(Note: this is part of a series of posts on the marketing makeover of a consultant’s Web site.)
Although we’re weeks away from needing to check how my client’s site is doing in the search engines, it’s worth taking a minute to discuss what the numbers mean – and what they don’t.
It’s a mistake to get too hung up in how well your Web site ranks in the search engines. What really matters is if the site is doing what you need it to do for your business. Is it bringing you leads? Impressing prospective clients?
That being said, however, you still want to know how well your site is performing for certain key phrases. If you know it’s ranking highly for a phrase, but your stats show that you virtually never get traffic from that phrase, then you know you’ve got some work to do.
To see how you’re doing you can continually Google your phrases and see if your site shows up. This gets old really fast. My favorite free tool to make this easier is Digital Point’s Keyword Tracker and Ranking Tool. You do have to have a Google API (basically, this means permission from Google) to use it, however.
MarketLeap has some neat free tools including one that shows if your site shows up in the first three pages for several search engines. You’ll notice that the top three search engines (Google, MSN, and Yahoo) may rank your site differently.
Dedicated SEO professionals have a bag of tricks that includes for-fee tools that generate reports for clients. Plus, there are lots and lots more free tools with varying degrees of usefulness.


But in the case of my new client, she does want her site to generate leads, so we’re going to take a several-pronged approach to make her site attract and convert more clients.
One of the most important marketing tools for guerrilla consultants is a hardworking Web site. Not just a pretty or cool (or pretty cool) Web site. But a site that actually does something for your business.