Illustration of a document with a magnifying glass and the letters 'SEO' inside it, symbolizing search engine optimization.

Organic Growth

Abstract geometric pattern with angular shapes in a grid layout, resembling stylized letters, in maroon color on a light background.
Graph displaying average organic traffic trend over 5 years, with a notable upward trajectory, marked weekly. Metrics like average impressions and paid traffic are unchecked.

Fireberry

Graph showing average organic traffic trends over 5 years with a peak and decline.

TestGorilla

Line graph displaying average organic traffic increase over 5 years, with significant growth after April 2024, reaching over 600 visits.

Allwear

Graph of average organic traffic over five years with increase shown by rising orange line.

Eleven

Graph showing average organic traffic over a 5-year period with a significant increase in 2023 leading to a peak in 2024. Options for time ranges like 1M, 6M, 1Y, and categories like URL Rating and paid traffic are available.

Originality.ai

Graph showing average organic traffic over five years with peaks and declines, labeled in weekly intervals with a selected metric checkbox.

Foundr

Graph showing average organic traffic over time with an increasing trend from November 2022 to May 2024, displayed in orange. The graph is set to a 5-year view with weekly intervals. Various metrics such as URL rating and impressions are available but not selected.

Connecteam

Graph showing average organic traffic over five years, with significant growth from early 2023 to mid-2024. Axes display traffic on the vertical and time on the horizontal.

Djust

Graph showing average organic traffic over a 5-year period with a notable increase from 2022 to 2024.

PureGym

Great Content Does More Than Tick a Few Boxes

Whether it’s for SEO-friendly blog content, thought leadership on LinkedIn, or detailed and insightful lead magnets, I capture the audience’s imagination, putting myself in their shoes, solving their pain points, and helping them achieve their goals.

I write for the user first and the Search overlords second. Why? Because focusing on user intent is the best way to achieve Search results anyway, as you can see from these results!