SEO for online retailers is a discipline built around the specific architecture of ecommerce sites. A clothing brand with 2,000 SKUs faces fundamentally different SEO challenges than a local law firm or a B2B software company. The strategies that work for those businesses don't transfer cleanly to retail.
At its core, ecommerce SEO focuses on three areas:
- Product page optimization: Titles, descriptions, schema markup, image alt text, and URL structure — all tuned to match how buyers search at the moment they're ready to purchase.
- Category page optimization: Category pages are often the highest-value pages on a retail site. They rank for broader, high-volume terms and funnel visitors to relevant products. Most online retailers underinvest in these.
- Technical site health: Faceted navigation, duplicate content from product variants, crawl budget management, site speed, and Core Web Vitals. These issues compound with scale — a 10,000-product catalog can have tens of thousands of duplicate or near-duplicate URLs if left unmanaged.
Beyond those three pillars, ecommerce SEO also addresses internal linking strategy (how product and category pages pass authority to each other), structured data for rich results like product ratings and price ranges in search, and content that supports the buying journey without cannibalizing transactional pages.
One distinction worth making early: ecommerce SEO is about organic search on Google and Bing — the unpaid results. It does not include Google Shopping ads, Performance Max campaigns, or any other paid channel, even though those appear in the same search results page.