Home - Case Study - Case Study: How I Ranked a Website in 30–60 Days

Case Study: How I Ranked a Website in 30–60 Days

how i ranked a website in 30-60 days
Table of Contents

This is a real SEO story from my work in Asia: a small, under‑optimised website that went from “invisible” to visible in 30–60 days by fixing technical issues, aligning pages with search intent, tightening local SEO, and publishing a handful of strategic, experience‑based articles. I used AI tools like ChatGPTGeminiClaudePerplexity, and Copilot in AI mode to speed up research, outlines, and data checks—but every critical decision and final draft came from my 18+ years of hands‑on SEO.

how i ranked a website in 30-60 days

In this case study, I walk through exactly how I took a website from almost no non‑branded traffic to multiple page‑1 rankings in 30–60 days: quick technical cleanup, on‑page rewrites around intent, locally‑focused content clusters, smart internal linking, and a small amount of targeted link building—supported, but never replaced, by LLMs like ChatGPTGeminiClaude, and Perplexity for research and outline work. If you understand the limits of a 30–60 day window and use it as a jump‑start, not a miracle cure, this approach can work safely in 2026.

You can connect this case study to:

1. The Starting Point: A Quiet Site With Almost No Organic Visibility

This site looked “okay” at first glance: decent design, a few blog posts, basic service pages. But under the hood, it had all the problems I now expect to see when someone says:

“We’ve had this website for years, but we get almost no leads from Google.”

Key issues I found:

  • Technical problems
    • Important pages weren’t indexed.
    • Slow mobile load times.
    • Messy internal links and some 404s.
  • Weak on‑page SEO
    • Titles and headings didn’t match real search queries.
    • Thin content on high‑value service pages.
    • No LSI/semantic keyword coverage, no FAQs, no clear answers.
  • Local SEO gaps
    • Google Business Profile incomplete and underused.
    • NAP inconsistencies across website and profiles.
    • Few reviews and no strategy behind them.
  • No real content strategy
    • A couple of generic blog posts, but no cluster, no depth, no clear topics.

Before touching anything, I set realistic expectations based on [How Long Does SEO Take?](from your other cluster): 30–60 days for early movement, months for strong positions.

2. The 30–60 Day Plan: Focus, Not “Fix Everything”

You cannot “do everything” in 60 days. You have to choose. Here’s what I decided to focus on:

  1. Fix the worst technical blockers.
  2. Rewrite and optimise a small set of high‑impact pages.
  3. Build a mini content cluster around one core topic.
  4. Clean up local SEO basics (if relevant for the business).
  5. Earn a few strategic links/mentions to jump‑start authority.

I used ChatGPTGeminiClaude, and Perplexity in AI mode to:

  • Scan SERPs quickly and spot common questions.
  • Brainstorm topic ideas and semantic keyword variations.
  • Draft outline structures for pillar and supporting pages.

Then I used experience to decide what to cut, what to keep, and how to prioritise.

3. Week 1: Technical Triage and Indexing

In the first 7–10 days, I focused almost entirely on technical SEO and indexing:

  • Cleaned up obvious crawl errors and broken internal links.
  • Fixed or redirected problematic URLs.
  • Improved Core Web Vitals where there were clear quick wins (image compression, removing obvious bloat).
  • Submitted updated sitemaps and requested indexing for key pages.

This alone doesn’t magically rank a site, but if Google can’t see or trust your pages technically, nothing else matters. This matches the foundation I describe in My 18 Years in SEO: What Still Works in 2026.

4. Week 2–3: Rewriting a Few Key Pages Around Intent

Next, I picked a small number of high‑value pages—typically:

  • The home page.
  • 1–3 main service/location pages.
  • One “explainer” page that could act as a future pillar.

For each page, I:

  • Rewrote title tags and headings to match real queries and intent (not internal jargon).
  • Added clear, above‑the‑fold value propositions and CTAs.
  • Expanded content to actually answer the things people search for, using LSI/semantic keywords naturally.
  • Added FAQs and structured answers tailored to common questions and AI Overviewpatterns.

I might start with a rough outline from ChatGPT or Claude, then rewrite it completely in my voice and with local examples, sometimes cross‑checking SERPs via Gemini or Perplexity to avoid hallucinated ideas.

5. Week 3–4: Building a Small Content Cluster (Not a Blog Dump)

Instead of publishing random posts, I built a tight content cluster around one core topic where we had a realistic shot in 30–60 days.

Example structure:

  • 1 pillar: e.g., “SEO Services for [Country/City] – 2026 Guide.”
  • 3–5 supporting posts:
    • “How Long Does SEO Take in [Country]?”
    • “Common SEO Mistakes [Industry] Businesses Make.”
    • “Local SEO Basics for [City] Owners.”

