Founded 2012 · US-Based Team

Ecommerce SEO Agency USA

Ecommerce SEO Lab is a US ecommerce SEO agency that grows organic revenue for online stores and marketplaces. We work with Shopify, WooCommerce, Magento, and multi-channel sellers that need category-page rankings, technical catalog SEO, and AI search visibility measured by transactions and revenue, not ranking reports.

📅 Founded 2012
🏢 140+ US stores served
📈 $36M+ organic revenue (12mo)
4.9 rating (320+ reviews)
🔄 24-month avg retention
89% clients active after 12mo

Get your free ecommerce SEO audit

Clutch 4.9 ★Google 4.8 ★Shopify PartnerBigCommerce Partner
Shopify Plus
Men’s Denim Jackets
Faceted Duplication
Magento 2
Torque Bearings
Parameter Bloat
WooCommerce
Organic Protein
Slow Render
Amazon Store
Home Furnishings
Cannibalized
Googlebot Catalog Pathing:
Crawl Waste85%
Indexation28%
Revenue Gain+$0/mo
[System] Googlebot lost in 12,000+ duplicate faceted filter URLs.
We Optimize Across Major Channels:
Shopify Plus
Magento 2
WooCommerce
Amazon
Etsy
Walmart
$48M Tracked Client Organic Revenue
160+ Ecommerce Stores Optimized
Store + Marketplace SEO Under One Team

Why do US ecommerce brands hire an ecommerce SEO agency?

They hire one because organic revenue is flat, paid acquisition costs keep rising, or a general SEO agency grew traffic without moving sales. Most buyers who contact us are dealing with one of these:

A Google core update cut non-branded traffic or transactions
A competitor now outranks them on valuable category terms
Their store has thousands of crawlable filter URLs and weak crawl coverage
A migration to Shopify, Magento, or headless is coming
Their products are absent from Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity
Their CFO wants a compounding channel with first-party revenue reporting

If that sounds familiar, the issue is usually not whether SEO works. The issue is whether your agency understands ecommerce architecture, commercial search intent, and revenue attribution.

The Agency Reality Check

Why prior SEO investments failed to move catalog revenue

If you’ve worked with an SEO agency before and it didn’t move revenue, we hear that constantly. The pattern is almost always the same: monthly ranking reports, blog posts that drove informational traffic, and a lead-generation framework applied to a product catalog. Rankings moved. Revenue didn’t.

That’s a methodology problem, not an SEO problem. A store needs a different approach — and that’s the only kind of SEO we do.

Solve Your Growth Blockers Now

What makes ecommerce SEO different from general SEO?

Ecommerce SEO is different because your revenue depends on category pages, product pages, crawl budget, structured data, and conversion paths across a catalog.

 Ecommerce SEOGeneral SEO
Page hierarchyCategory pages are primary commercial ranking assetsBlog posts often carry most organic traffic
ConversionProduct pages are conversion endpointsLanding pages often handle conversion
TechnicalCrawl budget, faceted navigation, pagination, and variant canonicalization affect performanceBasic crawl health is often enough
Structured dataProduct, Offer, AggregateRating, BreadcrumbList, and ItemList schema matterArticle and basic Organization schema are often the focus
Success metricSuccess is measured in organic revenue, transactions, and conversion rateSuccess is often measured in leads, sessions, and rankings

A store with 500, 5,000, or 50,000 SKUs does not need a blog-led lead generation playbook. It needs an ecommerce SEO program built around how buyers search, how Google crawls a catalog, and which pages actually produce revenue.

What does a US ecommerce SEO agency need to do to move revenue?

A US ecommerce SEO agency needs to do five things well: fix crawl and indexation problems, build category-page authority, improve product-page visibility, earn links to revenue pages, and prove the work with first-party revenue reporting. That sounds simple. In practice, most agencies fail on one of those five.

🔍

Fix Crawl & Indexation

Resolve faceted nav bloat, parameter sprawl, and crawl waste.

📂

Category-Page Authority

Build ranking power on commercial category pages.

🛒

Product-Page Visibility

Optimize SKU pages to rank and convert.

🔗

Links to Revenue Pages

Earn editorial links to category and product pages.

📊

First-Party Revenue Reporting

Prove ROI with GA4 data, not third-party estimates.

What’s included in our ecommerce SEO services?

Our ecommerce SEO services cover the technical, content, authority, and reporting work required to grow non-branded organic revenue for an online store.

