First, Don’t Panic
It’s normal for a page that ranked high on Google to drop suddenly or slowly over time.
This doesn’t always mean your content is bad or that Google is punishing you.
Here are a few reasons this can happen:
- Google updated its ranking system (they do this often)
- A new page from someone else is now more helpful
- People are searching in a new way (especially with AI tools)
- Your page is loading slowly or not working well on mobile
- The content is outdated or too thin
The good news?
You can fix most of these problems. But you have to check carefully and act smart—not guess.
2. Check if It’s a Real Drop or Just a Blip
Before making changes, make sure the drop is actually real — not just a short-term dip.
Here’s how to check:
Step 1: Look at Google Search Console
- Go to search.google.com/search-console
- Click on Performance → Pages
- Find the page that dropped
- Check the last 3 months vs. the previous 3 months
If clicks and impressions are dropping steadily over time, it’s likely a real issue.
If it dipped only for a few days or one week, it could be:
- A Google update being tested
- A seasonal dip (e.g. school holidays, end of month)
- Less people searching that term for now
Step 2: Check Your Page’s Ranking
Use tools like:
- Ubersuggest (free)
- Ahrefs or SEMrush (paid)
- SERP Robot or Mangools
Enter your keyword and see where your page ranks now vs. last month.
If you dropped from position 2 to 12 — that’s a clear fall.
Step 3: Search the Keyword Yourself
- Open an incognito window
- Type in the keyword your page used to rank for
- See what’s now showing on the first page
Ask:
- Is your page still there but lower?
- Is it gone completely?
- Is someone else answering it better?
Why This Step Matters:
You don’t want to start editing or deleting things unless you know what changed.
Always diagnose first — like a doctor — then treat.
3. Check the Page Quality and Content Depth
If your page dropped, there’s a good chance Google now thinks another page gives a better answer. That means it’s time to ask:
“Is my content still the best answer to this search?”
Here’s how to check:
Step 1: Read the Page Like a New Visitor
Open the page and pretend you’ve never seen it before. Ask yourself:
- Is it clear and easy to read?
- Does it actually answer the main question fast?
- Is it full of useful info or just general fluff?
- Does it help the reader take action (click, buy, sign up, etc.)?
If it feels thin, outdated, or hard to read — it needs work.
Step 2: Compare With Pages That Replaced You
- Search your target keyword
- Open the top 3–5 pages
- Look for what they have that you don’t:
- FAQs?
- Better layout?
- Recent data?
- More examples?
- Cleaner structure?
Make a quick checklist of what’s missing from your page.
Step 3: Add Real Value
To fix the drop, improve your page by adding things Google and readers love:
- Real examples or use cases
- Clear answers near the top
- Simple structure with good headings
- Helpful images or charts
- Internal links to related pages
- Fresh facts (stats, studies, product info)
Even 1 or 2 strong improvements can help your page climb back.
Check for Technical or On-Page Problems
Sometimes a good page drops in rankings because of small issues in the background. These are things most people don’t see—but Google does.
Here’s what to look out for:
Step 1: Check If the Page Is Still Indexed
- Go to Google and search: site:yourdomain.com/page-url
If nothing shows up, Google might have removed it from its index.
Fix:
Make sure the page is live, crawlable, and not blocked by your robots.txt file or a noindex tag.
Step 2: Check Mobile and Page Speed
- Put in your URL
- Look at both Mobile and Desktop scores
- Focus on fixing:
- Slow loading time
- Large images
- Poor mobile layout
- Unused code/scripts
Google cares a lot about mobile speed.
Even small delays can hurt rankings.
Step 3: Look at Core Web Vitals
In Google Search Console, check:
- Largest Contentful Paint (LCP)
- First Input Delay (FID)
- Cumulative Layout Shift (CLS)
If any of these are “poor” or “needs improvement,” talk to your developer or use a plugin (if on WordPress) to clean it up.
Step 4: Check Title Tags and Meta Descriptions
Sometimes, pages drop because people stop clicking on them—even if they still show up.
Look at:
- Title tag – Is it boring, unclear, or too long?
- Meta description – Does it make people want to click?
Fix:
Rewrite them to be short, clear, and focused on value.
Example:
❌ “Welcome to our site – Home”
✅ “Best Budget Hotels in Manchester (2026 Prices & Deals)”
Once technical issues are ruled out, it’s time to look at what Google’s doing behind the scenes.
Check If There Was a Google Algorithm Update
Google changes how it ranks pages all the time. Some updates are small, others are huge — and they can cause your traffic to drop overnight.
So before you blame your content, check if Google just changed the rules.
