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Search engine optimisation (SEO) is the process of improving your website so it ranks higher on Google. But behind that one-liner sits a complex mix of strategy, content, technical work, and consistency.


SEO is not just a traffic driver. It’s a lead machine. It’s how you show up when customers are actively looking for what you offer. And for many of our clients, it’s the most powerful and cost-effective long-term marketing investment they’ve ever made.



What is SEO? A guide on SEO basics.

How SEO works in real life


Imagine you’re a lawyer in Ponsonby, a florist in Hamilton, or an ecommerce brand selling skincare from Christchurch. When someone searches "Ponsonby lawyer", "wedding flowers Hamilton", or "best retinol NZ", you want your site to appear on page one.


SEO is what puts you there.


It involves improving the content and structure of your site, building trust through backlinks and authority signals, and making sure Google can understand and index your pages properly.


What’s included in a strong SEO strategy


At TopTalent, we build SEO strategies around three core pillars.


On-Page SEO


This is everything the user sees — headlines, page content, images, metadata, internal links, and overall structure. It’s about writing content that matches search intent and speaks clearly to both humans and search engines.


For example, if you're a landscaping company in Wellington, your service page needs to speak to phrases like "Wellington landscape design" and "garden renovation NZ". But it also needs to load fast, have a clear call to action, and show proof that you do great work.


Technical SEO


This is what’s happening behind the scenes. We look at how your site performs on mobile, how fast it loads, how clean the code is, and how easy it is for Google to crawl your content. One broken URL or slow-loading image can weaken your rankings.


We optimise this by fixing crawl errors, submitting your sitemap, compressing media, setting up Schema markup, and ensuring Google Search Console and Analytics are set up to track results.


Off-Page SEO


This is where authority gets built. We earn backlinks from credible websites, digital publications, and blogs. These backlinks signal to Google that you’re trustworthy and relevant in your industry.


An example: we helped Chatty Chums grow from a small editorial platform to one of New Zealand’s most respected lifestyle publications. By handling their SEO from the ground up — technical, on-page, off-page, and strategic planning — we helped them earn high-value backlinks. One blog they wrote about Besos Margarita is now featured in a rich snippet when people search "best margarita NZ".

That’s not luck. That’s strategy.


SEO results in the NZ market


You don’t need to be a media brand to win. Here's how SEO plays out for different types of Kiwi businesses.


Trade & Services (plumbers, electricians, roofers)


SEO helps you dominate local searches like "emergency plumber South Auckland" or "roof repair Whangarei". We optimise location pages, publish how-to content, and earn links through supplier directories and job platforms.


Professional Services (lawyers, accountants, consultants)


Searchers are usually high-intent and comparison-driven. Our SEO focuses on E-E-A-T signals like qualifications, experience, case studies, and expert blogs answering real client questions. The more helpful you are, the higher you rank.


Retail & Ecommerce (boutique fashion, skincare, homeware)


We identify purchase-based keywords like "buy linen sheets NZ" or "acne serum with niacinamide", then optimise product pages, blog content, and internal linking. Speed and user experience matter here — we make sure both are on point.


Hospitality & Events (restaurants, event planners, bars)


We target searches like "best dinner spot Takapuna" or "wedding planner Queenstown". This is where local SEO shines. Google Business Profile, citations, rich snippets and structured data help push you to the top.


SEO is not a one-off


Google is constantly evolving. So is your competition. A one-time SEO fix might help for a few weeks, but long-term ranking requires ongoing work.


We update content based on keyword trends. We continue building backlinks from newer sources. We monitor changes in Google’s algorithm and adapt quickly to avoid penalty or drops.


With Chatty Chums, we didn’t just optimise a few pages. We built a publishing system based on keyword research using Google Trends, AnswerThePublic and Google's keyword planner. Over time, their content began to dominate high-intent lifestyle searches, proving that SEO is cumulative. The longer you invest in it, the stronger your position becomes.


Should I DIY or hire an agency?


There are plenty of tools that help you track keywords, check for errors, and even generate AI content. But tools don’t build strategies. People do.


An experienced SEO agency brings more than implementation. It brings clarity. We know how to analyse competitors, spot gaps, write content that performs, and find the levers that drive results in the NZ market.


Ready to get serious about SEO?


If you want more visibility, better leads, and a long-term edge online, then SEO isn’t optional. It’s foundational.


At TopTalent, we handle SEO the way Google wants it done — by improving your website’s quality, answering your audience’s questions, and building your reputation online. You’ll see results in rankings, in clicks, and in the quality of the leads you get.


Publishing blog content that nobody sees can feel like a waste of time. Many businesses pour effort into writing articles that are too general or too competitive to ever rank on Google.


There’s a smarter way to get noticed online by creating blog content based on low-competition, high-demand topics that New Zealanders are actively searching for. At TopTalent, we’ve seen this work first-hand. A blog we published about NZ business directories, while simple, continues to pull in impressions and clicks because it meets a specific, underserved need. This guide will show you how to find niche content ideas like that using free tools and a few key steps.


