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7 Cases Where More Website Traffic Doesn't Mean Good SEO

Generating more traffic to a website is one of the important aspects of organic search optimization.

While driving increased traffic to a website is foundational as part of a solidified organic strategy, it’s also important to remember that increased organic traffic does not necessarily translate into a net positive.

The following scenarios are examples of when driving more traffic is not better for a business.

 

1. Users Are Not Finding What They Are After & There Is an Intent Mismatch

 

This one is straightforward.

Let’s say a visitor is searching for a specific query; your site is ranking highly for that query and they click on a result that leads to a page on your website.

If a searcher is looking for something, comes to your website, generates more traffic, but then quickly leaves because the content of your site is not what they were after, this can contribute to higher bounce rate metrics, lower time-on-site metrics, etc.

These things can send negative signals back to Google’s algorithm, indicating that your website result is not the ideal one for that query or intent.

 

2. Your Content Strategy Is Non-Existent or Poorly Executed

 

If you try to attract traffic to a website without having foundational optimisations in place, people are not going to stick around.

If you don’t have a thorough content strategy in place or are publishing poorly written content, users are not going to stick around.

If you have a site that loads at the rate of a tortoise or is not mobile-friendly, users will not stick around.

This is so important to Google that they’re launching the Page Experience update to better measure how well each webpage serves the needs of organic search visitors.

 

3. More Traffic Is Not More Valuable Than Conversions

 

The above two points go into a bit of a classic debate between which is more important – more organic traffic or more organic conversions?

However, if you ask me, I’d rather attract 100,000 visitors to a site and have 50% of them convert (what a conversion rate, right?), than 200,000 visitors and 25% of them convert.

The goal of an SEO strategy is not merely to garner more traffic.

If we stopped there, we would be eliminating one of the (if not the single) most important aspects of the role of an SEO: to drive more ROI for businesses.

If you are seeing traffic increases but that traffic is not also improving conversion rate, you are not truly achieving the best organic results.

 

4. The Site Is Receiving Negative Press

 

Traffic gains can happen for reasons you would probably rather avoid.

If your business is under scrutiny or receiving negative press, going back to your client and reporting that you saw an 80% increase in organic traffic MoM is not exactly positive.

If a recent scandal drew in a surge of visitors, you wouldn’t want to highlight that as a positive gain to a client, and also try to claim that it was due to a solidified organic strategy either.

 

5. More Traffic Across All Channels Is Backfiring

 

If we look outside of the organic channel, we can easily identify other situations in which it’s not ideal to drive more traffic.

If you’re driving website traffic through other channels, such as paid, to a site that is not optimized – content, technical, or user experience – this can backfire.

Our counterparts in PPC could be paying a higher cost-per-acquisition and driving more traffic to a page that is quickly encouraging users to leave.

 

6. Traffic Is Not Human or Desirable Bot Traffic

 

Paying close attention to traffic sources and channels in Google Analytics is crucial.

If this traffic is not from humans but spambots instead, an increase in traffic would not be a positive movement in this case.

Spambot traffic is a type of traffic that is generally illegitimate traffic sent to a site that skews and inflates traffic data.

 

7. You’re Wasting Valuable Resources

 

Sometimes, increased site traffic can strain your resources. You might have a really solid informational piece of content driving a ton of traffic, but if it’s not relevant to your audience you can end up with unintended consequences.

This goes beyond server issues to very real cost of frontline staff and customer service agents having to field calls, emails, chats, and in-person inquiries from people who aren’t likely to become customers.

Ensuring that the leads you’re driving from search are relevant and high intent is important, too.

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Source: SearchEngineJournal

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