A jaded decorator once told me the hardest part of any job is persuading a client that “ivory” and “antique white” are different.
The UK decorative-coatings market is worth £2.0 bn in 2025 and is still growing at a 3.8% CAGR. Yet most paint brands treat digital like yesterday’s drop cloth: clunky sites, thin content, no empathy for hesitant DIYers. Little Greene breaks that mould.
In the last twelve months, they:
- Jumped +33% in organic visibility, more than triple the industry’s +9% variance
- load pages 24% faster than competitors, cutting potential cart abandonment by a quarter
- lifted branded search interest +23%—a rare feat in a flat market for wall paint queries
For SEOs working in paint and decorating, Little Greene is the live case study you’ve been crying out for.
Click here to download our latest decorators market report.
Market context
While inflation squeezes household budgets, DIY is holding up: average weekly spending on “home maintenance materials” nudged 2% higher in FYE 2024.
Buyers are trading brand glitz for guidance. That shift plays straight into Little Greene’s content-first strategy.
A quick traffic-vs-authority map shows them punching above their weight, nestled among “over-achievers” with stronger content than backlink profiles.
Table 1 — raw numbers (May 2025 vs May 2024)
Brand | YoY visibility change | Against market | Page-speed rating* |
Little Greene | +33% | +24 pts | 93/100 |
Farrow & Ball | +25% | +16 pts | 71/100 |
Lick | –14% | –23 pts | 58/100 |
*CWV performance index, higher = faster. (Insert table after this paragraph.) |
Farrow & Ball remains the volume leader, but Little Greene beats them on speed and on-page UX. Lick, once the DTC darling, has slipped, slow JS bundles and a vague colour-naming scheme drag it down.
That’s a masterclass in sloppy SEO shortcuts: no caching, no intent matching.
Brand numbers (why they matter)
- Visibility: 187,978 traffic-score vs 141,750 a year ago.
- Branded search: 14,800 queries/month, up from 12,000 in 2024—that’s roughly 382 extra in-market users per day (14,800 ÷ 365).
- Trust signals: A 4.8/5 average across 7,835 product reviews keeps sceptics calm.
Seasonality strategy
Little Greene’s blog pivots hard when search trends spike. Last winter’s “olive green paint” surge (+7% YoY) saw a colour-story post published the same week it peaked.
Meanwhile, Farrow & Ball waited a month, missing the traffic wave.
(Suggest a mini funnel graphic here mapping “Search trend → Blog post → Colour card CTA → Basket”.)
Tactics in action
- Real-world colour validation: Product pages show daylight, lamplight, and RGB values. There is no Pinterest fairy dust, just truth.
- Projects feature: Users can “pin” swatches mid-scroll to a private board. The average dwell time on these pages is 2m 37 s, double the category median.
- Paint-cost calculator: Pre-loads room dimensions; friction evaporates.
- The delivery promise is above the fold: “Sample pots £2, delivered tomorrow.” Returns information is one scroll away. Google loves that transparency.
Key takeaways
- Faster than the giants: shave load time first; glamour second.
- Match content to colour panic — inspiration early, facts late.
- Give indecisive users mental scaffolding: calculators, sample pots, iron-clad returns.
- Trust beats links: 4.8-star reviews trump 10k cheap backlinks.
- Never ignore branded search—those 14k monthly “Little Greene” queries convert like magic.
Conclusion
You don’t need Dulux’s budget to win the search.
You need a site that thinks like a terrified DIYer, a content calendar wired to Google Trends and a tech stack that doesn’t nap. Little Greene proves that when you remove friction, colour confidence and revenue soars.
P.S We’re a specialist ecommerce agency with 15+ years of experience.