Google’s John Mueller mentioned on Twitter “extra content material undoubtedly doesn’t imply extra visitors.” That means, writing extra content material doesn’t all the time translate to extra visitors, espesially from Google Search.
Right here is the tweet inside context:
No, extra content material undoubtedly doesn’t imply extra visitors.
— 🐐 John 🐐 (@JohnMu) February 14, 2022
I can relate, creating extra content material, doesn’t all the time translate to extra visitors. Generally websites push out dangerous or spammy content material and that will not all the time result in extra visitors. However usually, should you write high quality and helpful content material usually, it’s extra probably which you can produce extra visitors from extra content material. Not all the time however usually.
John Mueller has mentioned this earlier than, saying Simply placing out extra content material would not essentially make a website higher. He additionally mentioned content material frequency shouldn’t be a rating issue.
That is well timed, in that almost every week in the past, I hit my 30,000th article on this website:
As we speak I revealed my 30,000th public article on @seroundtable ✍️ should you add within the 8,590 on @sengineland and ~1,136 on @sewatch that comes out to only below 40,000 articles on search pic.twitter.com/yyzTo5xkbn
— Barry Schwartz (@rustybrick) February 8, 2022
John additionally added this:
Not essentially. Does writing 4 “good high quality” pages per day make a e book a best-seller? If that was all it took, all books can be best-sellers, and they might all be the identical size.
— 🐐 John 🐐 (@JohnMu) February 13, 2022
No, simply writing doesn’t all the time translate to extra content material.
Discussion board dialogue at Twitter.