Page 1
Top 3
growth
These numbers come from a 24-month engagement that ran from December 2022 to December 2024. Across that period, average ranking position across the tracked keyword set also improved by 31 percent.
This is a story about a small Australian eCommerce brand competing in a category dominated by large retailers and international marketplaces. The win did not come from outspending the competition. It came from owning the language buyers actually use when they search for premium, sustainable wooden toys.
Who is Honey Bee Toys
Honey Bee Toys is a Melbourne-based eCommerce business focused on high-quality, sustainable wooden toys. They sell timeless playthings designed to nurture creativity and curiosity rather than the disposable plastic that dominates much of the modern toy market. Their range includes their own products alongside curated European brands such as Grapat and Ostheimer.
That positioning matters. The Australian wooden toy market is small but premium, and the buyers in it are knowledgeable. They know the difference between a mass-market product and one made from FSC-certified European hardwood. They search for specific brands, specific product lines, and specific use cases, not generic "kids toys" terms.
That is both the challenge and the opportunity. Smaller search volumes mean less competition from major retailers, but the brand needs to be visible exactly when those buyers are looking. Missing the moment means losing the sale.
The Problem
When Honey Bee Toys came to us, they had a beautiful product range and an engaged community of repeat customers, but their organic visibility was limited. The site was ranking for a small handful of branded terms and almost nothing else. Three specific issues stood out:
- Limited keyword coverage. The site ranked for a few branded queries but missed the broader category and brand-specific terms buyers actually search for
- Site speed and technical foundations. Page load times were slowing both rankings and conversion rates
- Product and category content optimised for browsing, not for search. Pages described what the products were, but did not capture the specific search queries buyers were typing into Google
- No structured link-building strategy. Backlinks came organically from happy customers, but the brand was missing the kind of niche-relevant links that establish authority in a specialty category
The brand was strong. The website was missing the search infrastructure to surface that strength to new buyers.
The Strategy
We treated this as a specialty eCommerce challenge, not a generic SEO project. The approach was built around four pillars that ran in parallel across the 24 months.
1. Brand-specific keyword research
The first move was understanding the language Honey Bee Toys' buyers actually use. That meant going beyond "wooden toys australia" and identifying the specific brand-and-product searches that signal high purchase intent. Terms like "grapat lola", "ostheimer animals", and dozens of similar brand-and-product combinations became the foundation of the content plan. These are not high-volume keywords. They are high-conversion keywords, which is what matters in specialty eCommerce.
2. Content optimisation across product, category, and editorial
Every category page, product page, and blog post was reviewed for keyword alignment, content depth, and internal linking. The goal was not to stuff keywords into existing copy. It was to make sure each page genuinely answered the question a buyer would have when they arrived. Educational content was added to establish category authority: guides to sustainable toy materials, age-appropriate play, and European toy brands available in Australia.
3. Technical SEO and site speed
Faster pages rank better, convert better, and earn more repeat visits. We worked through the technical foundations: site architecture, crawlability, meta tag structure, broken links, image compression, and mobile usability. These are the unglamorous fixes that compound over time.
4. Niche-relevant link building
Generic backlinks do not move specialty eCommerce rankings. We focused on links from niche-relevant sources: parenting blogs in the sustainable and Montessori space, educator communities, and partnerships with creators in the conscious-parenting category. Each link reinforced the brand's authority in its category rather than just adding to a domain authority score.
Preparing for the Shopify Migration
Toward the end of the engagement, Honey Bee Toys made the strategic decision to migrate to Shopify. Platform migrations are one of the highest-risk moments in any SEO programme. Done badly, they can wipe out years of organic foundation in a weekend. Done well, they create a faster, more conversion-friendly site without losing the rankings that took years to build.
We mapped redirects from old URLs to new ones, preserved page-level metadata, and used the migration as an opportunity to improve site speed and mobile usability. The 178 page one keywords carried through the migration cleanly. The Shopify platform then unlocked further conversion improvements on top of the search foundation already in place.
The Results in Detail
Across the 24-month engagement, Honey Bee Toys grew from a handful of ranking keywords to a meaningful organic presence in their category.
- 178 keywords on page one of Google, up from a starting position in single digits
- 93 of those keywords in the top three positions
- 72.6 percent increase in organic traffic across the engagement
- 31 percent improvement in average ranking position across the tracked keyword set
- Successful migration to Shopify with rankings preserved and conversion infrastructure improved
The qualitative shift mattered as much as the numbers. Honey Bee Toys went from a brand most buyers found through direct word-of-mouth to a brand that appears at the top of Google when someone searches for the specific products and categories the business carries.
"We couldn't be happier with the results. The consistent growth in traffic and visibility has translated into more sales and recognition for our brand. We're excited to see what's next with the Shopify migration."
— Honey Bee Toys
What This Means for Specialty eCommerce
The Honey Bee Toys engagement is a useful counterpoint to the assumption that small brands cannot compete on organic search. They can, but the strategy has to fit the category.
For a specialty eCommerce brand, winning on search means owning the niche language buyers use. That means brand-specific keyword research, content that genuinely answers buyer questions, technical foundations that do not let the site down, and links from sources that reinforce category authority. None of this requires the budget of a large retailer. It requires understanding the category deeply enough to know what to invest in.
Honey Bee Toys had a strong product, a clear category position, and a willingness to commit to a 24-month programme rather than expecting overnight results. That combination is what made the outcome possible.
Specialty eCommerce rewards depth, not breadth. Honey Bee Toys did not try to rank for "kids toys" or "Christmas presents". They built authority in their specific category and let that authority compound. The 178 page one keywords are the result of two years of doing the unglamorous work consistently.