Posicionarnos SEO y Search Engine The SEO Proposal Template that Wins 80% of Clients: Sample Template Included

The SEO Proposal Template that Wins 80% of Clients: Sample Template Included

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Some of you might be in a hurry and hence may not want to read through this entire post. If you want direct access to the “SEO Proposal Template That Wins You 80% of Your Clients”, get the free download from here. However, I suggest that you go through the article as it’s loaded with important insights, suggestions, and tips to maximize the impact of your SEO Proposal.

How often has it happened that you’ve spent hours working on an SEO proposal for a new prospective client, only for it to result in a no deal?

It can be frustrating and hard to take the time to come up with a customized SEO proposal for each client and then for it to not get the desired response. You ideally would want your SEO proposal to have a high close rate!

Thankfully, there are a few things you can do to ensure your SEO proposal gets the treatment it deserves.

In this blog, I’m going to show you how to pitch your SEO services better so that you get a higher conversion rate

Additionally, I’ll be including a sample SEO proposal template you may use as an inspiration while preparing your own winning SEO proposal.

Step 1: Pitch Better

If you do a Google Search for the perfect “SEO agency pitch” or “SEO proposal templates for clients“, you get over 3 million search results all claiming to have the magic formula for the ‘perfect pitch’. Being an ex-agency man myself, I can tell you that there’s no such thing. Successful pitches are done by agencies that don’t do one thing extraordinarily well, they do 10 things better than the competition. Here’s what I recommend.

To start with, here’s what a pitch typically looks like from both parties p.o.v.

Even a fresh-faced intern can see the difference. I’ve seen agencies put in tremendous effort in developing the pitch. Collecting every scrap of information possible and spending agonizing hours on revision after revision only to lose the pitch in the end. So what’s going wrong? Is data not important?

Well, the answer is both yes and no.

Yes, data is crucial to a pitch. It outlines where the problem areas are and leads to what the agency plans to do to correct it. A few good SEO agency teams will also go into how these corrections will benefit the client’s bottom line. But what separates the great agencies that win pitches consistently and the good ones that have a few wins punctuated with many hard losses?

The difference is in the intangibles.

Before you start creating your own pitch or even collecting the data, ask yourself these 3 questions:

Question 1: Have you dived into the client’s true problem? If a client is asking for a website redesign, have you asked “why” a minimum of 5 times? Once you get to the root of the problem/opportunity, you can design the pitch around that.

Question 2: Have you put in sufficient planning into how to sell your approach? Agency types tend to forget that clients are in fact people too. Any rational and logical person is going to ask for details – what was the thinking behind your recommended approach? On more than one occasion, I’ve dismissed agencies solely for not putting enough thought behind a ‘recommended’ solution and instead pushing it out of convenience which, it turns out, suited them.

Question 3: Is there a commonality between the potential client and the agency? It’s worth remembering that people make decisions from two centers of the brain. The Logical center evaluates the SEO proposals (the reptilian brain deciding whether to flee or engage) and then the Emotional center makes the final decision. I’ve lost count the number of times I’ve seen pitches won on pure emotional compatibility and gut feel – you could feel the passion the winning agency brought to the table and they focused on that far more than their credentials or past work.

Step 2: Choose the right format and create your own signature style

We were once in the middle of changing agencies and one of the agencies asked to pitch had a reputation for truly memorable ones. When it was their turn to take the floor, they did away with the traditional pitch deck and instead brought in palettes of money to show us how much we were losing and how much we stood to gain by using them. The money was fake of course, but it did far more to engage us than a deck could ever hope to do. The image of our daily losses being put in perspective through palette after palette of money being wheeled in is forever burned into my memory.

Granted this worked for them and I urge you to find something that works for you, but nonetheless, pitch decks offer a fair degree of individuality and I’ve included one of the best SEO proposal templates we were able to find which you can use for inspiration/reference while making your own.

