I had just pitched my crazy-sounding plan to a potential client during a sales call...

After 15 seconds of silence, he finally said: "You're kidding me, right...? So you're telling me if I delete 80% of my content, I'll actually get more organic traffic? Are you insane?"

That wasn't the first time I'd gotten that kind of response.

Having been in the search engine optimization (SEO) world for 6+ years now, I've been called just about every synonym for "crazy" you can find in the thesaurus. Most people don't like hearing that their non-SEO-focused content is actually hurting them from an organic-traffic standpoint.

But here's what they don't realize: It has been proven—time and again—that you can generate more organic traffic every month with just a handful of SEO-focused posts than you can with tons of nonoptimized posts.

(Here's a great case study from Ahrefs that shows this is true.)

An example: after removing and redirecting 195 blog posts (more on how to do this in a minute), my friends at ReputationManagement.com generated close to a 100% increase in organic traffic in just five months.

Another example: A client's monthly organic traffic increased from 20k to 120k in 19 months after removing over 100 blog posts, and focusing only on SEO content and building links.

So, if you have a lot of unoptimized posts on your blog and you're thinking of doing a content audit, this article is for you.

Here's the exact process I use.

My Simple Six-Step Content Audit Process

Step 1: Compile a spreadsheet with every post on your site

You can put this together manually, but a tool like Screaming Frog makes the process much easier.

(Note: I'm not affiliated with Screaming Frog. It's just my favorite tool for technical SEO shenanigans.)

Simply plug in your URL and click start, then Screaming Frog will crawl your site—returning every associated URL it finds.

Once it's done crawling your site, apply an HTML filter and export the results as a .csv.

You'll end up with a list of all of your pages and posts; you can then easily import that information into Google Sheets.

Step 2: Get critical metrics for each URL

Now, it's time to find out the following:

  • How many pageviews each URL got in the past 28 days
  • How many organic clicks each URL got in the past 28 days
  • How many referring domains and backlinks each URL has

We'll use Google Analytics and Google Search Console to get those numbers.

A. Finding Pageviews for the Past 28 Days

You've probably done this 1,000 times by now; it's pretty straightforward.

Just head to Google Analytics then click Behavior, Site Content, and All Pages.

Scroll to the bottom of the report and change Show Rows to show all URLs on your site, then export as a .csv so you can import the report into Google Sheets as a new sheet.

B. Finding Referring Domains, Backlinks, and Clicks from the Past 28 Days

To find link data, head to Search Console and click Links then More under External Links.

Export the report as a .csv and import it into Google Sheets as a new sheet.

Now, we're also going to figure out how many organic clicks each URL has generated over the past 28 days.

To do that, click on the Performance Report in Google Search Console, then click Pages.

Export this table as a .csv and add it to your Google Sheet as a new sheet.

C. Getting All That Data on the Same Sheet

The easiest way to match all the traffic, click, and backlink data with your URLs (other than using a Vlookup) is sorting the column with your URLs by alphabetical order in each sheet.

Then, you can just copy/paste traffic and link data into your main sheet once you've added the appropriate columns.

Step 3: Determine which posts to keep

Here's where things get interesting...

You have all the data you need; now you have to decide which posts to kill.

This can be a bit tricky...

  • Some of your content will get consistent pageviews but no organic clicks.
  • Some of your content will get consistent conversions but not many organic clicks or pageviews.
  • And some of your content will get tons of organic clicks but few conversions.

How do you determine which pages to keep (knowing that nonoptimized pages can hurt you from an SEO standpoint)?

Here's the exact process I use to navigate this issue based on several massive, successful content audits I've done for clients.

A. Keep all posts that generate consistent organic clicks

Based on your traffic numbers, determine a cut-off point for the number of clicks a post needs to stay alive.

An example: A post with 10 clicks per month should stay alive if you get a few hundred visitors per month, but it should die if you get a few thousand visitors per month.

Just make a judgement call here.

B. Tell Google to ignore important posts that don't generate clicks but do generate pageviews or conversions

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How to Perform a Content Audit That Skyrockets Your Organic Traffic

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Hunter Branch

Hunter Branch is an SEO coach and the founder of Rank Tree, a content marketing and SEO blog dedicated to teaching small businesses and brands how to create content that generates traffic and leads from Google.

LinkedIn: Hunter Branch

Twitter: @ranktree