Resources

Thoughts from the SearchPilot team

Getting started

A lot of our writing is based on lessons learned running SEO tests. If you're new here, you might want to read more about how SEO A/B testing works before you get started.

We also publish a lot of SEO A/B testing case studies that you can opt to receive by email every other week if you wish.

How to write a strong SEO hypothesis

Strong SEO hypotheses are founded on the three levers we can pull to influence organic traffic: Improving existing rankings, ranking for more keywords, and improving organic click-through-rates (CTRs). This blog post will talk you through our process for writing SEO hypotheses to help you improve your SEO testing practice.

Emily Potter

12 min read

SearchPilot is carbon neutral and supporting the path to net zero

SearchPilot is carbon neutral. We have bought high quality permanent carbon removal for our entire emissions throughout our supply chain. We are also on a path to net zero.

Will Critchlow

4 min read

What your C-suite team needs to know about SEO tests

Your C-suite should know that SEO is changing, and effective teams running SEO for large websites are investing heavily in testing capabilities. The investment required to do it well is significant, but the results are powerful.

Will Critchlow

9 min read

8 losing SEO tests

Losing tests can be just as important as winning tests in the overall effectiveness of an SEO program. A crucial part of the return on investment comes from the ability to try more things, and to try bolder things, safe in the knowledge that you won’t roll out losers. We’re often asked about it, so I put together this resource: some needed sensitive controlled A/B testing to detect, some of the impacts were so large, you might never want to touch a title tag without testing again!

Craig Bradford

4 min read

7 winning SEO tests

Something we are very often asked during the sales process is what are some examples of winning tests?. It comes up so often that I put together a resource listing some interesting winning tests - some predictable, some less so, ranging from modest uplifts that you really need to be running a statistical testing program to be sure worked to some stonking winners where it’s great to be able to know just how good they were.

Craig Bradford

2 min read

Predicting the decline of Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP)

Accelerated Mobile Pages (AMP) were controversial from the outset. Over time, many of the architectural issues were resolved, and the platform that remained, while still closely tied to Google, did less to encourage the most egregiously intimate integrations, but I have to admit to being happy to be able to predict the end of standalone AMP versions sitting alongside regular web pages.

Will Critchlow

5 min read

SEO is not zero sum

I have regularly heard people say that SEO is zero sum and it seems that almost half the industry thinks that’s true. What I believe people mean by it in an SEO context is that every time you move up in rankings for a particular search phrase, other websites necessarily must move down to make space for you.

This is intuitive, but I believe it’s wrong.

Will Critchlow

6 min read

How to tell good SEO advice from bad

The quality of SEO advice really matters in the real world, because steps back in performance are at the root of a lot of underperforming SEO initiatives and as SEO gets harder it also gets more confusing, and harder to tell the good from the bad. In this post I share my “surprisinginess / riskiness” framework for evaluating what to do with different kinds of SEO advice.

Will Critchlow

6 min read

How to test internal links for SEO

Someone born in the year I started Distilled would be learning to drive in the next year, and I still don’t really understand internal linking. I don’t think I’m alone. So we need to test! The big difference between regular on-page tests and internal linking tests is that the hypothesis can be about effects on the page where you are making the change (the “source” of the link) and on the pages receiving the new links (the “destination” of the links).

Will Critchlow

6 min read

Does Google rewriting titles prevent us from testing them for SEO impact?

Title tag testing still works even with Google rewriting many page titles for display in the search results. Since the majority of titles are not substantially rewritten, and title tag changes are among our most consistently detected and largest impact tests, it would be worth continuing to run title tag experiments even at much higher levels of rewriting than we see in the wild today.

Will Critchlow

5 min read
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