After talking with Andy Hagans and a few other friends I have got to thinking a lot more about tactical vs strategic SEO and marketing.
Many SEO tactics work well at achieving a certain goal, but to be wildly profitable you usually needs more than tactics, you need love from the strategic front. Many people who are great tactical SEOs do not build much equity because tactics without strategy have little value. Here are some examples:
Tactical:
Buy AdWords and AdSense ads to drive revenue.
Strategic:
If you are new to a fairly saturated market use AdWords and AdSense to roughly break even, hoping to increase your site exposure, link equity, and mindshare in the process...knowing that the real profits from an ad campaign can show up indirectly over time via organic search and product recommendation on other sites.
Tactical:
Get links.
Strategic:
Avoid actively seeking low quality links until your site has a significant history which includes many trusted backlinks.
Tactical:
Get quality links.
Strategic:
Create content, tools, or other packaged value systems which allow you to gain high quality viral links for a low aggregate cost. Create things that will make competitors want to talk about you.
Tactical:
Do anything to get links. Link bait link bait link bait.
Strategic:
Consider the potential outcome of your link bait if you are trying to cut others down to prop yourself up. As you build a trusted brand become more risk adverse.
Tactical:
Blog spam for links.
Strategic:
Talk about and become friends with the people you want links from.
Tactical:
Put everything on one exceptionally authoritative domain.
Strategic:
Own multiple brands that allow you to tap different market segments, or publish things that might not fuse too well with your main brand without hurting your brand. Design the brands so that they can extend in different directions.
Tactical:
Keep all your profits by doing almost everything yourself. Stick to what you know.
Strategic:
Admit your weaknesses and take on partners where neccessary. Find partners who add value where you are lacking.
Tactical:
Create high quality content.
Strategic:
Control content costs and make boatloads of average content. Build the authority of the site using exceptionally high quality content. Leverage that authority to profit from your boatloads of average content on that site. Segregate your high quality and high attention content from your lower value content, but after attention has passed ensure that the high quality content links trough to your lower quality content.
Tactical:
Use descriptive page titles to improve CTR and anchor text.
Strategic:
Title your pages such that the story spreads far. After the story has initially spread, consider changing the page title to something more descriptive.
Tactical:
Create a niche site in a low competition vertical.
Strategic:
If the vertical should be easy to dominate, make your core brand name broad enough that if you later want to expand you can.
Tactical:
Make as much money as you can right now.
Strategic:
Invest and reinvest. Make less upfront. Create passive income streams from properties that were designed around minimal customer service and growing into dominant self-reinforcing market positions.
Tactical:
Montize right away.
Strategic:
Limit initial monetization. Make the site look like a hobby or fan site made out of love for the topic so it is easy to link at. Program it such that it is easy to turn on monetization when the day to monetize comes.
Tactical:
Use consistant ad formats and layouts throughout your site.
Strategic:
On the home page and other high attention portions of your site use less ads to make your site more linkworthy.
Tactical:
Design for maximum ad clickthrough rate.
Strategic:
Consider linkability as a cost. Place ads in a slightly less aggressive position to make your content easier to link at.
Tactical:
Stay on topic to reinforce brand image.
Strategic:
Write some content for links, while writing other content for conversion. Occassionally drift off topic if there is a way to make a high link equity / high value / high authority idea relate to your site. If you are creative enough, everything in the universe belongs in a relational database that is tied to your content ;)
I am sure you probably have lots of other good examples about why strategy is important. What are your favorite SEO strategies?