Step 3: Get your Data Right

This is where most agencies stumble. Through SEO tools like Mondovo, it’s fairly easy to accumulate large volumes of data for a client pitch. But ask yourself, would you sit through a presentation where the presenter went through slide after slide after slide? Same concept.

Typically when accumulating data for a pitch, data from the reports mentioned below will prove invaluable in answering the ‘What’s the problem’ (and the how is my competitor doing) aspect of the pitch.

Let’s quickly look at what data can be highlighted through a sample pitch to an online accommodation booking company www.booking.com.

Ranking Report

What’s most important when presenting Rankings is showing Keyword performance and how well the URL is ranking in the search engines.

Search Engine Rankings Summary

Next, show the side by side comparison to the client’s competitors to get a sense of where the company stands currently online.

Competitor’s Search Engine Rankings

Assuming you’ve done your background research correctly and the list of competitors is relevant to your client, this should outline the case for affirmative action quite nicely.

If you’ve been pro-active in tracking the search engine rankings for a couple of days before creating the SEO proposal and if, by chance, you noticed a dip in their search rankings in the recent past, you could highlight them in your pitch.

An SEO Website Audit

Once you’ve established the cause for concern through the Rank Tracker, the next step you can move to is establishing the various causes. Here’s a good rule of thumb that we’ve found holds true in most circumstance. ‘Even if the website is agency designed and developed, chances are there is scope for optimization’. We’ve seen hundreds of websites — some good, some woeful — that are agency designed, developed, and maintained. Over half of them on an average have areas of improvement that the incumbent agency has neglected to correct. A badly optimized website affects rankings, which in turn affects traffic. Since web traffic to the site has a bearing on conversions, these errors have real-world implications that are costing the site owners money.

Here’s what you need to be highlighting while making the SEO proposal from the Website Audit of the clients’ URL. It’s standard industry practice to compare this with a site audit of a competitor as well and then highlight the difference in performance. You can find a sample of our website audit below, for reference.

A Quick SEO Web Audit Overview:

Summary & Meta Issues

Linking & Content details

Next, a quick peek into On Page Optimization issues – in this instance, the home page:

SEO Factors passed

SEO Issues to be fixed

A recent article in Moz highlighted how clients are looking at analytic toolsets, and by extension companies, at evolving into insight generators. The good thing about the Mondovo reporting engine is that it provides that insight. As the screen captured above show, every on-page analysis is accompanied by detailed information on where the problem lies and what needs to be done about them.

Content Issues & Keyword Optimization

With a site such as the one I’ve chosen i.e. www.booking.com, the number of pages would typically run into the thousands. Don’t allow yourself to get data drunk and include every snippet of information on every single page in the pitch deck or the presentation booklet. Instead, highlight the problem for a few key pages and outline your strategy (like SEO, PPC, Social, etc.,) for rectifying the problem, assuming that similar issues might exist for the inner pages.

Ending the Website Audit section of the problem, you can now show something from the Link Research section

Backlink Summary

The next step would be to run a Social Competition analysis. In this case, an analysis of the Facebook presence Booking.com vs three other competitors and highlight the differences in their posting & engagement strategies, fans etc… Here again, Mondovo differentiates itself by not only reporting the facts but offering insight as well.

Competition Summary

Overall Likes & Engagements

Just to summarise:

When compiled together, the data section of your report should succinctly outline and highlight the problem areas of the client vs the competition and leave you more than enough room to promote the intangibles (discussed at the beginning of the article).

Just to reiterate and hopefully emphasize its importance, more often than not, the winning agency isn’t the one with the most awards or the cheapest. It’s the one that forms an emotional connect with the client. The emotional aspect of the equation is as important as any data (a standout SEO proposal). In some instance, even more so.

Now let’s dive into what a good pitch document is supposed to look like.

Here is the basic flow of a pitch document, according to the feedback we received from our survey of our 2000+users

1) Executive Summary
2) Why you? (your company)
3) What’s at stake
4) Proposed Solution
5) Analytics & Improvement
6) Timeline
7) Dependencies

I’ll now go into each section in greater detail and provide you with a sample template that can be easily modified to fit your needs and purposes.

