The Allocation Argument. E-Commerce SEO
Blog Traffic vs Category Traffic: Where E-Commerce Brands Should Actually Invest
There is an allocation error hiding inside most e-commerce content budgets, and it is expensive. Ask a store owner where their SEO effort goes and the answer is almost always the blog: publishing schedules, topic calendars, freelance writers. Ask where their organic revenue comes from and the answer, once you actually attribute it, is category and product pages, usually by an enormous margin.
Across the 30 e-commerce SEO strategies I audited last year, 22 stores put the majority of their content effort into blogging while their category pages sat as bare product grids with a title tag. Meanwhile the commercial pages, roughly 6 percent of most sites’ indexed content, produced around 79 percent of organic conversions. The budget and the revenue were pointed in opposite directions.
Why the Blog Gets Overfunded
Three reasons, all understandable. Blog content is easy to commission: you can brief a writer today. Category page work is cross-functional: it needs SEO, copy, design, and dev cooperation, so it stalls. And blog metrics flatter: informational keywords have big volumes, so traffic charts rise, dashboards look healthy, and nobody asks the conversion question. Activity substitutes for outcome.
“Your blog builds the audience. Your category pages bank the revenue. Most stores fund the first like a business and the second like an afterthought.”
Ram Kr Shukla, SEO and Growth Consultant
What the Numbers Say, Side by Side
The Category-First Playbook
The Reallocation, Practically
If you currently spend 80 percent of content effort on the blog, flip to roughly 60 percent commercial and 40 percent blog for two quarters. Do not stop blogging entirely: the informational layer feeds the email list, earns the links, and increasingly feeds AI assistant citations. This is a rebalance, not an abandonment. One client made exactly this shift and grew category impressions 60 percent in two months without publishing a single new blog post, purely from finally investing in the pages that sell.
Want the allocation audit for your store?
I will map your content spend against your actual organic revenue by page type, and show you precisely how far your budget and your income have drifted apart.
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