How This Site Beat Amazon in Google Search (3 Step Strategy)

Ahrefs| 00:08:07|Apr 1, 2026
Chapters6
How Chewy fused outstanding customer care with search visibility to outperform competitors and drive loyalty.

Chewy wins with trust built through standout customer care and a scalable, product-led SEO strategy that dominates long-tail topics and earns massive backlinks.

Summary

Ahrefs breaks down how Chewy outperformed Amazon in search by marrying two strategies many brands keep separate: exceptional customer service and a powerful SEO program. Founder stories show the unscalable move of choosing a pet-focused, community feel over flashy jewelry, which seeded obsessive loyalty (Chewy reportedly retains 99.7% of active customers in early 2022). The lesson pivots to long-tail SEO, where Chewy Education covers questions like “Can chickens eat tomatoes?” and nudges readers toward relevant products, turning information into immediate purchases. The channel highlights how Chewy also acquired PetMD, creating a dominant topical authority and placing Chewy pages on multiple high-visibility SERP positions. By owning authoritative content and linking to the right Chewy products, they reduce friction from search to checkout. A viral-backlink mechanism is explained through the Anna Bros story, where compassionate aftercare generated tremendous media attention and hundreds of thousands of social shares, translating into high-quality backlinks. This blend of trust, education, and earned links culminates in a self-reinforcing growth loop that can feel counterintuitive in a world of paid ads and big brands. Chewy’s approach isn’t about outspending rivals; it’s about earning trust at scale and letting SEO amplify that trust across the web.

Key Takeaways

  • Chewy’s customer-retention rate was 99.7% of active customers in early 2022, illustrating how support quality translates into loyalty and lifetime value.
  • Chewy Education targets long-tail search queries (e.g., “Can chickens eat tomatoes?”) and nudges readers toward products, leveraging product-led content to drive conversions.
  • Chewy acquired PetMD to dominate topical authority, combining veterinary-backed content with product links that funnel users to Chewy’s catalog.
  • Chewy ranks for large terms (e.g., “King Corso”) and cross-publishes authority by linking to relevant Chewy products alongside expert content.
  • The viral Anna Bros incident shows how empowered customer care can generate millions of impressions (e.g., 605,000 likes) and earned media that deliver high-quality backlinks.
  • Chewy has over 35,000 unique linking domains, indicating a broad, sustainable source of organic traffic beyond paid channels.
  • The core growth loop is trust through care, education that links to commerce, and backlinks that reinforce visibility; together, they outperform traditional ad-heavy strategies.

Who Is This For?

Essential viewing for ecommerce teams and SEO strategists who want to learn how to combine stellar customer service with long-tail, content-driven SEO to achieve scalable growth. Great for brands considering product-led content and authority-building over mass paid campaigns.

Notable Quotes

""Other people feel the same emotional connection to their pets as I do.""
Founding moment that inspired Chewy’s shift from jewelry to pet-focused service.
""randomly sends out portraits of customers pets completely free or flowers when they find out one has passed away""
Shows how care translates into memorable customer experience and brand loyalty.
""They built a massive library called Chewy Education""
Explains the long-tail, problem-solving content engine driving search and purchases.
""They then integrated it into their own ecosystem, essentially creating a search monopoly""
Describes the PetMD acquisition and authority-building strategy.
""Chewy has over 35,000 unique websites linking to them""
Demonstrates the breadth of earned media and backlink strength.

