How To Double or Triple Search Traffic In 8x months
How To Double or Triple Search Traffic In 8x months, Really!!
- 1 How To Double or Triple Search Traffic In 8x months, Really!!
- 2 Creating A Plan Of Attack
- 3 What Did We Actually Do?
- 4 The Results Speak For Themselves
- 5 Wrapping It Up
There isn’t any “super secret” to SEO about doubling or triplicating search traffic in 8x month.
If you want to increase your search traffic it is as simple as-
- Conducting an SEO audit
- Creating content
- Building links
That is the exact approach we used to 14x organic search traffic in today’s blog, grow your search traffic.
We took traffic from 2,732 visitors per month to 38,420 in just 8x months-
Creating A Plan Of Attack
When forming your SEO strategy, there is one thing to keep in mind.
People tend to over complicate SEO.
Our strategy was broken down into 3x stages-
- Technical SEO – Build a solid & healthy website structure
- Content – Create relevant content that helps people
- Link Building – Acquire links from relevant websites
But of all of that is easier said than done right?
So let me show you how that translates into the real world…
What Did We Actually Do?
To help you understand our process:
I am going to step you through the core SEO strategy and precisely what we did.
The strategy was broken down into a number of pieces-
- Keyword Research
- Competitor Analysis
- Content Strategy
- Onsite SEO Audit
- Site Structure
- Link Building
And it is the combination of these pieces that were responsible for 14x traffic in 8 months.
Often when clients come to us:
They are completely obsessed with link building.
They say things like-
“Yeah but how many links will you build per month?”
But link building is just 1x component of a complete SEO strategy.
Let me ask you this:
Just 76.
76x links to take this sites traffic from 2,732 visitors per month to 38,420–
How?
By addressing all of the moving parts of SEO rather than only focusing on the number of links we build.
(I’ll share the link building strategy with you later)
But first:
You have to get the basics right-
Step #1 – Keyword Research
The first thing we do with any new client is conduct detailed keyword research.
First we asked our client for a list of seed keywords that are important to them.
Then used the KeywordShitter tool to expand on them-
Once we pulled all the keywords from there…
…we expanded on them further with AnswerThePublic:
Once we had a large list of keywords we started to filter them down-
- First we removed duplicate/similar terms
- Then we mapped out topic clusters of keywords with similar topics
- And thought about the “type” of keywords to focus on
These were the types of keyword we were looking for-
- Money keywords that drive traffic to key affiliate pages: [brand] review(s)
- Generic keywords related to different forms of the products: best [product] / best [product] [supplement|brand|pills], most effective [XYZ], weight loss [XYZ]
- Questions: does [XYZ] work, how to use [XYZ]
- Strictly informational keywords: [XYZ] information, [XYZ] pros and cons, [XYZ] side effects.
We also paid close attention to search intent when selecting our final keywords.
It’s important to avoid keywords that return different user intent than the site can satisfy.
The final spreadsheet included additional data pulled from Google Keyword Planner and our rank tracker-
But:
Whilst you’re doing keyword research, make sure to take a look at the SERPS for each one.
Pay attention to the sites that popup and make a list of common competitors.
We will be using that list to our advantage later in the case study!
Step #2 – Competitor Analysis
I can not stress how important this stage is!
At the moment we have a good list of keywords that are-
- Topically relevant
- Match the sites user intent
Now we need to take a closer look at who our SERP competitors are.
Do some searches and pay close attention to the first page of results.
You want to look at things like-
- Content length
- Page purpose and intent
- What types of pages are ranking (inner vs homepage or product vs category)
- How strong the domains are (is it Amazon or just an average Joe)
- Page layout (e.g. CTA and banner placements)
- Monetisation
Just by looking at the results, you can get a good idea of the type of SEO elements, structure, intent and content you need to create.
Here’s an example of a competitor site’s review my agency sends to clients:
It’s not everything:
But you can see what kind of signals we’re looking at.
Why is this important?
Because Google have been using machine learning algorithms since 2015.
And by looking at the search results we can see what the machine learning algorithm is expecting to see.
You might not realize this:
But every time you search this is what is happening behind the scenes-
- You enter your query into Google
- Google chops the query into individual words
- Google applies natural language processing to figure out meaning
- Then it analyses the intent of the query (eg informational or commercial)
- This generates a list of relevant results
- Additional filters are applied (eg Pagespeed)
- The final search results are displayed
Here’s a shot from Rad Paluszak’s Chiang Mai 2018 presentation to help visualize that-
But what is most important here is the final step of the process…
Because this is the machine learning part that is automatically analyzing the efficiency of the results and tweaking the algorithm.
