E-Commerce SEO Audits Archives - SimpliStack.com https://www.simplistack.com/blog/category/e-commerce-seo-audits/ Digital Marketing Experts in Miami Florida Tue, 04 Feb 2025 19:55:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://www.simplistack.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/cropped-favicon-32x32.png E-Commerce SEO Audits Archives - SimpliStack.com https://www.simplistack.com/blog/category/e-commerce-seo-audits/ 32 32 The Shift in SEO Conversation in 2022 https://www.simplistack.com/blog/the-shift-in-seo-conversation-in-2022/ Wed, 27 Jul 2022 14:31:49 +0000 https://www.www.simplistack.com/?p=4683 Websites have always had ranking problems – an inability to break into the top 10, then top 3 for search queries that would grow their business. Increasingly however, the conversation around this has changed. More and more, people are discussing indexation, not ranking. Table of Contents Is Content Still King for SEO in 2022? To […]

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Websites have always had ranking problems – an inability to break into the top 10, then top 3 for search queries that would grow their business. Increasingly however, the conversation around this has changed. More and more, people are discussing indexation, not ranking.

Table of Contents

Is Content Still King for SEO in 2022?

To be sure, Google has never indexed every single page made available to them. And that’s whether the website owner wanted them indexed or not. Many things have changed in the past couple of years making this problem more palpable.

For one, the push to create content is larger than ever. While the expression “content is king” is hardly new, SEO’s around the globe have been extolling Expertise, Authority and Trust for a few years now, and in part, you can’t create those 3 things without content.

The Push for More Web Content

And people have taken that to mean: Lots of content.

I think we’ll find in the end this becomes a Quality over Quantity discussion.

We need to redefine what a kingmaker is.

As I mentioned in “Why isn’t Google Indexing my Content” in early May 2022, the web is growing at an incomprehensible rate. By some estimates, as many as 500,000 websites are created every day. 

Not pages… Websites.

And then we have a few other factors.

Why is the Web Growing so Fast?

A few reasons.

Social Media

First is social media. If you consider that every YouTube video, every Tweet, every Facebook rant has a URL… That’s a page. And they get crawled, since you see them in search.

The “Ease” of Doing E-Commerce

Second is that e-commerce is now so unbelievably accessible. Tools like Shopify and BigCommerce make it super simple to set up shop, and there’s apps to basically let you import products to dropship at the click of a button (and the swipe of a credit card).

Your SEO, Inhouse or Agency

Third is us- Your friendly SEO partners. We tell you over and over “you need more content”.  And that’s sometimes true. But the shorter path to success we should be guiding you to is:

“You need content that is unique, relevant, and important. You need to publish it on a technically sound platform that allows search engines to ingest it, understand it, and feel like ranking.”

Programmatic SEO

Next would be the ability of Content Management Systems to leverage data to do programmatic SEO. You can literally take a Google Sheet and turn it into a 50,000 page website in a matter of hours. Not a good one, but a website none the less.

Artificial Intelligence

Last, we now have the ability to generate content that is pretty good with artificial intelligence. If no one has to write it, there’s no “cost” to creating it and publishing it. That will change quickly if Google decides to penalize websites it detects are using AI to generate content for the sole purpose of improving their rankings.

Is it Good that the Web is Growing So Quickly?

It would be if everyone was bringing their A Game.

The challenge for search engines is of course the volume they have to keep up with. On top of that, they need to make value judgments in near real time as to the worth of one piece of content over another. That becomes mathematically complex as the numbers grow.

It’s Not All Unique. It’s Not All Valuable

If all content were truly unique and valuable, and offered a new solution to a problem, or better information, then this might even be more of a challenge.

The fact is, so much of the content we generate these days is simply rehashing topics, or using canned manufacturer product descriptions.

The Signal to Noise Ratio is Worse than Ever

In that regard, the signal to noise ratio is getting worse. One of the end results is that Google seems to be using a different decision criteria than it used to.

It’s no longer “Does this content deserve to be ranked?”.  It’s now “Do we even have the desire to spend resources crawling this?”

In that regard, we as website owners are doing ourselves a disservice. There’s too many ways we can accidentally make this decision easy for them.

Signal to Noise Ratio in Web Content is Getting Worse

How the SEO Conversation is Shifting in 2022

Even in our pretty tight knit online SEO community, I’ve seen more discussion of this. Much like how paid search agencies have had to adjust to Google’s dramatic recent changes in advertising, SEO’s are starting to look deeper at new types of crawl reports rather than just ranking reports.

So there’s work being done.

Correlation Studies on the Indexation Topic

I ran in to a great correlation study by Onely this past week. Correlation studies are problematic for sure, as the takeaways are not 100% scientific. In the case of indexation, however, we don’t have the body of work like we do for ranking studies.

Check out the link to their study. It’s a good read, and at the very least thought provoking. And they’re quick to point out where an assumption is based on a correlation, which is good.

Some quick takeaways:

  • Even for very popular e-commerce sites, nearly 22% of their content in their XML sitemap is unindexed
  • The amount of unique content on a category page seems to play a strong role in getting it indexed
  • The number of pictures for a product correlates to a higher indexation rate

What to do Next for Content Indexing & SEO

If you’re here reading this, it’s possible that you are experiencing Google indexing issues yourself. The first thing to do is read our post on “why isn’t Google Indexing my content?”

