Should You Update, Rewrite, or Re-optimize?

Three different approaches to fixing underperforming content. Here's how to choose the right one for each situation.

By Ben Peetermans

When a page underperforms, you have three options: update, rewrite, or re-optimize. They’re not interchangeable. Choosing wrong wastes effort or fails to fix the problem. This decision is central to ranking recovery.

Here’s how to decide which approach fits your situation.

The three approaches defined

ApproachWhat It MeansTypical ChangesEffortBest For
UpdateKeep existing structure and content; add fresh elementsNew stats, recent examples, refreshed screenshots, updated referencesLow–MediumContent that’s fundamentally solid but dated
RewriteKeep the URL and topic; create substantially new contentNew structure, new depth, different angle, completely revised sections (often 2–3× more content)HighContent that’s structurally flawed or severely outcompeted
Re-optimizeKeep content largely unchanged; improve how it’s positioned for searchBetter title/meta, improved header structure, stronger internal linking, schema markup, intent alignmentLowGood content that’s poorly optimized for search

Decision framework

1. Assess the content itself

Read the page as a first-time visitor. Ask:

  • Is the core content still accurate? No → Rewrite. Yes → continue.
  • Does the structure serve readers? No → Rewrite. Yes → continue.
  • Is it comprehensive vs. competitors? Significantly worse → Rewrite. Close enough → continue.

2. Compare to what’s ranking

Search your target keywords and open the top 5 results:

  • Same format, depth, and angle as yours? Yes → Update or Re-optimize. No → Rewrite.
  • What do top results have that you don’t? Freshness → Update. Depth → Rewrite. Optimization → Re-optimize.

3. Read your GSC data

GSC SignalWhat It Points ToApproach
Position dropped, CTR heldContent quality or freshness issueRewrite or Update
CTR dropped, position heldSnippet optimization issueRe-optimize
Low impressions for target keywordsRelevance or optimization issueRe-optimize (or reconsider keyword targeting)
Position dropped for some keywords, held for othersPartial content gapUpdate with targeted additions

When to update

Choose update when:

✓ The content framework is solid ✓ Main points are still valid ✓ Just needs freshening up ✓ Dates, stats, or examples are old ✓ Minor gaps compared to competitors ✓ You have limited time/resources

Example scenarios:

  • “Best tools of 2024” needs to become “Best tools of 2026”
  • Tutorial with outdated screenshots
  • Industry guide that’s missing recent developments
  • Case study with old data

Update red flags:

  • If updating means rewriting most sections, just rewrite
  • If competitors are 3x more comprehensive, updating won’t close the gap

When to rewrite

Choose rewrite when:

✓ Content is fundamentally outdated ✓ Structure doesn’t serve readers ✓ Competitors have dramatically better content ✓ Search intent has shifted ✓ Original content was thin ✓ Multiple updates haven’t helped

Example scenarios:

  • 500-word article competing against 2,500-word guides
  • Content written for a keyword you now understand differently
  • Guide structured for 2019 search intent
  • Previous updates haven’t improved rankings

Rewrite cautions:

  • Keep the same URL (preserve any existing authority)
  • Maintain any sections that do work
  • Don’t rewrite for the sake of rewriting — only if necessary

When to re-optimize

Choose re-optimize when:

✓ Content is comprehensive and accurate ✓ Page doesn’t rank for target keywords despite good content ✓ Title/meta description don’t match search intent ✓ Internal linking is weak ✓ Headers don’t reflect content value

Example scenarios:

  • Great content buried on page 3
  • High-quality page with a boring title
  • Content targeting wrong keyword variation
  • Page orphaned from site’s internal link structure

Re-optimization elements:

  • Rewrite title for clarity and click appeal
  • Improve meta description to increase CTR
  • Add internal links from relevant pages
  • Improve header structure with clear hierarchy
  • Add schema markup where appropriate
  • Ensure exact keyword targeting matches intent

Combination approaches

Sometimes you need multiple approaches:

Update + Re-optimize

Content is good but dated and poorly optimized. Refresh the content AND improve the SEO elements.

Rewrite + Re-optimize

Create substantially new content AND ensure it’s properly optimized from the start.

Staged approach

If unsure, try the lighter approach first:

  1. Re-optimize (effort: low)
  2. Wait 4-6 weeks
  3. If no improvement, update
  4. Wait 4-6 weeks
  5. If still no improvement, consider rewrite

Effort vs impact comparison

ApproachEffortTypical impactBest ROI when
Re-optimizeLow10-30% improvementContent is already good
UpdateMedium20-50% improvementContent needs freshening
RewriteHigh50-200% improvementContent is fundamentally inadequate

Don’t use a rewrite’s effort level for an update’s impact.

How to track results

After any approach:

  1. Note the change date
  2. Set a 6-week reminder to check GSC
  3. Compare the 4 weeks before to 4 weeks after
  4. Measure position, impressions, and clicks change

Use the appropriate comparison period. Checking after 3 days tells you nothing.

Common mistakes

:::warning Avoid these before you commit to an approach:

  • Over-updating — making small updates repeatedly, hoping they’ll eventually work. If three updates haven’t helped, the problem isn’t freshness.
  • Under-rewriting — rewriting 20% of content and calling it a rewrite. If you’re rewriting, commit to it.
  • Ignoring re-optimization — sometimes the content is fine but nobody can find it. A better title or stronger internal linking may be all you need.
  • Rewriting too soon — jumping to rewrite when an update would suffice. Try the lighter approach first when content fundamentals are solid. :::

Making the decision

Ask these questions in order:

  1. Is the core content still accurate and valuable?

    • No → Rewrite
    • Yes → Continue
  2. Is it comprehensive compared to what’s ranking?

    • No, significantly worse → Rewrite
    • Yes or close → Continue
  3. Is it optimized properly for search?

    • No → Re-optimize (maybe + update)
    • Yes → Continue
  4. Is it fresh and current?

    • No → Update
    • Yes → Problem may be external (competition, links, authority)

Using GSC for monitoring

After making changes, GSC tells you if they worked:

  • Position improving → change is working
  • Position flat → change wasn’t sufficient
  • Position declining → change may have hurt (rare, but possible)

SerpDelta monitors these changes for you, alerting when your recovery efforts start showing results.

The key principle

Match the intervention to the problem:

  • Fresh problem → update
  • Structural problem → rewrite
  • Visibility problem → re-optimize

Anything else wastes effort or fails to solve the actual issue.

Related: step-by-step ranking recovery and how long recovery takes.