Content Decay Playbook — How to Save Dying Pages
Every piece of content you publish starts decaying the moment it ranks. This playbook teaches you how to detect decay early, diagnose the cause, and apply the right recovery strategy before your traffic craters.
What is Content Decay?
Content decay is the gradual loss of organic traffic to a page over time. It affects every website, in every industry, at every scale. Even the best-optimized content will eventually decay if left untouched — because the web doesn't stand still.
The challenge is that decay is slow and silent. A page losing 2% of traffic per week doesn't trigger alarms. But over 6 months, that's a 50% traffic loss. By the time someone manually spots the decline, recovery is harder and more expensive than if you'd caught it at -15%.
That's why automated content decay detection — using rolling 28-day window analysis — is critical for any site with more than 100 pages. You need a system that watches every page, every day, and flags the moment traffic trends turn negative.
Decay Severity Tiers
SEOInputs classifies every page into one of four tiers based on the percentage change between the current 28-day window and the previous 28-day window:
Growing (> +10%)
Traffic is increasing. No action needed. Keep doing what you're doing — this content is gaining momentum. Consider linking to it from other pages to compound growth.
Stable (-10% to +10%)
Normal fluctuation. Check back next month. If a page stays in the stable zone for 3+ months, it's healthy. If it keeps sliding toward -10%, prepare a refresh.
Declining (-30% to -10%)
Active traffic loss. Schedule a refresh within 2 weeks. Update statistics, add new sections, improve headings. Declining content is the most cost-effective to fix because it still has ranking equity that you can leverage.
Crashed (< -30%)
Severe traffic loss. Needs immediate attention. A simple refresh may not be enough — consider a full rewrite targeting the current SERP landscape. Check for technical issues first (deindexed, 404, canonicalization).
Why Does Content Decay?
Content decay has six primary causes. Understanding which one affects your page determines the right recovery strategy.
How to Detect Content Decay
Manual detection doesn't scale. You can't open GSC every day and compare traffic for 500 pages. You need automated monitoring with smart thresholds that filter noise from signal.
The 28-Day Rolling Window Method
Compare the most recent 28-day sum of clicks to the previous 28-day sum. Using 28 days (4 complete weeks) normalizes weekday/weekend patterns and reduces noise from single-day fluctuations. Pages with fewer than 56 days of data are excluded — you need two full windows to calculate a meaningful trend.
current_clicks = total clicks in days [-28, -1]
previous_clicks = total clicks in days [-56, -29]
decay_rate = (current_clicks - previous_clicks) / previous_clicks × 100
If previous_clicks = 0 and current_clicks > 0 → "new" (not "crashed")
If both = 0 → exclude from report (no data)
Minimum data threshold: Exclude pages with fewer than 10 clicks in the comparison period. Tiny-traffic pages create noisy percentage changes (2 clicks to 1 click = -50% "crash") that waste your time.
5-Step Content Recovery Process
A systematic approach to recovering declining and crashed content.
Diagnose the cause
Before making changes, understand why the page is declining. Check: (1) Did impressions drop? Query-level data shows if Google stopped showing the page. (2) Did CTR drop? Your listing may be less compelling than new competitors. (3) Did position drop? You're being outranked. Each diagnosis leads to a different recovery strategy.
Analyze the current SERP
Search the target queries and study what's ranking above you. Has the SERP changed format? Are there more featured snippets, video results, or 'People Also Ask' boxes? If the SERP shifted to favor a different content format, you may need to restructure your content entirely.
Update and expand content
For declining pages: update outdated statistics, add new sections covering recent developments, improve headings and structure, refresh images and examples. For crashed pages: consider a more fundamental rewrite that addresses the new intent Google expects.
Strengthen internal links
Check that relevant pages link to the declining article. Add contextual internal links from recently published content. Ensure the declining page is included in your main navigation or resource hubs. Internal link equity is one of the fastest ways to boost a declining page.
Monitor recovery
After making changes, track daily data for 4-6 weeks. Recovery is rarely instant — Google needs to re-crawl, re-index, and re-evaluate the page. Set an alert in SEOInputs to be notified when the page returns to its previous traffic level.
Preventing Content Decay
The best recovery is the one you never need. Build these habits into your content workflow.
Schedule regular content audits
Every quarter, review your top 50 pages by traffic. Check data freshness, link health, and competitive positioning. Put it on the calendar.
Update dates and statistics proactively
Don't wait for decay to hit. If your article references '2025 data', schedule an update for January 2026. Freshness signals matter.
Monitor competitor content
When a competitor publishes on your topic, your page is now at risk. Track competitor publications in your key topic areas.
Build internal link networks
Pages with strong internal link support decay slower. When you publish new content, add links to existing related pages to reinforce them.
Use automated monitoring
Tools like SEOInputs watch every page daily with 28-day rolling analysis. You get an alert at -10% decay, long before the page crashes.
Detect Content Decay Before It's Too Late
SEOInputs monitors every page daily. Get alerts the moment traffic trends turn negative.