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SEOnoun

Search Engine Optimisation

/sɜːrtʃ ˈendʒɪn ˌɒptɪmaɪˈzeɪʃən/

Structuring a site so it ranks higher in organic search.

Definition

Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) is the practice of designing a website's technical foundation, content, and external authority signals so it ranks higher in organic (non-paid) search results for queries that matter to the business.

SEO is a long game. Unlike paid ads, where spend produces clicks within hours, SEO compounds over months and years — but the asset is durable. A well-ranked page can drive traffic for a decade with maintenance; a paid campaign delivers nothing the day you turn it off.

The discipline splits into technical SEO (crawlability, schema, performance, mobile, internal linking), on-page SEO (content quality, keyword targeting, title/description tags, headings), and off-page SEO (backlinks, brand mentions, authority signals). All three matter; weakness in one caps the upside of the others. Most accounts have one weak link that, when fixed, lifts everything else.

Origin

The term emerged in the mid-1990s as early search engines (AltaVista, Lycos, Yahoo, then Google in 1998) created the need for a discipline focused on ranking. Google's PageRank algorithm (1998) made backlinks the dominant ranking signal for nearly a decade.

How it works

  1. Audit current state — technical health, content coverage, backlink profile.
  2. Define target queries by intent — informational, commercial, transactional, navigational.
  3. Build content that wins for each target intent (the page Google should reasonably rank).
  4. Fix technical foundation — crawl errors, slow pages, broken links, missing schema.
  5. Earn backlinks through deserving content, digital PR, partnerships.
  6. Monitor rankings, traffic, and conversions; iterate on what's working.

When to use it

Use when

  • On any business with buyers who search for what you offer.
  • When you want a sustainable, compounding traffic source independent of ad spend.
  • Especially when competitors are already ranking — late SEO is harder than early SEO.

Skip when

  • If you need traffic this week. SEO compounds — months to first wins, year+ to authority.
  • On categories where buyers don't search (some B2B niches buy through relationships, not search).

Key metrics

Examples

In practice at Makreate

Makreate SEO retainers cover technical, on-page, content, and link-building work — measured against ranked queries that actually convert. A recent B2B client had a strong technical foundation but no content for any of their commercial keywords. We shipped 24 long-form articles over six months, each targeting a high-intent commercial query. By month nine, organic traffic to the commercial pages had 5× and qualified inbound leads had 3.6× — at less than the cost of a quarter of paid acquisition.

Advertising →

Common mistakes

Frequently asked

How long does SEO take?

First wins in 3–6 months on uncompetitive long-tail. Authority on competitive queries: 12–24 months. Mature SEO programmes pay off for years after that.

DIY SEO or agency?

Below ~$5K/month total marketing — DIY with templates and a couple of tools (Ahrefs, Search Console). Above that — specialist help usually pays back through faster wins and better technical execution.

AI content and SEO?

AI-assisted content is fine; AI-generated mass-produced low-effort content is penalised by Google's helpful-content updates. The bar is value to the reader, not how it's written.

Further reading

Related terms

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