Each article:

  • Answered a specific, narrow question.
  • Linked up to the pillar and across to siblings.
  • Used semantic/LSI keywords so LLMs could understand the topic fully.
  • Included local, real examples to signal experience and E‑E‑A‑T.

This mirrors how your VentoRich clusters are designed: education, local, mistakes, hiring/pricing, and now this “experience” cluster.

Alongside content, I:

  • Fixed and optimised the Google Business Profile (if local business).
  • Cleaned up NAP data in key directories.
  • Set up a simple review request process.
  • Identified a small number of relevant sites (local blogs, partners, industry resources) and got a few mentions/links.

I didn’t chase big, risky link schemes. I just needed to nudge the authority signals enough that when Google re‑evaluated the site after the technical and content changes, it would see a coherent story: “this business is real, locally grounded, and has some support.”

7. What Happened in 30–60 Days (Realistic Outcomes)

Within 30–60 days, I typically see one or more of these:

  • Many more pages properly indexed and crawled.
  • A clear rise in impressions for target queries.
  • Initial rankings in the top 20–30 for selected keywords.
  • Occasionally, page‑1 appearances for less competitive or long‑tail terms.
  • A visible bump in organic clicks, especially on brand‑plus‑keyword searches.

For this particular site, the pattern looked like:

  • Week 2–3: indexing improvements and impression growth.
  • Week 4–5: some target pages moved from “nowhere” to page 2–3 for long‑tail queries.
  • By around day 45–60: a couple of important phrases broke into page 1 (lower positions), plus a noticeable uptick in relevant inquiries.

Not a fairy tale, but enough to validate the direction and justify continuing with the broader 6–12‑month plan I talk about elsewhere.

8. What I Didn’t Do (And Why That Matters)

Just as important as what I did is what I refused to do in that 30–60 day window:

  • I didn’t spin up thousands of AI articles hoping one would stick.
  • I didn’t buy a giant batch of spammy links.
  • I didn’t chase vanity keywords we had no chance of hitting quickly.
  • I didn’t “rebuild the site” just to look busy.

Instead, I used LLM tools like ChatGPTGeminiClaudePerplexity, and Copilot to move faster on research and drafts—then focused effort on things I know still work after 18 years: technical health, intent‑driven content, local relevance, and honest authority.

If you want my more opinionated take on risky vs sustainable tactics, that’s exactly what Grey Hat vs White Hat SEO: What Actually Works Today is for.

FAQs: How I Ranked a Website in 30–60 Days (25)

  1. Can you really rank a brand‑new site in 30–60 days?
    Sometimes for long‑tail or very low‑competition terms, yes. For competitive keywords, 30–60 days is usually about getting indexed properly and seeing early movement, not winning the whole battle.
  2. What kind of website was this case study based on?
    A small‑to‑mid‑size service‑oriented site with some history but very weak SEO. The exact industry doesn’t matter as much as the pattern of issues and fixes.
  3. What’s the most important thing you did in the first week?
    Fixing technical problems that blocked indexing or hurt crawlability—broken internal links, poor site structure, and obvious performance issues.
  4. How many pages did you optimise in the first 30–60 days?
    Usually a handful of high‑impact pages (home + 2–5 key pages) plus a small cluster of supporting articles, not the entire site.
  5. Did you use AI tools like ChatGPT or Gemini for this project?
    Yes—for research, outlines, and some draft help—but all final content, strategy, and edits were done manually with local context and experience.
  6. Did you see results only because you built links?
    Links helped, but they were a small, targeted part of the work. Most of the early gains came from fixing technical issues and aligning pages with intent.
  7. How many links did you build in those 30–60 days?
    A modest number—often fewer than 10 meaningful mentions/links from relevant sources—chosen for quality, not volume.
  8. Can I skip link building and still see improvements in 30–60 days?
    Yes, especially if your site is technically broken now. Fixing technical and content issues alone can move the needle early, but in competitive niches you’ll need authority eventually.
  9. Did you use any grey hat tactics in this case study?
    No. This case focused on clean fixes and fundamentals. Where I use grey tactics, I’m transparent about risk and never promise short‑term wins as if they’re free.
  10. How did you choose which pages to work on first?
    I picked pages that were closest to commercial value (services/locations) and where I saw a realistic chance to rank for relevant, not insanely competitive, keywords.
  11. How important were semantic/LSI keywords in this project?
    They helped shape the content so it matched how people actually talk and search around the topic, which supports both traditional SEO and AI understanding.
  12. Did you optimise for AI Overviews specifically?
    Indirectly: by adding clear answers, FAQs, and structured sections, I made the pages easier for AI systems to understand and quote, which is the practical way to “optimise” in 2026.
  13. How much time per week did this 30–60 day push take?
    That depends on budget, but in practical terms it was a focused burst: a few intensive weeks of audits, fixes, rewrites, and a small amount of outreach.
  14. Can I copy this exact strategy for my site?
    You can copy the framework (fix → focus pages → small cluster → local → a few links), but the specifics—keywords, content, risks—must fit your niche and region.
  15. How does this case study fit into longer‑term SEO planning?
    It’s the “kick‑off” phase. The next 6–12 months are about scaling content, authority, and UX improvements across more of the site.
  16. What metrics did you watch most closely during those 60 days?
    Coverage/indexing in Search Console, impressions for target queries, average positions, and early organic clicks and leads—not just a couple of vanity keywords.
  17. Did you change the website design or only the content?
    Mainly content and structure. I made minor UX tweaks where they were blocking performance or clarity but didn’t do a full redesign.
  18. What if my site is in a very competitive niche—can I still see results in 60 days?
    You can see directional movement and some long‑tail wins, but big head terms will generally take longer. In tough niches, set 6–12+ month expectations.
  19. How did you balance SEO work with the client’s existing Facebook Ads or other channels?
    We treated this as a way to reduce long‑term dependency on ads: ads brought immediate leads, SEO started building a base of organic, higher‑margin traffic.
  20. Did you create any new landing pages for paid campaigns in this window?
    In some cases, yes—because well‑optimised SEO landing pages often double as better paid landing pages too.
  21. How do I know which pages to pick for my own 30–60 day push?
    Start with pages closest to revenue: main services/locations. Look for ones already getting a bit of impressions but not ranking well yet.
  22. Can I do this myself, or do I need an SEO expert?
    You can do pieces yourself, especially if you follow guides like The Truth About SEO in 2026, but having someone who’s done this many times can save a lot of trial and error.
  23. What risks are there in trying to rank fast?
    The main risk is over‑reacting and using aggressive tactics (spam links, AI spam content) instead of solid fundamentals. This case study deliberately avoids that.
  24. How does this case connect to your long‑term principles?
    It’s a compressed version of the same process I describe in My 18 Years in SEO and SEO Strategies I Use for Clients in Asia—just focused on quick wins without sacrificing safety.
  25. What should I read next if I’m serious about replicating this?
    Move through this cluster in order:

