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SEO Tricks: The Value of Small Daily Incremental Improvements

Started by SEO Manager, May 09, 2008, 06:58:58 PM

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SEO Manager

The Value of Small Daily Incremental Improvements
 


<p>Building a well known brand and a sustainable business model in a competitive marketplace is challenging, but if you break things down into pieces and do something every day eventually you win marketshare. People who become successful have large goals like "become the leading source in our market" or "increase profits 150% year over year" but most people who actually achieve those types of goals set smaller goals and work toward achieving them every day. </p>
<p>One of my better habits is writing a to do list. When I scratch things off the list there is a sense of accomplishment which drives further activity. Sometimes the accomplishments are moral victories, learning how to create a little bit of code, or improving the graphical interface of something, while other projects are much more complex, like writing a book or hundreds of training modules. As long as growth is sustainable then all is well. If you stop growing in a growing marketplace then you need to evaluate what you are doing wrong.</p>
<ul>
<li>Are you doing too many repetitive tasks that software or a cron job should be able to do?</li>
<li>Does your site lack viral marketing components?</li>
<li>Does your site do a poor job of prequalifying leads?</li>
<li>Are you selling to the wrong market?</li>
<li>Are you pricing too cheaply and attracting the wrong clients?</li>
<li>Are you doing a poor job building perceived value?</li>
<li>Is your conversion process broken?</li>
<li>Are you doing a poor job of transferring value?</li>
</ul>
<p>In nearly every growing business at some point in time the answer to every single one of those questions is yes. Each is an area for improvement.</p>
<p>With employees I can come off as being under-appreciating and/or too demanding, largely because I expect people to work as hard as I do, and maybe 2% of people do. When you have the attitude of making incremental daily improvements it is hard for some people to grasp it until you beat it into their heads. I have found it hard to teach most people - especially if they work remotely. </p>
<p>You really need to find that 10% of people who want to add value...and then you need to find the 30% of those who's loyalty exceeds their greed. It is hard to find good workers.  As software gets cheaper I suspect it will only get harder to find and retain quality employees as more of the quality people decide to work for themselves, which means that you need to create ways to get customers to do your marketing for you. </p>
<p>I think the key to smoothing out some of the friction with workers is to teach people to set their own score card. Daily contact off the start is needed to set expectations and keep things progressing. But over time have them ask themselves each day what they did to add value, make a difference, and remove market friction. If you are active in your marketplace, are receptive to feedback, are aggressive with push marketing, give away value, and keep trying to build value each day, eventually the profits roll in. It might take a couple years to work out well, but eventually it does.</p>

 

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