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Is SEO Overrated in B2B Lead Generation?

 

I'm posing a question here. You can examine your own data the same way I'm going to discuss here and draw your own conclusions. No one doubts that you must perform effective SEO practices to have a chance of being found in a search. The question is, does it really drive qualified sales leads to your B2B website? If so, how effective is SEO compared to other lead generation tactics?

analyzing seo results and their effect on lead generationI'm looking at data from  several of our B2B inbound marketing clients, who shall remain nameless of course. I'm analyzing website traffic and leads since they were first recorded for each site using the HubSpot inbound marketing platform. You could probably do this with any marketing automation software. My criteria is at least six months of operations and at least 15,000 visits over time.

Now, I'm breaking leads down into their sources, organic traffic (from search engines, not paid search) vs. other sources (direct traffic, social media, paid search, e-mail, etc.). I'm further analyzing the organic traffic. If a lead came from a brand keyword, such as the company name, website, product or employee, I'm not counting it as an SEO-based lead. We can debate about whether or not that's a fair criterion, but my view is that brand name searches are the equivalent of direct traffic. If you're typing in a company's name in a search, you might as well be typing it in the address bar of your browser. Few companies need to work much at all to rank #1 for their own name as a keyword, so it's hardly an exercise in SEO expertise.

Now for a few results:

Company Traffic Leads Tot. Organic Brand Non-Brand % Non-Brand Conv. Rate
 A  102857  2034  338  166  172  8.46  0.17
 B  54946  1013  208  65  143  14.12  0.26
 C  16627  313  113  61  52  16.61  0.31
 D  32241  315  116  12  104 33.02  0.32
 E  73882  303  113  95  18  5.94  0.02
 F  59869  376  100  92  8  2.13  0.01
 G  18755  315  86  17  69  21.90  0.37

Lead analysis for seven B2B companies based on total historical results since the beginning of lead analytics using the HubSpot platform. Brand leads are from brand keywords, such as company name. Non-brand leads are all other organic leads. Non-brand % is the proportion of total lead sources from non-brand (SEO-related) keywords. Conversion rate is the conversation rate from visits to leads for non-brand organic sources.

Some observations:

  1. First, this is by no means a representative sample of anything, it's just an exploration of data that raises some questions.
  2. The proportion of leads attributable to SEO (the non-brand leads), is all over the map, but the average is about 15%.
  3. Overall visit-to-lead conversion rates for SEO keywords are quite low, well below 1% across the board.

Discussion

One might well conclude from these preliminary (and statistically insignificant) data that SEO doesn't do a very good job of generating leads. That conclusion, of course, flies in the face of convention. The working assumption by online marketers has always been that successful SEO strategies almost always increase both traffic and sales leads. What is usually hidden or ignored in SEO analysis is that a large proportion of results often comes from branded searches, not strategic keywords that are the target of on-page optimization and link building efforts. I hope that we can start a conversation here and that you will share some of your own analysis. I would raise the following questions:

  • Is SEO less effective for B2B marketing than it is for B2C?
  • Is branded search the dominant player in B2B SEO?
  • Should we focus most of our efforts on other things, such as content marketing and social media, and let SEO take care of itself?

Final thoughts:

Don't get me wrong. I'm not advocating abandoning SEO in any way. That would be foolish. In marketing you need to cover all of the bases, because you never know which aspects of your marketing strategy will take off and which ones will stagnate. The question is about resources. How much of each tactic should you employ to get the best results? I'm only raising the possibility that SEO might be less effective than we usually think, and it might not deserve as much attention in B2B marketing as we often assume.



Comments

Great post John. This really shows the power of closed loop marketing analytics, and how proper analysis of this information can be very helpful in making strategic inbound marketing decisions. 
 
This is an interesting question, are you referring to specifically on-page SEO tactics, or both on/off-page SEO? I consider Content Marketing, and Social Media Marketing to be part of off-page SEO. 
 
If you were to cut down on some of your B2B SEO activities what would they be?  
 
Thanks 
Keith
Posted @ Monday, July 11, 2011 3:23 PM by Keith Gutierrez
@Keith - I'm referring to any SEO activity that is designed to improve page rank and drive traffic and leads via search. I agree that Content Marketing and Social contribute to SEO, but they also drive traffic and leads in their own right. If I were to cut down, it might be on optimizing every piece of content or social media for SEO and worry more about great content that drives leads directly. Maybe keywords are a thing of the past for B2B - just sayin'... What do you think?
Posted @ Monday, July 11, 2011 5:12 PM by John McTigue
Excelent research John! 
 
I think in this case we are talking about the same "B2B SEO issue" that we see in our own projects as well. So recently I have put some thoughts on that. 
 
The next is only my opinion and I don't have any scientifical proof to that (yet). I think the main reason for this is that normally B2B purchases needs more research compared to B2C. And the buying cycle is a little different. As example if I am looking for "internet marketing automation software" in Google I might end up looking Hubspot. 
 
First maybe I browse there on their site and read some case studies and even a Hubspot blog, but in most cases trust is not yet so strong to me to "convert". Yet. 
 
After reading more about Hubspot I probably would ask some thoughts from my team, co-workers or in some cases boss (if I had one). So next time I would visit that site I would probably use some "brand term" like "hubspot". And that's the term that others in my team would use as well. And after that I and my team members (both who came to the site via brandterm) might convert to a lead by filling a form. And as that, the analytics shows us as a "leads from brandterm)". 
 
As we have this same issue we discovered the importance to track the first source where the lead came to our site. As if at first they came trought ppc and later after that came to the site via "brandterm" and converted, in our report that would be as "a lead from ppc". That can be done in many ways as using user defined variable in analytics or cookies and stuff. 
 
Hope you find this comment useful and sorry about my bad english as english is only my second language.
Posted @ Tuesday, July 12, 2011 1:54 AM by Jani Hovila
@ John - I agree, on-page keyword SEO tactics are losing ground to other off-page activities that drive quality leads to a website. The increased value that is being place on Social Graph Metrics in the Search Engine Ranking Factors supports this. With the introduction of Google+, it appears that social search will dramatically change search engine ranking factors, and those with a strong social following will benefit the most. @Jani you make excellent point about the overall B2B lead generation, and buying cycle. The face of SEO is changing rapidly, and your research is a great example of it. Thanks for sharing.  
 
Best, 
Keith
Posted @ Tuesday, July 12, 2011 5:18 AM by Keith Gutierrez
@Jani - I agree that tracking the original source is important in understanding how to best fill the top of the funnel. From then on it's all about lead nurturing, consistently good content and social engagement. I find it interesting that so many business owners we talk to are still thinking that you can get quality leads with a magic bullet approach, like SEO used to be (sometimes). 
 
@Keith - I think Google+ may die on the vine because it is so late to the party. We'll see, but as users and marketers, do we really need another monster social network? For me, it's just another base that needs to get covered, at least so far.
Posted @ Tuesday, July 12, 2011 6:48 AM by John McTigue
SEO is becoming the norm, and everyone with access to the web can promote their content, sharing masses of information. Do it, but ensure that the content maintains focus. Show yourself as the definitive source of info on a specific topic, even if another company has a little of the info amongst a mass of generalised content.
Posted @ Tuesday, July 12, 2011 7:40 AM by Sookie Shuen
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