Before Profit Labs™, this online education brand had a solid product and real demand, but organic search was not keeping up. They were bringing in 412 enrollments a month from organic traffic, with 18,400 monthly organic sessions, 67 page-one rankings, and only 11 terms in the top 3. Most of their visibility sat on a small set of branded and lower-intent pages. Important program and topic pages were thin, overlapping, or not mapped cleanly to how people actually searched. On top of that, technical issues were getting in the way of indexing and internal link flow. They reached out because paid channels were getting more expensive, and they needed search to become a dependable national enrollment source instead of a side channel.
## What we changed
First, we rebuilt the content plan around search intent and program demand. Instead of publishing broad articles with weak conversion paths, we mapped content to clear enrollment-stage journeys: program pages, career outcome pages, curriculum pages, comparison pages, and support content for common questions. We expanded topic clusters around high-value education terms and tied each cluster back to core enrollment pages with deliberate internal links.
Second, we tightened the site structure. We cleaned up duplicate and overlapping pages, improved title tags and meta descriptions, strengthened headings, and fixed internal linking gaps that left important pages buried too deep. We also worked through crawl and indexation issues, updated XML sitemaps, and improved template consistency so search engines could understand page purpose more clearly. That gave stronger pages a better chance to rank and helped weaker pages stop competing with each other.
Third, we built authority to the pages that mattered most. That meant a steady backlink program focused on relevant education, career, and industry publications, plus linkable assets that could earn mentions naturally. We did not chase volume for its own sake. The goal was to support priority clusters and move commercial pages higher, not just inflate domain metrics.
Finally, because this was on the national SEO track, we kept local work limited to trust signals rather than local lead generation. We made sure business information was consistent across key citations and supported brand credibility, but the campaign stayed centered on national non-branded search growth.
## Results
Over 12 months, organic sessions grew from 18,400 to 142,800 a month, an increase of about 676%. Page-one rankings climbed from 67 to 384, and top-3 rankings went from 11 to 67. Most importantly, enrollments from organic search increased from 412 per month to 1,980 per month, up about 381%.
In practical terms, this meant search became a serious enrollment channel. The brand was no longer dependent on a narrow group of terms or forced to buy as much demand through paid media. More high-intent pages were ranking, more prospective students were finding the site earlier in their decision process, and more of that traffic was reaching pages built to convert. The gains were not just more visits; they translated into a much larger monthly flow of qualified inquiries and completed enrollments.
## 90-day plan from here
The next quarter focuses on deepening what is already working. We’re expanding winning topic clusters, refreshing pages sitting in positions 4-10 to push more terms into the top 3, and improving conversion paths on the highest-traffic program pages. We’ll also continue technical cleanup and targeted link acquisition so the brand can hold its gains while opening up the next layer of national search demand.