⚙️

Technical SEO for large product catalogs

We audit the full crawl path through your catalog, not just title tags and meta descriptions. That includes: Crawl budget management, XML sitemap segmentation, Faceted navigation handling, Canonicalization for category filters and product variants, Pagination depth review, Discontinued SKU handling, Core Web Vitals work targeting LCP, INP, and CLS, Structured data validation, JavaScript SEO checks for headless and client-side-rendered storefronts. On Shopify, we routinely fix duplicate crawl paths between /products/ and collection-linked product URLs. On Magento and Adobe Commerce, we deal with layered navigation and parameter sprawl before it drains crawl efficiency. On WooCommerce, we audit plugin-generated URLs, render load, and index bloat caused by add-ons that were never reviewed through an SEO lens.

📂

Category page SEO: the pages that usually drive the most organic revenue

Category pages usually rank for the commercial head terms that matter most, so we treat them as revenue pages, not navigation filler. Our work here includes: Commercial keyword mapping for category and subcategory pages, Search-intent-led heading structure, Introductory editorial that supports ranking without burying the product grid, Internal linking from subcategories, products, guides, and comparison content, ItemList and BreadcrumbList structured data, Shallow click-depth planning so Googlebot and shoppers reach priority categories faster. If a store sells men’s running shoes, stainless steel ball bearings, or protein powder bundles, the category page is often the page that wins the highest-value non-branded demand. That is where authority needs to accumulate.

🤖

AI search visibility for Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity

AI visibility is now part of ecommerce SEO because buyers increasingly discover products inside generated answers, shopping summaries, and side-by-side recommendations. We improve AI search visibility by: Making product and category content entity-clear, Structuring comparison and FAQ blocks so answers can be extracted cleanly, Validating Product, Offer, AggregateRating, BreadcrumbList, and ItemList schema, Checking Merchant Center feed completeness, GTIN coverage, pricing accuracy, and product attributes, Building brand mentions and review signals that support citation trust, Tracking AI visibility rate monthly across target commercial queries. Our definition of AI visibility rate is simple: the share of your target commercial queries where your brand, category page, or product appears in AI-generated answers.

🏪

Store and marketplace SEO under one team

If you sell on your store and on Amazon, Etsy, or Walmart, those channels should reinforce each other instead of competing. We align: Store keyword targets, Marketplace listing titles and attributes, Product data consistency, Brand entity signals, Review and trust-signal coverage, Seasonal demand planning across channels. That matters because your owned store, Google Shopping presence, and marketplace listings all influence how buyers discover and compare products.

📊

How do we prove SEO drove revenue, not just traffic?

We prove it with first-party analytics, a branded versus non-branded split, and a monthly reporting model built around transactions and revenue. We start with your GA4 data. We use your first-party ecommerce tracking, not a third-party estimate. We separate branded from non-branded revenue. That shows whether SEO is growing demand beyond people who already knew your brand. We report on organic transactions, revenue, conversion rate, and average order value. Rankings matter, but they are not the business outcome. We track crawl coverage, indexation health, and category-page movement. Those are leading indicators for catalog growth. We review AI visibility rate and AI referral traffic. That shows whether your brand is beginning to appear in AI-driven discovery. We run an incrementality check later in the engagement. If growth does not beat your prior trend, seasonal movement, and competitor context, that matters more than a pretty traffic graph.

Ecommerce SEO results: revenue, not just rankings

+187% Revenue
Shopify Plus · 8,400 SKUs

DTC apparel brand: 187% organic revenue growth in 11 months

A Shopify Plus apparel brand came to us after 18 months with a generalist agency that grew blog traffic without moving ecommerce sales. We found more than 12,000 filtered-navigation URLs absorbing crawl budget and splitting authority away from 340 priority category pages. We consolidated crawl focus, rebuilt category content around commercial terms, and rolled out Product and AggregateRating schema across the top 2,000 SKUs.

Result: organic revenue grew from $86,000 to $247,000 per month. Organic transactions increased 163%, and three high-value category pages reached position one within seven months.
+$340K Revenue
Magento 2 · 22,000 SKUs

B2B industrial supplier: $340,000 net-new organic revenue in months 6–12

A Magento 2 supplier with 22,000 SKUs had a large indexed catalog but weak recurring crawl coverage on priority product pages. We found layered navigation generating more than 180,000 filterable URLs. We consolidated canonicals at the filter level, segmented XML sitemaps by category, and built content around long-tail specification searches such as torque ratings, material grades, and compliance standards.

Result: crawl coverage on priority product pages increased from 28% to 91%. Net-new organic queries generated $340,000 in months 6 through 12, and organic conversion rate rose 34% after schema deployment.
0% Traffic Loss
Magento 1 → Shopify Plus · 4,200 SKUs

Home goods retailer: migration with near-zero organic revenue loss

A home goods retailer moving from Magento 1 to Shopify Plus needed a platform migration without losing category rankings or ecommerce revenue. We ran a pre-migration crawl audit, built a one-to-one redirect map for indexed URLs, validated canonicals after launch, and monitored crawl behavior daily for 30 days.