If the problem is a little deeper than that, I’d highly recommend you engage us for a deeper analysis of your website through our e-commerce SEO Audit and Roadmap.  We’ll get under the hood of you and your competitors and give you a concrete path forward!

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Is Competitor Analysis Included in an SEO Audit? https://www.simplistack.com/blog/is-competitor-analysis-included-in-an-seo-audit/ Mon, 23 May 2022 20:46:38 +0000 https://www.www.simplistack.com/?p=4676 Like most things in digital marketing, SEO doesn’t take place in a vacuum. As much as you may be driving your SEO efforts forward, the strategy and proactiveness of your competitors plays a large role in your success or shortfalls. With that in mind, we include a competitor analysis in our SEO audits. Some of […]

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Like most things in digital marketing, SEO doesn’t take place in a vacuum. As much as you may be driving your SEO efforts forward, the strategy and proactiveness of your competitors plays a large role in your success or shortfalls.

With that in mind, we include a competitor analysis in our SEO audits. Some of the items we look at are the same as the elements we look for in your environment, and some are different.

So what kind of competitive metrics can you look for in the audit?

Keyword Overlap

One of the first elements we consider is your competitors keywords they are targeting and ranking for, and how they overlap with yours. This will give you a good feel for your competitors strategy, and allow you (with our help) to tweak yours to match it where it makes sense.

That’s not to say we’ll copy their plan (although some pieces may make sense), but we’ll know what we have to do to outrank them on the topics that are important to us.

It will also show us whether or not your peers think people search the same way that you previously thought they did. In general, if there’s a lot of keyword overlap, it means the search market is well defined for your niche or vertical.

If there’s not a lot of overlap, it may mean that the way people are searching has changed, and either you or your competition have shifted their overall strategy for SEO. 

Keyword Overlap

GAP Analysis

Secondly, we’ll perform a GAP analysis. Here, we look for topics that your competition is generating content for where you aren’t.

These gaps may become a core part of your content marketing plan going forward, as we seek to meet your competition where they think the revenue is.

Your competition may have found success in ranking for a theme similar to their core product set, but not directly about those products. For example, if you both sell mobile phone accessories, they may actually be doing mobile PHONE reviews and ranking for them.  They can then use those pages to link to relevant accessories to both sell product and boost their rankings.

If you’re not doing the same thing, we’d suggest starting to in order to “close the gap”.

Backlink Analysis

One of the core “off-page” factors in ranking well on Google is backlinks, or in other words, having many high-quality sites link to yours.  This signals to Google that your site has value, and you can be rewarded for it.

If your competition has more and/or better backlinks, as well as decent content, they have a high probability of outranking you.

We’ll provide those metrics, and can show you where they are getting their links from.  We can also provide you with ideas on how to get more.

Social Media Analysis in a Competitive SEO Audit

Social Media Analysis

While social media profiles don’t have a direct SEO impact, they can be a signal of how well you CAN do with SEO.

Years ago, it was far simpler to have your content indexed by Google.  Essentially just publishing a blog post, including it in your XML sitemap and maybe adding an internal link somewhere got the job done.

According to some research, there are 500,000 new websites launched globally… Every. Day.

You can imagine that Google, even with their seemingly infinite resources, would be hesitant to crawl and rank all those pages, if it were even possible.

So now, a better strategy is letting people find your content outside of Google, engage with it, & share it. This is a process known as “amplification”. The hope is that by having the content in front of more eyeballs will include it being in front of the “right” eyeballs. And that’s a great way to get sales and backlinks.

In that sense, your social media profile is important, and so is that of your competitors. If they are outpacing you here, as well as in SEO traffic, a specific strategy will need to be employed in order to overcome it.

Ready to Rank?

If you’re frustrated by your competition outranking you, and consequently outselling you, we’re here to help. We’ll give you an overview of why this is happening, and specific strategies and tasks you’ll need to execute on (with or without our help) in order to win.

Ready to get ranked? We’re ready to help.

Read More about our Enterprise SEO Audits

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What Insights Do I Get from the SEO Audit Roadmap? https://www.simplistack.com/blog/insights-from-seo-audit-roadmap/ Mon, 23 May 2022 15:48:56 +0000 https://www.www.simplistack.com/?p=4673 Tired of SEO reports with no real insights for your team to implement? You’re not alone. SEMRush or aherfs reports are great for scaring you with long lists of red-colored errors. But where are the true insights? Our SEO audit roadmap includes real work and insights from our team. Our SEO audit checklist has more […]

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Tired of SEO reports with no real insights for your team to implement? You’re not alone. SEMRush or aherfs reports are great for scaring you with long lists of red-colored errors. But where are the true insights?

Our SEO audit roadmap includes real work and insights from our team. Our SEO audit checklist has more than 150 checkpoints and they are grouped into many subcategories to help organize the audit. Overall these SEO checkpoints fall into two categories:

  1. Technical SEO insights
  2. Website content recommendations

Technical SEO Audit & Insights

What does technical SEO insights refer to? Here are a few examples straight from our checklist:

comparing screaming frog vs seo powersuite for seo audit softwareIndexing – Examples of SEO aspects that we look at here will include looking for duplicate content and examining canonical links. We look to make sure key pages are indexed and that Google is not flagging any issues.

Website Speed & Core Web Vitals – These factors deal with the user experience on your website and they are also SEO factors that Google uses to rank your content. Some of these things deal with the coding of the website. This will include code minification and inlining non-critical assets. Website speed also involves dealing with some other speed factors like server response time.

