Search Engine Optimization for Accounting Firm Websites

Having a website for your accounting firm that’s not optimized for search is like throwing a party but not telling anyone about it. How are people supposed to come if they don’t even know it’s happening?

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is the process of improving your website’s visibility in organic search engine rankings, so it can be more easily found by the people who need your product or services. (Organic listings fall directly below paid listings in search engine results, and the closer you are to the top, the more traffic you will get to your website.)

Any search engine’s goal, whether it’s Google, Bing or Yahoo, is to deliver the most relevant, quality websites in the search results to provide users with the information they need. In order to rank high organically, you have to first understand what the search engines consider to be important in order to optimize your website accordingly.

What makes a website relevant? Although search engines don’t reveal the algorithms they use to rank websites, they factor in things like how your site is laid out, where your important information is located, key terms found in web text and meta tags,  and the number of quality inbound links there are to your website.

So, where do you start? The best place to begin is to figure out where your current site is lacking – what parts of it are not set up to be search engine-friendly.

That’s where Katie Tolin, marketing director at accounting firm Rea & Associates, Inc. in New Philadelphia, Ohio, began her SEO research for her accounting firm’s website.

“Not only was our site built in frames, it had a splash page, drop down menus, no site map and no custom web links,” Tolin said. “If there was a way to prevent web crawlers from finding our site, we were using it.”

Prior to Tolin’s SEO endeavors, which started in 2005, virtually all of her firm’s web traffic came from direct links, or people searching for the firm by name. After her firm merged with another (whose website outranked them in the search engine results) partners began asking why the other site appeared higher in the search engine results and how they could fix this.

When Tolin began researching SEO, it quickly became clear that changes needed to be made to her firm’s website, but also that there were too many issues with the current website to optimize it. The only way to start optimizing for SEO was a total redesign.

Tolin said the new website was designed to have the right site architecture from the start.

“I used a content management system that allowed me to customize page titles, page addresses, meta tags, descriptions, etc. This gave me the ability to optimize every page of my website,” Tolin said. “I also made sure we had a site map – one little thing that can make a big difference – and strived to keep important content no more than three pages deep so it can be more easily found by search engines.”

These changes to the firm website led to a 50 percent increase in traffic and unique visitors, but even more importantly, it increased the firm’s conversion rate. On average, Rea & Associates adds more than 150 people per year to its distribution list simply because the visitors asked them to.

What is Tolin’s recommendation to firms considering SEO to improve their website ranking?

“Potential clients are forming opinions about your firm that may not be true. Don’t let them think you are old-fashioned, out-dated and not up-to-speed with the latest technologies if you aren’t.”

Not everyone has the time and resources to do the optimization in-house. If you fall into that category, look into outsourcing it. Although it costs more do outsource the effort, Tolin says the amount of new business generated from the website is substantially higher than what is spent on optimization.

“These are real companies paying us real dollars on an annual basis for our services,” said Tolin. “Leads generated through our website are from quality companies that simply choose to find vendors online.”

Tolin recognizes that consumer behavior is changing and that the majority of people now research their purchases online before making them and you need to be easily found.

“We live in a society where people are judged by their presence,” she says. “We form opinions based on what we see, but also what we don’t see. If you can’t be found online, that says something about you.”


Three Ways to Apply Google’s Zero Moment of Truth (ZMOT) to Your Accounting Firm’s Marketing Strategy

In 2005 Proctor & Gamble coined the term “First Moment of Truth” (FMOT) to describe the interaction between consumers and products on a store shelf. FMOT referred to the initial few seconds a consumer spent with a product in person, deciding whether or not it was something he or she wanted to purchase, and was considered to be a very crucial moment for marketing and brand messaging.

And although FMOT interactions still take place and are still critical moments, an even more important interaction is taking place between consumers and brands, before FMOT even has the chance to occur – a concept Google refers to as the “Zero Moment of Truth,” or ZMOT.

In a recently released eBook, “Winning the Moment of Truth,” Google’s managing director of U.S. sales and service, Jim Lecinski, explains how, with the proliferation of Internet use, particularly via mobile devices and tablets, another step needs to be added to the traditional three-step process of stimulus, shelf and experience. That additional step is ZMOT, defined as the moment when a consumer begins the process of seeking out information about a product or service.

