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SEO May 2026 · 4 min read

SEO for Small Businesses in Hammersmith: A Practical Guide

Most Hammersmith SMBs I talk to are paying for SEO they don’t really need. They’re paying for backlink campaigns, ranking guarantees and generic monthly content — none of which moves the needle on a local business. What does work is much simpler than most agencies make it sound, and most of it you can do yourself or commission as a one-off.

By Christopher Mollard, J4G Design — Fulham, helping small businesses with local SEO since 2017.
Last updated 20 Jun 2026

What are the three things to do first?

For most Hammersmith small businesses, the priorities for SEO in this order are: fix your Google Business Profile, target the phrases your customers actually search, and build a consistent citation profile. Get those three right and you’ve covered roughly 80% of what local SEO does.

Why start with Google Business Profile?

For most small businesses I work with, GBP traffic tends to outperform website traffic by around 3 to 1. It’s the listing that appears in Google Maps and the “local pack” — the three businesses with map pins that show for searches like “plumber Hammersmith” or “florist W6”.

A few things that usually work really well:

  • Claim the listing if you haven’t already (Google “your business name Hammersmith” on Maps)
  • Complete every field — hours, phone, website, services, service areas, attributes. Incomplete listings rank below complete ones
  • Pick the most specific primary category — a hairdresser should be “Hair Salon”, not “Beauty Salon” or “Spa” unless those are more accurate
  • Upload at least 10 photos — exterior, interior, team, products. Refresh monthly if you can
  • Post weekly — Google posts are free and they keep the listing active
  • Reply to every review within 48 hours, good or bad. The reply isn’t for the reviewer — it’s for the 200 people who’ll read it later

I’d budget 3–5 hours to get this set up properly, then about 30 minutes a week to keep it healthy. Most Hammersmith small businesses I audit are doing none of it.

How do you find the right phrases to target?

The free option is Google Search Console. Open the Queries tab and look for two patterns:

  • Queries where you rank position 4–15 — these are close to page 1. Small pushes move them into positions that get real traffic
  • Queries with high impressions but low clicks — Google is showing you but people aren’t clicking. Usually a title tag or meta description problem

For a Hammersmith business, the phrases worth targeting tend to be service + location combinations:

  • [service] Hammersmith
  • [service] in Hammersmith
  • [service] near King Street
  • Best [service] in W6

These should appear naturally in the page title, the H1 and the first 100 words of body copy. Not stuffed — just present so Google can see what the page is about.

What about citations?

A citation is anywhere online that lists your business name, address and phone (NAP). Google cross-references these to verify you’re real.

The essentials I’d start with for a Hammersmith business:

  • Yell.com (UK’s largest)
  • Yelp UK
  • Bing Places (separate listing to Google Business)
  • Facebook Business Page
  • Your industry directory (Checkatrade, TripAdvisor, etc.)
  • Hammersmith & Fulham Chamber of Commerce

What matters most is consistency. Your business name, address and phone should be identical on every listing — even punctuation. A comma in one and no comma in another can flag your profile to Google.

It’s usually a couple of hours to get the top five citations set up, then a quick check once a year.

What’s worth ignoring?

Most of the SEO products sold to Hammersmith SMBs are overblown. A few specific things I’d be cautious about:

  • “Guaranteed page 1 rankings” — nobody can guarantee Google rankings. Anyone who says they can is either misleading you or has defined “rank” loosely
  • Backlink packages — paying for backlinks is against Google’s guidelines. It can get your site penalised
  • Thin AI-generated content at the lowest end of the market — it tends to clutter your site without helping it rank
  • Long retainers without measurable outputs — for an SMB, you should be able to see what you’re paying for in monthly reporting, not just a list of “tasks done”

What does a healthy SEO setup look like?

For most Hammersmith small businesses, the realistic shape is:

  • A one-off foundation: GBP, on-page SEO, citations
  • Then quarterly check-ins to keep things current
  • Optional ongoing work — content, additional optimisation — if you want to grow beyond the basics

I focus on measurable success metrics from day one: organic clicks, local pack impressions, GBP actions. So you can see the impact rather than take it on trust.

If you’d like a second opinion on what you’re currently paying for, happy to look at it honestly — contact page.

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Common questions

What people ask before starting.

How much does a website cost?

It depends on the scope, but our builds start at £650 for a landing page and £1,400–£5,866 for a custom website. E-commerce starts at £4,150. For ongoing support, WP Care plans start at £59/month, SEO retainers from £549/month, and our all-in Studio packages from £270/month.

However a project is priced, we break it into milestones — each with a fixed price tied to a working deliverable. You never pay 50% of the total cost up front. Instead, you pay 50% of the first milestone to start it. When that milestone is complete, you pay the remaining 50% of it together with the 50% deposit on the next milestone — and that's what unlocks the next phase of work. The pattern continues until the final milestone is delivered, at which point you pay the remaining 50% of it.

The effect: cash flow stays smooth, you always see a working deliverable before paying for the next, and we never carry more than half a milestone of unbilled work.

How long does a project take and what does delivery look like?

Indicative timings:

  • Landing page: ~4 weeks from kick-off
  • Custom website: 4–8 weeks
  • E-commerce build: 8–12 weeks
  • Brand work: 2–8 weeks depending on tier

Delivery is broken into milestones built around working functionality, not internal phases like “design” or “build” in isolation. Think of it like an MVP and then MVP+1, MVP+2 — at the end of every milestone you have a live, usable thing you can see and sign off on.

For a typical website project, the milestones look something like this:

  1. MVP — A working homepage and core navigation on staging, with your brand applied. Real, clickable, mobile-friendly.
  2. MVP+1 — All inner pages built, forms wired, analytics installed.
  3. MVP+2 — SEO foundations, schema, performance optimisations, content polish.
  4. Launch — Final QA, DNS cutover, hand-over docs.

You'll always know what we're working on each week and what's due back from you. We never start the next milestone until the previous one is signed off and paid for, which keeps surprises out of the project.

What if I need a bit of everything — can you do that?

Yes, and this is what our Studio packages are built for. Instead of piecing together a freelance designer, a marketing agency, a developer, and a hosting account, you get all of it from one team on one monthly fee:

  • Studio Lite — £1,200/month. SEO retainer + GBP management + WP Care + 6 hours/month of design, dev or content time.
  • Studio Standard — £2,250/month. Bigger SEO scope, 13 hours/month design + dev, quarterly brand reviews.
  • Studio Pro — £3,500/month. The whole stack — 18 hours/month of flex time, weekly GBP posts, monthly cross-discipline strategy session.

Studio is best for businesses who'd otherwise hire a junior designer plus a part-time marketer. It's also how we work with most of our long-standing clients — they like having one point of contact for the whole digital side.

Do you offer ongoing maintenance after launch?

Yes — four WP Care plans, £59–£259/month, covering plugin and core updates, daily backups, security and performance monitoring, and content tweaks. Most clients pair their build with at least our Essentials plan so the site stays healthy and up to date.

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