Baby SEO – A New SEO Company for Small Businesses
Working in the SEO industry for quite a few years now I’ve talked to a lot of small business owners frustrated by their experiences working with SEO companies. Small business SEO is very different to doing SEO for larger brands and we’ve always focused on working with larger businesses at Branded3.
This week I’m pleased to say that we are launching a new business called Baby SEO to service smaller businesses with respect and deliver the sort of good, honest service that small business owners expect from an SEO company.
Although we are just officially launching the business this week we have already built up a few dozen clients over the last few months and the company has a dedicated small business SEO team in place.
Baby SEO packages range from £300 to £1500 per month and we are offering 20% referral fees – perfect if you have any friends or clients needing better rankings. We also offer a white label option.
If you have any friends who are looking for a specialist small business SEO agency or perhaps you are a designer wanting to find a reliable service to outsource some SEO to then please get in touch with Baby SEO and we will be gladly be of assistance.
Post category: Branded3, Search Engine Optimisation Tweet


Comments
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Congratulations on the new business launch. Exciting times for you guys
Smart way to segment your product. How’s the article quality?
I like the business name, good luck with everything.
It’s a good idea. Not many businesses can afford SEO because of the cost. However, almost all businesses can justify spending a few hundred to 1,000 on optimizing a site.
Well, I also offer “baby translation” to small businesses that can’t shell out a fortune to have their website translated, so this looks pretty reasonable…
the problem is that small business are cheap. Most won’t pay more than a few hundred a month.
Yep, that is true. But you pay what you can afford. The other side of the coin is that small business, if treated well, can be a fiercely loyal customer, proving you a long constant stream of revenue. On the other hand, “big” customers can suddenly disappear because of the whim of some manager, or somebody underbidding you, hurting you seriously from a financial point of view. Small customers are also usually more flexible, while big customers want it done “yesterday”. I personally prefer lots of small customers that just a few big customers – I’ve been burned before.