What’s that got to do with competitors?
Well:
We just have to look for those things…
Pro Tip: Spot Check Your Competitors
Do a search for your target keyword and look at the top 5 results.
First look for commonalities in the results such as-
- Content length
- Page intent
- Use of images/videos
- Page layout
- Ad placement
- Trust signals
Then make a note of what you like and don’t like about each result.This will become the outline for each new piece of content.
Step #3 – Technical SEO & Content Audit
Now we know where we want to go with the SEO campaign…
..It’s time to figure out where we are starting from.
To do that we conducted a comprehensive onsite audit that typically spans about 30 pages.
The goal of this is to identify any issues that might hold it back from performing at its full potential.
It includes things like-
- Site Structure – Are we using the best site structure to maximize link juice?
- PageSpeed – Does your site load quickly for Google and visitors?
- Index Management – Do you have unnecessary index bloat?
- Duplicate Content – Caused by improper use of tags/categories
- Internal Redirects – Wasting crawl budget is bad for your site!
- Internal Linking – Very powerful but underused tool.
- Trust Signals – Are you sending the right signals to Google?
This site had a range of problems that we needed to address.
Here’s how we fixed some of them-
Issue #1 – Page Speed
One of the main problems with the site was that it had almost no page speed optimisation.
The site was loading very slowly in our tests.
We use 2 plugins to fix that-
- WP Rocket – to optimise pretty much everything, BUT images.
- ShortPixel – to optimise images.
Or you can checkout my full WP Rocket review which takes a deep dive into how to get the most out of it.
Issue #2 – WordPress Taxonomies vs Duplicate Content
WordPress is a great platform to build a website.
But:
It can also make Google index a lot of rubbish.
All this indexed bloat decreases the overall SEO value of the site-
Not only do you risk duplicate content problems but you also waste valuable crawl budget…
To put it simply:
If you have 50 pages indexed, but only 5 that Google should pay attention to…
…you should consider pruning the site.
If the remaining 45 pages are not useful for your users, get rid of them.
Issue #3 – Internal Redirects
When we conducted the technical SEO audit, we spotted a few problems with internal redirects.
This was caused by a variety of things-
- The site had recently migrated from HTTP to HTTPS (poorly)
- A lot of the internal links were pointing to old HTTP urls
- Some pages were renamed or deleted and redirected
- The theme had some hardcoded redirect loops
All of this was wasting significant crawl budget.
But luckily:
It’s all pretty simple to fix!
With HTTP -> HTTPS URLs, we just tracked all of them down and changed all http:// to https:// manually.
And to fix the redirect problems we just fired up Screaming Frog–
- Crawl the site
- Go to Response Codes at the top
- Select “Redirection (3xx)” Filter
- Type your domain – this will ensure you are looking at your internal links only.
- Click on the URL you’d like to review
- This is what the URL is currently.
- This is what it should be.
In our case study site for example:
We could fix a lot of the errors by updating hardcoded links in the menus and sidebars.
But every site is different!
Issue #4 – Thin Content
Whilst conudcting the audit, we found a BIG issue with thin content.
Over 50% of the website pages had under 500 words.
Every niche is different!
But after looking at search results and competitor sites…
…It was clear this is a content heavy niche.
Don’t forget:
Google rewards fresh, long form content that addresses user intent. So we adjusted our content strategy to support the main campaign goal.
With that in mind:
We increased the length of the homepage from 1,500 words to 10,911 words by answering over 20 of the most popular questions around the main affiliate product.
Following the same strategy:
We increased the average word count per page from ~500 words to 2,216 words per page.
In addition to expanding the website’s copy, we also reviewed and optimised-
- Page titles
- Meta descriptions
- Headings
All of which worked in harmony with each other to pull the sites pages up the search rankings.
Step #4 – Building A Healthy Site Structure
It’s important to create a healthy website architecture.
Why?
Because-
- It helps user finds what they need
- It helps Google understand the site
- It helps to priortise the most important content
- It helps distribute link equity throughout the site
The website should follow a logical structure with a clear with your core pages located within 3x clicks from the homepage.
We can check this easily in Screaming Frog using the Crawl Depth report.
