Majestic

  • Site Explorer
    • Majestic
    • Récapitulatif
    • Domaines référents
    • Backlinks
    • * Nouveaux
    • * Disparus
    • Contexte
    • Intitulé de lien
    • Pages
    • Sujets
    • Link Graph
    • Sites liés
    • Outils Avancés
    • Author ExplorerBeta
    • Summary
    • Similar Profiles
    • Profile Backlinks
    • Attributions
  • Comparer
    • Récapitulatif
    • Backlink History
    • Flow Metrics History
    • Sujets
    • Clique Hunter
  • Outils pour les liens
    • Mon Majestic :
    • Activité récente
    • Rapports
    • Campagnes
    • Domaines vérifiés
    • OpenApps
    • Clés API
    • Mots-clés
    • Générateur de mots-clés
    • Keyword Checker
    • Search Explorer
    • Outils pour les liens
    • Bulk Backlinks
    • Neighbourhood Checker
    • Envoyer des URL
    • Expérimental
    • Regroupement d’index
    • Link Profile Fight
    • Liens mutuels
    • Solo Links
    • Rapport PDF
    • Typo Domain
  • Free SEO Tools
    • Démarrer
    • Backlink Checker
    • Majestic Million
    • Modules d'extension Majestic
    • Google Sheets
    • Post Popularity
    • Social Explorer
  • Assistance
    • Blog Lien externe
    • Assistance
    • Démarrer
    • Outils
    • Subscriptions & Billing
    • Questions fréquentes
    • Glossaire
    • Guide de style
    • Vidéos didactiques
    • API Reference Guide Lien externe
    • Nous contacter
    • About Backlinks and SEO
    • SEO in 2025
    • The Majestic SEO Podcast
    • All Podcasts
    • What is Trust Flow?
    • Link Building Guides
  • Compte gratuit
  • Tarifs
  • Login
  • Language flag icon
    • English
    • Deutsch
    • Español
    • Français
    • Italiano
    • 日本語
    • Nederlands
    • Polski
    • Português
    • 中文
  • Démarrer
  • Login
  • Tarifs
  • Compte gratuit
    • Récapitulatif
    • Domaines référents
    • Carte
    • Backlinks
    • Nouveaux
    • Disparus
    • Contexte
    • Intitulé de lien
    • Pages
    • Sujets
    • Link Graph
    • Sites liés
    • Outils Avancés
    • Récapitulatif
      Pro
    • Backlink History
      Pro
    • Flow Metrics History
      Pro
    • Sujets
      Pro
    • Clique Hunter
      Pro
  • Bulk Backlinks
    • Générateur de mots-clés
    • Keyword Checker
    • Search Explorer
      Pro
  • Neighbourhood Checker
    Pro
    • Regroupement d’index
      Pro
    • Link Profile Fight
      Pro
    • Liens mutuels
      Pro
    • Solo Links
      Pro
    • Rapport PDF
      Pro
    • Typo Domain
      Pro
  • Envoyer des URL
    • Summary
      Pro
    • Similar Profiles
      Pro
    • Profile Backlinks
      Pro
    • Attributions
      Pro
  • Rapports personnalisés
    Pro
    • Démarrer
    • Backlink Checker
    • Majestic Million
    • Modules d'extension Majestic
    • Google Sheets
    • Post Popularity
    • Social Explorer
    • Démarrer
    • Outils
    • Subscriptions & Billing
    • Questions fréquentes
    • Glossaire
    • Vidéos didactiques
    • API Reference Guide Lien externe
    • Nous contacter
    • Messages
    • The Company
    • Guide de style
    • Conditions générales
    • Privacy Policy
    • RGPD
    • Nous contacter
    • SEO in 2025
    • The Majestic SEO Podcast
    • All Podcasts
    • What is Trust Flow?
    • Link Building Guides
  • Blog Lien externe
    • English
    • Deutsch
    • Español
    • Français
    • Italiano
    • 日本語
    • Nederlands
    • Polski
    • Português
    • 中文

Go holistic and work more closely with other marketers

Izabela Wisniewska

Izzy Wisniweska has a different approach to improving the breadth of what you bring to the table, and that involves taking advantage of the talents and knowledge of the people who sit beside you.

@Izzy_CM  
Izabela Wisniewska 2024 podcast cover with logo
More SEO in 2024 YouTube Podcast Playlist Link Spotify Podcast Playlist Link Audible Podcast Playlist Link Apple Podcast Playlist Link

Go holistic and work more closely with other marketers

Izzy says: “Befriend other marketers and go holistic. In today's digital marketing world, we can't focus on one channel anymore – especially for brands that want to go big in order to build their branding and target more broadly.

You can't just focus on one channel, like SEO. You have to go holistic and work with other marketers. You have to work with your brand as well, but you need to ensure that your strategies are aligned. You can't do one thing for SEO and another thing for social media or split what you’re focusing on.

Align everything together. That is the only way that you’re going to hit the business goals – which is always a sale. They want to make money; that's why they hired you. You have to ensure that you're working towards the same goal and, to do that, your strategies have to be aligned and you need everybody working together so that your efforts are not disconnected and going in completely different directions.”

