Course → Module 8: Entity-First Content Strategy
Session 7 of 7

More Content Is Not Better Content

Many businesses operate under the assumption that more content means more traffic. Publish daily. Cover every keyword. Fill the blog. The result, after two years, is often 200 blog posts where 180 get zero traffic and the remaining 20 carry all the weight.

Those 180 zero-traffic pages are not neutral. They actively harm your entity's topical authority. Google evaluates your site as a whole. A site with 200 pages where 90% are thin or off-topic looks like a low-quality, unfocused entity. A site with 50 pages of concentrated, high-quality content on a clear topic looks like an authority.

Content pruning is not deleting content. It is removing noise so that your signal is clearer. Fewer, stronger pages build more entity authority than a large pile of weak ones.

Identifying Content for Pruning

Not every low-traffic page should be pruned. Some pages serve important functions (legal pages, contact pages) regardless of traffic. The pruning decision depends on multiple factors.

Factor Keep Prune
Traffic (last 12 months) Any meaningful traffic or impressions Zero sessions and zero impressions
Topical relevance On-entity or adjacent topic Off-entity, unrelated to core expertise
Content quality Substantive, accurate, well-written Thin (under 300 words), outdated, or factually wrong
Backlinks Has external links pointing to it No backlinks, no external references
Duplication Unique angle or coverage Substantially overlaps another page on your site
Conversion value Generates leads or supports the sales process No conversion path, no business purpose

The Four Pruning Actions

For each page you identify as a pruning candidate, choose one of four actions:

graph TD A["Page identified for pruning"] --> D{"Decision"} D -->|Still relevant, just outdated| U["Update: Rewrite with current info"] D -->|Overlaps another page| C["Consolidate: Merge into the stronger page"] D -->|Weak version of a topic covered better elsewhere| R["Redirect: 301 to the better page"] D -->|Off-topic and no value| N["Remove: Noindex or delete"] style U fill:#222221,stroke:#6b8f71,color:#ede9e3 style C fill:#222221,stroke:#c8a882,color:#ede9e3 style R fill:#222221,stroke:#8a8478,color:#ede9e3 style N fill:#222221,stroke:#c47a5a,color:#ede9e3

Update is the best option when the topic is on-entity but the content is stale. A 2021 article about "Google My Business optimization" is still topically relevant but needs updating to reflect the current "Google Business Profile" name and features.

Consolidate works when you have two or more pages covering the same subtopic. Merge the best content from both into one stronger page and redirect the other.

Redirect applies when you have a weak page and a strong page on the same topic. The weak page's URL gets a 301 redirect to the strong page, transferring any link equity.

Remove is the last resort. Use it for content that is off-topic, irredeemably thin, or actively harmful (outdated technical advice, for example). Either add a noindex meta tag or delete the page entirely and return a 410 (Gone) status.

The Pruning Process

Step Action Tool
1 Export all pages from Google Search Console (Pages report) GSC
2 Sort by clicks (ascending) to find zero-traffic pages Spreadsheet
3 For each zero-traffic page, check backlinks GSC Links report or Ahrefs/Moz
4 Classify each page: update, consolidate, redirect, or remove Manual review
5 Execute decisions in batches (10 to 20 pages per week) CMS + .htaccess for redirects
6 Monitor GSC for indexing changes over 4 to 8 weeks GSC

When to Prune

Content pruning should happen quarterly, aligned with your entity infrastructure maintenance calendar from Module 7. Each quarter, review your lowest-performing pages and apply the four-action framework.

Do not prune aggressively in a single session. Large-scale content removal can temporarily confuse Google's crawlers. Process 10 to 20 pages per week over several weeks rather than deleting 100 pages overnight.

Measuring Pruning Impact

After pruning, track these metrics over 8 to 12 weeks:

Pruning feels like losing content. In practice, it is concentrating authority. Removing 50 weak pages can make your remaining 50 pages rank better than all 100 did together.

Further Reading

Assignment

Export your pages from Google Search Console. Identify the 10 lowest-traffic pages. For each, evaluate against the pruning criteria (topical relevance, quality, backlinks, duplication, conversion value). Assign one of the four actions: update, consolidate, redirect, or remove. Execute at least 3 of those decisions this week. Track the metrics for the next 8 weeks.