SEM, SEO, or CRO – Which fits best for your online strategy?

Summary: Making decisions about where you want to go for dinner on a Friday night is fun; deciding what’s the best strategy for your business can be daunting.

So, the good news is that today, we are going to ease your worries. This post is going to provide you with more than enough information, so that by the time you are done reading, you will have made up your mind about whether you need SEM, SEO, or CRO for your business.

Online purchasing trend
Screenshot PPC example
SEO too dashboard example

Advantages and Disadvantages of SEO

SEO is the foundation in building a solid source of leads. Once achieved, it will yield results pretty much on its own. While it requires constant maintenance and improvements, the boost of SEO for your website will yield results indefinitely.

Now for the downside: SEO is pretty much a skill that is crafted after years of trial and error and it would take a long time to gain any traction (it’s a complex and arduous process). More even now that Google is about to release their new update Google Core Web Vitals.

During this time, there’d be very little traffic generated, meaning there would be no sales. Besides, anyone who did find their way to your site might be unimpressed if the content is not optimized by meeting user intent and delivering on the promise.

CRO – Conversion Rate Optimization

CRO stands for conversion rate optimization. The conversion rate on any given website is determined by how many people who reach the page ultimately choose to move forward with the transaction they began. It is one of the strongest indicators of how effectively your site is performing. It doesn’t stop with buying products though; it’s often useful to treat every user action that you believe has real-world value as a meaningful conversion (e.g. downloading a brochure or submitting a contact form).

Essentially, you are attracting visitors to your website because you want them to take action. Conversion rate is calculated by dividing the number of visitors that come to your site by the amount of those who take a specific action.

It’s Not Conversion, It’s Conversions. Plural.

SEM SEO CRO Relationship

3. Are You Leaving Money on the Table?

Let me put it this way; if you are not structuring your marketing efforts in the right order, most likely you are not utilizing your marketing budget to its maximum potential.

How can we determine if we are getting the most juice out of these three digital marketing disciplines?

Imagine that someone has just launched their retail business, selling assorted gadgets (possibly even using drop-shipping). Now, let’s think about what would happen if they committed to just one of these practices:

SEM minus SEO (just PPC).

As discussed before, how large would the initial budget of this company need to be in order to make this business model sustainable? If you can afford it, go for it, but you are definitely burning your cashflow at a scary rate.

SEO alone

If you master this technique and are capable of bringing your site to the first three of five positions on the SERP, chances are you are on your way to make a profitable business.

But then, what would be the use of attracting many visitors to your website if they are not taking any desired actions after they land on your page. If you are in the business solely to provide content without expecting anything in return, great! But most of us are here to make a living.

CRO alone

CRO would nicely polish the landing pages and product pages, but with neither PPC nor SEO to bring in traffic, it would essentially be pointless. Even a massive conversion rate is useless if there’s hardly anyone visiting the site.

The bottom line is that even using just two of the three would be suboptimal and constitute leaving money on the table. If you can eventually build up enough SEO equity and your conversion rate is healthy, you can pause PPC advertising and see if you can get by without it — but you may not want to. Most big retailers run PPC ads in perpetuity because they continue to turn a profit.

5. When is it time to move to the next strategy?

When you’re pressed for time and have limited resources, you need to operate with tremendous efficiency. By prioritizing tasks that involve each of these practices, you can get significantly increased value in return for your effort. Here are some examples:

  • Develop high-converting landing pages. One of the best things you can do for a core product or service is to create a strong landing page to serve as the target of your traffic drivers. Mixing that with excellent content, design, and UX to boost the product conversion rate will then improve the on-page SEO factors to give it strong ranking potential.
  • Produce cornerstone content. Through creating high-quality advisory and informative and/or entertaining content for a store blog or guide section, you can achieve several things that will affect everything we’ve looked at, such as:
    • Raising your brand authority. The better your content (and the more useful information it provides), the more you will be seen as an authority in your area of the e-commerce world. This will reduce user reluctance while shopping (particularly for high-cost items), earn you better Google rankings, and give your PPC ads some convenient name value.
    • Establishing consistency. Users and search engines alike prefer businesses that are consistent in what they say and how they act. Pushing out strong content on a regular schedule, with no duds along the way, will encourage prospective buyers to listen to you and will enable search engines to trust the quality of your site.
    • Winning social shares. People like to share content with their friends and communities. Having some great guides or articles on an offer will boost your social shares, which will lend social proof to your core business, get you additional attention and feedback into a positive public perception.
  • Target multiple channels. With so many popular digital channels competing to occupy our time, it’s unwise to focus on any one of them in particular. If you’ve spent time and resources on making your website and blog content extremely impressive, you need to get that content in front of as many eyes as possible — and that means cross-platform. What’s more, it isn’t even that difficult to achieve this using tools like Hootsuite (though you need to be careful about the formatting).
AB Test infographic - CRO