Welcome to Month 8 of the LowFruits case study!
If you’re only joining me now, a quick reminder: I started a BBQ blog under a fresh domain name with no prior history last October.
Since then, I’ve been using LowFruits to find low-competition keywords.
The case study website reflects my typical website building system:
- Do good research
- Publish well-written content
- Provide a good user experience, so people stay and return to your site regularly
High DA and a strong backlink profile can help, but they’re not essential.
Before I dive into the case study developments, I want to know one thing:
Did You Survive the May Core Update?
I hope the May update to Google’s core algorithm did you some good.
(Or at least didn’t hurt you!)
How did Google’s May core algorithm update affect you? Let me know in the comments!
It’s been crazy for me and many of the people I know.
Yoyao of Niche Surfer and Mushifq of The Website Flip (whose newsletters everyone reading this case study should consider subscribing to) also had some of their sites hit. So did Alex of WP Eagle.
Fortunately, the case study site’s doing well, and so are the cash-cow websites in my portfolio.
I did have one website that was hit.
I bought an aged domain in May and published 75 articles. I had done everything by the book:
- Do your due diligence before purchasing the aged domain
- Republish the pages that have links with fresh content
- Don’t stray from the main site topic
Unfortunately, the site still tanked in the SERPs. The pages stayed indexed, but they’re nowhere to be found in the results.
Will it ever recover? Or will I need to 301-redirect to another domain to “reset” the algorithm?
It’s too early to tell.
This goes to show the nature of our game:
You win some, you lose some, and you never know which of your site(s) can get hit—and when.
Diversify, and don’t keep all of your eggs in one basket.
(Just don’t spread yourself too thin.)
Website Traffic Is Growing!
The case study site had 6,200 page views in May, and there are 2 reasons why.
When I decided to start a BBQ website, conventional wisdom and Google Trends suggested I should expect seasonality:
- People are more likely to barbecue food on weekends than on weekdays -> traffic would go up & down during the week
- They don’t call the summer “grilling season” for no reason -> the site would get the most visits from May to September
The assumptions have panned out so far.
In this game, you want a niche with as few surprises and unpredictability as possible.
Here are the total clicks and total impressions the site received from Google in May:
At first, I thought that the site had gotten a lift from the update (cue drumroll).
Then, I checked May’s Bing search traffic in Bing Webmaster Tools and saw an almost identical spike:
The spike wasn’t because of Google.
People are searching for answers to outdoor cooking questions during the weekends.
I combine Google Search Console and Bing Webmaster Tools for all my websites. If you notice drops or spikes, you can compare data and sanity-check your assumptions.
How I Handle Low-Quality Backlinks
I’m seeing some weirdness in the website’s Ahrefs backlinks profile.
In May, the site got nofollow backlinks from 36 websites with .in domain names.
These websites have the same layout and content. It looks like they crawl Alexa’s list of top 1M domains on the internet and display it in a Web 1.0 link directory-like format.
Other sites in my portfolio had links like these.
It’s hard to tell if it’s an automated crawler or a competitor trying to mess up your backlink profile.
Whatever it is, my solution is always twofold:
First, I reach out to the contact they provided on the “Remove Link” page and take a screenshot of it as proof.
Secondly, I go to Google Search Console’s Disavow Links tool and update my site’s disavow file.
These days, Google ignores bad links to your site. I’m not worried; even new websites get bad backlinks within weeks (likely due to spun content written by AI tools).
(For example, I have a three-year-old website in a highly competitive niche where people prefer to play dirty than compete fairly. The site’s disavow file contains 1,479 domains.)
LowFruits Tip of the Month
Did you know you can use LowFruits not only to search for keywords—but to create content outlines?
Say you’ve found a good keyword to compete for, like “how to flip a house with no money.”
Fire up the Keyword Finder and use that keyword as a seed keyword.
You will get at least a dozen ideas for your subheadings in the “All” tab and “Questions” tab.
When you get many results back—and they all look good—analyze them all.
Then, select the ones with the highest number of low fruits.
You’ll create an outline that sets you up to attract maximum organic traffic!
Metrics Over Time
Traffic
Time Period | May 1, 2022 – April 30, 2022 |
Monthly Pageviews | 6,200 |
Avg. Engagement Time | 0.46 s |
Engaged Sessions / User | 0.47 |
Pageviews / Published Post (PPP) | 65.26 |
Source: Google Analytics
Take a look at the traffic distribution:
The best thing about building a site with low-competition keywords is that organic traffic is distributed evenly across the pages.
This makes the website stable even as competitors and copycats come in, or Google changes its mind about the search intent and the best results.
Content
Rankings
Date Checked | June 10, 2022 |
Avg. Position (Google, USA, Mobile) | 12.17 |
Avg. Position (Google, USA, Desktop) | 9.21 |
Positions in Top 3 on SERPs | 29 (+4 Month-over-Month) |
Positions in 4-10 on SERPs | 21 (No Change Month-over-Month) |
Positions in 11-100 on SERPs | 12 (-6 Month-over-Month) |
Source: Ubersuggest
Earnings
Time Period | May 1, 2022 – May 31, 2022 |
Total Revenue Since Start of Site | $0 |
Total Revenue YTD (2021) | $0 |
Monthly Revenue | $0 Of which $0 from display adsOf which $0 from affiliate commissions |
Revenue / Published Post (RPP) | $0 |
Stay Tuned
I can’t believe it’s been eight months since I started this site!
Stay tuned for next month because it’s Month 9, and that’s when I will be revealing the case study site!
[ratemypost]