The Personal Injury Lawyer's
Complete SEO Guide
This guide isn't a list of SEO tips. It's a complete system to grow your business.
The PI Lawyer's Complete SEO Guide will help your firm...
• Scale Lead Flow Predictably
• Build a Brand that Outlasts Ad Spend
• Convert Search Traffic Into Assigned Cases
• Future-Proof Visibility in a World Where Google Rules
The PI Lawyer's Complete SEO Guide
Ch. 2 | Your Core SEO Strategy
Ch. 3 | Technical SEO
Ch. 4 | Law Firm SEO Content
Ch. 5 | Entity SEO & Branding
Ch. 6 | Local SEO & Google Maps
Ch. 7 | Link-Building That Works
Ch. 8 | Visual SEO
Ch. 9 | Content Pruning & Site Maintenance
Ch. 10 | Reviews & Reputation
Ch. 11 | Advanced SEO Strategies
Ch. 12 | Analytics & Optimization
Ch. 13 | The AMG SEO Success Framework
Chapter 9 | Content Pruning, Crawl Budget, and Site Maintenance
How Cleaning Up Your Website Can Improve Rankings, Speed, and Case Volume
Most personal injury law firms think SEO is about publishing more. More blogs. More pages. More keywords.
But growth doesn’t always come from addition. Sometimes, it comes from subtraction.
Old blog posts, thin location pages, and unread content don’t build momentum; they slow your site down.
Cleaning up old pages can turn into a competitive advantage.
Why Crawl Budget Matters (and Why Most Firms Ignore It)
Google doesn’t crawl your entire website every time. It sets limits. That’s your crawl budget, the amount of attention Google is willing to give your site.
If it spends that time on outdated press releases or empty location pages, it may never get to the content that deserves to rank.
That’s a missed opportunity.
Older or larger sites feel this the most. But even smaller firms benefit when they streamline their content and refocus Google’s attention.
What Is Content Pruning?
Content pruning is the process of identifying underperforming, irrelevant or outdated content and cleaning it up. Cleaning up content looks like:
- Updating what’s worth keeping
- Merging overlapping pages
- Redirecting old content to stronger pages
- Deleting what no longer adds value
Think of it like a tree. You trim the weak branches so the healthy ones grow stronger.
How to Spot Pages That Need to Go
Tools like Google Analytics, Search Console, Ahrefs, and Screaming Frog help identify pages that:
- Haven’t had traffic in six months or more
- Are thin (under 300 words) and not optimized
- Are duplicates or outdated versions of other content
- No longer matter (past events, old bios, etc.)
Then ask:
- Is this page still valuable to someone today?
- Does it bring in traffic or links?
- Does it support our local presence, authority, or conversion goals?
- Is it helping or confusing the user?
- Is it even linked from anywhere else on the site?
What to Do With Low-Value Content
If a page is doing nothing (no traffic, no links, no strategic value), delete it.
If it has a few links or some visibility but is outdated, redirect it to a stronger page.
If you have two or more pages covering the same topic, combine them into one better resource. Then redirect the weaker ones to the new version.
What to Keep (and How to Improve It)
Not every old page is bad. Sometimes, all it needs is a refresh. Improve those pages by:
- Adding internal links
- Fixing formatting for easier reading
- Updating legal references or timelines
- Improving your calls to action
- Swapping in newer visuals or statistics
- Adding fresh FAQs or related links
Making these updates gets Google to take a second look and helps users stay longer and take action.
Don’t Skip Technical Maintenance
While you’re cleaning up content, check in on the rest of your site too.
Your quarterly audit should cover:
- Broken internal and external links
- Redirect chains that slow down your site
- Image size and ALT text
- Sitemap and robots.txt files
- Schema markup
- Directory listings and NAP consistency
- ADA accessibility
- Plugin and theme updates (for WordPress users)
Your website isn’t a brochure. It’s a living business asset. Treat it like one.
Chapter 9 Checklist: Content Pruning + Website Maintenance
- Quarterly audit scheduled
- Underperforming content flagged
- Outdated or duplicate pages removed
- High-potential content refreshed
- 301 redirects used strategically
- Internal links updated
- Crawl budget optimized
- Technical files reviewed and updated
- Schema and ADA standards confirmed
- Broken links fixed
- Ongoing maintenance is assigned to the team
SEO Wins Don’t Always Come From Doing More
Sometimes, your most significant gains come from getting out of your own way.
By trimming the bloat, focusing on what matters, and tightening up your website, you make it easier for Google to rank you and easier for clients to trust what they see.
In This Chapter
Why Visual SEO Deserves Your Attention
Image SEO: Function Over Flash
Video SEO: Build Trust Before THey Call
Where Visuals Matter Most
ADA Compliance: Do It Right, Rank Better
Reviews, Reputation, and Real-World SEO Power
Put your reputation to work so it earns clicks, leads, and long-term credibility.