Before the Internet existed, the process went something like this:

  1. Woman sees ad on television for a new laundry detergent. (Stimulus)
  2. Woman goes to the store and sees the product on the shelf. (FMOT)
  3. Woman buys product, takes it home and uses it to wash a load of laundry. (Second Moment of Truth – or SMOT)

Today, that process is a bit different.

Consider the example we just used. The television commercial still acts as the stimulus – it creates awareness and interest. But now, instead of the next interaction between customer and brand occurring at the store, it occurs when mom opens her laptop or pulls out her Smartphone and types the name of the detergent into a search engine.

That’s ZMOT – the moment a consumer accesses a plethora of online resources, including product reviews, blog posts from people who have tried the detergent, videos from the manufacturer about why the detergent is unique and efficient, product coupons, and any other type of information available in digital form. It’s the moment a consumer decides if the product is really worth checking out at the store, or, more importantly, whether or not to buy it.

Tina Sharkey, chairman and global president of BabyCenter, says in Google’s eBook: “You’ll see the same thing happen whether the topic is the Tooth Fairy or accounting software for a 20,000-person corporation. People look for others who have been in the same situation as they are now. They know that fellow consumers (unlike advertisers) aren’t trying to sell them something.”

What does ZMOT mean for your accounting firm?

How can you take advantage of ZMOT and use that initial opportunity to promote your accounting services to potential clients searching the web for a solution to their needs? The answer is fairly simple: be present and relevant. We’re not just talking about search engine optimization or running Google AdWords – we’re talking about creating a digital presence that answers questions you anticipate your target audience asking.

Here are three things you can do to make sure your accounting firm wins at ZMOT.

1. Create a short video.

Develop a short (1 – 2 minute) video for your accounting firm’s website. Not only will creating a video improve your organic search engine ranking, but it’s a great way to be present at ZMOT. Use the video to introduce prospective clients to some of your accounting firm staff. Let them explain in their own words why your firm is unique and what sets it apart from other accounting firms. Explain what you do differently for your clients and list the reasons they should choose your firm. Allowing your potential customers to make a connection with your staff helps to establish a preliminary relationship and will develop loyalty with your firm.

2. Institute a corporate message board.

There’s no better testimonial than a client who loves your accounting firm and is able to clearly articulate why. Creating a message board for your website and allowing clients to ask questions, start discussions and provide feedback of your services, allows prospective client to view honest opinions about your firm from real people who want to provide helpful information to others, and not trying to sell them anything. It’s also a way for you to interact with your target audience in an honest, constructive way.

3.) Establish a social presence online.

Google’s 2011 ZMOT study found that “37 percent of shoppers found online social sources to be an influential driver when making decisions. That was up from 19 percent in 2010 – nearly doubling in one year.” The top online social activities among shoppers included finding online referrals from friends, seeing the brand mentioned on a social networking site, becoming a fan/follower of a brand, and reading a blog that discussed the product. Making sure your firm has a solid social online presence will ensure your firm is in the places where your potential clients are most likely to seek out information about you.


Onward by Howard Schultz: Five Takeaways For Your Accounting Firm

“Work should be personal. For all of us. Not just the artist and the entrepreneur. Work should have meaning for the accountant, the construction worker, the technologist, the manager, and the clerk.” – Howard Schultz, CEO, Starbucks

Onward: How Starbucks Fought for Its Life without Losing Its Soul by CEO Howard Shultz is the story of how an iconic brand faced a flailing economy and tanking stock prices by going “back to the basics” and refocusing on core values.

By 2008, when sales began to slide downward, Starbucks realized in its drive to rapidly expand, it had strayed off course and lost sight of its original goal – to innovate and connect with customers on a personal level. Howard Schultz, who had stepped back from daily operations 8 years earlier to serve as chairman, returned to his position as CEO and initiated the development of a “Transformation Agenda” – a plan to get the company back on track and reignite passion in the brand.

