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on Tuesday, July 20th, 2010 and is filed under News, SEO.
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Posted by randfish
Another great post from Jason Cohen popped onto my radar yesterday entitled "Startup Competitive Advantages that Work." It’s definitely worth a read, even if you’re not at a startup.
As a passionate (OK, maybe obsessed is the right word) startup guy and someone who loves SEO, I couldn’t help but want to jump into the fray with some thoughts on how the field we’re in - domination of the organic search results - can be an unfair, competitive advantage for businesses that know how to wield it.
The core of Jason’s post is below:
Last week I detailed the most common misconceptions about competitive advantages, so go read that if you haven’t already.
To summarize: Anything that can be copied will be copied, including features, marketing copy, and pricing. Anything you read on popular blogs is also read by everyone else. You don’t have an "edge" just because you’re passionate, hard-working, or "lean."
The only real competitive advantage is that which cannot be copied and cannot be bought.
Like what?
And he’s got a number of terrific answers, but SEO, and more broadly, phenomenal organic web marketing, isn’t among them. Before I tackle why I think it belongs there, let me explain the difference between "good" SEO and defensible, "competitive advantage" style SEO.
In other words, you’ve followed best practices, done the "right" things and while an SEO audit might reveal some missed opportunities and an error here or there, you’d generally come away with an "A" on your SEO report card.
All of these have content pouring out of them, generated rapidly, scalable, and in time with query demand. They have broad networks of patrons and participants that incent the spreading and sharing of their content through links and social networks. They employ content+SEO+sharing in a high-return equation that’s nearly impossible for competitors to match. I’ll illustrate:

That’s not to say they can’t be beaten, but runner B (a new competitor) is going to have to go dramatically faster than runner A (the market leader) if they want to catch up before runner A sees them coming and turns up the jets.
This is my argument for why the level of truly great SEO I described above, belongs on the list of unfair competitive advantages.
It’s certainly not the only option, but it can have a dramatic impact. If you’re starting a company, starting an SEO campaign or just want to renew your vision for how your site will go from ranking for a few keywords to becoming a dominant market player, it’s, at the least, a strategy worthy of consideration.
p.s. If you’re interested in some more practical SEO advice this morning, my slide deck from the Blueglass LA conference - Strategic SEO Link Analysis - may be able to scratch that itch.
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