If you’ve ever spoken to an SEO agency for more than six minutes, you’ll notice something peculiar, they absolutely love an acronym, not just a gentle sprinkling of letters to keep things tidy. No. We’re talking full-on alphabet soup, a kind of linguistic Scrabble where every sentence sounds like someone fell asleep on the keyboard.
“Kev, we just need to optimise your SERP visibility with stronger CTR through improved UX while aligning with the latest E-E-A-T signals and adjusting for the new LLM search behaviour.”
And you’re standing there thinking…
WTF!
For the uninitiated indie business owner (hello), here are just a few of the letters you might encounter while trying to run a perfectly normal small business and simply get found on Google:
SEO – Search Engine Optimisation
SERP – Search Engine Results Page
CTR – Click Through Rate
UX – User Experience
UI – User Interface
DA – Domain Authority
PA – Page Authority
ROI – Return on Investment
CPC – Cost Per Click
PPC – Pay Per Click
KPI – Key Performance Indicator
CMS – Content Management System
ALT – Alt text for images
HTML – Hyper Text Markup Language
XML – Sitemap language thingy
GA4 – Google Analytics 4
GSC – Google Search Console
NAP – Name, Address, Phone (local SEO stuff)
E-E-A-T – Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trust
LLM – Large Language Models (hello, AI search results)
At this point the conversation starts sounding less like marketing and more like a briefing at NATO (if you’re wondering, stands for North Atlantic Treaty Organization.)
The problem is this: SEO is genuinely important, according to industry research, around 68% of all online experiences start with a search engine, and roughly 53% of website traffic comes from organic search. So yes, it matters but trying to understand it as a small independent business owner can feel a bit like this:
Imagine walking around a supermarket… in the dark… wearing a blindfold… with noise-cancelling headphones on… while someone keeps moving the shelves.
That’s SEO.
Just as you think you’ve figured out where the milk is, Google changes the algorithm and suddenly the dairy aisle has turned into frozen peas, for years SEO felt like aiming at a target, now it’s less a target and more… a shape-shifting vegetable. One minute the target looks like a standard bullseye, the next minute it looks like an aubergine.
And everyone’s shouting: “Fire! Fire now!”
But no one’s quite sure where the centre is anymore, especially now with AI search and LLMs rewriting the rules of discovery ( I have slipped into the acronym rabbit hole!) and this is where indie business owners like me have to confront a slightly uncomfortable truth, sometimes we need to BBR.
Be Bloody Realistic.
Because as a solo founder you cannot:
• Run the business
• Do the accounts
• Do the marketing
• Post on socials
• Write blogs
• Build the website
• Optimise SEO
• Record podcasts
• Design graphics
• Respond to emails
• And remember to eat lunch
Something eventually gives.
So sometimes the answer isn’t “hire a big expensive agency”, sometimes it’s creative collaboration. At The Cluster Coworking Space, we see this all the time, one founder swaps studio time for branding, another trades marketing advice for web help, someone else offers photography in return for strategy. It’s not always cash, cash is not always king or queen! Sometimes it’s skills, time, and goodwill.
The startup economy is held together with a mixture of WiFi, coffee, and the occasional “mate’s rates” arrangement, and honestly, that’s how a lot of brilliant businesses survive the early years.
SEO does matter. Visibility matters. Being found online matters.
But no single tactic is the magic bullet.
For most small businesses the fundamentals still win:
• Clear messaging
• Helpful content
• A fast website
• Genuine expertise
• And a reputation built by real humans recommending you to other real humans
Yes, algorithms change. Yes, AI search is rewriting the playbook, but if people trust you, talk about you, and send others your way… you’re already winning half the battle. Everything else is just letters.