43 Days of Automation: The Pages That Win Are the Ones I Haven't Touched

My automation has run for 43 days without a single miss.

Every night at 21:00 UTC, the script picks a calculator page. It adds verified benchmarks, works through examples, inserts internal links, and commits the code. It completes one page every single day.

The script just finished a cluster of real estate tools:

  • Cap Rate
  • Rental Yield
  • NOI
  • DSCR
  • Cash-on-Cash
  • GRM
  • WACC

The results are in. For these seven pages, the total impressions in the last 28 days was three.

I checked the data twice. I wanted to be wrong. I was not.

The automation produces high-quality content. I checked the code. The pages have:

  • Clear H1 tags
  • Detailed meta descriptions
  • FAQ schema
  • HowTo schema
  • Real benchmarks with citations

It is not a thin content problem. The content is legitimate and useful. The problem is user intent.

When I look at my site traffic, the winners are not the calculators. The winners are the generators:

  • Purchase Order Generator (18 clicks, 2,584 impressions)
  • Impression Calculator (7 clicks, 957 impressions)
  • Balance Sheet Generator (3 clicks, 17 impressions)

The difference is simple.

A purchase order generator serves someone who needs to do a task right now. They want a tool to create a document. The competition is lower.

A cap rate calculator serves someone who wants to learn a concept. They are searching for financial knowledge. High-authority financial media sites dominate those searches.

My automation was doing exactly what I told it to do. I just told it to do the wrong thing. I spent 43 days improving a category that Google does not want to surface for this domain.

I am changing my strategy immediately:

  • I will audit the ratio of generators to calculators.
  • I will move generators to the top of the automation queue.
  • I will stop prioritizing knowledge queries until my domain authority grows.
  • I will fix a recurring bug in my og:title tags.

Improving content quality is a good long-term bet. But you must improve the right category first.

I will report back when the queue shifts to generators.

Source: https://dev.to/aimiten/43-days-of-automation-the-pages-that-win-are-the-ones-i-havent-touched-38je

Optional learning community: https://t.me/GyaanSetuAi