If your content isn’t performing as well as you expected, or old pieces you published a few years ago are no longer relevant or pulling their weight, it’s time for an update.
Specifically, it’s time to optimize your underperforming content.
This is the process of updating, tweaking, editing, and rewriting old content that’s not pulling in ROI. The goal is to improve the content so it will eventually start:
Often, optimizing your underperforming content is a cost-effective method to improve your content marketing overall. By optimizing, you won’t need to invest in creating completely new pieces – you can just rejigger what you already have and make it better.
It’s a good practice for any brand with content (especially as part of a content audit), as it ensures every piece continues to work toward your goals (versus hindering them).
First, you’ll need to identify your underperforming content – what pieces aren’t living up to their potential – and then take steps to improve and optimize it.
How do you know which content pieces are underperforming?
You’ll need to look at specific metrics to find them.
Use tools like Google Analytics, Semrush, or Ahrefs to look at this data and find your underperforming content.
Search ranking metrics:
To identify content pieces underperforming in search results, look at your organic keyword stats, especially the average position of your content in Google. Pay attention to:
Traffic and engagement metrics:
Which pages are losing traffic?
Which pages get little to no engagement (i.e., people aren’t spending enough time on the page to read the content)?
These are great candidates for optimization.
After you find your underperforming content that’s prime for optimization, ask yourself the following questions to understand how to fix it.
If your content isn’t performing, first consider whether the keyword you’re targeting is, in fact, winnable for your brand.
For example, if you targeted the keyword “content strategy” in a piece and it’s languishing on page 5 of search results, that might be a result of two factors:
It’s doubtful that a new or low-authority site could crack the top 10 results for this keyword.
If that’s the case, consider switching keywords to target what you can actually win. Especially for newer or smaller brands, long-tail keywords are usually easier to rank for. They also generate 70% of all traffic.
For example, instead of targeting “content strategy,” try targeting “content strategy for beginners” or “content marketing strategy for SEO.”
Going long-tail is generally a win-win because these keywords are more specific and target searchers with more specific intent.
These searchers also may be more willing to convert because they’re actively looking for solutions – not just browsing.
If a piece is already well-written and optimized for a winnable keyword, consider whether it’s optimized enough.
Google has stated that the key best practices for improving your SEO include:
Placement and use of keywords matter a ton to how well you’ll rank in search.
If you haven’t given Google enough signals that say, “Hey! This keyword is the focus and topic of this page!” it’s not going to get the memo.
Some tips for keyword usage and placement in your content:
Many people overlook little details (e.g., writing a solid meta title and description or crafting strong, descriptive headings). And that's a mistake.
These little pieces do a lot of hard work. The meta title alone can entice searchers to click your link among extremely similar results – especially if yours is more thoughtfully crafted or descriptive than the other options.
For example, if I search for "how to make caramel popcorn" in Google, the results are almost identical. However, only one mentions "easy" in their meta title. That's enough of a differentiator to make me want to click it.
With that in mind, take the time to craft strong meta titles, descriptions, and headings for your underperforming content.
These elements can pique your readers' curiosity or interest, pulling them further into the piece, which can positively impact its performance.
A few tips:
This is one of the easiest ways to optimize underperforming content. Make sure it's up-to-date and relevant to modern readers!
For example, are the statistics cited in the content from 2016 or earlier? That's too old, especially since companies usually update studies (or conduct new ones) every few years.
A good rule of thumb: If the statistics in your content are more than five years old, find new ones unless the stat is ground-breaking or foundational in your industry.
If a statistic comes from a unique study that hasn't been updated or replicated, then it should be OK to cite it.
Next, what about the links? Are the links that point to other sites and resources still relevant? Do they point to the correct pages (and are the pages still there)? Are the links high-quality and authoritative? If not, update.
Finally, check your content for relevance. For example, if the year 2020 is mentioned multiple times in an otherwise evergreen blog, update those references so they're current.
Let's say the content piece you're optimizing is relatively short and thin when you'd expect it to be meatier.
Maybe the piece doesn't fully address the topic it's trying to cover, or it delves into irrelevancies.
Perhaps the topic calls for supportive statistics or data that help add weight to the piece, but it doesn't have any.
Or, maybe it has a bunch of spelling or grammatical errors, or it doesn't have any images.
These issues are all related to content quality – how helpful, relevant, accurate, and informative/entertaining/empowering the content is for your particular audience.
Luckily, in all of these scenarios, a few updates will improve the quality without requiring a complete rewrite. For example:
Sometimes you can't save poor-quality content.
Instead, some pieces may need total overhauls. This means you'll delete everything and start over.
How do you know when your content requires a complete rewrite?
Finally, don't forget to zoom out to look at the bigger picture when you're optimizing underperforming content.
Your site may be contributing to your content's poor performance in a few ways.
For example, if your site loads extremely slowly, that can affect your rankings and engagement. People won't wait to read a webpage that doesn't load quickly.
Or, maybe your site isn't optimized for mobile browsing, so people trying to access your content on smartphone browsers can't even read it.
A poor site design can interfere with its readability as well. Make sure there's enough contrast between the text on your page and the background for comfortable reading.
Avoid long paragraphs, too – those are hard on the eyes when reading from a screen.
Last but not least, ensure Google and other search engines can crawl your pages to index them.
Sometimes a silly error can lurk under the surface, such as a "noindex" tag accidentally placed in the code for one of your blogs ("noindex" tells search engines not to include the page in results).
Optimizing your lackluster content is a great way to get the most ROI from it.
Each piece of content requires a certain amount of investment (the effort, money, and time spent to create it). When you take the time to optimize and update it, you'll stretch that investment further.
Even better, content that starts performing will bring in heftier positive returns.
That means you'll get more longevity out of your content assets, and they'll keep performing into the future to bring in passive traffic, leads, and conversions.
It's crucial to repeat the optimization process regularly as part of your content strategy to get the best results. This will ensure all of your content keeps working to reach your goals.
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One thought on “How to optimize underperforming content”
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