Here is an example of bad crawl depth–
And here is what it should look like-
If you wanted to dig deeper…
…You can also use Screaming Frogs Visualization tools-
But what are we looking for here?
Well this is an example of a bad site structure–
And when you do things right…
…it looks like this-
So with the case study site in mind, we overhauled the site structure so everything was within 3x clicks of the homepage.
We did this by-
- Building out category pages
- Linking to those category pages from menus
- Internal linking between content (I’ll talk more about this later)
A lot of people don’t pay attention to site structure.
But trust me:
Step #5 – Content Strategy
As soon as you have a keyword strategy and healthy site foundation to build on…
…It’s time to get your hands dirty with content!
You should start crafting the content as soon as possible because this is often a bottleneck for many businesses.
This is how we approached it-
- First we selected our primary target keywords
- Then we reviewed our competitors in Google for each keyword
- That allowed us to create a “content specification”
- Which was then sent to our writing team
Based on what we had learned about the thin content issues during the SEO audit…
…we made sure that all new pieces of content were at least 2,500 words.
We continued to produce 2x new pieces of content per month throughout the campaign.
Step #6 – Internal Linking
Once we developed our killer content and restructure strategy…
We needed to help Google navigate the website easier to discover all the pages we updated/created.
The goal of our internal link building strategy was to distribute link value throughout the site, from pages with authority to others with less authority.
We used a balanced combination of targeted, branded and generic anchors to help Google determine the relationship between them-
Along with links we placed manually, we also installed and tested a number of plugins to help place internal links-
The one we ended up using is Yuzo Related Posts:
We chose this because it helped us customise the display on the front end of the site-
This meant we could cross link key pages across the site structure automatically.
Very handy!
Step #7 – Link Building
There is no doubt about it:
But that is amplified 10x when you have built a good site structure backed with solid content.
With all of that in place we started to build the overall domain authority using links from relevant websites in the fitness, health and lifestyle niche.
We took the backlink profile from 27x referring domains to 374x referring domains–
How did we do that?
By keeping things simple!
First we scraped a huge list of relevant websites with SEO value, traffic & authority.
Then we published high quality content targeted at their audience to secure a backlink where possible.
That was all backed up by some high quality TRULY private blog network links.
We didn’t do anything beyond that.
This is the exact link building strategy and schedule we used to meet the clients budget-
- 12x PBN Links
- 1x Outreach
Month 2
- 10x PBN Links
- 3x Outreach Links
- 15x Quora Links
Month 3
- 12x PBN Links
- 3x Outreach
- 10x PBN Links
- 3x Outreach
Month 5
- 4x Outreach Links
Month 6
- 3x Outreach Links
The strategy was simple-
- First build authority and topical relevancy as quickly as possible with PBN links
- Once established (month 4), we switched to outreach only
- In month 5+ the site starts ranking & picking up links naturally to fuel growth
And that’s all we did.
In month 7+ we didn’t build any additional links to the site.
Once the site started to rank it was picking up links naturally and rankings have continued to improve.
The Results Speak For Themselves
The site has had 8x months of amazing growth.
Traffic has grown from 2,732 visitors per month to 38,420.
Let me put that in different words…
If we take a closer look at things…
…we managed to increase-
- DR from 45 to 59
- UR from 10 to 41
- Referring domains from 27 to 374
- Backlinks from 45 to 2,540
Metrics – Start of the Campaign
Metrics – End of the Campaign
That increased domain authority also increased keyword visibility.
At the start of the campaign there were-
- 68x top 3 rankings
- 345x top 10 rankings
But at the end of the campaign…
There are now 637x keywords in the top 3 positions!
And 2,221 keywords in the top 10-
Although throughout the campaign we were only monitoring 48x core keywords…
..they had a net increase of 894x positions in Google–
And a number of those keywords…
…had high search volumes and were dropping into the #1 positions-
With a number of other high volume search keywords breaking into the top 10.
All of which made for some really pretty Google Search Console data-
Not bad right?
Especially in such a competitive niche (more on that soon).
If you want help ranking your website…
Wrapping It Up
So there you have it:
It really isn’t that difficult to do – you just need to follow the 3x stages of SEO-
- Technical SEO – Build a solid & healthy website structure
- Content – Create relevant content that helps people
- Link Building – Acquire links from relevant websites
Or if you want to do it the easy way:
This post originally appeared at https://www.matthewwoodward.co.uk/seo/case-studies/14x-search-traffic/