A while back I made a post about a new technique I was using to bulk post shop-like pages to my Mens Underwear Site. You can refresh your memories here.
I promised then to come back and do a follow up re: how the pages have performed. I think the results can safely be described as “mixed”. I’m really happy to report that Google seems to consider them adequately unique to keep in the index and rank them well. As with all site pages some seem to be performing better than others in terms of rankings which I’ve put down to: -
1. Competitiveness of search terms / cleverness with which I identified groups in the merchant feed niche enough to rank and popular enough to actually get me a bit of traffic!
2. The bloody mindedness of Google which often behaves oddly when ranking site pages / determining relevance. Particularly with newer sites such as mine. Old posts often start performing months after they have been put up for reasons best known to the G-meister.
3. The fact that they were probably not targeted in the same way as they might have been had I used my instinct / market info about what styles and collections would sell well.
Conclusions?
I think the most interesting thing to have come out of that particular exercise for me was less about creating blog posts en-mass and more about landing page structure. Having monitored the performance of those pages I now realise they are far more likely to convert traffic to a sale and are also good enough to send PPC to – great if there’s a hot product that’s had media coverage or is simply selling well. That is a real positive and has resulted in me starting to use a more refined template based upon the one I used in my test for any blog content that goes up for the site. It takes a little longer to create the pages by hand, but they are way more effective.
Will I be using bulk posting going forward? At this stage, no. Not because it wasn’t great at creating nice looking pages in bulk, but because I felt I was putting my effort into something that ended up being very “hit and miss” in nature. I think my quest to find ways to improve my user experience and get lots of useful content up there in the SERPS without the “long and laborious” manual process of posting up content will have to focus elsewhere.
The other issue is that I’m in a quandry about the effectiveness of churning out blog post after blog post generally. I’m increasingly finding that the posts are very hit and miss to get rankings for (probably due to the blog structure). Although I’m sure writing lots of blog content is beneficial because it keeps the site fresh, I’m currently having a good think about whether or not I should divert this time into some other activities that might have the same effect with less effort. Currently I spend 2 hours most days engaged in this, which seems like an awful big chunk of time.
As always, my quest to make sure my time is spent most effectively for best results goes on!