From closing 7,100 Starbucks stores for three hours (at a loss of $6 million) so 135,000 baristas could participate in “Espresso Excellence Training,” to creating mystarbucksidea.com to engage customers, to devoting 50,000 hours of Starbucks employees’ time to rebuilding New Orleans during a leadership conference, each move Starbucks made was a strategic initiative to reclaim its position as a leader in the coffee industry.

The components of Starbucks transformation are applicable to any company facing difficult times. At its simplest level, Starbucks’s Transformation Agenda is a series of business objectives and actionable items that serve as the path to achieving those objectives.

Here are five takeaways from Onward that you can incorporate into your own accounting practice’s business strategy.

1.) Know What Went Wrong

You can’t set out to fix your business if you aren’t even sure what went wrong or why. You may have indicators of the problems – losing clients, slowing sales, employee discord – but those are only symptoms of the problem and not the actual cause.

For example, Starbucks “symptoms” included a glaring decrease of in-store comparative sales, falling stock prices and stores constantly running out of products. The actual “causes” included its rapid expansion strategy (opening six new stores each day), problems with supply chain operations and commoditization of the brand. It isn’t possible to fix a failing business by attending only to the symptoms. Unless the actual cause is addressed, the same issues will continue to manifest throughout the organization.

2.) Have a Plan (And Stick to It)

Once you’ve identified your business’s particular pain points, create a plan to address those specific issues. If you’re experiencing decreasing numbers of clients and you’ve determined the reason is that they are leaving you for a competitor, the next step is to figure out why. It might be the most painful part of the process, but once you have an understanding of why you’re losing customers, you can determine the best course of action to solve the problem.

Businesses sometimes avoid addressing the real causes of problems because fixing them can be expensive or incur criticism from competitors or the public. They can necessitate changes in personnel or require severing ties with long-time vendors. For Starbucks, resolving  their problems meant changes in corporate leadership, closing 600 U.S. stores and laying off 12,000 employees – 7 percent of its global workforce. It also meant millions of dollars in losses.

3.) Engage with Customers

In these modern digital times, customers are holding companies to higher standards than ever before. They have the ability to make informed decisions and they have choices. If you don’t listen to them – if you don’t engage them – they will find someone else who will.

Despite being a multi-billion dollar organization with stores all over the world, Starbucks realized that it wasn’t engaging with customers – one of its core business objectives. Its website didn’t allow it to interact with customers and it had no social media presence whatsoever. It wasn’t listening. This led to the establishment of an interactive social media presence on social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter, as well as the creation of mystarbucksidea.com, a microsite built with the sole purpose of generating ideas from customers on initiatives Starbucks could take to improve its business.

4.) Invest in New Technologies

Simply put, if you aren’t investing in new technologies that will help you operate your business more efficiently, your competitors will. It’s more important than ever to stay abreast of new software and processes, because your clients are coming to expect it. Being time-starved isn’t a good enough excuse anymore – especially since new technologies are designed to help professionals save time.

Up until 2008, Starbucks was not providing its employees with the same technology and tools that most other business professionals are provided with. Store computers were little more than large boxes – they couldn’t access the Inernet or e-mail, or even run basic software such as PowerPoint or Excel.

“In short, a Starbucks store was essentially the equivalent of a $1 million-a-year business, yet an iPhone has more business applciation power than our stores’ technology,” writes Schultz in Onward.

One of the main initiatives in its Transformation Agenda was to improve its technology, starting with every single store receiving a brand new laptop, equipped with software that would enable store employees to better manage and improve their stores.

5.) There is No “Silver Bullet”

Shultz uses this phrase throughout his book to reiterate the fact that reinventing the Starbucks brand and restoring the company to its former glory was a culmination of many new processes and the hard work of many dedicated people and employees. There was never one idea or one initiative that would automatically set everything right again, and it’s useless for business professionals to hope that will be the case. Resolving business issues requires a holistic approach of multiple methods and various points of view.

If things have gone amiss at your accounting firm, it’s most likely not the result of a single action or incident, but a combination of a multitude of issues that have developed over time. By that same token, it will take a combination of many different efforts to correct the problems. Rather than pinning hopes on a single action, realize that the solution may be as complex as the problems themselves.


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