Types of SEO: Which SEO Should Your Business Focus On?

Last Updated Date: November 29, 2025

TLDR:

  • Different SEO types (local, international, video/YouTube, image, mobile, eCommerce, WordPress, etc.) share the same core SEO process but differ in workflows, metrics, and priorities.
  • Local, mobile, and image SEO are critical because a large share of searches are local or mobile, and many SERPs show image snippets that can drive traffic.
  • YouTube SEO targets ranking inside YouTube, while Video SEO targets ranking videos in Google and other search engines, often leveraging YouTube’s authority.
  • eCommerce and WordPress SEO focus on product pages, schemas, and CMS-specific best practices to convert search traffic into leads or sales.
  • Businesses should pick SEO types based on audience, platform, and goals, often combining several (for example, local + mobile + image + video) rather than relying on just one.

In this lesson of my SEO Fundamentals for Business course, I explain the main Types of SEO you’ll encounter and how to choose the right one (or mix of types) for your goals.

Types of SEO matter because although the core SEO process remains the same, the workflow, metrics, and priorities change depending on what you want to rank — a global site, a local shop, a YouTube channel, or an online store.

Table of Contents

What is the difference between International SEO and Local SEO and when should I use them?

International SEO is about ranking pages for a worldwide audience. I use it when my target market spans multiple countries and languages. The process focuses on targeting search results globally rather than targeting a single geographic area.

Slide reading 'International SEO' with a globe icon centered and the presenter smiling in a bottom-right video inset.
International SEO slide — introducing global targeting.

Local SEO, on the other hand, is about boosting rankings in a specific geographic area — country, state, city, suburb, or neighborhood. I recommend local SEO if you run a small business, enterprise branch, or any service that depends on nearby customers. Local SEO applies both to your website and to business listings on Google Business Profile or Bing Places.

Presentation slide titled 'Local SEO' with a storefront icon and bulleted list of local SEO uses.
Local SEO targets nearby customers — use it for your website, business listings, and promotional videos.

Some quick facts that show why local SEO is critical:

  • 72% of buyers do a local search and visited a store within 5 miles.
  • More than 97% of people get information about local companies through online search.
  • 88% of mobile searches for local businesses result in a call or visit within 24 hours.
  • “Near me” and “close by” searches grew more than 900% over two years for location-based mobile queries.

How do YouTube SEO and Video SEO differ and why should I care?

I separate YouTube SEO and Video SEO because one focuses specifically on ranking within YouTube, while the other focuses on having videos appear in general search engines (Google, Bing, Yahoo).

YouTube SEO optimizes titles, descriptions, tags, thumbnails, and audience retention to rank higher in YouTube search and suggested videos. Consider YouTube SEO because more than 2 billion people use YouTube, it’s localized in over 100 countries and 80 languages, and at least 1 billion hours of video are watched daily.

Clear presentation slide titled 'YouTube SEO' with bulleted points about YouTube usage and a presenter inset at the bottom right.
Slide summarising why YouTube SEO matters.

Video SEO extends that idea: optimize your videos so they rank in search engine result pages (SERPs). Google owns YouTube, so search results often show YouTube videos prominently. A video hosted on YouTube benefits from the platform’s trust and SEO power, which can speed up ranking compared to a new website.

Slide titled 'Videos SEO' with bullets explaining why to optimize YouTube videos, plus a small presenter inset in the corner.
Overview slide: why Video SEO matters for YouTube and search.

Why should I optimize images — what is Image SEO?

Image SEO means optimizing your website’s images to rank higher in image search results or appear as image snippets in SERPs. I always optimize images because around 33% of search result pages can return an image snippet, and image search engines (Google Images, Bing Images) send traffic back to the source page.

Presentation slide titled 'Image SEO' with bullets explaining reasons to optimize images and a small speaker overlay in the bottom-right.
Image SEO slide showing why you should optimize images for search.

What is Mobile SEO and why is it no longer optional?

Mobile SEO is the practice of optimizing websites specifically for mobile devices, focusing on mobile user experience so you can gain higher mobile rankings. Search engines serve different results to mobile and desktop users because experience and performance differ by device.

Mobile is essential:

  • 52.2% of worldwide web traffic comes from mobile phones.
  • There are more searches on mobile devices than on desktop for many queries.
  • 87% of smartphone users visit search engines via mobile at least once a day.
  • 40% of mobile visitors will leave a site if it takes more than 3 seconds to load.
Presentation slide titled 'Mobile SEO' with explanatory bullets and a small presenter inset in the lower-right; clear text and mobile icon visible.
Mobile SEO slide — why mobile optimisation matters.

