The basics — plain English
What is SEO?
The answer that
doesn't waste your time.
SEO stands for Search Engine Optimisation. Here's what it actually means, how it works, and whether it's worth your time and money as a South African business.
What SEO actually means
SEO — Search Engine Optimisation — is the practice of improving your website so that it appears higher in search results when people search for things related to your business.
When someone types "accountant Cape Town" or "how to fix a leaking geyser" or "best running shoes South Africa" into Google, the results they see aren't random. Google has ranked hundreds of websites in a specific order based on which ones it thinks best answer that search. SEO is the work of making your site one of the ones Google ranks highly.
The simple version
SEO gets your business in front of people who are actively looking for what you offer — without paying for every click. A well-ranked page keeps delivering traffic for years. A paid ad stops the moment you stop paying.
Unlike paid advertising, where you pay per click, organic SEO traffic is free once you've earned the ranking. That's why it's a long-term asset rather than a short-term tap.
How search engines work
Google sends automated programs called crawlers across the web constantly. They follow links, read content, and build an index — essentially a massive database of what every page on the internet is about.
When someone searches, Google pulls from that index and ranks the most relevant, trustworthy pages at the top. The ranking is determined by hundreds of factors — but they mostly come down to three things: relevance, authority, and experience.
The three pillars of SEO
01
Technical SEO
Can Google find, crawl, and understand your site? Site speed, mobile-friendliness, clean code, proper indexing, no broken links.
02
On-Page SEO
Does your content match what people are searching for? Keyword research, content quality, headings, meta tags, internal linking.
03
Off-Page SEO
Do other trusted sites link to yours? Backlinks from credible sources tell Google your site is worth ranking. Authority takes time to build.
All three pillars matter. A technically perfect site with no content won't rank. Great content on a broken site won't rank. Good content with no backlinks will rank eventually but slowly. The fastest results come from all three working together.
Is SEO worth it for your business?
| Business type | SEO value | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Local service business (accountant, lawyer, dentist, plumber) | Very high | People search before they hire. Local SEO captures high-intent queries. |
| E-commerce | Very high | Product searches drive massive traffic. Technical and content SEO both critical. |
| Professional services (marketing, consulting, HR) | High | Research phase is digital. Being found builds credibility before first contact. |
| B2B with referral-driven sales | Moderate | SEO supports but may not be primary channel. Worth doing, not the priority. |
| Hyper-niche B2B | Lower | Target audience too small for meaningful search volume. Other channels may outperform. |
How long SEO takes — honestly
This is the question everyone wants answered and nobody wants to answer honestly. Here it is:
For most South African small to medium businesses targeting local keywords, meaningful results come within 3–6 months. Page one for competitive terms takes 6–12 months of consistent work. Some competitive terms take longer.
The work in months one and two — technical fixes, content creation, initial optimisation — produces almost nothing visible. This is the phase where most people give up or get sold on shortcuts. Don't. The compounding effect of SEO is real but it takes time to kick in.
DIY SEO vs hiring someone
More of the SEO workflow is learnable than it used to be — especially with AI tools. For a small local business with moderate competition, a motivated owner can handle a significant portion of their own SEO.
What you can reasonably DIY with guidance: keyword research, content writing, meta tags, basic on-page optimisation, Google Search Console setup, Google Business Profile optimisation.
What's harder to DIY: technical SEO audits and fixes, link building strategy, schema markup, site architecture, competitive analysis, and reading data correctly to make good decisions.
The honest question isn't "can I do this myself?" It's "is my time better spent on this or on running my business?" The answer depends on your situation. That's exactly what the oonie DIY quiz helps you figure out.
SEO and AI search in 2026
SEO is no longer just about Google's blue links. AI systems — ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews — are answering more search queries directly. This has given rise to a new discipline called GEO (Generative Engine Optimisation) — optimising to appear in AI-generated answers, not just search results.
Strong SEO is the foundation for GEO. If your content is well-structured, authoritative, and answers specific questions clearly, you're already doing much of what GEO requires. But the two disciplines have differences worth understanding — especially for SA businesses where AI search adoption is growing fast.
Rather have a human handle it?
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without the nonsense.
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