Mar 27, 2025

What is branded traffic? (And why it matters for SEO and LLMs)

Content strategies that index on SEO are historically focused on increasing website traffic for unbranded keywords, or keywords that don’t include a company or product name. The strategy looks something like this: First, you identify unbranded search terms that are both relevant to your business and (ideally) high volume. Then, you write a lot of upper funnel content that you hope ranks for those terms in organic search. The goal is to attract new visitors to your site who may have never heard of your solution before.

If you’re myopically focused on the unbranded keyword approach of SEO yesteryear, you’ll be missing a lot. Branded search and its subsequent traffic (”branded traffic”) is becoming increasingly important for SEO and LLMs in ways that we’re discovering daily. Further, branded traffic is often overlooked for the purposes of SEO itself and can provide a ton of clues and opportunities for a comprehensive search-optimized content strategy.

In this post, we’ll look at the ways that you can learn from branded traffic and leverage it to improve your overall search performance across both search engines and LLMs. We’ll also talk about why we recommend analyzing traffic not in terms of branded vs unbranded, but rather as  strategic vs non-strategic.

What is branded traffic?

Branded traffic is the portion of the overall traffic to your website that comes from search queries containing terms specific to your product or company. The people searching for these terms already know you exist.

In this sense, branded traffic can act as a measure of brand awareness. With the rise in usage of LLMs for product research, brand exposure is increasingly important. Branded traffic is one element of a comprehensive approach to measuring brand awareness that can help you better surface in the right conversations at the right times.

What is non branded traffic?

Non branded traffic is site traffic from search queries that don’t include any mention of your product or terms related to it. When your site shows up in search results for non branded search terms, it’s an opportunity to have your product or solution newly discovered by people who might not know you exist.

Increasing nonbranded traffic is a method for increasing brand awareness, the ultimate goal of which is converting these visitors to customers.

Branded vs unbranded search queries

Branded search queries include product or company names, like “Rayban sunglasses”, or “Toyota Tacoma.” Non branded search terms don’t use specific product names. For example, someone might type a term like “polarized sunglasses” or “mid-size truck” as a search term.

Measuring branded vs unbranded traffic

There are several ways to understand how much traffic to your site is coming from branded vs unbranded terms. At ércule, we combine Google Search Console and Google Analytics data in a Looker Studio dashboard to see the m/o/m change across both. We recommend understanding the baseline for branded vs unbranded traffic before attempting to impact either number. Other keywords tools, like Semrush, also provide ways to segment branded vs unbranded keyword rankings in a fairly straight forward way.

An increase in branded traffic: what does it mean?

The simple answer: an increase in branded traffic means that more people are looking for you by name. This is typically due to the successes of your PR, community marketing, and product teams.

Your brand awareness initiatives are working

If you’re working on brand awareness initiatives and you’re also seeing more branded search traffic come in, it’s likely that the work you’re doing is having an impact.

For example, if you ran a Super Bowl ad, you’re probably going to see an increase in branded traffic in the first quarter of the year.

More people are using your product (and asking questions)

Companies with technical products also tend to see increases in branded search terms as their user counts increase, as more people type questions into search engines about “how to do x in [product name].”

Branded traffic is a big opportunity for your competitors

If people are typing your brand name and branded terms into Google, you want to be at the top of their search results. If not, a competitor will be happy to take your place.

Take for example a term like “Your Company vs Another Company.” If you consider branded terms as unimportant to your content strategy, your competitors may outrank you for this term.

In the following example, for the term “Asana vs linear,” neither product’s website shows up in the top 3 results for this search. Instead, ClickUp–a competitor in the space–shows up #1 with a solid product comparison. Using other companies’ branded terms, they’re able to make new people aware of their offering who may not have otherwise been considering their tool.

Not showing up for branded queries like these can mean losing traffic to competitors who are unafraid to make your brand part of their SEO strategy. Owning the narrative is key, and also an advantage as LLMs increasingly ingest first page results from top product queries in their own product research, alongside other sources like G2 and Gartner. (Side note to make sure you’re always taking a multi-channel approach to how you think about your brand in the modern world of search!)

GrPlylkL0owOQOVynSyONM_A4QSdZZh4omTtCWq1POr t0_q4TedP4UMJeFRd ud6VyxHhdr0APnnxPlyjcJYLm7sM5v1woZYYbjMROxXzxbX1qnyp7eLWZbBsgeWCIzac47e5cgRadclIKvJbI5URo

Branded content is a source of clues for your SEO strategy

Branded content (ie. landing pages, product pages, product launch posts) often ranks, not surprisingly, for a lot of branded search queries. When dialing in your search strategy, you might have a tendency to ignore these pages as “branded content.”

Using a tool like the ércule app, you can quickly comb through your library page by page and see which of your product pages or product-specific blog posts rank for which keywords.

eEBzESHsyt6k984Idflr_HLdOnncSFOLYFDY8u1Z DVKNUsMTYI EVEpcmhoBhdprxWyosiqkKxhZpHKZpOYOTRw4Gjl63 Xh4s2EVRIWEqhIXOlbFhLunoprdC4ixtPIXfMdM9oW54RKCqXhiDidnQ

You might be surprised that some of your most visited product pages are actually getting traffic from unbranded search terms. This is great signal! Rather than trying to “unbrand” a product-focused page, you can build an SEO companion piece targeting those same search terms. We recommend you take an approach like a more generic solutions page or blog post that addresses upper-funnel problems or concerns and cross-linking to your product-focused page or post.

Team up with product marketers on SEO

New product and feature announcements tend to be great sources of initial traffic. While product and feature launch posts are difficult to optimize for search (since they most often lead with the product and are not evergreen), they often do get search impressions for related keywords.

1password did a great job of optimizing their product feature content for search (and coordinating it with unbranded content as well).

1n7DsRO3ZSn7MfdeuzmlkywKyDAeCdRZBXdUKNTN12cBc5ByXPzoO9bu9njYNjuqCfPTRLtejygCNj xqt58l3LMVRuMl_c0lCOCfh4GhZYIgCvW5k XcKuUAN2gQOU88FHNv j lbwsOskgbtN2BqQ

We recommend keeping a close eye on branded posts and making friends with your fellow product marketers. They can provide you with a lot of clues into what you should be writing about higher up in the funnel and together you can build a complete launch strategy that gets a lot of eyes across all channels—including search.

Beyond branded vs non branded: strategic traffic

At ércule, we track branded and unbranded keywords and their performance for clients. But we also include a third category of analysis: strategic.

The “strategic” category includes any keywords, queries, topics, and terms that we’ve identified as relevant to your brand and audience. This can include branded and unbranded search queries alike. That way you’re keeping in mind terms like “Your Company vs Competitor” alongside important unbranded topics, too.

We recommend you focus on a variety of topics and terms as strategic to your search strategy, including:

  • What you want to be known for
  • What you don’t want to be know for but has volume (to position against, for example)
  • Problems your product solves and use cases it supports
  • Your competitors (including “vs” and “alternative” terms)
  • Branded terms like conferences or open source projects you support

You can try out our topic strategy template to populate your own strategic topics along with volume, competition, and relevance data from your SEO tool. And please, reach out if you have questions! The world of SEO is changing fast, and we’re constantly evolving how we think about these fast-evolving topics. I personally love to nerd out about these things and would love to chat. :)

We’re *actually* here to help

We’re marketers who love spreadsheets, algorithms, code, and data. And we love helping other marketers with interesting challenges. Tackling the hard stuff together is what we like to do.

We don’t just show you the way—we’re in this with you too.

Background image of a red ball in a hole.