Cristobal Varela is a Senior SEO Strategist and Consultant, Author, and Entrepreneur who helps executives understand Search Engine Optimization (SEO) as a strategic growth lever, not just a technical task. He studied Architecture in Hermosillo, Sonora, Mexico, and later he resumed his education in the U.S., studying for a Bachelor of Science in Information Technology (BSIT). That mix of structural thinking and technical training has shaped the way he approaches digital strategy. After moving to the U.S., Cristobal could not afford to return to school immediately, so he entered the workforce in a phone sales role with no formal background in technology, marketing, or analytics.
He learned business the hard way-growing his own companies from the ground up, leading small teams through uncertainty, and carrying the pressure that comes when every decision affects payroll, clients, and family. Those experiences taught him to see problems from multiple angles and to anticipate the real impact of executive decisions on long-term growth. Over more than twenty years, he has worked across disciplines that sit at the core of modern marketing: photography, videography, graphic design, web development, social media marketing, reputation management, analytics, and SEO. This combination allows him to connect brand, content, and data in a way that makes complex search strategies understandable and actionable for leadership teams. Cristobal has led and advised SEO efforts for local businesses, national brands in fields such as home construction, medical and pharmaceutical organizations, and high-traffic media and news companies. His work focuses on aligning business goals with sustainable, measurable organic performance rather than quick wins or vanity metrics. What Executives Get Wrong About SEO is the first book in his SEO Trilogy, written to help leaders avoid the hidden mistakes that quietly undermine their marketing investments. Cristobal lives in Arizona, where he continues to consult, build tools for enterprise SEO, and mentor teams on how to think more strategically about organic growth.