User Experience

Breadcrumbs and site usability are at the center of what we look for in this part of our checklist.

Mobile Experience

Do you have a mobile responsive design? How do the search engines see your content for mobile users? Are you hiding some content on mobile just because the page looks too crowded? 

Measurement and Monetization Checklist

Here we are looking at your set up to make sure that we can measure results and we make sure that you have checked a few of the boxes on your monetization checklist. This means making sure that you are collecting customer emails, using cart abandonment to target your customers.

link building image for seo servicesLink Building

Overall we are looking at the composition of your backlink profile to see if it is a weakness, strength, and how it is affecting your website’s performance. This allows us to understand your capabilities when it comes to ranking for tough keywords and this may affect our blog strategy recommendations later on.

Multi-Lingual

Do you use proper “hreflang” markup? There is a difference between telling Google that a web page is written in Spanish vs telling Google that a webpage should be shown to people in Spain.

Policy Essentials

Believe it or not, this stuff does affect conversions, it does affect user metrics and it does affect SEO. No need to go in-depth here but we do check this stuff off of the list.

Search Console and Google My Business

We do request access to these tools and this helps us assess your website. Most importantly, it allows us to find crawling and indexing issues that have been flagged by Google.

Content Recommendations

Our checklist methodically covers each page type on an e-commerce store. Each of the page types tends to be structured differently and they will often have issues that are common across the subset, but not across the whole website. We look at the most important SEO aspects of these pages:

  • Homepage
  • Category/Collection Page
  • Product Page
  • Blog Pages

Blog Content

The blog content is often a central part of our recommendations. This is because this can often play an important role in your content strategy moving forward. In this case it is not the audit of the blog content that matters so much (you might not even have one yet) but it is our recommendations that make up the bulk of the time that we spend on this section of our roadmap for you.

Blog Content Planning and Roadmap – Pillar & Clusters, Episodic Content, Link Magnets, Sales Tools & More

seo audit roadmap for e-commerce websites

This is one of the things that sets our e-commerce SEO audit process apart from other agencies. We don’t just hand you a stack of reports and tell you to let us know if you have any questions. We create a content roadmap, we walk you through it, and we provide your team cross-training so you can implement it. And of course, we are here to help if you want it.

This may include a range of content strategies and/or a combination of many including pillar/cluster strategies, episodic content, content that is designed to earn incoming links, and content that is designed to play a role in the sales funnel as a sales tool.

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How Do We Audit Equipment Dealer & Machinery Retailer Websites? https://www.simplistack.com/blog/how-do-we-audit-equipment-dealer-machinery-retailer-websites/ Mon, 16 May 2022 21:21:56 +0000 https://www.www.simplistack.com/?p=4641 Do you want to increase equipment sales but don’t have the marketing staff? You may have an alternative. Websites for equipment dealers and other big ticket e-commerce retailers will face unique challenges. We have a standardized approach to doing website audits for e-commerce sites and we adjust this approach so that it works well here […]

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Do you want to increase equipment sales but don’t have the marketing staff? You may have an alternative.

equipment retailer marketingWebsites for equipment dealers and other big ticket e-commerce retailers will face unique challenges.

We have a standardized approach to doing website audits for e-commerce sites and we adjust this approach so that it works well here with only a few adjustments that are specific to your industry.

These adjustments are based on 10 years of working with equipment dealers, so we have insider knowledge of the industry, competition and what works.

Before We Start:

First, we get to know your team, your website, your business and your goals. Each e-commerce niche has its own business factors that are unique to the industry and this is where we get onto the same page as your team. This is part of our standardized audit process and it comes first for important reasons.

However, for machinery retailers the time needed to get started during this first step is almost cut in half. We already know your industry, we know what is likely to be important to your website and we understand the underlying forces that drive converting leads to your business.

Now We Begin:

We use our 150+ point SEO audit checklist. This is the same checklist that we use for any e-commerce website regardless of the industry and regardless of the website’s platform.

seo audit screenshot

This checklist allows us to go through your website methodically to look for weaknesses, existing issues, and areas for improvement. Nothing changes to this part of the process for equipment and machinery websites. We just go through the list. It is standardized enough so that nothing gets missed and this allows for a process that is both simplified and also in-depth.

Adjusting Website Structure for Inventory Depth & Replenishment Rates

When you are selling expensive machinery and equipment you will not be dealing with the same type of traffic or sales volumes as a large t-shirt manufacturer.

It is important for category pages to have ample content and it is also important to be familiar with Google’s policy on doorway pages among other related concepts. We will often look to expand the number of categories if we are able because this can be an easy way to expand your reach in the search engines.

Some equipment dealers (new and used) will have much different inventory levels and replenishment rates than others, so the way that we set up categories may also be very different for each website. The key is to strike a balance between user experience, maximizing search engine visibility, and not creating empty category pages that are just meant to exploit the search engines. We don’t want the same content on every page and we don’t want empty pages.

Content Strategies and Recommendations for Dealers

used construction equipment reseller marketingOnce our audit is done we will begin to work towards making content recommendations for each of our e-commerce clients.

This part of our process for equipment dealers and machinery retailers is likely to be shortened because many business owners in this space are interested in two things: inventory and sales. Runnin or even facilitating a content generation operation is often just not within the scope of what everyone wants to do. Once you start trying to create videos, edit and approve blog posts, you will take on an additional burden even if the operation is outsourced, and we understand this.

