The enterprise business of SEO: Communicating to the C-suite

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The enterprise business of SEO: Communicating to the C-suite

Change is the only constant in SEO. At the moment, change is the only constant in the economy. 

Adapting to SEO shifts, reduced paid spending, and the general consensus of having to do more with less have hit marketers hard. 

As C-suite members look to reduce costs and improve efficiencies, SEO has risen to become an essential boardroom agenda item.

SEO is impacting website performance across every type of industry. It provides vital business insights into consumer behavior and intent while helping content get discovered and measured.  

With this in mind, and as we look toward 2023, how SEOs communicate to key stakeholders across their organization will be of the most critical importance. 

Additionally, as competition for digital marketing budgets intensifies, the importance of SEO success and performance must be recognized and rewarded.

As SEO becomes engrained in many parts of a business – from providing insights for sales and product and optimizing content to partnering with digital media teams – it is critical to address the following.

  • “What key metrics matter to the CEO?”
  • “How best do I talk to my CMO and the CFO on budgets?”
  • “When and how should I communicate SEO performance across the organization?”
  • “How do I handle multiple requests for insights from other departments?”

Here are some insights and tips to help you communicate to the C-suite.

SEO in the boardroom: Challenges and opportunities

Conversations at the C-level are constantly pivoting due to changes in the economy, fluctuations in demand and supply, and organizational changes. 

Companies of every size across every industry face the constant challenges of innovating for the future and meeting the demands of tomorrow’s customers. 

Understanding the needs of the customer and their experiences has become the number one focus for every business.

The organic channel is perfect for helping key members of the C-suite to:

  • Stay ahead of market trends with vital business insights.
  • Determine competitive pressures.
  • Identify new opportunities.
  • Glean an overall better understanding of the customer across the whole business.

C-suite conversations are also highly focused on performance. However, it is not about driving performance at all costs. 

Instead, it is about driving performance in the most efficient way possible with the best gross margin possible.

When it comes to the organic channel and SEO, C-level executives appreciate the ROI of the organic channel. 

Organic search drives over 51% of website traffic – a percentage that has held constant for nearly eight years. This is a great starting point when building conversations with C-level executives.

However, the challenge that many SEOs have is twofold:

  • Getting visibility.
  • Getting buy-in through clear reporting and communication. 

And you cannot get one without having the other.


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Understanding the C-suite and key business metrics that matter

The C-suite drives the company’s business strategy and manages employees. However, not everyone in this position has an equal amount of knowledge about digital marketing techniques.

Some may be more skilled than others in technical skills like coding or designing websites. 

At the same time, another person could specialize in product strategies instead. 

Regardless of their SEO knowledge levels, all members work toward common goals:

  • Results (revenue).
  • Performance metrics (how well we’re doing relative to our competitors).
  • Organizational impact.

Regarding organic search, measures of one campaign’s success do not always translate directly into what members in your organization view as a victory. 

To bridge this gap between communication and understanding for everyone involved, you should begin by establishing how vital SEO is on an individual level with those who can make decisions based on these numbers. 

You can also show them how your efforts are helping promote other digital marketing channels while boosting customer retention rates through more personalized offerings based on understanding the customer experience.

As media budgets are reduced, organizations are being asked to do more with less with more. There has never been a better time to communicate the importance and value of SEO.

Your goal here is to establish that:

SEO is an investment that provides compounded interest from short-term wins to long-term incremental gains. 

The time and effort that goes into it are sticky. 

It does not go away and builds over time. It is durable and provides exponential growth.

These are things a C-suite member loves to hear!

Every organization has different hierarchical structures and titles. However, for illustrative purposes, below are a few examples based on a generic enterprise C-level structure.

CEO

The chief executive officer (CEO) is always interested in overall performance. CEOs:

Metrics that matter: 

CMO

The chief marketing officer (CMO) is interested in the overall demand generation portfolio. Organic search is exciting because of its sheer size. 

Every CMO:

Metrics that matter: 

CFO

The chief financial officer (CFO), like the CEO, is interested in overall performance. 

However, the CFO will also be interested in budgeting and forecasting.

They will want to determine:

With so many fluctuations in the economy and pressure on budgets, ensuring the CFO understands the why of what you are doing related to the end result is essential. 

Metrics that matter: 

CTO

A chief technology officer (CTO) is pivotal in modern-day SEO. 

CTOs:

Metrics that matter: 

COO

The chief operating officer (COO) will be interested in:

Metrics that matter:

Collectively, the C-suite wants to know the following:

Mastering communication

Remember that your time with the C-suite will be limited. Hence make sure you choose your words wisely and make them count.

To evangelize and elevate your SEO work, remember who you are talking to, and remember to speak their language. 

For example, a CMO would rather hear about revenue than rank because they are more concerned with how well an SEO campaign translates into tangible results for their company’s bottom line.

You should always strive to speak “their language” when communicating effectively – which means understanding how to translate. 

CEOs are less interested in seeing keyword ranking changes (outside of your crucial core terms) and more interested in seeing your share of voice, revenue from organic campaigns, and success within the competitive landscape. 

This offers you the chance to elevate SEO and the importance of your role. Again, language is key to communication.

Here’s how to frame what you say and what it means to the C-suite.

SEO language C-suite language
SEO The organic channel
Algorithm updates Google changes 
Keywords Topics that customers are searching for – intent 
Rank and rank change Where content is performing
Optimizing Attracting and converting customers online
SERP CTR Share of voice for an online search query
Data  Business insights
Share of voice  Versus the competition 

In addition, use reports and visuals that quickly and clearly communicate your progress and the direct benefit to the company.

Elevate SEO by being transparent 

SEOs have a history of making SEO esoteric and exotic, implying that there is a bit of dark magic involved. 

But, unfortunately, that serves neither the SEO nor the executive audience.

Take the opposite approach by:

Communicate SEO’s value to the C-suite

The role of SEO is continually rising. It has become an active participant in business planning and part of many companies’ business intelligence. As a result, alignment with multiple stakeholders is becoming critical. 

Ensure your strategies are sound while creating alignment across various stakeholders across the C-suite as your organization advances. 

Most of the time, SEO teams are expected to do more and provide more value with fewer resources than other areas of the business may have. 

While that speaks to the value and importance of SEO in an organization, it also means you have to be methodical in approaching your work if you’re an SEO in this scenario. 

Use your time to showcase success and manage expectations. Traction takes time, so balance strategies to make incremental gains while focusing on long-term success

Keep elevating your success by building appropriate dashboards and presentations that tie SEO strategy and tactics to business objectives. This will directly help you position and promote your success. 

Continually engage with C-level executives and help them understand the value of SEO and its role.

Use data, AI, and deep learning to share powerful insights, tell content-rich stories, and develop new skill sets that help you understand and adapt to the broader digital and marketing technology landscape.

The ability to communicate effectively in meetings is a crucial part of your success as an SEO. 

Invest some time developing valuable meeting room traits like confident speaking abilities or compelling storytelling so that you can engage with leaders. 

This will allow you to engage with your organization’s leaders and help them understand the value of what you and the organic search channel offer.


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


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About The Author

Jim Yu

Jim Yu is the founder and CEO of BrightEdge, the leading enterprise content performance platform. He combines in-depth expertise in developing and marketing large on-demand software platforms with hands-on experience in advanced search, content and digital marketing practices.

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