As an affiliate marketer, your ability to write pre-sales copy that ranks in search engines and converts visitors into buyers can make or break your campaigns. Getting this balance right is hard — and getting it wrong is incredibly common, especially among beginners.

These are the most common SEO copywriting mistakes I have seen over my years in internet marketing, originally shared by expert copywriter Karon Thackston and updated here with modern context.

1. Stuffing Keywords Into Every Sentence

More keywords does not mean better rankings. Search engines use sophisticated algorithms that go far beyond simple keyword counting. When you overload your copy with search terms, you sacrifice readability and user experience. In 2026, Google's natural language processing is advanced enough to understand topic relevance without needing your keyword repeated fifteen times on a page.

2. Losing the Balance Between Readers and Search Engines

SEO copywriting serves two audiences: search engines and human readers. Your readers always come first. However, write with too little attention to search optimization and you will not rank. Write with too much and you will lose your audience. The sweet spot is copy that reads naturally while incorporating your target terms in strategic locations — title, headings, opening paragraph, and naturally throughout the body.

3. Accepting Keywords You Cannot Write With

Sometimes keyword research tools suggest phrases that are grammatically awkward — things like “candies samples free” or “plumber Dallas cheap.” Do not force these into your copy verbatim. Search engines in 2026 understand semantic variations and natural language. Write naturally and Google will connect the dots.

4. Sacrificing Flow for Keyword Placement

If a sentence sounds awkward because you forced a keyword into it, rewrite it. You can break phrases across sentences using natural punctuation. Search engines ignore periods and commas when evaluating keyword proximity. “Looking for affordable real estate? Hawaii listings include…” works just as well as cramming “real estate Hawaii” into a single unnatural sentence.

5. Targeting Keywords That Do Not Match Your Page

If your page is about wedding receptions, do not try to rank it for “wedding dresses” just because that term gets more traffic. Even if you manage to rank, visitors will immediately bounce when they realize your content does not match what they searched for. High bounce rates signal to Google that your page is not relevant, and your rankings will drop.

6. Mixing Misspellings With Correct Spellings

Misspelled keywords can capture some search traffic, but mixing them into the same page as correct spellings looks unprofessional. In 2026, Google automatically corrects misspellings and maps them to the correct term, so this tactic has lost most of its value anyway. Focus on spelling things correctly and let Google handle the rest.

7. Using Keywords the Same Way Every Time

Repeating the exact same keyword phrase in the exact same format throughout your copy produces text that sounds robotic and unnatural. Vary your usage. Use synonyms. Break phrases across sentences. Incorporate keywords into different sentence structures. This makes your copy sound human while still signaling relevance to search engines.

Bonus: Match Keyword Types to Page Types

Broad keywords belong on your homepage and category pages. Specific long-tail keywords belong on individual product or content pages. And always make sure your title tags, meta descriptions, headings, image alt text, and body copy work together to support a focused topic rather than scattering unrelated terms across the page.

Great SEO copywriting has not changed at its core: write for humans first, optimize for search engines second, and never sacrifice quality for the sake of a keyword.

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