March 30, 2020 by Natalie

Weekly SEO Tips to Help Your Business or Nonprofit Thrive In Tough Times

TL;DR

This series was originally published in the dark ages of the COVID-19 lockdowns. Remember that? Updated in May 2025, New Why’s DIY SEO blog series is a practical, hands-on guide designed to help small businesses and nonprofits improve their online presence through search engine optimization even when budgets are tight. Spanning topics like local SEO, competitive link building, blogging for SEO, and using Google tools like Analytics and Tag Manager, the series breaks down each concept into weekly, actionable steps. The series remains a valuable roadmap for building long-term visibility and resilience through thoughtful digital strategy.

From the series:

  1. Weekly SEO Tips to Help Your Business or Nonprofit Thrive in Tough Times
  2. DIY SEO: How to Blog for SEO
  3. DIY SEO: Local SEO
  4. DIY SEO: Competitive Research and Link Building
  5. DIY SEO: Google Analytics and Tag Manager Basics
  6. DIY SEO: Make More Videos
  7. DIY SEO: Keyword Research
  8. DIY SEO: Keyword Optimization

 

This is a turbulent time for small businesses and nonprofits. Some sectors are particularly affected (arts and culture and events-based organizations, I’m looking at you), and we’re all adapting to a rapidly shifting landscape—especially as nonprofits face new challenges under the current presidential administration in 2025.

I started doing SEO at the end of 2009, during the financial crisis. What was surprising to me was that there was such an enormous need for SEO in a time like that.

An image of the author hiking as a young mother.

When I first started doing SEO, this is what I looked like. Weird, huh? So young and innocent.

For those of you who may be new to SEO, it stands for Search Engine Optimization, the art / science / hackery of making sure your website shows up when someone searches for your brand, services, or products. It’s a complicated dance people like me do with Google (and, to a lesser extent Bing, Yahoo, DuckDuckGo).

During the financial crisis, businesses and nonprofits were scrappy, scrambling to carve out a place online that, to some of them, was a relatively new frontier after operating solid offline businesses and organizations for their entire history. Back then, there were some reliable tricks that people used to rank well, but over time Google (I typically use Google as a stand-in for all search engines, for better or for worse) started catching on to these tricks and made it harder and harder to rank well in search. This became especially true for small businesses and small nonprofits.

We now compete more with Amazon, Walmart, and other gigantic e-commerce retailers and large service-based organizations, not to mention Google’s own tools. While Google used to send 100% of search traffic to websites other than Google (Google was just a directory, more or less, not an actual website unto itself), today less than 50% of Google traffic actually leaves Google. Google has answer boxes and featured snippets that scrape content from websites so you never have to click to find an answer. If small businesses want to do well, reliably, on Google search now, you have to pay Google in the form of search ads. This was probably Google’s plan all along.

With that said, there are still things that you can do to help your website.

Image of old computer hardware in a wheelbarrow

You might not ever be number one for some of your products, especially if it’s something that a huge corporation sells (see Amazon for almost all goods), but you can rank for other things that will lead people to your website in order to build trust, brand familiarity, and potentially help you meet your organization’s goals.

Many of these tasks take time to pay off. That’s the secret of SEO; it’s rarely instantaneous and the results of the work you do now may not even show up for three months or more. But that doesn’t mean you shouldn’t do it, especially if you or your employees and volunteers have more time on your hands right now. SEO is cumulative. It’s something you should always be doing and it’s something that continues to pay off the longer you do it.

Each week, starting today, we'll post a blog that includes one task you can work on this week to help your organization improve its online presence.

If you have employees or volunteers who need something to do right now, you can assign these tasks to them, assuming it’s something they’d want to do. Or, you can do it yourself. Either way, these ideas will help your business online in both measurable ways and subtler ways. Check out our first post today, and keep coming back weekly for simple, effective SEO tasks you can tackle to strengthen your organization’s online presence.

Want more ideas? Here’s a marketing checklist for slow times that can help you prioritize what you need to do. 

From the series:

  1. Weekly SEO Tips to Help Your Business or Nonprofit Thrive in Tough Times
  2. DIY SEO: How to Blog for SEO
  3. DIY SEO: Local SEO
  4. DIY SEO: Competitive Research and Link Building
  5. DIY SEO: Google Analytics and Tag Manager Basics
  6. DIY SEO: Make More Videos
  7. DIY SEO: Keyword Research
  8. DIY SEO: Keyword Optimization

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