Step 1: Look for Recent Updates
Go to these trusted sources:
- Google’s Search Status Dashboard – shows official updates
- Search Engine Roundtable
- Twitter/X @searchliaison – official Google search rep
- SEO forums like Reddit’s r/SEO or WebmasterWorld
If other people saw traffic drops around the same time, it’s likely an update — not just your site.
Step 2: Understand the Update Type
Some updates target:
- Thin content (not helpful enough)
- Spammy AI content
- Slow websites
- Lack of trust signals (no author, poor E-E-A-T)
- Low-quality backlinks
Try to figure out what kind of update it was so you know what to fix.
Step 3: Don’t Overreact
If it was an update:
- Don’t delete your page
- Don’t rewrite everything from scratch
- Don’t panic and start guessing
Wait a few days or weeks. Then:
- Improve the content (as we did earlier)
- Strengthen your site overall
- Keep publishing helpful pages
Google sometimes rolls updates back or fine-tunes them.
Once you’ve checked for Google updates, it’s time to work on rebuilding rankings. That’s what’s next.
How to Recover and Rebuild Rankings
Now that you know what caused the drop — and you’ve fixed the page, technical issues, or found a Google update — it’s time to rebuild.
The good news?
If your page was ranking before, it can rank again. You just need to earn back that trust and relevance.
Step 1: Refresh the Content
Update the page like it’s brand new:
- Add new info (2026 stats, latest trends, FAQs)
- Improve structure (clear headings, short paragraphs)
- Cut anything that’s outdated or vague
- Add images, charts, or examples where helpful
Think of it like a “content relaunch” — not just a light edit.
Step 2: Add Internal Links
Link to this page from other strong pages on your site.
- Use natural anchor text (not spammy)
- Make sure it’s in a helpful spot (not buried in the footer)
This helps Google find and revalue your updated page faster.
Step 3: Build or Rebuild Backlinks
If your page dropped and others moved up, they might have better links now.
Try this:
- Use Ahrefs or Ubersuggest to see who’s linking to top-ranking pages
- Reach out to those sites and show them your improved version
- Create a short guide or infographic that makes your page more link-worthy
One or two solid backlinks can make a huge difference.
Step 4: Resubmit to Google
In Google Search Console:
- Go to the URL Inspection Tool
- Paste your updated page URL
- Click “Request Indexing”
This tells Google: “Hey, I’ve made updates — come look again.”
Step 5: Track Progress
Check rankings, clicks, and impressions weekly:
- Are keywords moving back up?
- Is the click-through rate better?
- Are users spending more time on the page?
If it’s slowly climbing, you’re on the right path. Keep improving around it.
Final Checklist to Keep Pages Ranking in 2026
Fixing a drop is one thing. Keeping your pages on top is what really matters.
Search is changing fast — AI tools, new updates, and smarter users mean you can’t “set and forget” your content anymore.
Here’s a simple checklist to keep your top pages strong:
1. Update Content Regularly
- Refresh every 3–6 months
- Add new data, examples, or FAQs
- Keep it useful, not just long
2. Watch Search Console Weekly
- Check drops in impressions or clicks
- Look at what keywords are bringing traffic
- See if you’re being shown for new queries you can target
3. Improve Page Speed and Mobile UX
- Compress images
- Remove slow-loading scripts
- Make sure it looks good on phones
Fast and mobile-friendly pages win — always.
4. Link Between Pages on Your Site
- Help Google understand what pages matter
- Help readers move around your content
- Use natural, helpful link text
5. Keep Building Trust
- Add author names and bios
- Include stats and sources
- Show experience, not just info (Google calls this E-E-A-T)
6. Stay Ahead of Google Updates
- Follow trusted SEO blogs or X accounts
- Don’t chase tricks — focus on being the best answer
- Keep your site clean, fast, and useful
7. Use AI Smartly, Not Lazily
AI can help you write faster — but it can’t replace real value.
Use it to help structure, expand, or research…
But you bring the insight. That’s what keeps rankings.
Just know:
Pages drop. It happens to everyone.
The smart marketers? They fix it fast, update with purpose, and build something better than before.
And in 2026 — that’s what Google rewards.

Olabode Oduwole is a distinguished Digital Marketing Specialist with over 12 years of excellence in SEO, content strategy, and brand growth. Renowned for driving visibility and performance across sectors, he has led campaigns for top organizations including Digital Bananas, WYZE Nigeria, Smart City PLC, and Pointek. As a mentor and facilitator with GoMyCode and Digital Bananas, he’s shaped Nigeria’s digital talent pipeline. His hallmark: turning strategy into unforgettable brand impact.