Instead of focusing on content generation strategies for equipment dealers, we focus on your incoming lead channels and making sure all channels are being utilized and flowing with traffic.

For example, one of our top priorities is to make sure that you are utilizing your customer email list and you are running a monthly newsletter with inventory updates. Growing this list is one of the best things that you can do for your business and this is also something that is commonly neglected in this industry.

This Means Fewer Small Ticket SEO Items In Our Recommendations

We won’t be putting as much emphasis on some of the smaller onsite SEO factors that we might look at in the audit process. This is a function of the number of pages on your website that can be monetized and the competition for those pages to rank for their respective keywords.

Dealing with some of the least important SEO elements flagged by the audit process is usually not a great way for you to get the best bang for your buck. These items will tend to take up a smaller part of our recommendations for equipment dealers and machinery retailers. Instead, we will focus more on the main SEO elements and some of the non-SEO initiatives of your marketing program where we can often find the best opportunities to make money for you.

The Roadmap

We don’t just hand you a report and wish you good luck. We deliver a set of prioritized SEO recommendations. We teach your staff how to implement them and why, and we give you a roadmap to success moving forward.

seo audit roadmap for e-commerce websites

The roadmap completes the first leg in this section of your journey and this encompasses everything that we have learned during the audit process.

Contact us here to get your own roadmap and to get your inventory and sales flowing at the levels that they deserve to be at.

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8 Great SEO Audit Items for Fashion & Apparel E-Commerce Websites https://www.simplistack.com/blog/fashion-e-commerce/ Mon, 09 May 2022 14:32:02 +0000 https://www.www.simplistack.com/?p=4622 Do you manage a fashion & apparel e-commerce store that is getting beat in the search engines by competitors that DON’T DESERVE TO BEAT YOU? Proper Category Hierarchy This item on our checklist is important enough that it is usually something we have looked at before the audit process actually even starts. Your category/collections setup […]

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Do you manage a fashion & apparel e-commerce store that is getting beat in the search engines by competitors that DON’T DESERVE TO BEAT YOU?

Proper Category Hierarchy

This item on our checklist is important enough that it is usually something we have looked at before the audit process actually even starts. Your category/collections setup is central to your website’s functionality, so it is hard not to notice this. Looking at your hierarchy is a point where we can find lots of low hanging fruit.

apparel cartegories for e-commerce website

Adding new categories and subcategories for existing products is an easy way to optimize your website for more traffic. This helps to set a website up to receive more organic search traffic naturally.

Pages for Each Brand

If your e-commerce store sells goods that you manufacture then you won’t need to worry about this. For retailers that sell many brands, it is important to have a category-like structure for each brand. You can set these up as category pages, as product tag pages, or any other solution that will accomplish the same ending within your CMS.

The goal here is to have one page that is designated for each brand and this is where customers can find everything that you sell from that brand. This gives you a clear and PERMANENT target page that can rank for each brand name and some of its related searches.

Product pages can do this as well, but products can come and go and also have their own keywords to attack. Having a permanent target for internal and external links is often a best practice here.

This is essentially the same thing as a pillar page which you can link to from lots of blogs and other content throughout the website.

Product Image Attributes

optimized alt tag for search enginse on an ecommerce website

There are a number of different items on our audit list related to optimizing images throughout the site. Here I am referring to a subgroup of these and let’s just call these the most important aspects of SEO for your product images.

You will probably have lots of product images on your site and naturally this will give you lots of opportunities to have those images show up in the search engines.

  • We make sure that these images all have alt tags that are optimized in unique ways.
  • We make sure that each image is using an image file name that has also been optimized.

In my experience these are the two things that are most likely to help that image get found in the search results.

These are easy opportunities as well, and this also makes them a favorite item to visit on our audit checklist. This is the opposite of trying to propose a content strategy that is conducive to link building, or trying to make critical decisions about which category pages should be deleted and created. This is simple, straightforward, it can bring in traffic, and you only have to do it once.

Multi-Lingual Coding

international e-commerce flagsThis item is not for everyone but for those with the largest audiences and product selections, this is a top priority. Does your website implement “hreflang” coding properly? Are you presenting different versions of your website to users of different languages in the same country? what about users of a different language in a different country? This can make a huge difference to some of our clients when you are selling internationally.

Homepage Keyword Audit/Title Tag

The homepage will often have the most incoming links to it and this often presents the best opportunity to go after some specific keywords. Many of the best keyword opportunities out there will be for product pages, but most industries will have a keyword set that the homepage can attack on some level.

Identifying competition strength, keyword volume, and a website’s ability to rank for certain keywords is a big part of our job here. We want the best keyword targets, but they must also be obtainable. In many cases, the obvious choices are not realistically attainable in a short time frame for smaller websites… This is the eternal plight of the SEO agency.

A new t-shirt company is going to have a very tough time ranking for “mens t-shirts” in Google’s search results. They will need to pick some more reasonable keyword targets. This is where we come in!

Category Title Tags and Keyword Optimization

Making a second appearance on our list… your category pages. However, now we are not looking at these for their general hierarchy and keyword opportunities. We are looking specifically at the way that you set up your title tags. We look at the overall scheme of your category title tags (most websites do all of their category title tags in a similar style) and whether or not they contain the product brand name etc.