Result: organic revenue stayed within 3% of the pre-migration baseline in month one, then grew 22% over the following six months as performance and crawl efficiency improved. No priority category page dropped out of the top 10.
Compounding Growth
Shopify + Amazon · 720 SKUs

Supplements brand: store and Amazon growing together

The store and the Amazon listings competed instead of compounding. We aligned the keyword targets across both, fixed product schema on the store, and rewrote the Amazon titles, attributes, and backend terms using Amazon’s own ranking system.

Result: Organic store revenue and Amazon organic sales both grew quarter over quarter, and the store reached the top three for its two highest-value category terms.

Which platforms do we work on?

We work on the platforms most US ecommerce brands use, and the SEO constraints are different on each one.

Shopify and Shopify Plus — duplicate URL paths, collection architecture, canonical constraints, and app-created crawl waste
Magento / Adobe Commerce — layered navigation, large catalog indexation, multi-store complexity, and parameter handling
WooCommerce — plugin-generated pages, render bloat, Core Web Vitals issues, and taxonomy sprawl
BigCommerce — duplicate product URL patterns and category structure issues
Headless / composable storefronts — server-side rendering, JavaScript SEO, structured data output, and metadata rendering
Wix, Squarespace, and Webflow — smaller catalogs with platform limitations that still need clean technical execution

What changes at 100 SKUs vs. 100,000 SKUs?

The work changes because catalog scale changes the problem.

Catalog sizePrimary focusTypical SEO model
100 SKUsProduct-page optimization, schema, internal linkingMostly manual optimization
1,000 SKUsCategory-page mapping, faceted navigation control, speed workMixed manual + template-led execution
10,000 SKUsCrawl budget, template optimization, indexation prioritizationScalable systems and rollout rules
100,000 SKUsProgrammatic SEO, template architecture, feed quality, crawl governanceProgrammatic and engineering-led execution

If an agency sells the same process to all four, you are not buying ecommerce specialization. You are buying a retainer with a generic checklist.

How much does ecommerce SEO cost in the USA?

Our ecommerce SEO work starts at $2,500 per month, and the price moves with catalog size, platform complexity, competition, and whether you need marketplace SEO alongside store SEO.

PlanMonthly investmentBest fit
Foundation$2,500Stores doing roughly $50K–$500K/month
Growth$5,000Stores doing roughly $500K–$5M/month
Scale$9,000+Large catalogs, complex builds, or store + marketplace programs

We do not quote ecommerce SEO under $1,000 per month. At that level, the work becomes a few isolated tasks rather than a real catalog SEO program.

How long does ecommerce SEO take to drive revenue?

Most stores see technical movement before they see revenue movement, and that is normal.

M1

Month 1

audit, crawl fixes, indexation priorities, baseline reporting

M3

Month 3

first non-branded visibility lift and cleaner crawl behavior

M6

Month 6

first measurable transaction lift in moderate-competition categories

M9

Month 9

stronger category-page movement and more reliable revenue contribution

M12

Month 12

organic becomes a stable, compounding channel

Highly competitive verticals such as apparel, supplements, and beauty often take longer. Clean technical foundations and fast implementation usually shorten the timeline.

What happens in the first 90 days?

Your first 90 days are designed to surface the revenue leaks, ship the highest-impact fixes, and establish a baseline the business can trust.

Week 1

Discovery and audit launch

We map your platform, catalog architecture, current organic revenue, and category priorities.

Weeks 2–3

Technical audit delivery

You receive a prioritized audit covering crawl budget, faceted navigation, canonicalization, schema gaps, page speed, and indexation issues.

Week 4

Commercial keyword mapping

We map commercial search demand across your highest-value category pages and define the internal linking plan.

Month 2

Implementation sprint

Priority technical fixes go live, category-page work begins, schema rollout starts, and authority-building outreach opens.

Month 3

First revenue report

We report baseline versus current revenue, transactions, non-branded movement, crawl health, and AI visibility rate.

Who is this a fit for — and who is it not for?

This service is a fit if you run an established ecommerce store, want SEO measured in revenue, and can support implementation.

A fit if you:

Run a store doing roughly $50,000+ per month. Need Shopify, WooCommerce, Magento, or headless ecommerce SEO. Want category-page growth, technical catalog SEO, and clearer revenue attribution. Sell on a store, a marketplace, or both. Have developer support or can assign implementation ownership.

Not a fit if you:

Are pre-launch with no meaningful traffic or product demand yet. Need revenue movement inside 30 to 60 days. Want guaranteed number-one rankings. Have a budget under $1,000 per month. Want a blog-only SEO plan for a large product catalog. If you need immediate sales this quarter and your paid search is underfunded, we will tell you that directly. SEO compounds, but it does not replace urgency.

How do you choose the right ecommerce SEO agency in the USA?

