How to fix declining traffic

Analytics with Ottimo

Try the app ↗️

IntroductionAccount setupCollectionsAction ItemsWhy we built OttimoRelease notes

Contact us

Say hi on LinkedIn ↗️

Tweet @erculeco ↗️

Email team@ercule.co ↗️

Get the newsletter ↗️

🔒 Hidden content
Social content strategies

How to fix declining traffic

What to do when traffic starts to sag

No piece of content stays golden forever – at least, not without continued maintenance.

The sooner you can spot a page in decline, the more effectively you can revive it. And before you can fix the issue, you have to identify the cause.

So let’s look at how to do all of that.

(Note: we flag a page as “declining” if its traffic has decreased 15% or more in the past quarter.)

Why traffic starts to decline

It comes down to two general trends:

  • Decline in searches
  • Decline in click-through

A page in decline is probably dealing with one of those, at least.

Decline in searches

People are searching for the subject-matter of your post less and less. Alternately: they might still be interested in the subject, but are using new language to find it in search engines.

To gauge search trends for your page, run the target keyword through Google Trends.

image

Decline in click-through

Regardless of search volume, your page might be losing its appeal in the SERPs.

A drop in clicks often coincides with a drop in rank. A drop in click-through rate often coincides with outdated metadata.

To verify click and click-through trends, pull up that data for your page in Google Analytics.

Finding and fixing pages in decline

image

Step one is to actively monitor traffic performance across your entire site so that you can spot worrisome trends as soon as they start.

You can do that with Google Analytics. You can also do it (with fewer clicks) in Ottimo. There’s a performance category dedicated to declining pages.

image

Once you have a list of declining pages, we recommend starting with the pages that have the most traffic.

Here’s how to understand and fix declining traffic for each page.

Identify the page’s top search queries.

Run those through Google Trends to spot any changes in search traffic.

Pull up click-through data from Google Analytics.

image

A quick look at the month-over-month chart can give you a quick sense for how these metrics have changed.

Review top-ranking competitor pages.

How does their keyword usage differ from yours? How about their metadata? And the content itself?

Choose the target keyword for your revision.

It might be the same as before. That’s fine. But you might see an opportunity for an adjacent keyword instead.

Revise the page for content quality.

It never hurts to finish up with a general SEO touch-up as well.

Once you publish the revised page, keep an eye on it. If you don’t see any change after about a month, you might need to get in there and make changes again.

icon
You might find our newsletter helpful

Everything we have to say on SEO, content performance, and content analytics – in convenient email form.

(Having doubts? Here's a recent issue.)