In addition to this, we are looking to see if there is space to go after additional keywords and we look at possible ways to do this.

While we do look at the title tags for all page types during our audit process (product, category, homepage, blog page etc), the category page title tags are among the most important. Product page title tags are usually pretty simple because just the brand and product name are often enough to fill the title tag to the character limit. Category pages present a different opportunity with more room for optimization in many cases.

Product Page User Reviews

user reviews for e-commerce websiteThese reviews have two great purposes. The first is to act as a conversion tool. Adding some social proof in the form of customers/user reviews is a great way to convince people to buy whatever you are selling.

Equally as important are the keyword ranking opportunities that are created by adding this kind of content. You’ll often find that the reviews can help you show up for long-tail searches, some of which can be very high converting.

The Backlink Audit

Why do we audit backlinks?

This is where we can start to understand what is making your website successful. We do check for toxic links and incoming links to 404 error pages, but what is probably even more important is that we just assess the strength of your website. This gives us an idea of whether or not some of the tougher keyword targets for a website will be realistic targets or not.

Some websites are successful because of great social media campaigns. Sometimes it is Google PPC. Sometimes a website might simply just have acquired a strong following from being great for many years. But there are others that are successful because of their backlink strength.

This powers these websites up in the search engines and it can be the main driver of success for some clients. Knowing this is more than just useful knowledge to us. Understanding this is critical for anyone that is doing strategic content planning for a website. If you are going to war in the content world, you must know the strength of your army.

If you are losing traffic to competitors that don’t deserve to beat you, now you have some starting points to try and change that. If you feel like it’s time to get serious and assert your dominance in the SERPs, give us a call and ask us about our E-Commerce SEO Roadmap.

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Enhanced E-commerce Set Up & SEO Audits https://www.simplistack.com/blog/enhanced-e-commerce-set-up-seo-audits/ Mon, 09 May 2022 14:13:52 +0000 https://www.www.simplistack.com/?p=4634 The path to purchase in your e-commerce store is critical for the success of your business. If you intend to use organic traffic to drive revenue, your Google Analytics Enhanced E-commerce setup should be examined during an SEO audit. What is Enhanced E-commerce in Google Analytics In short, Enhanced E-commerce (EE) is a series of […]

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The path to purchase in your e-commerce store is critical for the success of your business. If you intend to use organic traffic to drive revenue, your Google Analytics Enhanced E-commerce setup should be examined during an SEO audit.

What is Enhanced E-commerce in Google Analytics

In short, Enhanced E-commerce (EE) is a series of reports that describe the effectiveness of your product pages, category/collection pages, on-site search results and other aspects of your website. When set up properly, it’s a great way to see if your visual merchandising is working to drive revenue and conversions. 

It’s also a great place to look for how well specific coupon promotions and marketing campaigns are performing.

Often, however, we find that many companies don’t have this set up to work properly.

That’s why we include it in our SEO audits.

Enhanced E-Commerce Items we Check During an SEO Audit

Product List Performance

Product List Set Up

Most Google Analytics installs for e-commerce sites do a good job of tracking product revenue.  Most also track adds to cart and other product level performance metrics.

So many visits start from a Product List, or Category (a Collection if you’re using Shopify).

EE can also track these pages performance- if you have it set up properly. Most small to medium size stores don’t however.

So what are you missing?

These reports track what products showed in which positions when a category loads.  Some stores default to showing the best sellers first, but other companies choose to do visual merchandising by hand, especially for holiday sale pages and such.

For your last big promo, do you know how many people clicked on the first product? The second? Did they add it to their cart or buy?

When your EE is working properly, you will.

Internal Promotions Report

Internal Promotion Performance

Running a site wide banner promoting a specific category or product? Do you have banners on your home page?

In EE, these are referred to as Internal Promotions.

We can show you how to properly code your banners to track impressions, clicks, and sales. It’s a great way to test effectiveness of both offers, and creative assets.

Order Coupons Report

Coupon Performance

Most sites track this well in EE, but we’ll check to make sure yours does too.  This report will show which coupons are being used the most, as well as which drive the highest average order value. If you do some math, it can also show you what percentage of your customers are using coupons in the first place.

Shopping Behavior Report

Shopping Behavior

This is another report that most stores get right, but you can run into issues. This simply shows the path users take in your e-commerce store to purchase product.

It also will tell you how many visitors actually view your products at all, as opposed to just consuming your blog or other content.

Checkout Behavior

Unlike Shopping Behavior, many stores get this one wrong- and it’s really important. This report is key to your overall conversion rates, as it shows what step in the checkout process tend to make your users abandon the checkout process.

So this is a key part of our e-commerce SEO audit, since if its not configured correctly, you’ll have bad data, as in the image above.

Ready to get ranked? We’re ready to help.

Read More about our Enterprise SEO Audits

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Are Automated SEO Audits Good Enough? https://www.simplistack.com/blog/are-automated-seo-audits-good-enough/ Mon, 25 Apr 2022 15:19:57 +0000 https://www.simplistack.com/?p=4556 Are you trying to decide if it is worth it to pay for a real SEO audit of your E-Commerce website? Let’s see if automated reports are good enough… If you are serious about improving your digital marketing program and dealing with the issues that you have now, an automated website audit is not going […]

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Are you trying to decide if it is worth it to pay for a real SEO audit of your E-Commerce website? Let’s see if automated reports are good enough…

website seo audit summary reportIf you are serious about improving your digital marketing program and dealing with the issues that you have now, an automated website audit is not going to solve your problems.