Step 1: Use Google Autocomplete to Discover What People Want


Open Google.co.nz in an incognito window and begin typing phrases your customers might search. The suggestions that pop up are real queries people are entering every day.


Try prompts like:


  • best places to advertise a hair salon in

  • how to promote a small café in

  • where to list a tradie business online

  • free marketing ideas for NZ startups

  • how to get more clients as a freelancer in NZ


These suggestions often lead you to long-tail searches that are highly specific but rarely written about. Take note of anything that feels locally focused — those are often the most valuable topics to cover.


Step 2: Use Google Keyword Planner (Free with a Google Ads Account)


You don’t need to run any ads to use this tool. Log into Google Ads, then go to:


Tools & Settings > Keyword Planner > Discover New Keywords


Make sure to set your location to New Zealand before entering general terms related to your business. Here are some starting ideas based on different industries:


  • A yoga studio might try: yoga near me, online yoga NZ, how to get yoga clients

  • A tradie might try: plumber Auckland, find local jobs NZ, how to get more leads for tradies

  • A hairdresser might try: list salon NZ, how to grow salon clientele, NZ salon business tips

  • A retail store might try: how to sell online NZ, get reviews NZ, local shop promotion ideas


Once the suggestions load, sort them by competition and look for terms with low or medium competition and even a small search volume. You don’t need thousands of monthly searches — even 30–50 targeted visits can bring real business over time.


Step 3: Use Free Tools to Discover Questions No One is Answering


Websites like AlsoAsked.com and AnswerThePublic show common question-based queries around your keywords. These are especially helpful for discovering what real people are struggling with.


Examples of questions you might find include:


  • “How do I get clients for my cleaning business in NZ?”

  • “Where can I list my Airbnb for free?”

  • “How to set up a business Facebook page in NZ?”

  • “How to get more bookings for a photography studio?”


These questions can easily become blog posts. Aim to write in a way that solves the problem in a clear, NZ-relevant manner — that’s where you’ll beat the big websites.


Step 4: Learn from the Blog Content That’s Already Working


If you already have content published, your own data is one of the best places to start. Log into Google Search Console and check the ‘Pages’ and ‘Queries’ tabs.


Look for:


  • Which blog posts are showing up in search (even without clicks)?

  • Are the topics extremely specific?

  • Can you create a follow-up post that supports or deepens the topic?


For example, a café that sees a few impressions on a post about “How to list your café on Google” might follow up with:


  • “How to Get Customer Reviews for Your Café in NZ”

  • “Free Platforms to Promote Your Café Online”

  • “List of NZ Food Blogs That Review Local Cafés”


A tradie who has a post about quoting jobs might try:


  • “Free Invoice Templates for NZ Tradies”

  • “Best Free Trade Listing Sites in NZ”

  • “How to Turn One-Off Clients into Repeat Work in the Trades”


Use what’s working as your compass, then build out a cluster of content that supports the same intent.


Low Competition Blog Topic Ideas Across Different NZ Industries


Here’s a list of potential blog topics that are locally relevant, low in competition, and highly searchable:


  • Free Online Directories for Tradies in NZ (2025 Edition)

  • How to Get More Bookings for Your Hair Salon Without Spending on Ads

  • Where to List Your Airbnb for Free in New Zealand

  • NZ-Specific Ways to Promote Your Cleaning Business Online

  • How to Set Up a Google Business Profile for Your Yoga Studio

  • Best Sites to Promote Local Art, Music, and Creative Projects in NZ

  • Free NZ Platforms for Hospitality Venues to Get Found Online

  • How to Get Customer Reviews for Your Local Business in 2025


You won’t find these on most big agency blogs because they’re too niche — and that’s exactly the point.


Start Small, Rank Faster


You don’t need dozens of blogs to get results. Just one article that answers a specific, under-served query can outperform a hundred generic ones. Focus on clarity, usefulness, and local relevance. That’s what ranks in New Zealand.


At TopTalent, we help businesses create blog strategies that cut through the noise and attract real attention online. If you'd like help choosing the right topics or building momentum, get in touch. We’re always keen to help smart NZ businesses win.


With real examples for skincare brands, cosmetic clinics, builders, property developers & online course providers


If you’re trying to climb the Google ladder, link building isn’t just a nice-to-have — it’s a must. Done right, it tells search engines your website is worth paying attention to. But for most Kiwi business owners and marketers, link building feels like some vague SEO magic.


By then end of this article, you'll know how to do link building step by step. And to keep it practical, we’ll show how businesses like skincare brands, property developers, and course providers can actually use this stuff in the real world. If you cbf doing it yourself and you're curious about costings then check out our seo cost estimator.

The answer to how to do link building step by step

What is meant by link building?


Link building is the process of getting other websites to link to your website. These “backlinks” act like referrals or shout-outs — and the more credible the site linking to you, the more trust and authority your site earns with Google.


