Citrus America Success Stories — Traffic & Linking Strategy
Overview
Citrus America has a library of customer success stories on their website — well-produced, customer-approved case studies that include Q&A sections. Despite their quality, these pages receive almost no organic traffic. The traffic they do get comes almost entirely from direct email outreach by Brian (sending links to prospects one-on-one), not from search or site navigation.
This article captures the strategy developed in the [1] to change that, turning success stories from a sales tool Brian uses manually into a self-service asset that drives inbound interest.
The Problem
- Success stories are indexed but receive negligible organic traffic
- No internal links from blogs or other site pages point to them
- No prominent CTAs on the homepage or product pages direct visitors there
- The pages are not formatted to surface in AI-driven search results
- The content cannot be modified (customers have signed off on the final text), limiting direct SEO optimization of the stories themselves
Strategy: Three Levers to Drive Traffic
1. Internal Linking from Blog Posts
Blog posts are the primary vehicle for organic discovery. Every relevant blog should link to one or more success stories that illustrate the post's topic.
How to implement:
- When writing or editing a blog post, identify the most relevant success story
- Add a contextual inline link (e.g., "See how [Customer X] used this approach to drive foot traffic")
- Treat success stories as the "proof layer" beneath every educational blog post
This creates a content funnel: blog post attracts search traffic → internal link pulls readers into the success story → success story builds credibility and drives conversion.
2. Stronger CTAs on High-Traffic Pages
The homepage and product pages should actively direct visitors to success stories. Currently, these pages do not do this.
Recommended placements:
- Homepage: a dedicated section or banner — "See how our customers are winning" with links to 2–3 featured stories
- Product pages: a contextual CTA below the product description — "See this machine in action at [Customer Type]"
- Blog posts: a closing CTA block — "Want to see real results? Read our success stories."
The goal is to make success stories feel like a natural next step in the buyer journey, not a hidden archive.
3. Customer Video Testimonials
Short, authentic video testimonials are a high-impact complement to written case studies. They don't need to be polished productions.
Format:
- iPhone-quality is acceptable and often feels more authentic
- 30–60 seconds: customer answers 1–2 questions about why they chose Citrus America and what results they've seen
- Optional: a brief walkthrough of the machine on the store floor
Why this works:
- Video builds trust faster than text, especially for a considered B2B purchase
- A retailer who is skeptical about whether a juicing program will "actually work" is more persuaded by a peer saying it works than by any marketing copy
- Videos can be embedded on success story pages, shared in email campaigns, and posted to LinkedIn
AI Search Optimization (Adjacent Consideration)
While the success story text itself cannot be changed (customer-approved), there are two ways to improve AI search visibility:
- Blog posts that link to success stories should use H2/H3 headers formatted as questions (e.g., "How do grocery retailers increase foot traffic with fresh juice programs?"). This is where the AI optimization work happens — in the surrounding content, not the stories themselves.
- Q&A sections already exist at the bottom of each success story. These are already structured in a format AI search tools favor. Ensure these are not buried and that the questions reflect real search intent.
See also: [2] for broader guidance on structuring content for AI-driven discovery.
Action Items (from 2026 Strategy Call)
| Owner | Action |
|---|---|
| AAG | Audit existing blogs and add internal links to relevant success stories |
| AAG | Add "See our success stories" CTAs to homepage and product pages |
| Brian Framson | Identify 2–3 customers willing to record short video testimonials |
| AAG / Brian | Develop a simple video testimonial process (questions, format, logistics) |
| Brian Framson | Increase blog post output to create more linking opportunities |
Related
- [1]
- [3]
- [2]
- [4]