Why most stores lose the organic game
Most ecommerce sites have the same problems: product pages with thin manufacturer descriptions, category pages with no content, duplicate URLs from filters and variants, and zero schema markup. Google can't rank what it can't understand — and buyers can't find what Google doesn't rank.
The opportunity: product keywords like "best running shoes for flat feet" have buying intent built in. Rank for them once, and they convert for years without ad spend.
What's included in my Ecommerce SEO service
1. Technical SEO & site architecture
- Full crawl audit — index bloat, duplicate content, broken links
- Faceted navigation & filter URL cleanup
- Site structure that flows authority to money pages
- Core Web Vitals & page speed fixes
2. Product & category page optimization
- Keyword mapping — every page targets a real search term
- Rewritten product descriptions that rank and sell
- Category page content that captures broad keywords
- Image optimization & alt text at scale
3. Product schema & rich results
- Product, Review, Offer & Breadcrumb schema
- Star ratings and prices showing directly in Google results
- Merchant listings eligibility for free Google Shopping placement
4. Keyword & competitor strategy
- Competitor gap analysis — keywords they rank for and you don't
- Buying-intent keyword research for every collection
- Content plan for buying guides that feed product pages
What results look like
One US store owner saw organic sales grow 3× after a product page overhaul and technical cleanup. Read the ecommerce case study →
Frequently asked questions
Which platforms do you work with?
Shopify and WooCommerce most often, plus BigCommerce and custom builds. The SEO principles are the same — only the implementation details change.
How long until I see more organic sales?
Technical fixes often show impact within 4–8 weeks. Meaningful revenue growth from new rankings typically lands in the 3–6 month window, depending on your niche's competition.
My store has thousands of products — can you handle that?
Yes. At scale, the game is templates and prioritization: fix the patterns that affect every page, then hand-optimize the 20% of products that drive 80% of revenue.