC, but also on training internal staff to help empower businesses to manage their own search destiny.

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