Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own.
When e-commerce brands come to me saying organic traffic has flatlined, the problem is seldom the homepage or the blog. It’s the product pages. These pages should be doing the heaviest lifting in search — they carry purchase intent, they match long-tail queries and they’re the closest thing to a conversion your SEO strategy can deliver. But most e-commerce brands treat them as an afterthought.
Your product pages are your most valuable SEO real estate — treat them that way. Most founders pour their SEO energy into blog content and homepage optimization while their product pages sit with thin copy, no structure and zero differentiation from every other retailer selling the same item. Google’s algorithm can tell the difference between a product page that adds value and one that exists purely to hold an “Add to Cart” button. If your product pages aren’t pulling their weight in organic search, one or more of these five mistakes is likely the reason.
The five product page mistakes that keep showing up
Copying the manufacturer’s product description word for word. This is the most common mistake I see — and the one business owners are least aware of. The brand uses the exact same description the manufacturer provides, the same text appearing on every other retailer’s site selling that item. Sometimes it’s done out of convenience. Sometimes, founders don’t realize it’s a problem.
Google sees hundreds of pages with identical copy and has to decide which one to rank. If you’re not the manufacturer’s own site, that page is almost never yours. You’re handing your organic visibility to Amazon or whoever carries a higher domain authority. The fix is straightforward. Rewrite every product description in your brand’s voice. Add details the manufacturer doesn’t include — how the product feels, who it’s for, what problems it solves. Even 100-150 words of original copy changes the equation entirely.
Skipping product schema markup entirely. Search for one of your products on Google and look at what shows up. If the result is a plain blue link with no price, no star rating and no availability status, you’re missing product schema. Meanwhile, your competitors are showing rich results with review counts, pricing and stock information right in the search listing.
Rich results earn significantly higher click-through rates than plain listings. Without product schema, you’re leaving clicks on the table even when you do rank. If you’re on Shopify or WooCommerce, most SEO apps handle schema automatically — but many brands never verify that it’s rendering correctly. Run your product URLs through Google’s Rich Results Test before assuming everything is working.
Letting keyword cannibalization run wild across product variations. You sell the same shoe in eight colors. Each color has its own URL with a nearly identical page title, meta description and body copy. Google doesn’t know which one to rank, so it rotates between them — or ranks none of them well.
Instead of building authority on one strong page, the brand is splitting ranking signals across eight weak ones. This is especially common with apparel, accessories and any product with multiple sizes, colors or configurations. Pick a primary product page and use canonical tags to point variations back to it. Or consolidate all variations onto a single URL with a selector for color and size. One strong URL per product will always outperform eight pages competing against each other.
Treating out-of-stock product pages as dead ends. A product sells out or gets discontinued. The brand either deletes the page entirely — creating a 404 error — or leaves it live with no next step for the visitor. Either way, the SEO value that page built over time disappears. Backlinks, ranking history and internal link equity all vanish or stall.
If a product page has been ranking and earning traffic for months, deleting it throws away all of that accumulated authority. And if the page stays live but offers the customer nothing, they bounce — and Google notices. If the product is temporarily out of stock, keep the page live with a “notify me when it’s back” option and leave the schema markup in place. If it’s permanently discontinued, 301 redirect the URL to the most relevant replacement product or category page. Never let a ranking URL die without a plan for where that value goes next.
Building thin category pages with nothing but a product grid. Open your category pages right now and look at them honestly. If all you see is a title and a grid of product thumbnails with no introductory copy, no internal links to related categories and no buying guidance, you have a problem.
Category pages often carry more ranking potential than individual product pages because they target broader, higher-volume keywords like “men’s running shoes” or “organic skincare.” But Google needs content to understand what the page is about. A grid of product images with no supporting text gives it almost nothing to work with. Add 150-300 words of original, useful copy above or below the product grid. Include internal links to subcategories or related collections. Answer the question a first-time visitor would have — what’s here and why should they care. This small addition can unlock ranking potential that was sitting there the entire time.
These fixes aren’t expensive — but ignoring them is
None of these are obscure technical problems that require a six-figure budget. They’re overlooked fundamentals that compound quietly over time. Every month, a product page sits with duplicate copy or missing schema is another month of organic traffic and revenue going to a competitor. The encouraging part is that most e-commerce brands are sitting on untapped SEO value in their existing catalog. The fix doesn’t start with building something new. It starts with taking a hard look at what’s already there.
When e-commerce brands come to me saying organic traffic has flatlined, the problem is seldom the homepage or the blog. It’s the product pages. These pages should be doing the heaviest lifting in search — they carry purchase intent, they match long-tail queries and they’re the closest thing to a conversion your SEO strategy can deliver. But most e-commerce brands treat them as an afterthought.
Your product pages are your most valuable SEO real estate — treat them that way. Most founders pour their SEO energy into blog content and homepage optimization while their product pages sit with thin copy, no structure and zero differentiation from every other retailer selling the same item. Google’s algorithm can tell the difference between a product page that adds value and one that exists purely to hold an “Add to Cart” button. If your product pages aren’t pulling their weight in organic search, one or more of these five mistakes is likely the reason.
The five product page mistakes that keep showing up
Copying the manufacturer’s product description word for word. This is the most common mistake I see — and the one business owners are least aware of. The brand uses the exact same description the manufacturer provides, the same text appearing on every other retailer’s site selling that item. Sometimes it’s done out of convenience. Sometimes, founders don’t realize it’s a problem.
