Content Marketing
SEO
The 2025 SEO Playbook for Cross-Border Brands
Expanding into a new market is rarely a translation problem. The brands that win in search abroad treat every market as its own audience — with its own intent, its own competitors, and its own definition of trust. This playbook distils what we have learned helping Vietnamese brands go global and international brands enter Vietnam.
Why cross-border SEO is different
Domestic SEO rewards consistency. Cross-border SEO rewards local precision. The same query can carry entirely different intent across two markets, and the SERP features that matter in one region may be irrelevant in another.
If your strategy assumes one market behaves like another, search will quietly correct you — in lost rankings.
Before a single page is written, we map the competitive landscape per market and decide where to compete, where to wait, and where to lead.
Building a market-first keyword map
A keyword map built from a single language rarely survives contact with a new market. We start from local search behaviour, not from a translated spreadsheet.
- Intent clustering — group queries by what the searcher wants, not by surface wording.
- Local competitors — identify who already owns the SERP before estimating effort.
- Opportunity scoring — weigh volume against the realistic cost to rank.
A note on localisation
Localisation is editorial work, not a find-and-replace pass. Currency, examples, regulations, and tone all signal whether a brand belongs in a market.
Technical foundations that scale
Hreflang, crawl budget, and site architecture decide whether your content is even eligible to rank. We treat the technical layer as the price of entry — invisible when right, expensive when wrong.
Content that earns local trust
Rankings open the door; content keeps the reader. Trust is built through relevance, clarity, and proof — case studies, data, and a voice that sounds native to the market.
Measuring what matters
Traffic is a vanity metric until it is tied to pipeline. We report on qualified demand, assisted conversions, and revenue contribution — the numbers a marketing director can take to the board.
Cross-border growth is a compounding game. The brands that commit to local precision early are the ones still leading the SERP two years later.
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