How I Boosted Traffic by 72% With Ahrefs’ AI Content Helper

Any content writer with skin in the game knows the sinking feeling that comes with the traffic “flatline of nope” after that initial “spike of hope”.

Ahrefs graphic illustrating traffic spikes of hope and flatlines of nope.

Content dates, traffic dips. It’s a tale as old as… web 1.0.

But recently I’ve cottoned on to a new strategy that’s helping me claw back some of those lost visits.

It’s simple: fill topic gaps in your content.

Here’s my process for using the AI Content Helper to find low-effort, high-reward content updates, which have led to an average traffic increase of ~72%.

Some SEOs believe that Google considers topic and entity coverage to inform its search rankings.

This is why I think the strategy works.

The rationale being: the more comprehensive you make your content—covering all the relevant angles that users expect to read in the SERPs—the more likely search engines are to rank that content.

Below I’ll walk you through how I find and fill those topics, from start to finish.

And if you want a speedy overview, you can watch me walk through the full process here:

study on AI traffic doesn’t match the intent of the SERP for the keyword “AI traffic”—hence all the yellow, orange, and red scores in the AI Content Helper.

Ahrefs AI Content Helper shows low topic score for an article on AI traffic

Thankfully, I don’t want to rank for this keyword since the SERP results are all about AI vehicle traffic management, but if I did I’d need to rewrite my article from scratch.

Only do a quick content gap update if you think it will actually improve performance.

Here are some criteria you can check:

Make sure the article aligns with search intent

Check that your content aligns with the dominant search intent, either by assessing overall topic scores in the AI Content Helper, or by using Ahrefs’ Identify Intents tool in the SERP Overview report.

Ahrefs Identify Intents tool, with the dominant intent highlighted for a search on SEO audits

If intent is mismatched, then a quick topic gap update is unlikely to turn traffic decline around.

Check user engagement signals

Check for other “signs of life” that indicate a piece of content is worth updating. For instance, our SEO audit blog still showed impressive time on page and user engagement in Ahrefs Web Analytics, even though organic traffic had dropped over the past year, which suggested it was worthy of a refresh.

Ahrefs Web Analytics tool highlighting views per visit and a time on page of 5m 1s for Ahrefs SEO audit blog

Double-check business relevance

Make sure the content is still relevant to your product and/or business. Publishing a quick update to fill a content gap might get you more views, but it’s pointless if the article is all about a feature that no longer exists. Use your own in-house knowledge to make a judgement call.

Choose the right “quick” update method

I’m focusing on filling topic gaps in this article, but that’s not the only way to publish a quick update.

If your article is getting minimal traffic, but the AI Content Helper is showing healthy topic coverage, there may be other things you can do to get it ranking.

For example, you might want to improve your meta data or build more internal links.

The AI Content Helper isn’t just useful for topic enrichment—it can help you optimize your title tags, meta descriptions, headings, and—soon—internal links.

Ahrefs AI Content Helper screenshot highlighting title tag and meta description recommendations

Offer something extra

One of the fears I had with this strategy was that our articles would become too much like the competition. AI Content Helper assesses topic coverage based on the top SERP competitors, after all. I didn’t want to make our content formulaic—Ahrefs’ blog has been so well received in the past for precisely the opposite reason.

That’s why I focus on getting just one or two topics up to a good level, then adding in some form of unique information—like first-hand research, downloadable content, practical tools, developing news, atypical opinions, exclusives, etc.

For example, when I updated our blog post templates article, I used Claude Artifacts to help generate some new downloadable templates based on the topics I’d added.

This automated content generation helped me stay on schedule while still introducing something unique and valuable.

A screenshot of a blog post on blog post templates showing claude generated, human-edited templates

When I updated our title tags article I included illustrative examples, like this instance of search intent shift I spotted in our Identify Intents tool.

A screenshot of a blog post on title tags showing illustrative examples added in

I also added a ChatGPT-generated table of power word modifiers, so readers can quickly copy and paste words when writing their own titles.

A screenshot of a blog post on title tags showing a table of ChatGPT power words added in

Similarly, when I updated our SEO Audit blog (the example you saw earlier) I added a new section on the impact of AI and featured snippets in SEO audits to make the content more current, and backed that up with Ahrefs’ first-hand research and data.

Ahrefs Page Inspect tool in content changes highlighting the addition of a section on AI Overviews in a blog on SEO audits

And when I updated our article on H1 Tags, I referenced a recent study from GotchSEO on the impact of using exact-match keywords in headlines.

Ahrefs Page Inspect tool in content changes highlighting the addition of a piece of new research

This is a bit of “lite” information gain to make the content more current, relevant, and/or practical. It’s tempting to just add in a glossary definition or a couple of generic sentences to check that “entity” box but: one, that is dull to read and, two, that’s what everyone else is already doing.

I’m not saying my additions are groundbreaking, but they’re at least a bit different.

debby ryan fringe gif reading "She's not like other blogs"

While the AI Content Helper is great for outlining and drafting, if you treat entities and topic suggestions as boxes to check, then you’re probably going to create facsimile content.

Whereas, if you start with a hook, quote, piece of data, or basically any unique angle, you can focus on framing that information in the most interesting way.

Don’t get too het up trying to get every topic up to a score of 100, at the expense of your time or the quality of your content.

Pick one or two gaps to fill, then focus on adding in the thing that makes people actually want to read it. Otherwise your blog will just be a laundry list of related topics, covered at a superficial level—something that no one has time for.

Plus, it’s easier to track the impact of small improvements when you only have to worry about one or two topics.

Iterate on your updates

Treat these quick topic gap updates as ongoing tests.

They bring in modest traffic bumps that can compound over time with small improvements.

Re-running AI Content Helper reports on your updated articles can help you review your topic scores and spot any new or emerging entity gaps.

For instance, I added a section on internal linking to our post on SEO audits, taking our topic coverage from a score of 3 up to 67.

Ahrefs AI Content Helper tool screenshot, highlighting a score of 67 for the topic of "internal linking" since content was updated

A score of 67 is nothing to be sniffed at, but I could potentially go deeper into this subject.

Tip

Use the “Chat” function to get more ideas of the kind of topics you should be covering when you’re plugging those information gaps. A screenshot of the chat feature in Ahrefs AI Content Helper

Also, since running my last report, the SERPs have changed slightly, and now I can see there’s an opportunity to add more advice on competitor audits…

A screenshot of a topic gap about "Competitor analysis" showing a score of 22, in an article on SEO audits.

Adding this in could result in an extra traffic bump.

Final thoughts

You don’t need to be constantly recreating the wheel, but it’s worth checking back on your most important pages to keep them current and topically relevant.

If you focus on pushing quick updates—spending no more than half a day—then, at best you can reclaim lost traffic, and at worst you haven’t wasted too much time or money.

There’s usually a lot of head-scratching involved when you’re trying to work out what caused your traffic to dip, and what you can do to claw it back.

As a certified worrywart, I find this workflow especially helpful for reining in the overthinking. You see your content has a gap, you fill the gap, you watch your traffic, you iterate.

It’s a manageable process that leads to a feedback loop of learning, which will inevitably help you improve your future content.

Similar Posts