How to Choose the Right Technique When Your SEO Needs an Overhaul
True life: I’m often the second SEO agency someone hires.
By the time clients reach out to me, they’ve usually already spent time, money, and trust on someone else—and their website is still invisible on Google. Or worse, it’s been actively damaged by the work that was done.
Over the last 20 years, I’ve seen it all.
I’ve worked on sites that only needed a few simple tweaks to start ranking—and I’ve also had to completely scrap and rebuild websites that were beyond saving. The real challenge is knowing which level of intervention your website actually needs.
Do you need a light touch, a serious restructuring, or a complete demolition and rebuild?
Let’s break it down.
When to Use a Chisel: Subtle SEO Tweaks That Deliver Big Results
This is the best-case scenario—and fortunately, where many websites land.
If your site is fundamentally sound but just hasn’t been optimized correctly, you might only need minor adjustments. That could mean:
- Adjusting metadata
- Updating or expanding content
- Fixing basic technical SEO issues (like internal linking or indexation)
- Building a few high-quality backlinks
Here’s an example:
I recently worked with a Public Adjuster who had been trying (unsuccessfully) to get leads from Google for five years. I was told I was their last shot at making SEO work. After just a couple of focused technical tweaks and strategic on-page adjustments, they started ranking within a month—and the phone started ringing not long after that.
The lesson? Sometimes a chisel is all you need when it’s applied in the right place, with the right pressure.
When to Use an Axe: Fixing Deep Technical SEO Problems
Sometimes, the problem runs deeper. Maybe your website:
- Loads painfully slow
- Isn’t mobile responsive
- Has clunky or outdated code
- Uses a page builder or CMS setup that’s just not SEO-friendly
In these cases, a heavier hand is required. It’s not about destroying everything, but it’s more than a surface-level cleanup.
Take this situation with a law firm I helped. Their website was beautifully designed—visually appealing and modern. But under the hood? It was a mess. The site was built in a way that made it hard for Google to crawl and understand the content. After restructuring their backend and speeding up the site, their lead flow jumped from just 3 leads per month to 22+.
Here’s the truth: It doesn’t matter how pretty your site looks if Google can’t find, read, or trust it.
When to Use Dynamite: Starting from Scratch After SEO Disasters
Then there’s the rare—but real—scenario where the only logical move is to blow it up and start over.
This usually happens when a previous agency went way off the rails:
- Buying toxic backlinks from link farms
- Spinning content
- Participating in outdated or black-hat SEO tactics
- Leaving behind layers of penalties or technical debt
Right now, I’m in the middle of a project that inspired this entire post. A company came to me with a history of SEO work that was, frankly, reckless. Their former agency built links through a network of low-quality sites—a blatant violation of Google’s guidelines. The result? A site that not only wasn’t ranking, but was actively being suppressed.
In this case, we’re going full dynamite mode:
- Disavowing bad links
- Rebuilding their content
- Launching a brand-new website on a clean, optimized framework
Yes, it’s more work—but it’s also the only path to real, lasting recovery.
So… Chisel, Axe, or Dynamite? How to Know What You Need
The truth is, most business owners don’t know what’s broken—only that their website isn’t getting traffic or leads. That’s where a real SEO audit comes in.
It’s not about guesswork.
It’s about diagnosing the right problem and choosing the right tool.
- If your content is close but not quite clicking, use a chisel.
- If your tech foundation is broken, grab the axe.
- If your SEO past is toxic, light the dynamite and start clean.
No matter what the situation, the goal is always the same: clear away the confusion and carve a direct path to results.
Need help figuring out which tool your SEO needs?
Let’s talk. I’ll take a look under the hood and give it to you straight—no fluff, no jargon, just real solutions that get you back on Google’s good side.