This is where you outline the reason for the pitch. Where you highlight the insight that your discussions with the client have yielded. Where you differentiate yourself by showing a greater understanding of the problem beyond merely what the client has requested.

Things to include in this section are:

Why You?

In this section, state the value proposition of your SEO services. It’s where your core competencies and how they will help achieve the client’s goals and objectives. My advice is to not focus on the tangibles such as how many clients you have or how many awards you’ve won. Instead, show your human side and try to make a connection with the human side of the client as well. Your clients, after all, are humans.

What’s at Stake?

Nothing helps a prospect realize the importance of your services better than seeing how much more revenue he could be generating or losing if he just ranked better for the target keywords (remember the palettes of money example? Same thing). Put the perspective in money if possible using simple math and provide the client with an estimate of the ROI that your agency can bring to the table. Here’s what you’ll need to do that:

Most of this data can be found easily using tools such as Mondovo. To calculate the SEO driven revenue from each keyword, you can download the SEO driven revenue calculator from the below link:

Here’s what it looks like – Just enter the details highlighted in the red columns and the formulas will handle the rest.

SEO Driven Revenue Calculator

A point to note: be sure to make it clear to the client that you’re making this estimation on current market data. Market trends, product seasonality, promotions and other factors could affect the revenue projections in your SEO proposals.

Your SEO Proposal

In this section, state your agencies recommendations that will address each issue identified under the SEO challenges section. I would also recommend using text & images to get your point across and help the client understand the end goal. This section is intended to justify the techniques you’ll be using and investments that you’ll be asking them to make.

You would also define the scope of work here and make clear what you are going to do and what you’re not. This is very very important so that no future issues arise. Under this section, some of our users have also highlighted having explained the rationale of how you (your agency) intends to operate through subsections such as:

A. What fundamental changes your agency will need to make to overall processes such as the client’s inbound marketing model

B. Recommended actions that included the specific ones you’re going to take for the SEO process – such as a technical audit of the site, blog creation, develop & build a link strategy etc…

Analytics and Improvement

This section, as the name suggests, identifies the metrics that will allow the client to judge the performance and progress of your efforts on a month to month basis. This will allow for both the client and the agency to have visibility on what’s working and what’s not. Committing to this data lets the client have some sense of control over the overall proceedings and makes them feel ‘in charge’. It also allows for the important aspect of transparency.

Much more than a basic outline of how much time the entire project will take, the timeline contains information on the sequence and timing of the tasks that you will be performing throughout the contract’s duration. Things to include here are items like the name of the task, the person responsible, start and end dates etc…
Having a predetermined timeline also shows some sense of organization and planning forethought and also contributes to the overall transparency of the agency-client interaction. You could also include pricing out here. Here’s a video we’ve made on how you could price your SEO services.

This section is where you list down the resources that the prospect needs to provide when he becomes your client. Access to the CMS, access to their web analytics data, their Google Webmaster Tools data, cooperation from their development team, and of course your monthly retainer should all be listed here.

You can download the sample SEO Proposal template by clicking on the link below. To be noted, this proposal has been taken from Glen Dimaandal’s blog post out here and slightly edited to include a few more bits.

Thanks for getting in touch with us.

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Sameer Panjwani

Sameer Panjwani is the CEO & Founder of Mondovo.com, an online marketing toolset that helps you track your rankings, monitor your site stats and research your competitors\’. A man of many talents, Sameer occasionally writes about social media marketing, content marketing and SEO. In his free time, he loves reading about the latest trends in SEO as well as spending time with his two little daughters.

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Sameer Panjwani

Sameer Panjwani is the CEO & Founder of Mondovo.com, an online marketing toolset that helps you track your rankings, monitor your site stats and research your competitors\’. A man of many talents, Sameer occasionally writes about social media marketing, content marketing and SEO. In his free time, he loves reading about the latest trends in SEO as well as spending time with his two little daughters.

This content was originally published here.

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