Questions This Video Answers

  • How did Chewy leverage customer service to improve SEO performance?
  • What is product-led content marketing and how did Chewy use it to boost sales?
  • Why did Chewy acquire PetMD and how does that affect search rankings?
  • How can long-tail keywords drive e-commerce growth like Chewy did for dog food and pet products?
  • What is the impact of viral customer-care stories on backlinks and SEO authority?
AhrefsChewySEOCustomer ServicePetMDProduct-led ContentBacklinksLong-tail SEOKing CorsoViral Marketing
Full Transcript
This company beat Amazon in e-commerce despite [music] higher prices and slower shipping. They did it by combining two things most brands treat completely separately. Customer service and SEO. That company is Chewy, an online pet store selling the same dog food you can buy anywhere else. Yet, customers are obsessively loyal. Today, we're breaking down how that growth loop worked and giving you [music] three takeaways every e-commerce brand should steal. And it all starts with the unscalable move. Chewy was founded by Michael Day and Ryan Cohen. [music] Now, originally they were planning to start a jewelry business, but one week before their website was planned to go live, Ryan was at a local pet store buying food for his poodle, Tyle. And in that moment, he realized he didn't care about the jewelry in his safe. He cared about his dog. And he thought, "Other people feel the same emotional connection to their pets as I do." So, they emptied the safe, sold the gems, and bought dog food. They bet everything on the idea that they could deliver a personalized neighborhood pet store experience, but online and at massive scale. So, from day one, they obsessed over customer service. If you called them at 3:00 a.m. because your dog had a hot spot, a human expert answers. And it goes beyond that. Chewy randomly sends out portraits of customers pets completely free or flowers [music] when they find out one has passed away. So, what does all of this get you? It's loyalty. And that loyalty is actually a measurable number. In early 2022, Chewy reported that they retain 99.7% of their active customers. That means for every thousand people who shop at Chewy, only three of them leave. If you look at the lifetime value of a customer, a dog or a cat owner might spend $5 to $15,000 on food over their lifetime. So, if Chewy is spending $50 on flowers or a painting that secures them 15K in revenue, that's just good business. Loyalty made people stay, but they still needed a way to find new customers and at scale. And that brings us to takeaway two, own the longtail. Most e-commerce websites have a very narrow focus. They spend most of their time and resources trying to rank for [music] money keywords, stuff like buy dog food or cheap cat litter. And don't get me wrong, Chewy spends money on these keywords, too. But they also decide to back up and meet customers earlier in their journey. They realize that pet owners search when they have a problem or a question. To capture these people, they built a massive library called Chewy Education, formerly [music] B Chewy. For example, let's look at the search, can chickens eat tomatoes? It sounds like a random question, but thousands of people search this every [music] single month. Chewy has a dedicated article that gives you the answer. It explains that ripe red tomatoes are safe, but green tomatoes and their leaves are actually toxic for your chickens. And while that might sound completely unrelated to their business, they're doing something called productled content marketing. While you're reading about what's safe for your birds, the article suggests a healthy alternative to [music] tomatoes, like Mana Pro Harvest Delight chicken treats, and it gives you a button to add it to your cart right then and there. You went from a safety concern to a purchase in about 30 seconds. This works for big topics, too. Take the keyword King Corso. Almost a million people search for that [music] every single month. Chewy ranks number three in the US for that term. That guy explains that because these are massive dogs, they grow very quickly and need a specific nutrients to protect their joints. [music] So, right next to that advice, they link you to a supplement, Zesty Paws, Hip and Joint Mobility Bites. That food is designed to solve that exact problem. By providing the expert advice first, Chewy establishes trust. By the time you're ready to buy that bag of food or the heat lamp for your tortoise, you aren't going back to Google [music] to find a competitor. You're going with Chewy. Okay, so their education handles the practical questions like, "Can chickens eat tomatoes?" But Chewy took this a step further and bought one of their biggest search rivals, Pet MD. They then integrated it into their own ecosystem, [music] essentially creating a search monopoly. If you look at the data in Hrefs, PMD pulls in over 10 million visits per month. That is more organic search traffic than many of the world's biggest retail brands on their own. By owning them, Chewy bought even more topical authority. They have a team of actual veterinarian writing and reviewing every single one of their articles under their vet verified program and use the same product strategy as Chewy Education typically nudging you towards a product at [music] the end of the article. So whereas Chewy Education covers lifestyle like how to potty train a puppy, PetMD covers clinical like is my puppy sick? So because they have so much authority in their niche, they can actually occupy most of the spots on a single results page. Chewy has the third sponsored post on this. PMMD is the second organic ranked spot. So, right away out of this initial search, we have two where they're ranking somewhat high. I mean, they're they're actively in the conversation. It's [music] hard to do any type of animal related search and not have Chewy or PetMD show up. Let's try best tea lamps for reptiles. Chewy has half of the top products. One, two, three, four, which is pretty good. Let's see another one. How to fix my dog's bad breath. So, before I even scroll and I'm looking at the AI overview, I can see that PetMD is one of the topsighted sources. [music] I would say that's touch point one. Then next to that, there's a bigger link to that source of PEMD. Below that, I have the sponsored results and that's to Chewy is the top sponsored result that's encouraging me to try and fix my pet's bad breath directly. And then if I look to the side, there's two products actually through Chewy as well. So, they absolutely dominate the search in this case. Chewy's SEO brings in customers and their [music] customer care keeps them coming back. So, when they work together, the growth compounds. But there's [music] one more piece of advice that brings this to the next level. And that brings us to takeaway three, the viral backlink machine. In the world of SEO, link building is a grind. Everyone [music] knows it. You spend countless hours sending cold emails to strangers, hoping that they link back to your new guide on catnip. It's tedious, expensive, and most people just hit spam. But Chewy found a way to get the biggest media sites to talk about them without even doing outreach. Take the story of Anna Bros. In 2022, her dog Gus passed away suddenly. She reached out to Chewy to return a bag of unopened dog food. The agent didn't just give her a refund. They told her to donate that food to a local shelter, gave her a bouquet of flowers, and a handwritten card. That single post rigged in 605,000 likes. That story went viral and was picked up by the Washington Post, Inc. Magazine, [music] and today.com. Now, these are highquality backlinks, which are some of the most important ranking factor signals for Google. This might sound like a one-off lucky moment, and in some ways it was, but the important part wasn't unique. If you look across Reddit, Facebook, and X, you'll find thousands of people sharing similar experiences about how Chewy's doing something unexpectedly generous. Not because it was a campaign, but because support agents are empowered to do the right thing. And these stories compound. People start talking about them, press covers it, and links are accumulated. If you check HFS, you can see the data. Chewy has over 35,000 unique websites linking to them. And this customer care continues to create a steady drum beat of new organic mentions across the web. And in the world of AI overviews, that's important. So Chewy didn't win by gaming Google or outspending competitors. They won by earning trust at scale and letting SEO carry that trust everywhere. And when you combine all of that, it creates an unbeatable growth loop.

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