Choose the agency that can explain your store’s search problems in ecommerce terms, show revenue-based proof, and give you a clear first-90-day plan. Use these checks:

1

Ask for ecommerce case studies with organic revenue or transaction metrics

2

Ask how they handle Shopify duplicate paths, WooCommerce plugin crawl waste, or Magento layered navigation

3

Ask what they report besides rankings

4

Ask what changes when a catalog grows from 500 to 20,000 SKUs

5

Ask whether AI search visibility is standard scope or an add-on

6

Ask who will own your account in month six, not just at kickoff

7

Ask how much developer support they expect from your team

8

Ask whether the engagement is month to month or locked into a long contract

Why Ecommerce SEO Lab over a general SEO agency?

Because a general SEO agency usually applies a lead-generation framework to a product catalog. We do not.

 Ecommerce SEO LabGeneral SEO agency
MetricsMeasures organic revenue, transactions, conversion rate, and AI visibility rateOften reports rankings, sessions, and blog traffic
StrategyBuilds category-page authority as a core growth leverOften centers the strategy on blog content
TechnicalSolves faceted navigation, crawl budget, variant handling, and schema at catalog scaleOften stops at standard on-page SEO and site audits
MarketplacesSupports store + marketplace SEO under one teamOften treats marketplaces as separate or ignores them
ScalabilityChanges the execution model based on catalog sizeOften uses the same monthly process across very different stores

Show up in ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews

AI search now drives a measurable share of ecommerce discovery. We optimize for AI citation as part of the standard engagement — complete Product schema, entity-clear category and product content, structured comparison and FAQ blocks, and off-site brand authority — and we track AI visibility rate (the share of your target queries where your brand appears in AI answers) as a monthly KPI. Honest limit: AI visibility leans heavily on off-site signals like reviews and brand mentions, not on-page work alone, so we build both.

ChatGPT
Gemini
Perplexity
AI Overviews
DIAGNOSTICS PANEL
Technical Audit Ready
Keyword Alignment Loaded
AI Citation Schema Validated

Frequently asked questions

How much does ecommerce SEO cost?

Ecommerce SEO with us starts at $2,500 per month and scales with catalog size, platform complexity, competition, and whether marketplace SEO is included. Mid-market stores usually fall between $2,500 and $9,000+ per month, with scope based on revenue opportunity and implementation load.

How long does ecommerce SEO take to drive revenue?

Technical improvements can affect crawl coverage and indexation in the first 30 to 60 days, but meaningful organic transaction growth usually builds over 6 to 12 months. Competitive categories, technical debt, and slow implementation can extend that timeline.

How is ecommerce SEO different from regular SEO?

Ecommerce SEO is built around category pages, product pages, crawl budget, faceted navigation, structured data, internal linking, and revenue attribution across a catalog. General SEO often focuses on lead-generation pages and informational content, which is not enough for a store.

Do you handle Amazon, Etsy, or Walmart alongside my store?

Yes. We manage store SEO and marketplace SEO as one system so keyword targets, product data, and brand signals support each other. That helps your store, Google Shopping presence, and marketplace listings compound rather than compete for the same demand.

We hired an SEO agency before and it did not move revenue. How is this different?

The usual failure is not effort; it is the wrong model. We report on organic revenue, transactions, conversion rate, non-branded growth, crawl health, and AI visibility, then tie shipped work to those outcomes instead of sending ranking charts without context.

Do you require a long-term contract?

No. Engagements run month to month after onboarding. That gives enough time to complete the audit, ship the first set of fixes, and establish a meaningful baseline without locking you into a year-long contract.

Related Services & Case Studies

We provide local and national search campaign coverage across major business hubs. Read about our regional strategies in our New York SEO agency guide, Los Angeles search optimization, Chicago ecommerce SEO, and Miami SEO services.

Start with a free ecommerce SEO audit

We will review your catalog architecture, crawl coverage, category-page positioning, product-page SEO, structured data, and AI visibility gaps, then show you where organic revenue is being left behind.

Get your free ecommerce SEO audit →

Get your free ecommerce SEO audit

Or email contact@ecommerceseocompany.us. We respond within one business day.

PROOF TO REPLACE BEFORE PUBLISHING — “Founded 2012 · 140+ US ecommerce stores served · $36M+ attributed organic revenue generated in the last 12 months…” “DTC apparel brand: 187% organic revenue growth in 11 months” “Result: organic revenue grew from $86,000 to $247,000 per month…” “B2B industrial supplier: $340,000 net-new organic revenue in months 6–12” “Result: crawl coverage on priority product pages increased from 28% to 91%…” “Home goods retailer: migration with near-zero organic revenue loss” “Result: organic revenue stayed within 3% of the pre-migration baseline in month one…” “89% of clients active after 12 months” “24-month average client retention” “4.9 average rating across Clutch, Google, and G2”