SAO – Search Agency Optimization
Landis Communications / PRGN, San Francisco / USA, 21.02.2012

David Landis, szef i właściciel Landis Communications na temat przyszłości związków firm PR i Social Media. Jesteśmy skazani na sukces, czy na wyginięcie?
I just returned from a very fruitful couple of (very snowy!) days in Denver.

(Yes, that’s snow, not a light show, in front of Euclid Hall in Denver)
Last week I met with my Western U.S. Public Relations Global Network affiliates (www.prgn.com). LCI is the network’s San Francisco member agency. I always find these meetings exhilarating and return with innovative ideas for our clients and our agency, as well as renewed passion and creativity for the industry.
During the meeting, Jim Licko at Ground Floor Media (www.groundfloormedia.com), our Denver PR partner, raised a provocative question: Who in the marketing/communications world, he asked, will own the world of social media?

Jim Licko, Ground Floor Media, Denver
It’s not a new question. But the way he posed it made me think: the brave new world of Web 3.0 could be the PR industry’s to lose.
You see, there are advertising agencies who claim they can do what we do. Biting at their heels are the “search engine optimization” folks who claim, as one local agency in the Bay Area does, that “not every link to your website is equal. We build powerful relevant links for you.”
But who really is best equipped to do this work for clients?
I say it is public relations professionals. We have spent our careers developing relationships with influencers, media and business partners to help tell the stories of our clients – all with the goal of helping build brand awareness and support for their businesses objectives. Who better than PR professionals to engage broader community conversations, listen, and make the most of those opportunities?
Let me give you an example, as told by Jim: SEO companies claim that they can engage “business partners” – but in reality, what do they do?
For paid search, it’s straightforward. They optimize buying keywords with an aim to place a brand at the top of paid results. But when it comes to organic search, PR companies not only compete – we do it better.
SEO companies put a person barely out of college (or utilize “bot” software) to build links that have no real relationship to the client. Conversely, how do public relations professionals build those links? We create partnerships by establishing real relationships with targeted bloggers (and traditional media who all have online components), providing valuable content that helps the client and the blogger/journalist at the same time. That content drives traffic to each partner.
But I’ll tell you what those SEO companies do better: they are in the habit of quantifying their results (through click-throughs, Google analytics and the like) that demonstrate return-on-investment for their clients. This is why I say this piece of the business is the PR industry’s to lose: unless we follow this example and provide solid ROI, clients will go elsewhere – even if those services aren’t, in my humble opinion, as beneficial.
So, if you’re a client looking for social media services, I’d say optimize your search for an agency. Don’t just assume that because someone says they do SEO, they have the best interest of your business in mind. Take a look instead at the public relations professionals who have built a career on building partnerships that help grow the business of their clients.
And PR pros, beware: unless we embrace ROI and demonstrate true return on investment, our industry may join the ranks of the Tyrannosaurus Rex.
2013
Kwiecień
Marzec
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