More content on your website doesn't necessarily equate to better rankings. Producing one piece of content after another in the hope that they will perform well in search engine results and get ranking is an approach that often turns out to be counterproductive.

About 6 million blog posts are published every day. Unless you take a strategic approach to content creation, you are only adding to the noise.

Accumulating content on your website without a content strategy to guide it only hampers SEO rather than giving it a boost. Increased numbers of webpages that provide no real business value only end up bloating up your website and bringing down its overall authority, thus negatively impacting SEO.

Defining What Value-Adding Content Really Means

If a piece of content has been on your website for more than six months and drives no meaningful traffic, if it has no internal or external backlinks, and if it doesn't rank organically for any of the keywords it targets, then it doesn't add any real value to your website. Such content ideally requires remedial action to ensure it doesn't end up adding to your website's bloat.

There are several options to choose from when deciding the corrective action for such pages: deleting them, non-indexing them, redirecting them, and updating them.

A content audit can help you identify the pages that require remedial action and also formulate a plan of action to deal with them. It can align your existing content with your long-term strategy, bringing you one step closer to the elusive hockey stick growth.

This article will help you conduct an effective audit of your content to help you derive the value from it.

Conducting an Audit of Your Content

The word "audit" is sufficient to send shivers across any content team. It paints a bleak picture of being surrounded by spreadsheets and getting buried under tons of data. But it doesn't have to be that way.

All you need to do is understand the concepts behind conducting a content audit and follow through with some simple steps to unlock the power of your existing content.

Step 1: Collect the data

The first step in conducting a content audit is taking stock of what you have. That involves gathering data about the content you have on your website, including landing pages and blog posts.

If you don't have an extensive website, you can manually collect the data and enter it to a content audit spreadsheet base on your sitemap. Otherwise, you can use Google search console or tools such as Screaming Frog to give you a comprehensive overview of all your webpages.

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Four Steps for Conducting an Efficient Content Audit and Deriving the Most Value From Your Content

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

image of Rahul Varshneya

Rahul Varshneya is a co-founder and the president of digital marketing agency CurveBreak.

LinkedIn: Rahul Varshneya