How does eCommerce SEO differ from regular website SEO?

eCommerce SEO focuses on optimizing your store and product pages to rank for commercial intent keywords and search queries where users intend to buy. The priorities shift toward product page structure, schema, category pages, reviews, and conversion signals.

Consider these trends:

  • It is estimated that by 2040, 95% of purchases will be through e-commerce.
  • 44% of people start their online shopping with a new Google search.
Presentation slide titled 'eCommerce SEO' with explanatory text, shopping-cart icon and a small presenter inset at the bottom-right.
eCommerce SEO slide showing definition and examples.

Should I care about WordPress SEO and what are the practical facts?

If you use WordPress, WordPress SEO becomes an important part of your strategy. WordPress is a free CMS that helps you create and manage websites without advanced HTML knowledge. WordPress powers roughly 40% of websites on the internet and more than 500 new WordPress sites are created daily.

I often convert WordPress sites into stores using WooCommerce. Because of WordPress’s popularity, learning WordPress SEO gives you broad coverage across sites and content types.

Clear presentation slide titled 'WordPress SEO' with readable text on the left and a small presenter inset in the lower-right; large WordPress logo visible on the right.
Clear WordPress SEO slide — full title, bullets and unobstructed text.

What other Types of SEO should I know about?

Aside from the major types above, there are several specific SEO subtypes you may need depending on your project:

  • App Store SEO — optimize app listings in Play Store or App Store.
  • Blogger SEO — optimize Blogger/Blogspot sites.
  • Wix SEO — optimize sites built on the Wix CMS.
  • Voice SEO — optimize audio content and content structure for voice search queries.
  • News SEO — optimize news content for fast indexing and ranking in news sections.
Slide titled 'Other Types of SEO' listing App Store SEO, Blogger SEO, Wix SEO, Voice SEO and News SEO with a small presenter inset in the bottom-right.
Other Types of SEO — quick list of niche SEO areas like App Store, Blogger, Wix, Voice and News.

How do I choose which Types of SEO to focus on?

Choose based on your audience, platform, and business goals. You’re not limited to one type — you can combine Types of SEO. For example, an e-commerce business may need eCommerce SEO, mobile SEO, image SEO, and video SEO simultaneously. I recommend starting with the type that aligns closest to your conversion goals and expanding from there.

I plan to create separate, free courses covering each of these SEO processes in-depth, so you can follow a dedicated path based on which Types of SEO fit your needs.

What is the simplest definition of Types of SEO?

Types of SEO are the different specializations within search engine optimization, each focused on ranking different content or targeting different audiences — for example, local SEO, eCommerce SEO, YouTube SEO, mobile SEO, and so on.

Do I need more than one SEO type for my business?

Not necessarily, but you can choose multiple Types of SEO and work on them concurrently. Pick the types that match your audience and business model — for many businesses, a combination delivers the best results.

Which SEO type helps videos rank in Google search results?

Video SEO focuses on optimizing videos so they can rank in search engine result pages, not only within YouTube but also on Google, Bing, and other search engines.

Why is mobile SEO mandatory now?

Mobile usage dominates web traffic. Search engines use mobile-first indexing and have guidelines for mobile experience. If your site isn’t optimized for mobile speed and UX, you will lose rankings and users.

Final thoughts

Understanding the Types of SEO helps you prioritize the right work for your goals. The core SEO process stays the same, but the metrics and tactics change depending on whether you’re targeting global audiences, local customers, video viewers, or online shoppers. Choose the SEO types that fit your business, and remember: I will be covering each major SEO process in separate, free courses to help you get practical, step-by-step guidance.

If you want to rank faster and smarter, focus on the SEO type that aligns with your audience — then expand into other types as your site grows.

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Senior Digital Marketing Manager BSF, SEO Expert & Teacher

Alston Antony is a Senior Digital Marketing Manager and SEO Expert with more than 15 years of experience helping businesses turn SEO into a predictable customer acquisition system. He holds an MSc in Software Engineering (Distinction) from the University of Greenwich and is a Professional Member of the British Computer Society (MBCS). As a practicing Digital Marketing Manager at BSF, Alston applies the same SEO strategies he teaches to real businesses, validating them in the field before sharing them publicly. More than 7,000 professionals follow him through his private community. He runs a YouTube channel with over 4,000 subscribers and has taught more than 20,000 students on Udemy. Alston created the BARS SEO System, which doesn’t just teach SEO theory. He engineers SEO systems that bring customers.

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