Ecommerce SEO —
Turn Product Searches
Into Organic Sales
Ecommerce SEO helps online stores attract high-intent shoppers from search engines — people actively searching for the products you sell — turning those searches into consistent organic sales without increasing ad spend every month.
Grow Your Store’s Organic Sales
Book a free call or message me directly
Full-Stack Ecommerce SEO —
From Product Pages to Technical Foundation
Ecommerce SEO is more technically complex than standard SEO. Large catalogs, product variants, faceted navigation, duplicate content, and crawl budget issues are all specific to stores — and all require specific solutions.
Every campaign starts with a full store audit — covering technical health, category structure, product page quality, and competitor analysis — before any optimisation work begins.
I work directly on Shopify and WooCommerce as primary platforms, with experience on WordPress ecommerce and Magento on a case-by-case basis.
Platforms Supported
Shopify
Primary platform
WooCommerce
Primary platform
WordPress
Ecommerce plugins
Other Platforms
Case-by-case basis
The Hidden Issues
Silently Costing You Organic Sales
Ecommerce stores face SEO challenges that standard websites don’t. These are the most common issues — and how each one gets fixed.
Duplicate Content
Product variants (size/colour), manufacturer descriptions copied across products, and near-identical category pages cause duplicate content that confuses Google and splits ranking signals across multiple URLs.
Fixed with canonical tags, unique content, and variant URL strategy
Faceted Navigation Issues
Filter pages (colour, size, brand, price) generate thousands of URLs that waste crawl budget, create index bloat, and dilute the authority of your real category pages — without any SEO benefit.
Fixed with robots.txt, noindex, and canonical configuration
Thin Product Pages
Product pages with only a few lines of description, missing keyword targeting, no schema markup, and no content beyond the product name fail to rank — even for exact-match product searches.
Fixed with keyword-optimised descriptions, schema, and intent alignment
Keyword Cannibalisation
Product pages and category pages targeting the same keywords compete against each other in Google — splitting authority and causing neither to rank as well as a single, well-targeted page would.
Fixed with keyword mapping and page consolidation strategy
Crawl Budget Waste
Large stores waste Google’s crawl budget on pagination, filter URLs, session parameters, and out-of-stock pages — leaving important product and category pages undercrawled and under-indexed.
Fixed with XML sitemap optimisation and crawl directive strategy
Orphaned Product Pages
Products that aren’t linked from any category page, navigation, or internal link are invisible to Google — regardless of how well the product itself is optimised. Orphan pages receive no authority and rarely rank.
Fixed with internal linking audit and site architecture review
Audit First.
Prioritise by Revenue Impact.
Ecommerce SEO without an audit misses the biggest opportunities. Every campaign follows a structured process — starting with where the highest-value gains are and working systematically outward.
Step 01
Full Store SEO Audit
Technical audit, product page quality review, category structure analysis, and top competitor comparison. This reveals where the store is losing organic visibility and which fixes will generate the biggest ranking improvements fastest.
Step 02
Keyword Research for Products & Collections
Commercial intent keywords mapped to specific product pages and category pages — identifying what buyers search before purchasing and ensuring the right page targets the right keyword at the right stage of intent.
Step 03
Technical SEO & Site Architecture
Canonicals, indexation, crawl budget, faceted navigation, XML sitemap, URL structure, Core Web Vitals, and internal linking. Technical issues are always fixed first — because no amount of content optimisation compensates for a site Google can’t crawl efficiently.
Step 04
Category & Product Page Optimisation
Category pages first — they typically drive the most ecommerce SEO traffic by targeting broad commercial keywords. Then product pages — titles, descriptions, schema markup (product, review, breadcrumb), images, and conversion-focused content improvements.
Step 05
Ecommerce Content Strategy
Buying guides, product comparisons, and informational content that captures shoppers earlier in the research phase — building topical authority and creating internal link pathways that push authority down to product pages.
Step 06 — Ongoing
Monitoring, Rankings & Growth
Monthly tracking of rankings, organic traffic, and revenue opportunities. Ongoing optimisation adapts to inventory changes, seasonal products, and new catalog additions — keeping the store’s organic performance growing consistently.