This isn’t because automated reports have no value. We DO use automated software as a part of our e-commerce audit process, but these are just tools to provide info to our team while we are working through our SEO audit roadmap.

Why Aren’t Automated SEO Audits Good Enough?

Here are 3 of the biggest problems:

1. No Prioritization – Not all red flags are created equal in the SEO audit world. Something like an empty meta description is not an issue at all but this will be a red flag in some SEO software programs. On the other hand, broken links are usually one of the first things that we will investigate when we see those pop up on the list.

Broken links are also a great example of why we DO use automated software as part of the audit process. You would never want to have to check all of the links on a large e-commerce website manually. Using the software allows this to be done almost instantly.

2. Some Metrics NEED Interpretation – There are quite a few metrics that are provided which you need to understand in order for them to mean anything. For example, you might see “# of pages with canonical”. Whether this is a large or small number is not the point of the metric. The reason that this is provided is so that you can see if the metric is inline with the number that you expect to see there.

In order to know what is expected here, you need to know what a canonical tag is, what role it plays, where on your site you should expect or need to see them etc. Simply reading the description of each metric is not going to give you the level of understanding that you need in all cases.

comparing screaming frog vs seo powersuite for seo audit software

3. No Real Recommendations – This is where real people, with real experience come in. SEO software might be able to find some technical issues which you can then go and fix, but there is no real roadmap that will turn the data into a real SEO strategy that is capable of beating strong competitors.

Don’t some software programs also make recommendations?

Yes, you can actually get some content recommendations from website audit software. This usually comes in the form of keyword research. This will tell you keywords that can be attacked which your competitor might rank for but you do not. However, this is data that you would use on a single page-level in order to try and rank for additional keywords. It is not something that you would use to blindly name a strategy for a team of 5+ content creators to follow.

Automated reports are missing the most valuable part of the process… The SEO Audit Roadmap. This includes some of the most valuable things that we can do for you.

Blog Content Recommendations & Strategies – Getting a detailed content marketing strategy is not possible with automated reports. In some industries this is where we can make some of our strongest recommendations. You won’t get this type of guidance from an automated website report in any way. You need a great team of marketers in order to create a great strategy roadmap.

Category Structures & Category Additions – This is another place where the recommendations tend to be the strongest and have the best ROI on your efforts. These recommendations also tend to be easy to implement. Keyword gap analysis can be used to help with these recommendations but you really need a thinking person who understands your industry to be at the helm for this.

How to Acquire Backlinks – Strategies for obtaining high quality, natural backlinks is something that should tie in to your content marketing strategy. The old days of paying for directory links and guest posting links are gone. Creating a holistic approach to creating amazing content, sharing it across your channels, and promoting it is how to increase your site’s authority in a way that wont’ come back to bite you later.

Reports are just a tool. The team that you put together is what matters!

Get in touch with us to find out what seo4anyone our SEO audit roadmap can do for your team. Contact us here.

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Forensic SEO & E-commerce Audits https://www.simplistack.com/blog/forensic-seo-e-commerce-audits/ Tue, 19 Apr 2022 13:33:01 +0000 https://www.simplistack.com/?p=4445 When doing an e-commerce SEO audit for sites that have lost organic traffic, forensic SEO becomes a key component. Determinations need to be made as to what happened and when. Only then can a solution be put in place. Like detective work, forensic SEO is time consuming, and requires an in-depth knowledge of algorithmic ranking […]

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When doing an e-commerce SEO audit for sites that have lost organic traffic, forensic SEO becomes a key component. Determinations need to be made as to what happened and when. Only then can a solution be put in place.

Like detective work, forensic SEO is time consuming, and requires an in-depth knowledge of algorithmic ranking factors. The analyst also needs a complete history of changes made to the website, such as:

  • E-commerce platform migrations
  • Site redesigns or restructures
  • SEO and link building campaigns
  • Changes in website leadership
  • Organic traffic history

E-commerce Platform Migrations & Forensic SEO

If you’ve moved from BigCommerce to Shopify, or even Shopify to Shopify Plus, certain events can lead to negative SEO impact. Often, if a dedicated SEO resource wasn’t involved in the site move from beginning to end, something will get overlooked. Here are some things we often see:

  • URL structure change without a proper 301 redirect strategy
  • Noindexing certain pages (or all pages) when pushing the new site live
  • Technical changes that prevent search engines from properly crawling the site
  • Large increases or decreases in content that “startle” the search engines
  • Allowing Google to index the Dev or Staging versions of the site

At least with a platform migration, we know a date to start with. If we see dramatic drops in organic traffic shortly after the change, it’s a big red flag that something went wrong when you flipped the switch.

Forensic SEO Investigation

Site Redesigns or Restructures & Forensic SEO

Even if you aren’t changing platforms, significant changes made to an e-commerce website can very quickly decimate organic traffic. This is another business practice that SHOULD have had a dedicated SEO resource involved from the inception.

While large-scale changes may become necessary for a business requirement, a careful, pragmatic approach needs to be taken to prevent negative side effects. Some of these may include:

  • Deletion of a key product categories from the site
  • Large numbers of products going out of stock simultaneously
  • Removal of outdated content from the blog or How-to section of the site
  • General rebranding of products
  • Anything that changes your URL structure or site hierarchy

Hopefully, you’ll know when any of these things have occurred, and at that point a forensic audit can be done. Experienced auditors have the tools to look at that kind of history, and do a forensic SEO analysis that way.

