Growth Marketing Glossary

Search Engine Positioning (SEP)

search en·gine po·si·tion·ingnoun

Where you land in the results. Search engine positioning is the work of ranking a site higher for target terms — essentially SEO viewed through the lens of the position you occupy on the results page.

a target termSEP improves ranka higher position
Schematic — improving a site's rank for target terms
Term
Search engine positioning (SEP)
Is
Improving where a site ranks for terms
Close to
Search engine optimization (SEO)
Goal
A higher, more visible position

Parts of speech & senses

search engine positioning · noun
  1. Search engine positioning (SEP) is the practice of improving where a website ranks in search results for its target keywords — an older term closely related to search engine optimization. "Their search engine positioning moved the guide from page two to the top three."

What search engine positioning is

Search engine positioning (SEP) refers to the work of improving the position — the rank — a website holds in search engine results for its target keywords. The premise is that position on the results page matters enormously: the top results capture the large majority of clicks, and visibility drops sharply further down, so moving from page two to the top of page one for a valuable term can transform a site's traffic. SEP is the effort to climb to and hold those higher positions.

It's an older term that overlaps heavily with search engine optimization (SEO); in practice the two describe the same goal of ranking well in organic search, with 'positioning' emphasizing the position achieved and 'optimization' emphasizing the work to get there. Both involve the same levers — relevant content, technical health, authority and links — aimed at earning a higher, more visible spot for the queries that matter to the business.

Why position matters so much

Position matters because search attention is steeply concentrated at the top. Click-through rates fall off rapidly down the results page, so the difference between ranking first and ranking fifth — let alone on page two — is often the difference between abundant traffic and almost none. For a valuable, high-intent keyword, holding a top position can be worth a great deal, which is why so much effort goes into search engine positioning. A great page that ranks on page two effectively doesn't exist for most searchers.

This concentration is also why positioning is competitive and ongoing. Rankings aren't static — competitors are also working to climb, and search algorithms change — so positioning is a continual effort to earn and defend visibility rather than a one-time achievement. The value of a top position attracts competition for it, making sustained relevance, quality, and authority necessary to hold the spot.

Improving search engine positioning

Improving search engine positioning means doing the work of modern SEO: creating genuinely relevant, high-quality content that matches search intent for target terms, ensuring the site is technically sound and crawlable, and earning authority through quality links and genuine relevance. It rests on understanding the keywords that matter and the intent behind them, and on being a genuinely strong result for those queries — because search engines reward relevance and quality, not tricks.

The failures are chasing positions with manipulative tactics (link schemes, keyword stuffing, thin content) that search engines penalize, targeting terms with no real value or intent, and treating positioning as a one-time fix rather than an ongoing effort. The discipline is to earn high positions by being a genuinely relevant, authoritative, high-quality result for valuable terms — the durable path to the visibility that position represents.

Worked example. A business has excellent content that ranks on page two for its most valuable keyword — and gets almost no traffic from it, because search attention is concentrated at the top and page-two results are effectively invisible. Treating search engine positioning as the priority, it does the real work of modern SEO: sharpening the content to match intent, fixing technical issues, and earning quality links and authority for that term — climbing into the top few positions. Traffic from the keyword multiplies, because position is everything for search visibility. The lesson: search engine positioning is the work of ranking higher for target terms, and since click-through is steeply concentrated at the top, earning and defending a high position through genuine relevance, quality, and authority is what turns good content into actual traffic. (Illustrative; RGM analysis.)
Failure modes to watch. Chasing positions with manipulative tactics (link schemes, keyword stuffing, thin content) that get penalized; targeting terms with no real value or intent; treating positioning as a one-time fix rather than ongoing; and ignoring how steeply click-through falls below the top spots.

Synonyms & antonyms

Synonyms

SEPsearch rankingorganic positioning

Antonyms

paid placementunranked

Origin & history

Search engine positioning is an older name for the work of ranking well in search results, emphasizing the position a site holds; it overlaps almost entirely with search engine optimization (SEO).

Etymology: source.

Usage trends

Search interest for this term over the last five years:

View interest-over-time on Google Trends →

Common questions

What is search engine positioning (SEP)?
The practice of improving where a website ranks in search results for its target keywords — an older term closely related to and largely synonymous with search engine optimization (SEO).
How is SEP different from SEO?
They describe the same goal of ranking well in organic search. 'Positioning' emphasizes the position achieved; 'optimization' emphasizes the work to get there. Both use the same levers — relevant content, technical health, authority.
Why does search position matter so much?
Because click-through is steeply concentrated at the top — the leading results capture most clicks, and attention falls off rapidly below them. Moving from page two to the top can transform a site's traffic.

Resources & people to follow

Curated, non-competitor resources verified per term.

Related training

Disciplines

Areas of marketing where search engine positioning (sep) is a core concern:

Sources

  1. trendsGoogle Trends — "search engine positioning"