Why category pages first? Category pages target broader commercial keywords with higher search volume — “running shoes”, “men’s jackets”, “espresso machines” — while product pages target specific model searches. Ranking category pages typically delivers more organic traffic faster than any other ecommerce SEO activity.
Choose Your
Ecommerce SEO Package
Available as a one-time audit and implementation, or ongoing monthly management. Growth and Scale plans are recommended as monthly retainers for compounding results.
Package 01
Ecommerce Starter
For new or small stores wanting an audit and foundational optimisation — laying the technical and on-page groundwork before scaling.
Starting from
$250
One-time project — custom quote
Package 02
Ecommerce Growth
For growing stores wanting ongoing ecommerce SEO management — combining product and category optimisation, content, and monthly ranking growth.
Starting from
$600/mo
Custom quote — monthly retainer
Package 03
Ecommerce Scale
For larger catalogs and competitive markets — advanced technical SEO, content strategy, and a continuous growth campaign across the full store.
Starting from
$1,200/mo
Custom quote — monthly retainer
Who Needs
Ecommerce SEO?
Any online store that wants consistent organic sales alongside — or instead of — paid advertising.
Shopify Stores
Shopify stores with growing ad costs that want to build an organic channel — or new stores that want to rank from launch rather than paying for every visitor.
WooCommerce Stores
WordPress-based stores often have significant technical SEO issues — plugin conflicts, slow performance, poor crawlability — that are suppressing rankings that good products deserve.
DTC & Niche Brands
Direct-to-consumer and niche ecommerce brands competing against large retailers — where focused SEO on specific product categories can outmanoeuvre broader competitors.
Stores With Declining Organic Traffic
Stores that previously ranked well but lost traffic after a Google update, site migration, or gradual technical debt accumulation — an audit identifies exactly what changed and how to recover.
Growing Ecommerce Businesses
Businesses scaling their catalog and wanting an SEO infrastructure that grows with them — with proper architecture, internal linking, and category structure from the start.
Stores With High Ad Dependency
Stores spending heavily on Google Shopping and Meta Ads but generating almost no organic traffic — SEO builds an independent channel so revenue isn’t 100% dependent on paid spend.
Common Questions
Answered
Questions ecommerce store owners ask most often — including the Google Shopping ads question and what to do about frequently changing inventory.
Ads stop generating traffic the moment you stop spending. Ecommerce SEO builds a compounding organic channel that generates sales even when your ad budget is paused. Stores that invest in both benefit from paid visibility for immediate sales and organic visibility for long-term, cost-efficient revenue growth that doesn’t increase linearly with spend.
Both matter, but category pages typically drive the most ecommerce SEO traffic because they target broader commercial keywords with higher search volume. Product pages rank for specific model searches and convert at higher rates. The best ecommerce SEO strategy prioritises category pages first, then optimises product pages to capture long-tail and exact-match searches.
Yes — ecommerce SEO strategies can fully adapt to inventory changes. Category pages maintain their rankings regardless of which individual products are in stock. Out-of-stock product pages are handled with redirect or retention strategies rather than being deleted. Seasonal products are managed with consistent URL structures. Frequent catalog changes are a normal part of ecommerce SEO management.
Ideally yes — unique product descriptions help each page rank for its own keyword variations and reduce duplicate content issues. In practice, the priority is given to high-value, high-traffic products first. For large catalogs, a tiered approach focuses effort where the revenue opportunity is greatest rather than attempting to rewrite every product simultaneously.
Most stores begin seeing measurable improvements within 2–4 months, depending on competition, current site health, and catalog size. Technical fixes often show faster results as Google recrawls and reindexes corrected pages. Content and authority improvements compound over time — making ecommerce SEO an investment that delivers increasing returns the longer it runs.
In direct competition on generic terms, large retailers are difficult to beat. But niche and long-tail product searches are where smaller stores can consistently outrank Amazon — with more specific, better-written content and stronger topical relevance for their category. The strategy focuses on the terms where you can realistically win and build from there.
Build an Organic Channel
Your Store Can Depend On
Book a free strategy call and I’ll review your store, identify your biggest SEO opportunities, and outline exactly what it would take to generate consistent organic sales from search.