The Author:

Related Topics

Top Marketing Strategies for Small Businesses in Phnom Penh (2026)

Top Marketing Strategies? The most effective marketing strategy for Phnom Penh SMEs in 2026 involves three pillars: 1) A consistent Facebook and TikTok presence utilizing real, unpolished Khmer-language video; 2) A verified Google Business Profile to capture high-intent “near me” searches; and 3) A professionalized chat sales process in Telegram

Read More »

How to Build an Online Presence in Cambodia (From Zero, 2026)

To build an online presence in Cambodia from scratch, business owners should move through a three-phase process: 1) Secure a brand domain and professional Facebook storefront; 2) Launch a 3-5 page mobile-friendly website to capture high-intent Google searches; and 3) Implement tracking via Meta Pixel and Google Analytics to monitor

Read More »

Digital Marketing in Cambodia (2026): What Actually Works

The most effective marketing setup in Cambodia right now involves an active Facebook presence for engagement, a TikTok strategy for discovery, and a clean, SEO-optimized website for credibility. Key shifts in 2026 include the normalization of direct social buying, the dominance of Khmer-language video over English text, and the strategic

Read More »

Grey Hat vs White Hat SEO: What Actually Works Today (2026)

In 2026, the real line between white hat and grey hat SEO isn’t a list of “allowed” and “banned” tricks—it’s your time horizon and risk tolerance. White hat SEO (serving users, building real authority, publishing experience‑driven content, keeping your site technically sound) is still what survives every core and spam update, including those now

Read More »

SEO Strategies I Use for Clients in Asia (Real Insights)

SEO Strategies I Use for Clients in Asia. Working with clients across Asia in 2026—from Cambodia and Vietnam to Singapore, Malaysia, and beyond—I’ve learned that the SEO campaigns that actually last all have the same spine: deeply localised keyword research, content that reflects real experience in that market, technically clean

Read More »

My 18 Years in SEO: What Still Works in 2026

My 18 Years in SEO: What Still Works in 2026. I’ve been doing SEO long enough to see every “SEO is dead” headline, every new Google update, and now AI Overviews, LLMs, and tools like ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Perplexity, and Copilot take over everyone’s feeds. Under all that noise, the same things still move the needle in 2026: technically clean

Read More »

Monthly SEO Services: What You’re Really Paying For (2026 Guide)

A monthly SEO retainer is not a mysterious “rankings subscription”—it’s a bundle of ongoing tasks your freelancer or agency does every month: technical checks and fixes, on‑page improvements, content creation and updates, link building, local SEO, and reporting with clear next steps. Globally, these retainers for small and mid‑sized businesses typically sit

Read More »
Scroll to Top