category architecture, faceted navigation, product schema, and content for ecommerce sites that want compounding traffic.
What Ecommerce SEO actually means — and where most teams stop short
When clients come to me asking for Ecommerce SEO, the conversation usually starts with the deliverable — keywords, reports, dashboards, ad accounts. But every engagement I’ve run across SEO for the last seven years has taught the same lesson: Ecommerce SEO only pays back when it’s wired to a real business outcome. Not impressions. Not engagement. Booked calls, qualified leads, transactions, lifetime value.
That framing changes everything downstream. The audit is sharper. The plan is shorter. The KPIs are fewer. And the conversation a quarter in is about money, not metrics.
On this page I lay out how Ecommerce SEO works in my engagements — the scope, the process, the typical outcomes, and the FAQs that come up before we sign. If anything is unclear, the fastest way to get an answer is to book a 30-minute strategy call or message me on WhatsApp.
What’s included in a Ecommerce SEO engagement
How a typical Ecommerce SEO engagement runs
Every engagement runs through the same four-phase rhythm. The phases compress or expand to suit the project, but the order doesn’t change.
- Audit. Inside the first two weeks I produce a written audit — what’s working, what’s broken, and what’s a quick win. For paid accounts this includes account-structure review, conversion-tracking validation, and a wasted-spend pass. For SEO it includes crawl, content, links and analytics. You read it before we touch anything live.
- Plan. A short, dated plan with three things: the priorities for the next 90 days, the metric we’re moving, and the work I’ll do each week to move it. No 40-page strategy docs — a one-page plan you can actually act on.
- Execute. Weekly cycles. New work goes in. Test results come out. A short note on Friday summarising what shipped, what we learned, and what’s next.
- Review & scale. Every 30 days we sit on a longer call — what moved, what didn’t, where to put the next 30 days’ attention. Scaling decisions are made here, not on a hunch midweek.
The principles that govern every Ecommerce SEO decision
Ecommerce SEO is full of opinions. These are the ones I anchor to, because they’ve held up across seven years of campaigns, audits and accounts.
- Measure first, optimise second. If tracking is wrong, every other decision is wrong with it. Step one of every engagement is fixing measurement.
- Pursue revenue, not vanity. Rankings, impressions, CTRs — useful as diagnostics, never as goals. The goal is always money or a money-shaped proxy.
- Concentrate budget on what works. Most accounts have 5 things doing 80% of the work and 50 things doing nothing. Kill the long tail. Compound on the head.
- Write for the human first, the algorithm second. Real copy outranks SEO copy, real creative outperforms templated creative. Always.
- Document everything. Every test, every change, every assumption. You leave with a paper trail you can run yourself.
What success looks like — and how long it takes
Honest timelines, based on my own engagements:
- Weeks 1–4. Quick wins from tracking fixes, wasted-spend cuts and low-hanging optimisations. Most accounts see a measurable lift here even before strategic work lands.
- Months 2–3. The strategic work compounds. New campaigns, new content, new creative — and the first cohort of tests turning into shipped changes.
- Months 4–6. The system starts running itself. Reporting tells the story. Decisions become smaller and faster.
- Beyond 6 months. Strategy is now about scaling — new markets, new channels, new offers. Most of my long-running clients sit here.
If you want a sense of what real outcomes look like, the case studies page documents real campaigns with real numbers.
Working with me on Ecommerce SEO
I’m a one-person consultancy. That means you get the senior person doing the work, not an account manager relaying instructions to a junior. It also means I take on a small number of engagements at any time — usually 5–8 active clients — to keep the work deep and the response time short.
Most engagements start with a 30-minute call. We talk about the business, the goals, what’s been tried, and what hasn’t worked. By the end of the call you’ll have a clear sense of whether I’m the right fit. If I’m not, I’ll usually know someone who is.
Frequently asked questions about Ecommerce SEO
Ready to start?
If you’re ready to talk about Ecommerce SEO — or just want to pressure-test what you’re currently doing — book a strategy call below. Calls are free, 30 minutes, and end with a recommendation either way.