How do SEOs befriend other marketers and go holistic?

“We talk to each other; it’s as simple as that. Talk to each other, and schedule meetings and regular catchups with other marketing teams. In one of the agencies I worked at, we used to have short meetings every morning with our PR people and project managers to ensure that we were working towards the same goal, we weren’t disconnected, and we weren’t working on something that might negatively impact other team members.

Make sure that you know each other and you know what other teams are working on because there might be things that you can help each other with. If Christmas is approaching, you might be writing some blog posts and trying to rank them. Your social media team could help by posting it on social media and boosting some of those posts.

You have to talk to each other in order to do that. If you’re going to focus on Christmas and they’re going to focus on one sale for Black Friday, then it's all going in different directions. You could help each other out if you just aligned your efforts.”

To ensure that nothing is forgotten, is there a formal process that you would recommend for working more effectively together?

“It all depends on the company that you work for. If you're in-house or agency side, it might be different as well. You could have Slack channels, and I would really recommend having an Asana board that everyone can contribute to so everyone can see what's going on.

You can have more formal meetings, perhaps once a week. I wouldn't do it too often, though, because you might run into the trap of just talking to each other and running out of time to do the actual work.

Once a week, you could have one formal meeting to go through your strategies. The teams can explain what they’re focusing on and go through their ideas together, so everyone is involved from the beginning of the process, and everyone knows what's going on. Then, at subsequent meetings, you can have a catch-up. If you have more structured management, management and department heads can make a plan and then you can involve your juniors in another meeting, so everyone knows what's going on.

The key is for everyone to know what's going on, and then you could use morning meetings to just touch base on what you're doing today and highlight any potential issues.”

Instead of having an SEO team, could you have a project team that includes one marketer from each channel being represented on that project?

“I used to work like this, and I think it can work really well. There were many people in the agency, but we worked in ‘pods’. Those pods would have an SEO person, a PR person, and a project manager – and then we would have our set of clients. Obviously, we could talk between different pods and share ideas, but we would focus on our set of clients. This way, we could make sure that we were aligned with each other.

I like the idea of not having different channel teams but having campaign teams instead, to make sure that you have representatives of every channel in every campaign. Then, you make sure that everyone knows what's going on.

That might be tougher in bigger organisations, but it's about coming up with a way of structuring the teams to ensure that everyone knows what's going on. It's also useful to make sure that your broader marketing team understands different channels. I don't mean specialising in different channels but, as an SEO, I know how pay-per-click works. I’m focused on technical and on-page, but I know how link-building and PR work.

If you're a T-shaped marketer, and you have an understanding of the broader marketing efforts, you know how those other channels work, what they’re working towards, and how that can be achieved. Even if something gets lost in translation, you can then spot potential issues. It’s really helpful to ensure that your team is educated to a certain level.

They shouldn’t be specialised in everything, because we can't specialise in everything. However, they should at least know what's going on and how things are achieved in different channels. Even if it's more difficult in different organisations, there are ways to make it work. There is always a structure, and there’s always someone that we're reporting to. This information can start at the top, with the heads of the departments, and they can then share it with the lower levels.

For really large marketing teams, you could have a plan drafted up so everyone can read it in their own time and understand how the different channels are going to work together. It’s vital, and I've seen firsthand what can happen when things are disconnected.

Even just in SEO, we have technical SEOs, local SEOs, content SEOs, etc. If these channels are disconnected, one person will do something and another team will see that it just doesn’t work for them. It can just lead to going back and changing things, and losing time fixing things instead of going forward.”

Could SEOs work in a pod one or two days a week and then go to their own team the rest of the time?

“I can see the benefit of that but it might be challenging if you were working on separate clients within the pods.

The pods we worked in at Re:signal were structured really well. Outside of working in a pod, we also had something called Land and Learn, where different team members would give talks, so we could all learn from each other.

We also worked very closely together, so you could always go to someone and talk to someone from the same channel if you had a problem or just wanted to have a chat. We also had internal newsletters to get updates on what was happening and a very good online internal communication structure.

There are different ways of structuring things. If you worked on the same client, you could work on different campaigns as a pod to make sure that everything is aligned. Then, as a bigger picture, you could come back to your teams.”

If you’re in an interdisciplinary team, how do you measure which channel has the biggest impact on the customer deciding to make a purchase?

“In an ideal world, you are a marketing team and you're fighting for the same goal, so you shouldn’t try to take individual credit. You can still measure your impact though.

The fact that you all work on the same campaign doesn’t change the things that you do. If you’re doing a Christmas sale, you would still run pay-per-click, do your on-page SEO, make sure the technical is done, and do your social ads, but you might drive them to the same page. You might advertise the same campaign at the same time that the social ads do and make a lot of noise around it because that is what’s most important to the brand.

You can still see the fragments. If you go to analytics, you can see who came from pay-per-click, who came from search, who came from social, etc. You’re not changing what you do so much as how you do it and how you approach it. You’re making sure that strategy is aligned, and you don't go in completely different directions. If you’re promoting your perfume, you want the content team to be writing a blog post on 10 Best Perfumes for Christmas, not 10 Best Christmas Gifts.

