Most small business owners know they should be thinking about SEO. The problem is that very few people realize how much work happens before a website designer ever starts building pages.

Before we can recommend content, organize service pages, or help a business rank in Google, we need data. That data comes from keyword research, competitor analysis, and local search trends.

 

What People Search Isn’t What You Think

When business owners describe their services, they usually use industry terms. Customers often use something completely different.

A cleaning company may talk about residential sanitation services. Their customers are probably searching for “house cleaning Raleigh NC” or “move out cleaning Cary NC.”

An accountant may describe tax planning and advisory services. Their potential clients may simply be searching for “CPA near me.”

The difference matters because Google relies on the language used throughout your website to understand what your business does.

A beautiful website can still struggle to generate leads if it’s built around the wrong keywords!

 

The Software Adds Up Quickly

Many business owners assume agencies are charging primarily for design work. In reality, most agencies invest heavily in software before a project even begins.

As of June 2026, some of the most commonly used SEO tools include:

  • Ahrefs: $129+ per month
  • Semrush: $140+ per month
  • Surfer SEO: $99+ per month
  • BrightLocal: $39+ per month
  • Screaming Frog: $259 per year

That’s before factoring in website hosting, security software, premium WordPress plugins, backups, analytics tools, and other subscriptions that help agencies support their clients.

A business owner trying to build the same toolkit could easily spend several hundred dollars per month before making a single update to their website.

 

Buying The Tools Is The Easy Part

This is where things get interesting.

The software tells you what people are searching for. It doesn’t tell you what to do next.

Let’s say you discover people are searching for “website design Raleigh NC.” Should you create a service page? A location page? A blog post? Should you focus on Raleigh, Cary, Apex, Durham, or the entire Triangle?

Those decisions are what separate data from strategy.

Keyword research isn’t about finding information. It’s about knowing what to do with it.

 

Why This Matters For Local Businesses

We’ve worked with businesses across North Carolina that had professional looking websites but weren’t generating the calls, form submissions, or leads they expected.

Most of the time, the design wasn’t the problem.

The website simply wasn’t built around how local customers search. If someone is searching for a moving company in Cary NC, a custom closet company in Raleigh NC, or a house cleaner in Apex NC, Google needs clear signals that your business is the right answer.

Without those signals, even a great website can struggle to gain visibility.

 

What You’re Actually Paying For

When someone hires Barefoot Build, they’re not just paying for a website.

They’re benefiting from the tools we’ve already invested in. They’re benefiting from the research we’ve already completed and the lessons we’ve learned helping businesses improve their online presence.

Most importantly, they’re getting a website built around how real customers search online instead of how we think they might search.

That foundation helps guide everything from service pages and blog content to Google Business Profile recommendations and future marketing efforts.

 

Final Thoughts

Could you purchase the software yourself and learn how to use it? Absolutely! The better question is whether that’s the best use of your time. Most small business owners would rather spend their time serving customers, managing employees, and growing their business than sorting through SEO reports and keyword data.

That’s why we include keyword research and local SEO considerations in every website project we build. A website should do more than look professional. It should help the right people find your business.

Most small business owners know they should be thinking about SEO. The problem is that very few people realize how much work happens before a website designer ever starts building pages.

Before we can recommend content, organize service pages, or help a business rank in Google, we need data. That data comes from keyword research, competitor analysis, and local search trends.

 

What People Search Isn’t What You Think

When business owners describe their services, they usually use industry terms. Customers often use something completely different.

A cleaning company may talk about residential sanitation services. Their customers are probably searching for “house cleaning Raleigh NC” or “move out cleaning Cary NC.”

An accountant may describe tax planning and advisory services. Their potential clients may simply be searching for “CPA near me.”

The difference matters because Google relies on the language used throughout your website to understand what your business does.

A beautiful website can still struggle to generate leads if it’s built around the wrong keywords!

 

The Software Adds Up Quickly

Many business owners assume agencies are charging primarily for design work. In reality, most agencies invest heavily in software before a project even begins.

As of June 2026, some of the most commonly used SEO tools include:

  • Ahrefs: $129+ per month
  • Semrush: $140+ per month
  • Surfer SEO: $99+ per month
  • BrightLocal: $39+ per month
  • Screaming Frog: $259 per year

That’s before factoring in website hosting, security software, premium WordPress plugins, backups, analytics tools, and other subscriptions that help agencies support their clients.

A business owner trying to build the same toolkit could easily spend several hundred dollars per month before making a single update to their website.

 

Buying The Tools Is The Easy Part

This is where things get interesting.

The software tells you what people are searching for. It doesn’t tell you what to do next.

Let’s say you discover people are searching for “website design Raleigh NC.” Should you create a service page? A location page? A blog post? Should you focus on Raleigh, Cary, Apex, Durham, or the entire Triangle?

Those decisions are what separate data from strategy.

Keyword research isn’t about finding information. It’s about knowing what to do with it.

 

Why This Matters For Local Businesses

We’ve worked with businesses across North Carolina that had professional looking websites but weren’t generating the calls, form submissions, or leads they expected.

Most of the time, the design wasn’t the problem.

The website simply wasn’t built around how local customers search. If someone is searching for a moving company in Cary NC, a custom closet company in Raleigh NC, or a house cleaner in Apex NC, Google needs clear signals that your business is the right answer.

Without those signals, even a great website can struggle to gain visibility.

 

What You’re Actually Paying For

When someone hires Barefoot Build, they’re not just paying for a website.

They’re benefiting from the tools we’ve already invested in. They’re benefiting from the research we’ve already completed and the lessons we’ve learned helping businesses improve their online presence.

Most importantly, they’re getting a website built around how real customers search online instead of how we think they might search.

That foundation helps guide everything from service pages and blog content to Google Business Profile recommendations and future marketing efforts.

 

Final Thoughts

Could you purchase the software yourself and learn how to use it? Absolutely! The better question is whether that’s the best use of your time. Most small business owners would rather spend their time serving customers, managing employees, and growing their business than sorting through SEO reports and keyword data.

That’s why we include keyword research and local SEO considerations in every website project we build. A website should do more than look professional. It should help the right people find your business.

Written by Taylor Barefoot
Written by Taylor BarefootCo-Founder & SEO Specialist
Taylor is the technical and SEO partner at Barefoot Build, focused on helping small businesses build WordPress websites that perform well and grow over time. Featured in Forbes online.
Published On: June 8th, 2026 / Categories: Performance & Speed, SEO & Visibility /

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