SEO & Link Building Campaigns & Forensic SEO

Now we’re getting into projects that don’t really have a switch that turns them on. Building links, or engaging in a long term pillar/cluster content creation process tends to occur slowly over time.

In this case, there may not be a specific date when traffic started to falter- it can be very gradual.

The forensics here are a bit more complex, and we’ll have to dig into what pages or groups of pages started losing traffic when. We can then develop a strategy to deal with it.

If we find that the issue is related to bad backlinks, we’ll let you know how to get those removed. We’ve seen many times where links that were acquired a long time ago have suddenly become a problem, either due to a Google policy change, or they were simply just discovered recently.

Changes in Website Leadership & Forensic SEO

While on the surface having a new set of eyes on a website can be a good thing, we often find that new leadership wants to make their mark quickly. Sometimes that means that subtle changes are made to the site content.

There might be a particular phrase that is driving you traffic that isn’t in favor with leadership, so it’s removed. One example can be the use of the term “cheap” vs “discount”. That switch can have a huge impact on your organic traffic if you were ranking highly for the previous keyword and now made the switch.

Even something as simple as changing a headline or a call to action can potentially cause a shift in your search traffic.

We’ll endeavor to find these changes for you, and make recommendations as to how to fix them. 

Organic Traffic History & Forensic SEO

You might think that looking at a lifetime of traffic patterns is the place to start for a forensic SEO investigation. That’s not always the case though.

Seeing where the drops (or gains!) occur can be a red herring. Not every action you take has an immediate reaction. Sometimes a change to the website might not move rankings until the next core Google algorithm update.

So then there’s two dates we need to be cognizant of: the timing of the changes, and the next core update that occurred.

When we’re really digging in to find the root of a traffic loss, it’s often better to look at the changes first, instead of relying on the traffic graph to coach us into potentially bad science.

Starting the SEO Investigation

Puzzled by a big traffic loss recently? Or perhaps years ago that you’ve never recovered from? We’re here to help.

The first step in good forensic SEO is a comprehensive website audit. See what else we include in our SEO audits.

Ready to get ranked? We’re ready to help.

Read More about our Enterprise SEO Audits

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What do we Look for While Auditing Backlinks? https://www.simplistack.com/blog/what-do-we-look-for-while-auditing-backlinks/ Fri, 08 Apr 2022 13:49:12 +0000 https://www.simplistack.com/?p=4405 Since backlinks are the most important off-page ranking factor in SEO, all audits should include a deep dive into backlinks. Further, the audit should include a strategy for acquiring more. There are numerous factors we examine during a backlink analysis which is included in an e-commerce SEO audit. Top of the list are: Current backlink […]

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Since backlinks are the most important off-page ranking factor in SEO, all audits should include a deep dive into backlinks. Further, the audit should include a strategy for acquiring more.

There are numerous factors we examine during a backlink analysis which is included in an e-commerce SEO audit. Top of the list are:

  • Current backlink profile
  • Toxicity Level
  • Broken Links
  • Opportunities for new links/Strategy

Auditing Your Current Backlink Profile

Using a handful of third party tools, we’ll put together a profile of links to pages on your site. We’ll then cross reference that list with Google Search Console to see which of these links Google is aware of, and how they may be helping or hurting you.

It’s important that your profile looks “natural”- meaning that you’ve acquired links over time by creating great content, and providing value to the user. We don’t want to see a large collection of links that were purchased, or acquired through other means that look “fishy”.

We’ll take a look at the domain authority of links to your key pages, and see if there’s an opportunity to improve or redirect those. You always want your best backlinks to be pointing at your most important pages, or at least topic clusters. Also important here is the number of unique referring domains. In general, the more the merrier.

Determining Backlink Toxicity Level in an Audit

Chances are you’ve been sent a “free SEO audit” before to your inbox. One of the pages in this PDF is talking about toxic backlinks, and you probably have “a lot of them”. Like in the image below.

Just close the PDF and go about your day.

9 times out of 10, those toxic links are from spammy directory sites, you didn’t ask for them, and frankly, Google just ignores them. Go look in your Search Console and see if those bad links from “The Globe” are even in there. We’re willing to bet they’re not.

However, it’s possible that in the past, your in-house SEO, your agency, or maybe even the CEO went on a link building adventure and got some links you REALLY don’t want anymore. Those are the ones we’ll be looking for, and we’ll instruct you on how to deal with them.

False Toxic Link Reporting

Finding Broken Links in an SEO Audit

During the backlink audit, we’ll probably uncover some links to an old blog post, product or web page that doesn’t exist anymore. Depending on how “good” that link is, we’ll offer suggestions on how to take advantage of it by either asking the linking site to change it to point to current content, or to redirect the old page to a similar new one.

This can be trickier if you’ve changed domains completely, but a full audit of broken links still has a lot of value, and can provide you an organic traffic lift relatively quickly.

Link Building Strategy

Lastly, as part of our commitment to knowledge transfer after the audit, we’ll provide you with a link building strategy you can adhere to going forward. It won’t require a lot of technical SEO knowledge- it’s more about creating, presenting, and amplifying your content so that it has some stickiness. 