It's still possible to see who came from where and how much revenue is assigned to each channel, if you need to.”

If an SEO is struggling for time, what should they stop doing right now so they can spend more time focusing on what you suggest in 2024?

“Structuring your day better is always helpful, so stop checking emails at the beginning of your day. It might sound harsh but, when you start checking emails, then you do stuff for other people, and you don't do the stuff that you should be doing right now.

If you're not making to-do lists, start making to-do lists. To-do lists are gold. Also, have blocks of time dedicated to hardcore, focused work. I try to dedicate the mornings to that. If I've got a big project to finish, or a big chunk of work to do, I try to dedicate a morning to it. Then I start checking emails, replying to people, and doing bits and bobs.

That should mean that you have more time for communication and alignment with other teams because you've already done your main piece of work for the day. You can chat with other team members and tackle the work from the emails that you didn't check in the morning.

You can even leave client emails until later in the day. If something is terribly wrong and you don't see the email, they can always pick up a phone and call. The client will appreciate you actually working on tasks for them rather than just sitting and replying to emails. Replying to emails doesn't get things done. I'm not saying leave a client’s email for days, I'm just saying that you should give yourself two or three hours to dedicate to your important work.

If you were in a meeting and another client emailed you, you wouldn’t stop that meeting just to reply. You wouldn’t even check your emails during a meeting. Strategy meetings can last for two or three hours, so you have to leave those emails for that amount of time anyway. If you have these focused sessions of hardcore work, and you really do stuff for that client, they will see that and they will appreciate it.”

Izzy Wisniewska, the director of Creatos Media, and you can find her over at CreatosMedia.co.uk.

@Izzy_CM  

Also with Izabela Wisniewska

Izabela Wisniewska 2025 podcast cover with logo
SEO in 2025
Think beyond Google

Users are venturing outside the traditional search box, so Izabela Wisniewska from Creatos Media believes it’s essential that SEOs start doing the same.

Majestic SEO Podcast - the Majestic SEO podcast cover
Majestic SEO Podcast
#42: Link Building Outreach
In this episode of the Majestic SEO Podcast, we explored the best ways of reaching out to prospective link partners so you can maximise your likelihood of receiving your desired link.
Izabela Wisniewska 2023 podcast cover with logo
SEO in 2023
Build quality, trustworthy brands

Izabela Wisniewska tells SEOs in 2023 that you shouldn’t focus strictly on SEO in isolation, and instead focus on building trustworthy brands and very good websites - and shouting about it.

Izabela Wisniewska 2022 podcast cover with logo
SEO in 2022
Get your basics covered first

Before becoming side-tracked by shiny, exciting, new things - let's get started by ensuring that the basics are covered first.

Majestic SEO Podcast - the Majestic SEO podcast cover
Majestic SEO Podcast
#22: Website Crawling for SEO
How often should you be crawling your website and what are the key issues that you should be looking to identify with a site crawler?

Choose Your Own Learning Style

Webinar iconVideo

If you like to get up-close with your favourite SEO experts, these one-to-one interviews might just be for you.

Watch all of our episodes, FREE, on our dedicated SEO in 2024 playlist.

youtube Playlist Icon

Podcast iconPodcast

Maybe you are more of a listener than a watcher, or prefer to learn while you commute.

SEO in 2024 is available now via all the usual podcast platforms

Spotify Apple Podcasts Audible

Book iconBook

This is our favourite. Sometimes it's better to sit and relax with a nice book.

The best of our range of interviews is available right now as a physical copy and eBook.

Amazon US Amazon UK

Don't miss out

Opt-in to receive email updates.

It's the fastest way to find out more about SEO in 2025.


Pouvons-nous améliorer cette page pour vous ? Donnez-nous votre opinion

Fresh Index

Adresses URL différentes recensées 346 003 001 645
Adresses URL différentes trouvées 968 805 695 278
Plage de dates 16 mars 2025 – 15 juil. 2025
Dernière mise à jour Il y a 37 minutes

Historic Index

Adresses URL différentes recensées 4 502 566 935 407
Adresses URL différentes trouvées 21 743 308 221 308
Plage de dates 06 juin 2006 – 26 mars 2024
Dernière mise à jour 03 mai 2024

SOCIAL

  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
  • Facebook
  • Bluesky
  • Twitter
  • Blog Lien externe

ENTREPRISE

  • Valeurs de Flow Metric
  • Présentation
  • Conditions générales
  • Règlement en matière de confidentialité
  • RGPD
  • Nous contacter

OUTILS

  • Tarifs
  • Site Explorer
  • Comparer les domaines
  • Bulk Backlinks
  • Search Explorer
  • Developer API Lien externe

MAJESTIC POUR

  • Link Context
  • Backlink Checker
  • Professionnels du SEO
  • Analystes des médias
  • Découverte d’influenceurs
  • Entreprise Lien externe

PODCASTS & PUBLICATIONS

  • The Majestic SEO Podcast
  • SEO in 2025
  • SEO in 2024
  • SEO en 2023
  • SEO en 2022
  • All Podcasts
top ^