Content Pruning
Content pruning is the strategic process of removing, consolidating, or redirecting underperforming, duplicate, or outdated content to improve a site's overall search quality and topical authority.
Content pruning is the strategic process of removing, consolidating, or redirecting underperforming, duplicate, or outdated content to improve a site's overall search quality and topical authority.
Why It Matters
Over time, blogs accumulate zero-traffic pages, overlapping topics, and outdated information. These pages dilute topical authority, waste crawl budget, and confuse search engines evaluating your expertise. In the AI search era, LLMs assess site-wide content quality when deciding whether to cite a source—low-quality pages can reduce your AI visibility even if your best content is excellent.
Pruning Criteria
| Criterion | Description | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Zero traffic | No organic visits for 6+ months | Delete or merge into a stronger page |
| Keyword cannibalization | Multiple pages targeting the same keyword | Consolidate into one, 301-redirect the rest |
| Outdated information | Inaccurate data or facts | Update if possible, delete if not |
| Thin content | Pages under 200–300 words with little value | Expand or merge into related content |
| Duplicate content | Substantial overlap with another page | Choose the canonical, redirect or delete duplicates |
Execution Process
- Content inventory: Collect URL, organic traffic, keyword rankings, publish date, and backlink count for every page.
- Classify: Sort each page into Keep, Update, Merge, or Remove.
- Merge: Incorporate key content into the canonical page and set 301 redirects from the original URLs.
- Remove: Delete target pages, preserving link equity via 301 redirects where external backlinks exist.
- Request reindexing: Submit changed URLs through Google Search Console.
- Monitor: Track site-wide traffic and ranking changes for 2–4 weeks post-pruning.
Best Practices
- Check backlinks first: Never delete a page with external links without setting a 301 redirect to preserve link equity.
- Prune in small batches: Deleting hundreds of pages at once can cause volatile ranking swings. Work in small batches and observe impact.
- Protect seasonal content: Pages with low current traffic may spike during seasonal demand—exclude these from pruning.
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