Here's what actually moved. I took on a client on May 1st. They sell in one of Google's most restricted niches. The kind where Google is actively suspicious of every page you publish. No ads allowed. No easy links. Competitors getting deleted from the index every core update. If the system works there, it works anywhere. That was the bet. Here's the 9-week scorecard, straight from Search Console: - 20 pages up - 2,650 extra clicks vs the period before - Best product page: +2,933% - Another product page: +1,960% (that's 392 extra clicks on one URL) - One article: +2,300% - Even the news page: +7,400% But here's the part most people miss. Around 1,900 of those 2,650 clicks landed on PRODUCT pages. Not the blog. Most agencies would've spent those 9 weeks pumping out blog posts. Top of funnel stuff that AI summaries are eating alive anyway. We did the opposite. Money pages first. I can't share the keywords or the niche. Client confidentiality. But I can share what the work actually was, because it's not magic: 1. Fixed the trust signals Google checks before it will rank a restricted-niche page at all. Who's behind the site, who vouches for it, whether a machine can verify any of it. 2. Made every money page readable by machines. Clear structure, sane internal links, schema that tells Google exactly what each page is. 3. Stopped feeding the blog and started feeding the pages that take payment. No new content sprints. No link buying. No tricks that die in the next update. Boring, fundamental trust work. Repeated weekly. Turns out Google doesn't hate restricted niches. It hates restricted-niche sites it can't trust. If you're sitting on a site where the products don't rank but the blog sort of does, you've got the same problem this client had. Happy to answer questions about the approach in the comments. Keywords stay private, everything else is fair game.