Your Online Presence – YOP.
Our SEO Agency is based in Essex – Our client base is UK Nationwide
SEO in Baldock
Your Online Presence is a website design & digital marketing agency, who specialise in SEO and marketing campaigns. SEO is the science of adjusting a website’s code, content and structure to make it visible on a search engine result page for particular keywords or combinations of keywords. The main focus of our work is to generate a return on your investment, and SEO is capable of generating very attractive returns by bringing people to your website through search engines.
Return on investment can be the most important thing about any online marketing strategy, which is a point often overlooked by many other web design agencies. Understanding your industry, your business and the competitive environment in which you operate before we start on the creative process is a key part of our working process. Start your SEO in Baldock today!

View our most recent Website projects below!

Warnes Interiors

Walthamstow Windows

123 Estate Agent

The Good Pea Co.

Browns Transport

Noah Capitol

Clear Investment

Winstree Financial

AM Gas Services
What’s Your SEO Score?
Affordable SEO Packages from just £100 per month – Small Costs, Big Results! Find out what’s holding you back – and how to fix it! Get your Free SEO Audit today!
Facts about Baldock
History
In 1045 the Saxon thegn Ethelwine ‘the Black’ granted the upper part of Langlai to St Alban’s Abbey as Langlai Abbatis, the remainder being the king’s Langlai. By the time of the Domesday Book in 1086, the village was inhabited by 19 families. The area was split into four manors, Baldock, Langleybury, Chambersbury, and Hyde. In 1539, Henry VIII, seized Baldock and sold it to his military engineer Sir Richard Lee.
The Manor of Baldock was bequeathed by Francis Combe in his will of 1641 jointly to Sidney Sussex College, Cambridge and Trinity College, Oxford. The manors of Langleybury and Chambersbury passed through the Ibgrave and Child families, and in 1711 were conveyed to Sir Robert Raymond then Solicitor General later Attorney General and Lord Chief Justice of the King’s Bench. On the death of his son without issue in 1756, the manors passed to the Filmer family.
Kitters Green developed as a separate hamlet by Manor House. The land between Kitters Green and Baldock was bought from the estate of Sarah Smith by the British Land Company in 1866. It laid out plots for development along Adrian, Breakspear, Garden and Popes roads. The development of these plots led to the merger of the two settlements and the loss of Kitters Green’s separate identity.