Think of it like this: if your skincare brand gets linked by Viva or a popular beauty blogger, it’s a digital thumbs up. Google notices. Your ranking improves. That’s link building at work.


Is link building good for SEO?


Yes — it’s one of the most important parts of SEO.

When Google ranks websites, it looks at three big things:


  1. Content relevance

  2. User experience

  3. Authority — and that comes largely from backlinks.


High-quality backlinks tell search engines that your site is trustworthy and worth ranking higher. It's the difference between page 7 and page 1. Especially in competitive niches like beauty, property, and online education, link building is a game-changer.


Step 1: Get Your Website Link-Worthy


Before you start reaching out for backlinks, make sure your site has content that’s actually worth linking to.That might be:


  • Helpful blog posts

  • Infographics

  • Before/after case studies

  • Research or data

  • Tools, quizzes or guides


Example – Skincare & Beauty Products


Create a blog titled “5 Skincare Ingredients You Should Never Mix” with expert commentary. Beauty bloggers and skincare reviewers are always looking for smart content to link to. Pair it with a quiz: “What’s Your Skin Type?”


Step 2: Identify Link Opportunities


Now it’s time to hunt for sites that could realistically link to you. Think:


  • Local blogs

  • Industry directories

  • News and lifestyle media

  • Suppliers and partners

  • Guest post opportunities

  • Awards & "Top 10" lists

  • Influencer shoutouts


Example – Cosmetic Clinics


Reach out to beauty or wellness bloggers offering a collab or expert comment for a story. Or submit your clinic to articles like “Top 10 Cosmetic Clinics in Auckland” — many of these lists are open to submissions.


Step 3: Outreach – Ask for the Link (But Make It Worth Their While)


Link building isn’t begging. It’s pitching — like PR, but for SEO. Your goal is to show why a link to your site will help their readers.


Here’s a basic outreach structure:


Subject: Quick idea for your next blog?

Body:“Hey [Name],


Loved your article on [relevant topic].


I recently put together a [guide/case study/tool] that expands on that theme. If you’re ever updating or writing a new post, feel free to check it out: [URL].


Happy to contribute a quote or extra info if that helps!


Cheers,

[You]”


Step 4: Build Relationships, Not Just Links


Long-term link building works best when you actually build real relationships with writers, influencers, and other businesses.


  • Comment on their posts

  • Share their content

  • Invite them to collaborate

  • Offer guest posts or testimonials


Example – Builders & Property Developers


Partner with architecture blogs or interior design influencers. Offer them a behind-the-scenes tour of a new project or a guest piece titled “5 Site Mistakes to Avoid When Building in Auckland”. That’s link-worthy content and builds buzz.


Step 5: List Your Business in High-Quality Directories


This is the low-hanging fruit. Local directories, business associations, and niche-specific platforms are still valuable.


Example – Online Course Providers


Submit your course to NZ-specific education platforms, course listing sites, and even student discount directories. Also hit up industry blogs for guest posts like “What NZ Employers Look for in [Your Subject] Grads.”


Step 6: Track and Optimise


Use tools like Ahrefs, Moz, or even Ubersuggest to:


  • See who’s linking to you

  • Identify your top-performing pages

  • Track competitors’ backlinks

  • Monitor domain authority and rankings over time


How much should I pay for link building?


This depends on your industry and the quality of links you're chasing.


  • Cheap links ($50–$150): Often low quality, spammy, and can hurt your rankings more than help.

  • Mid-range ($200–$500 per link): Decent blogs, local media, niche directories — good for most NZ small to mid-sized businesses.

  • Premium ($500–$1,500+): High-authority media (Stuff, NZ Herald, global blogs), influencer partnerships, or PR placements.


At TopTalent, we usually build link packages based on industry, competition, and goals — not just “X links for $X.”


Quality > quantity. Every time.


How hard is link building?


We’ll be honest — it can be a grind.


You’re writing content, building relationships, pitching bloggers, tracking results — and doing it consistently. Plus, you’ve got to avoid Google penalties by staying well clear of dodgy link schemes.

But it works. And once the links are live, they continue sending trust and traffic to your site long after the initial effort.


If you’ve got a solid strategy and someone who knows how to execute, it’s one of the best ROI channels in digital.


Bonus: 3 Link-Building Ideas You Can Try This Month


Launch a “Top Tips” blog post featuring quotes from influencers (they’ll usually link back).


Offer a free sample or service in exchange for a blog review.


Create a killer free guide (e.g., “How to Choose the Right Builder in Auckland” or “Free Skincare Routine Planner”) and pitch it to relevant blogs or directories.


Final Thought: Link Building Is a Slow Burn, Not a Quick Fix


But if you do it well — with useful content, smart outreach and a focus on quality — the results compound. More traffic. Higher Google rankings. More leads. More sales.


And if you don’t have the time or patience to do it yourself?That’s where we come in 😉



Let’s get your site linked, ranked, and generating leads on autopilot.


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