Free Online Guide

Organic SEO: Getting Found Without Paying For It

A plain-English guide to organic search for small businesses, nonprofits, and schools — no jargon, no budget required.

Part 1

What Is Organic SEO — and Why Should You Care?

Let's start with the honest version. Organic SEO is how you get found on Google, Bing, and other search engines without paying for ads. When someone searches "best vegan café in Dortmund" or "how do I write a grant proposal," they get a list of results. The ones that aren't marked "Sponsored" got there through organic SEO.

It's free to do. It takes time to work. And when it does work, it keeps working — long after a paid ad campaign would have gone quiet.

For small businesses, nonprofits, and schools, organic SEO is often the single highest-return marketing activity available. You're not outspending anyone. You're out-thinking them.

💡 The simple version: SEO is about making sure that when your audience is looking for what you offer, they find you — not your competitor.

How search engines actually work

Search engines send out "crawlers" — automated programs that read your website, follow your links, and report back. Based on what they find, the search engine decides how relevant and trustworthy your content is for any given search. Your job is to make that decision easy for them.

There are three areas to focus on: what's on your pages (on-page SEO), what other sites say about you (off-page SEO), and whether your site is technically healthy (technical SEO). All three matter — and we'll cover each one.

Part 2

The Shift You Need to Understand

SEO has changed. A lot. If you last thought about it in 2015, the version you remember is largely gone.

Keywords still matter — but they're no longer the whole game. Google has become very good at understanding what a person actually wants when they type something. That means your content needs to answer questions, not just contain words.

AI search engines like Google's AI Overviews, ChatGPT, and Bing's Copilot don't read your entire page. They slice it up, pick the best chunks, and serve those to users.

— Warren Laine-Naida, Content Chunking for AI Search

This is why well-structured, clearly written content outperforms keyword-stuffed walls of text every time. You're writing for a person who has a problem — and for a machine that wants to help that person solve it.

And increasingly, that "machine" isn't just Google. It's ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini. Good organic SEO feeds all of them. (See our GEO Guide for more on that.)

💡 The new question: Don't start with "what keyword do I want to rank for?" Start with "what question is my audience actually asking?" Then answer it better than anyone else.

Part 3

Your 8-Step Organic SEO Checklist

  1. Research the right keywords Use free tools like Google's "People also ask" boxes, or Keywords Everywhere. Look for specific, longer phrases ("affordable yoga classes for seniors Bremen") over short, competitive ones ("yoga"). Specific = less competition, more relevant traffic.
  2. Structure your pages with clear headings Every page needs one H1 (your main topic), followed by H2s (sub-topics) and H3s (details). Think of it as a newspaper: headline, subheadings, body text. This helps both readers and crawlers understand what the page is about.
  3. Write for the person, optimise for the machine Your primary keyword should appear in the page title, the H1, and naturally within the first paragraph. Don't force it — if it reads awkwardly, you've gone too far. Write like a human first, then check the basics.
  4. Sort your meta descriptions This is the short text that appears under your page title in search results. It doesn't directly affect rankings, but it does affect whether people click. Keep it under 160 characters, make it useful, and treat it like a mini-advert for your page.
  5. Build internal links Link between your own pages generously. A blog post about local SEO should link to your services page. Your homepage should link to your best content. Internal links help crawlers navigate your site and signal which pages matter most.
  6. Earn external links When other credible websites link to you, it's a vote of confidence. Guest posts on industry blogs, listings in local directories, being mentioned in a press article — these all count. One quality link beats a hundred low-quality ones.
  7. Keep your content fresh Update old posts and pages regularly. Search engines — and the AI tools that increasingly sit above them — prioritise current, accurate content. A well-tended article from two years ago can still rank and get cited today.
  8. Fix the technical basics Make sure your site loads quickly (Google PageSpeed Insights is free), works perfectly on mobile, uses HTTPS, and doesn't have broken links. These aren't glamorous tasks — but a technically healthy site is the foundation everything else is built on.

🔗 SEO and your website go hand in hand. For a deeper look at structure, speed, and WordPress essentials, see our Website Primer guide.

Part 4

Off-Page SEO: The Part Most People Forget

On-page SEO is what you do on your own website. Off-page SEO is everything else — and it's becoming more important, not less.

Visibility doesn't begin on your domain. It begins in the conversations, mentions, citations, and content ecosystems where your brand shows up — or doesn't.

— Warren Laine-Naida, All SEO Is Off-Page SEO Now

This means your Google Business Profile, your LinkedIn presence, mentions in local press, reviews on third-party platforms, and your activity in relevant online communities all contribute to how search engines (and AI tools) perceive your authority.

Social media plays a role here too — not because Google directly ranks social posts, but because active, visible brands earn more mentions, more links, and more trust signals. See our Social Media guide for practical steps.

SEO TypeWhat It CoversYour First Step
On-PageContent, headings, keywords, meta descriptionsAudit your 5 most important pages
Off-PageBacklinks, brand mentions, reviews, social signalsClaim your Google Business Profile
TechnicalSpeed, mobile, HTTPS, crawlabilityRun a free PageSpeed Insights check
Part 5

A Few Terms Worth Knowing

Organic Search
Search results that appear because of relevance and authority — not paid advertising.
Keyword
The word or phrase someone types into a search engine. Your content should match the keywords your audience actually uses.
SERP
Search Engine Results Page. The page Google shows after a search. Ranking on page one matters significantly more than page two.
Backlink
A link from another website to yours. High-quality backlinks from credible sources are one of the strongest SEO signals.
E-E-A-T
Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness. Google's framework for evaluating content quality. Author bios, citations, and credentials all help here.
Crawl / Crawler
An automated program that reads and indexes your website. If crawlers can't read your content, it won't rank.
Meta Description
The short summary of a page that appears in search results. Doesn't directly affect rankings, but influences whether people click.
Core Web Vitals
Google's set of performance metrics — loading speed, interactivity, and visual stability. A technical health check for your site.
Part 6

Test Yourself: Quick Quiz

Let's see what's landed. No tricks — just the essentials.

1. What is organic SEO?

  • Paying Google to appear at the top of search results
  • Getting found in search results through relevance and authority, without paying for ads
  • Only posting on social media to drive traffic
  • A type of content marketing for food and wellness brands

2. Which of these is an example of off-page SEO?

  • Writing a clear H1 heading on your homepage
  • Adding a meta description to your blog post
  • Being mentioned and linked to in a local newspaper article
  • Compressing your images to improve page speed

3. What does E-E-A-T stand for?

  • Efficiency, Engagement, Awareness, Traffic
  • Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness
  • Everything Everyone Asks Today
  • Engagement, Editing, Analytics, Testing

True or False?

False Stuffing your page with keywords as many times as possible is the best way to rank higher on Google.
True Updating older content regularly can help it maintain and improve its search rankings.
True A technically slow, mobile-unfriendly website will hurt your SEO even if the content is excellent.

Answer Key

  1. B. Organic SEO is earned visibility — no ad spend required.
  2. C. Off-page SEO is about external signals: links, mentions, and credibility built elsewhere on the web.
  3. B. Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness — Google's content quality framework.