If the Good Web Guide was a ship, then it was taking on water. Its rankings were sinking while its traffic (ironically) was drying up. So, we set about patching up the biggest holes first, prioritising the errors and issues with the most significant impact on SEO performance.
This included lots of 404 errors, internal and external broken links, missing H1 tags, duplicate and/or missing meta, unoptimised imagery, redirect loops, and pages with low word counts. Once we had the site back on an even keel, we provided the brilliant content writers at the Good Web Guide with some core SEO training to help them boost future organic performance.
And speaking of content, we followed up our crucial technical fixes with a detailed content audit, reviewing traffic, engagement, and rankings of the key pages across the site. This left us with a few important decisions. Do we keep, repurpose, or delete certain pieces of content?
In a ruthless pursuit of perfection, we removed over half the site’s content, replacing it with rich, heavily-researched, long-tail, keyword-focused content. Or, in other words, we chose quality over quantity — and the results were phenomenal.