Whether you realize it or not, you are making this mistake.

You have multiple pages on your site targeting the same keyword.

It may not seem obvious, but it’s almost always the case.

For example, if you specalize in selling pet food, you naturally have multiple pages targeting “dog food”.

The same would be the case if you are an accountant offering tax services. You have multiple pages targeting similar tax keywords.

This causes confusion with Google. They don’t know which page to rank.

This is called keyword cannibalization, and it quietly kills rankings.

Instead of one strong page… you end up with multiple weaker ones.

Google gets confused. Authority gets split. Rankings drop.

The fix isn’t creating more content. It’s structuring what you already have the right way.

In this post, I break down how to fix it. I cover:

✔ How to find cannibalization issues fast

✔ What to merge, delete, or redirect

✔ How to prevent it going forward

If your traffic isn’t turning into rankings or revenue, this is usually part of the problem.

If you want my team to just analyze your site, find the cannibalization issues, and fix them…