It's interesting that you reference Marketing Myopia, and then offer a myopic view of SEO. The article references industries that went under because they refused to change with the times. I'm wondering about your client who made the SEO jokes. Was it by chance Blockbuster? Or Borders?
Nope, not either of them. (Neither of those two spend $2.5B annually on advertising.) And their demise had nothing to do with lack of an SEO approach, but rather both had business models that fundamentally made no sense in today's marketplace.
The client company who's CMO made the SEO comment is generally regarded as one of the best marketing machine's in the world. And, in fact they probably spend more in on-line and SEO marketing than the rest of the other fortune 50 companies combined. Their CMO's comment was made to underscore the point that SEO is great, in as far as far as it goes. However, it's worth very little absent a cogent underlying marketing strategy.
I'll stand by my statement that SEO will not benefit "the industry" a single whit. Will it help XYZscuba.com gain some marketshare/sales from ABCdivers.com? Absolutely. Will that help "the industry" overall? No. The more interesting question is whether such an approach will actually hurt "the industry" overall. The answer to that is probably "yes" to some degree. But so be it, if I've got a business that I need to run I can't worry about "the industry" in general. All the more reason "the industry" needs someone marketing scuba diving overall. An expanding market is the best way to prevent individual businesses from engaging in activities that inadvertently hurt the industry - people who are backed into a corner do dumb things.
It seems this thread went completely off track from the get-go, as your original post title "Marketing: Are we doing ok, or do we need help?" confused people:
1.) The use of "we" caused people to think you were wanting to help "the industry" overall, rather than individual businesses
2.) The use of the term "marketing" caused people to think you were taking a broad, holistic view rather than a focus on one particular tactic
Apparently, what you meant was "SEO: Are you ok, or do you need help?"
This would have more clearly indicated the exceedingly narrow focus of your question, and proposed service offering. There's nothing wrong with that question and approach, I think people just went the wrong way with the topic as worded.
A question for you relative to the business model of your proposed agency: If I'm XYZscuba.com, and I engage you to do SEO for me... what do you do when ABCdivers.com calls you and asks if you can help them? Will you tell them "Sorry, I have a conflict of interest and cannot take you on as a client?" Or will you take their money and then offer ABCdivers.com a SEO solution that negatively impacts my business without telling either company that you're playing both ends against the middle? To use real-life names as an example you cannot take on both Aggressor Fleet and Explorer Ventures as clients. Nor can you take on both Sunset House (Cayman) and Buddy Dive (Bonaire). So, as near as I can tell you've got a shot at about 5-6 clients max.
1 Liveaboard op
1 On-line dive shop
1 Dive resort or tourism board
1 Full-line gear manufacturer
1-2 Ancillary products manufacturers
If you didn't track down "Blue Ocean Strategy" I suggest that as your next read; might help you understand whether you want to help your potential clients fight for a piece of a shrinking pie, or if there is a way for you to help them out of the bloodied, zero-sum-gain waters that even advanced SEO strategies are certain to keep them in. (Will also help you figure out how to avoid your own business model being self-limiting.)
---------- Post added December 26th, 2013 at 05:02 PM ----------
If a diver wants to know about wreck diving off the coast of New Jersey what will they search? Maybe "Wreck diving in New Jersey." When the search results come up, will your website be there? Is your competition there? If they click on your competition's website and like what they see, they will book with them and you've lost business. How much business over a year will you have lost because you didn't take the time to optimize your website for search engines?
Interesting question. While my day job is in the ad agency world, I do spend some of my free time crewing on a NJ dive boat, as referenced in my sig line. I did just google "Wreck Diving New Jersey" and found that...
1.) Our boat's website doesn't show up until the fourth page of results
2.) Two of our "competitors" show up above us in google results
However, our boat is booked full almost every time we go out... and the two boats listed above us in the google results tend to cancel many charters because they don't have enough passengers. So, strategically, for us there would probably not be any benefit to paying someone to assist us in SEO because...
A.) It is unlikely that we are currently losing any business to competitors due to poor SEO
B.) The likelihood of increasing our number of passengers per trip/month/year via enhance search performance is exquisitely low
C.) It is unlikely that we would recoup the cost of paying someone to assist us in SEO
Again, I'm not saying that SEO is not a valuable tool in a marketers tool box, but it is just that. As the old adage says "If all you have is a hammer, everything starts to look like a nail." Before a business decides to jump into SEO as the solution to their problems, they ought to think about whether that makes strategically.
Help me understand the business case for SEO as the savior of the small business: Suppose I'm trying to break into the online gear sales space... how much can I expect my bottom-line to increase if I improve my search result performance? (Knowing that "search results" don't appear anywhere on a balance sheet.)
Will I get on the first page, above the fold? If so, how much more valuable is that compared to wherever I am currently? Is showing up high in organic search results better or worse than LeisurePro or Scuba.com's paid position at the top of the page? Is that better or worse than the sponsored links on the right? What mix of SEO vs paid search vs online media purchase do you recommend? Or are you advocating a SEO as an "all-my-online eggs in one basket" approach?
However I might get my name in front of online customers, what is the psychographic makeup of the online gear purchaser? What is their likelihood of making a purchase overall? What are their key drivers/motivators/barriers to making a purchase in general? How do they choose among different online merchants specifically? How much of a factor is low price in their decision making process? If - as I think we'd all agree - low price is a key driver, can I even compete with LP or Scuba.com prices? Even if I can, do I want to?
Again, not saying SEO isn't a valuable tool, but that it is just one of many tools. And, as with the hammer referenced above, indiscriminately swinging it at screws and bolts and nuts is unlikely to yield satisfactory results.
I hope you don't feel that I'm picking on you; I genuinely love kicking this kind of stuff around. I'm mostly asking you - and the industry - to take a more circumspect view as to what is the problem that you're trying to solve, and what are the appropriate strategies and tactics that will best solve them.