Collection Product Grid Optimization Opportunities
This is an advanced opportunity 🚨
I recommend you work with a developer to implement this.
This requires technical resources and or knowledge of HTML/theme editing.
Table of Contents
- What the heck is the ‘product grid‘?
- Product grid customization example
- Example collection product grids
- How do you edit the product grid?
- How much impact does product grid content have on your rankings?
- What are the significant product grid opportunities for SEO?
- Are product grid optimizations worth it for collection SEO?
First, what the heck is the ‘product grid’?
All the information in the product grid positively impacts your SEO. Why is that?
Because the more unique information you can share on the page, the better the browsing experience for your customers.
If you can output more relevant product information into the product grid, it will be easier for your visitors and Google to understand:
- What a collection is about
- What products are included in a collection
- The specific features and details of individual products
And all of that will help your collections (and products) rank higher in Google.
Product Grid Customization Example
Including more product information in the product grid helps your customers as they navigate and browse your store and helps Google understand your products and collections.
Compare these two contrasting examples of the opposite ends of the collection optimization spectrum.
Let’s say you’re browsing for an iPad Folio as a gift for a friend. You land on a collection page and look at the product grid as you start to browse. Of these two examples, which:
- Helps you understand your options?
- Is more straightforward for you to browse?
- Makes you feel more confident about your upcoming click to a product?
Example #1
Example #2
This is an extreme contrast and it’s helpful to see the difference.
Including more information in your product grid on your collection pages will help improve your browsing and shopping experience. The more relevant information we can share on the collection page in the product grid, the better the browsing experience for the customer and the better for Google and your SEO.
Example Product Grids on Shopify
Here are a few example product grids (some optimized, some natural), so you can see what this looks like.
Here’s an example from The Chocolate Season:
The Chocolate Season outputs the product:
- Image
- Title
- Reviews (with stars)
- Starting Price
Here’s an example from My Favorite Quilt Store:
My Favorite Quilt Store displays the product:
- Image
- Title
- Dimensions (as part of the title)
- Price per
Mac-Case Product Grid SEO Example
This is a collection from Mac-Case, a Shopify store selling iPad Cases and Bags.
- Title
- Image
- Price (before/after discount)
- The first ~30 words of the product description
How do you edit the product grid?
You edit what your product grid outputs by editing your theme files, and that’s what makes product grid optimization for collection SEO an advanced opportunity.
Most likely, to implement these sorts of product grid opportunities, you’ll need to work with a developer.
- On some themes (mostly some Online Store 2.0 themes), you may have options in customizer for customizing what is (and is not) displayed in the product grid.
- On most themes (including most pre-Online Store 2.0 themes), you have minimal options for customizing what is and isn’t displayed in the product grid.
How much impact does product grid content have on your rankings?
A lot! Increasing the amount of content displayed in the product grid can have a substantial amount of impact on your SEO and rankings.
Why is that? Because Google cares about relevant content on the page. If you can increase the amount of relevant content on a page (like by adding a description to a collection or adjusting the product grid content), you’ll get more relevant content on the page and help boost your SEO.
Let’s take a look at an optimized example.
This bit of on-page product description content output into the product grid on the collection page is very impactful. That text is naturally keyword-rich, so when Google sees it, it helps inform Google’s understanding of what this collection is about and what the product in the collection is about.
Multiply that ~30 words of product description content across 10, 20, or 30 products per page in the collection, and you end up with quite a lot of additional high-quality on-page content for Google. That’s an SEO win.
Outputting the first ~20-30 words of the product description into the grid gets you more:
- Relevant content on the page
- Keyword rich information for Google
- Relevant information for your browsers so they understand what products they’re looking at
What are the significant product grid opportunities for collection SEO?
With this more advanced opportunity, your strategy should be to increase the content included in your product grid. More helpful + relevant content is always better. The more relevant information you can share in the product grid on the collection page, the better the browsing experience for your customer, and the more likely they’ll click.
I recommend focusing on these optimization opportunities:
- Make your product titles more descriptive. If a collection has products of a specific type (e.g., iPad Case, Watercolor Greeting Cards), ensure those relevant secondary keywords are included in each product title and output into the product grid.
- This is an opportunity you can tackle without any technical resources! Making your product titles more descriptive will help your SEO (i.e., include a secondary keyword related to a collection’s main keyword).
- Include pricing information and, if applicable, product units. Include your current pricing or starting price and any discounts in the grid. Include that information in the product grid if you sell in specific units (e.g., per yard, per foot, per six-pack, per case). (e.g., Starting at $X/per yard)
- Incorporate product review information. Get that information output into the product grid if you’re collecting product reviews and displaying them on your products. It’s worth showing your high-quality social proof, like “17 Reviews, 4.5 🌟,” in the product grid.
- Excerpt and output a small bit of your product description in the product grid. Outputting just the first ~20-40 words of your product description into the product grid can make a huge difference in your SEO. This product description content is keyword rich, relevant, and helps visitors (and Google) better understand collections and individual products in collections.
Are product grid optimizations worth it for collection SEO?
Yes. Optimizing the content output in the product grid is high-impact. However, it likely will take you development resources, so it is also high-effort.
If you don’t have development resources, I recommend you focus on making your product titles more descriptive (so they include relevant secondary keywords) and prioritize optimizing collection SEO titles and writing collection descriptions.
Previous chapter
Meta Descriptions
Next chapter
Splitting Collection Descriptions