It will be top tier work that other websites will want to link to so that they can provide additional value to their own users.

You can read a little bit more in this post about some backlinks that e-commerce companies should be going after.

Backlinks and your E-commerce SEO Audit

When our audit is complete, and you’ve had time to digest it, you’ll have an excellent understanding of your backlink profile. You’ll know if you have any bad links to get rid of, or great links to repurpose.

What’s more, you and your team will have a strategy you can employ to get more and better links in the future.

Ready to get ranked? We’re ready to help.

Read More about our Enterprise SEO Audits

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What Product Page Elements Do We Look for in an E-commerce SEO Audit? https://www.simplistack.com/blog/product-page-elements-for-seo-audit/ Tue, 05 Apr 2022 16:46:49 +0000 https://www.simplistack.com/?p=4245 Are you trying to improve your e-commerce store’s visibility but don’t know where to start? Product pages are often overlooked from an SEO perspective. Let’s find out why. The elements that we look for on product pages are not the same as those that we look for on category pages or other types of pages. […]

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Are you trying to improve your e-commerce store’s visibility but don’t know where to start? Product pages are often overlooked from an SEO perspective. Let’s find out why.

category page SEO optimizationThe elements that we look for on product pages are not the same as those that we look for on category pages or other types of pages.

Why? The pages are not structured the same. They don’t serve the same purpose. They have different layouts, different constraints and also different expectations from the customer.

Many of the elements will be the same in coding. For example: we will look for title tags and other H tags on all pages. However, the way that your website utilizes these elements is likely to be different throughout the website so they must be analyzed separately.

Here is a list of elements from our audit list that we use for product pages and a quick summary of what we look for:

Product Page Title Tags – These should usually contain the product name and hopefully there will be room to add in some useful keywords as well for ranking purposes. This can include the specific color, size or other attributes of the product.

Product Title Optimization – This should be an accurate product name, not optimized for keyword purposes. 

h1 tag being used for a product title on ecommerce website

H Tag Structure – Does the page use an H tag hierarchy that makes sense? H1 should go at the top with lower H tags following in some logical hierarchy. The presence of an H tag for the product title and lesser h tags for the rest of the page is what we look for here.

If your CMS uses an H2 tag for the product title, this is fine. If the hierarchy skips the H3 and H4 tag, this is fine. Google’s crawling bots are trained to deal with much more confusing situations than this.

Image Alt Tags – There is nothing new or groundbreaking here. Alt tags have been optimized since the early days of SEO. Try to include your keywords as well as an accurate description of the image.

Meta Descriptions – Meta descriptions are not required. In the old days of Matt Cutts running the show at Google’s webspam team, the advice from Google was:

  • that unique descriptions are best
  • having no descriptions is OK
  • but having duplicate descriptions should be avoided

Today, provided meta descriptions are not being used 100% of the time by Google anyway, so we leave these blank fairly often on product pages. When we are dealing with high traffic pages that have lots of visibility in the SERPS, optimizing descriptions starts to make more sense so we will put more time into this.

The meta descriptions are NOT a ranking factor that Google uses. However, they can influence click-through rates from the SERPs, so when we deal with high traffic queries we prefer to start optimizing meta descriptions for click through rates.

seo

This does not mean stuffing them with keywords. This means giving users a reason to click through, differentiating your brand, describing what is on the other side of that link… anything that will increase your CTR. So feel free to include your USPs like:

  • Free Shipping
  • Money Back Guarantee
  • Made in the USA
  • etc

Product Descriptions – If your descriptions are not unique you are missing out on opportunities to rank your website for terms that will bring incremental traffic. It used to be believed that using manufacturer descriptions was the end of the world, but this just isn’t the case. The problem is that Google may not see any reason to rank your pages above competitors and you are simply just not giving them much reason to.

You can still do well with factory-provided descriptions and in some cases it makes sense to just copy, paste, and get them into place. However, this would not be considered optimal for SEO purposes.

Rich Content – The type of rich content that is appropriate here will differ depending on what products you are selling. Rich content generally refers to videos, podcasts, infographics and interactive features among other things. We like to think of rich content as “other things that Google can see, identify, rank or use as a ranking signal.”

Calls to Action – This is easy for product pages and most of you should have this covered by the time that you get to contacting us. This may just seem to refer to “add to cart” buttons but this may also include a “related products” slider and more.

Product URL – This should be similar to your product title or title tag. Keywords do count here as a minor ranking factor but keeping it short is also a goal of ours. As long as your URLs are not obscenely long you should be just fine here. We usually are opposed to rewriting product page URLs for SEO purposes but it has been something that we have recommended a few times.

Just be sure to convert all non-supported characters with a “-“.  This includes spaces between words and other special characters that are not either numbers or letters.

Customer Reviews – These can provide fodder for search engines to use for ranking purposes as well as act as a conversion tool when used on product pages. If schema markup is properly applied, then the star ratings may show up on the SERPs and at least can be leveraged during paid ads for Google Shopping.

Product Image URL/Filename – All image URLs should attempt to use some keywords that make sense. Typically they are the name of the product itself. Just like other URLs, we like to use keywords but don’t like to extend the length too much. 5-7 words should do it here.

Product page SEO items make up a small fraction of our complete list of technical and content-related elements we review in our audit checklist. Serious e-commerce managers are welcome to reach out to us about our SEO audit roadmap and website audit services.

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