Here's my situation. This spring I pitched my services to a smallish (12-15 people) financial firm, one that has been gradually realizing the mistake of not budgeting a cent to marketing.
I want to market their online tool and do additional work woefully lacking there - basic SEO, SEM, blogs/social media/mobile (they are nowhere); to generally raise their online profile to match a solid presence on conventional media (TV/some blogs/print, etc.)
They loved everything I had to say and offer, but stressed they didn't yet have that kind of money in the budget. (They have dough, but costs come out of pocket so they're being cheap - at said point they still don't get basic marketing concepts. They are traders/money managers by trade.)
But they were willing to commit to an SEO/SEM firm.
I want to show them that they're not only wasting money, but worse, wasting time. They are under the impression they can go from 0-60 through some PPC and cost-effective SEO.
My contact within the company forwarded the SEO's pitch and their first weak-assed monthly report.
In the first month about $1000 of direct PPC spend netted 8 new subscribers for a product that costs less than $50. About $3000 was also spent on "SEO" and a startup fee, and standard fee for ad spend.
All of the SEO company's bullshit is standard, possibly less slick than most.
After 6+ weeks as a customer, the company website still has the title tags "Home" on Home page, "Our Services" on Our Services, etc. (How can an SEO firm defend that, that they're waiting for the optimized keywords to use? This is just stock market stuff here, not molecular science.)
I want to cut these guys to ribbons to my potential employers, as I'm still in close touch with. I am familiar with many of the delaying tactics that an SEO firm will employ to buy time and keep monthly fees coming in, but I am sure I'm missing a few.
Any recommendations as to how I can proceed here?
I want to market their online tool and do additional work woefully lacking there - basic SEO, SEM, blogs/social media/mobile (they are nowhere); to generally raise their online profile to match a solid presence on conventional media (TV/some blogs/print, etc.)
They loved everything I had to say and offer, but stressed they didn't yet have that kind of money in the budget. (They have dough, but costs come out of pocket so they're being cheap - at said point they still don't get basic marketing concepts. They are traders/money managers by trade.)
But they were willing to commit to an SEO/SEM firm.
I want to show them that they're not only wasting money, but worse, wasting time. They are under the impression they can go from 0-60 through some PPC and cost-effective SEO.
My contact within the company forwarded the SEO's pitch and their first weak-assed monthly report.
In the first month about $1000 of direct PPC spend netted 8 new subscribers for a product that costs less than $50. About $3000 was also spent on "SEO" and a startup fee, and standard fee for ad spend.
All of the SEO company's bullshit is standard, possibly less slick than most.
After 6+ weeks as a customer, the company website still has the title tags "Home" on Home page, "Our Services" on Our Services, etc. (How can an SEO firm defend that, that they're waiting for the optimized keywords to use? This is just stock market stuff here, not molecular science.)
I want to cut these guys to ribbons to my potential employers, as I'm still in close touch with. I am familiar with many of the delaying tactics that an SEO firm will employ to buy time and keep monthly fees coming in, but I am sure I'm missing a few.
Any recommendations as to how I can proceed here?