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This is why I was talking to you about at least 8/12 months for 100/500 monthly visits, wanting to be conservative. For example, a page is able to rank on Google much faster if it targets keywords with little or no competition . On the other hand, an article in a highly competitive niche on a relatively new website will take much longer. Likewise, if you're hoping to reach the top of the search results, you'll probably have to play the waiting game.
A study by Ahrefs (an authoritative source in the SEO field and company that created the WhatsApp Number List SEO tool of the same name ) observed that the average age of the pages in the top 10 rankings is 2+ years and only 22% of the results in the top 10 is generally less than a year old. ahrefs infographic on seo positioning time CREDIT: also showed that: Only 5.7% of pages reach the top 10 in Google's SERPs within a year. age of pages positioned on Google CREDIT: AHREFS Of course they confirmed that pages on older, higher authority domains seem to rank faster than new domains, which makes sense since older domains are more likely to have a stronger link profile than new ones.

For new sites, a period that many experts state is 6-8 months. This appears to be the average time it takes for a new page on a relatively new domain to reach its potential in terms of Google rankings and organic traffic. I always prefer to be a little more pessimistic/conservative, both by character but also precisely to work with truly motivated people, who no matter how much they put in: if they have a goal in mind they will reach it even if there are some unexpected obstacles. When doing SEO you are working with an outside company and have no control, it is important to keep this in mind. This is why the focus should be on content and users first and foremost: maybe one day Google will be replaced, but your content will still do well if it is quality.
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