If your content strategy feels like a treadmill, post, post, post, then start over next week, you are not alone.
Social posts are fast, but they are also fleeting. They spike, they fade, and then they disappear into the scroll. Which is exactly why long term visibility matters, the kind that keeps working even when you are not posting daily.
In my conversation with SEO strategist Maggie Schneider from Hilltop Help, we unpacked how SEO and content repurposing create visibility that compounds over time. And most importantly, how to make it doable even if you are a solopreneur with limited time.
What long term visibility really means
Long term visibility is when your business gets found without you constantly pushing.
It is traffic that comes from people actively searching for answers, solutions, and the exact thing you teach.
SEO is one of the most practical ways to build that kind of compounding momentum because a single blog post, podcast episode, or YouTube video can bring in traffic for years. Maggie shared that she still has blog posts from three years ago bringing in organic traffic today, with no ad spend attached.
That is the dream. Content that keeps paying you back.
Why SEO aligns perfectly with the 1% Conversion Effect™
The 1% Conversion Effect™ is about tiny shifts that create big momentum across your funnel and customer journey.
SEO works exactly like that.
Most people avoid SEO because they assume it is complicated, slow, or only for big companies. But the truth is, you can make small improvements that stack.
One better page title.
One clearer keyword.
One stronger call to action.
One updated blog post.
One week at a time.
Those tiny tweaks compound into authority, traffic, and leads you did not have to fight for.
The biggest repurposing myth coaches believe
Most people hear “repurpose your content” and think it means chopping up one long video into ten Instagram posts.
And then what happens?
They post those clips on the same platform, for the same audience, and they still feel like they are starting over every week.
Maggie’s approach is bigger picture.
Instead of repurposing only inside social media, use long form content that can actually be discovered through search. Think blogs, podcasts, and YouTube, because those live longer and are less dependent on algorithms.
She also referenced a study from Neil Patel showing businesses that show up on six or more platforms tend to see a stronger return on marketing efforts. The takeaway is not that you need to do everything today. The takeaway is that strategic repurposing across multiple platforms creates more doors for people to find you.
The smartest way to repurpose webinars and trainings
Webinars take time. Planning, slides, emails, prep, delivery. So if you run one and then move on, you are leaving a lot of visibility on the table.
Here are a few smart ways to turn one webinar into long term visibility:
Create blog content that feeds the webinar
Write blog posts around the exact questions your webinar answers. Then direct readers to the training as the next step.
This works because someone who finds a blog post through search is already raising their hand. They are already interested. A webinar is a natural next step.
Relaunch it in cycles
Instead of treating your webinar like a one time event, bring it back quarterly or twice a year. Update examples, update the framing, and re promote it.
Maggie shared she still promotes an SEO challenge she ran two years ago and it continues to perform well.
Use your audience feedback as future content
Your webinar questions and chat comments are keyword research in real time. If people ask follow up questions, those are new blog topics, new emails, and new content angles waiting to happen.
The first SEO basics to set up today
If you only do one thing after reading this post, do this.
Connect Google Analytics and Google Search Console
Maggie sees this constantly in website audits. Business owners skip the basics.
The problem is that if these tools are not connected, you are not collecting data. Which means you cannot look back later and see what pages performed well, what brought people in, or what needs to be improved.
Even if you are not “doing SEO yet,” set this up now so future you has data to work with.
That is a 1% Conversion Effect™ move.
SEO for funnel pages and landing pages
Yes, you can apply SEO thinking to funnel pages.
Many funnel builders have an SEO section where you can add page titles and descriptions, but Maggie pointed out something even more important:
A lot of landing pages do not have enough context for Google to understand what the page is about.
Even if you add keywords in the backend, Google still needs clear on page copy that communicates:
- Who this is for
- What it is
- What the visitor will get
- Why it matters
- What to do next
In other words, speak to your ideal client in the language they search, then guide them to a next step.
What to do after someone finds your blog
This is where most businesses lose the opportunity.
Someone finds your blog through Google, reads it, and leaves. No next click, no list growth, no relationship built.
Maggie is big on one principle:
No dead ends
Every blog post should guide the reader to something.
That might be:
- A lead magnet
- A related post
- A free training
- A service page
- A booking link
- A product recommendation
Even simple sidebar links or “related posts” sections can increase time on site and create a better experience.
Because when someone is interested, your job is to keep the momentum going.
That is how visibility turns into conversions.
Keyword research without getting overwhelmed
Keyword research is not a one time task. It is ongoing market research.
Maggie shared a simple strategy that is perfect for coaches and experts:
Keep a running document of frequently asked questions you get from your audience. If the same question comes up more than once or twice, that is content.
Also, remember that your audience may not use the expert terminology you use.
Especially in industries like health, finance, or technical fields, people start their search with symptoms and pain points, not professional terms.
Your job is to meet them where they are searching.
Balancing ads with SEO for short term and long term wins
SEO builds compounding visibility.
Ads can create immediate traffic.
Maggie and I both agree the best strategy is a blend.
One of the most powerful ways to use ads in support of SEO is to drive traffic to new content. When a new blog post gets visits quickly, that initial boost can help signal relevance and speed up performance in search.
And if ads are not converting, it is often a sign that your pages need improvement anyway.
Slow down to speed up.
Strengthen the foundation.
Then scale.
Your 1% Conversion Effect™ action step
If you want to apply the 1% Conversion Effect™ to visibility, do this:
Pick one piece of content you already have and improve it.
- Check how it is performing
- Update the headline or keyword focus
- Add a clearer call to action
- Link it to a next step
- Repurpose it to one additional platform
One page a week sounds small.
Until you look up in three months and your website is a completely different asset.
Tiny tweaks.
Massive momentum.
Let’s grow your business together.