Dubai Freight Website Audit: 10 Sites, 10 Costly Mistakes Costing Thousands in Lost Enquiries (2026)
This Dubai freight website audit started as an internal exercise. Over the past few months, we quietly audited 10 freight forwarding companies operating across Jebel Ali, JAFZA, Business Bay, Al Quoz, and Dubai South — without being paid to do it.
Not to sell them something immediately. Just to understand the problem.
We picked 10 freight companies operating across Jebel Ali, JAFZA, Business Bay, Al Quoz, and Dubai South. Some had been running for over a decade. Some were newer outfits growing fast on referrals. Some had invested in professional websites. Some hadn't touched theirs since 2019.
What we found was consistent enough to be alarming. Every single one of the 10 companies was making at least 6 of the 10 mistakes listed below — mistakes that, conservatively speaking, cost each of them between AED 15,000 and AED 80,000 per month in lost inbound enquiries.
That's not a guess. That's a calculation based on what those keywords convert at, what freight contracts are worth in the UAE, and what their competitors who are ranking are likely earning from organic traffic.
This blog is written for freight company founders, MDs, and CEOs in Dubai and the wider UAE who want to understand exactly what's happening on their website — and what it's actually costing them. There's no fluff here. Just findings, impact estimates, and fixes.
The UAE freight and logistics market was valued at USD 21.63 billion in 2025 and is projected to reach USD 31.63 billion by 2031 at a 6.55% CAGR. — Mordor Intelligence, 2026
Dubai handles over 14 million TEUs annually through Jebel Ali, making it the largest port in the Middle East and the 9th busiest in the world. The market is growing. The opportunity is there. The question is whether your digital presence is capturing any of it.
- No Google Business Profile — or a Completely Abandoned One
- Homepage Targeting the Wrong Keywords
- Zero Location Pages — Invisible in Suburb-Level Searches
- No Route-Specific Pages — Losing High-Intent Traffic
- Critically Slow Mobile Load Speed
- No Schema Markup — Missing Rich Results Entirely
- Thin, Duplicated, or AI-Generated Service Page Content
- Zero Blog or Content Strategy
- Broken or Missing Internal Linking Structure
- No Backlink Profile — Google Sees an Unknown Entity
- The Cumulative Cost — What It All Adds Up To
What We Audited and How
We ran each of the 10 Dubai freight websites through a standardised audit covering: Google Business Profile completeness, on-page SEO (title tags, meta descriptions, H-tag structure, keyword targeting), Core Web Vitals and mobile page speed, schema markup presence, internal linking architecture, content depth and originality, backlink profile strength, and local search visibility across Dubai's major freight hubs.
We did not name the companies. Some of the founders are people we respect and may one day work with. The point isn't to embarrass anyone — it's to make the patterns visible, because the patterns are universal.
- 10 out of 10 companies had no route-specific pages targeting high-intent searches
- 9 out of 10 had a Google Business Profile that was either incomplete or actively misleading
- 8 out of 10 had mobile PageSpeed scores below 50 — catastrophically slow by Google's standards
- 10 out of 10 had zero schema markup of any kind
- 7 out of 10 had service pages under 300 words — Google classifies these as thin content
- 10 out of 10 had no blog content targeting the keywords their clients search
- 9 out of 10 had a backlink profile of fewer than 20 referring domains
No Google Business Profile — or a Completely Abandoned One
Nine of the ten companies we audited had a Google Business Profile that was either unclaimed, unverified, or last updated before 2023. Three of them had profiles showing incorrect addresses. Two had phone numbers that were disconnected. One had a profile photo that was a blurry stock image of a generic cargo ship with no relation to their actual operations.
Here's what makes this painful: when a supply chain manager or operations director in Dubai searches "freight forwarding company near me" or "customs clearance agent Jebel Ali," Google's local pack — the three-result box that sits above all organic results — is the first thing they see. It gets the highest click share on the page. And none of these companies were appearing in it for any commercially meaningful search.
GBP is free. It takes less than two hours to set up properly. And yet it's the most consistently neglected asset we found across every audit.
Homepage Targeting the Wrong Keywords
Every single homepage we audited was targeting one of two keywords: either a brand name ("Welcome to [Company] — Your Trusted Logistics Partner") or an impossibly broad term ("Freight Forwarding Dubai") that they had absolutely no domain authority to rank for.
The title tag on one homepage read: "Home." That's it. One word. On a website that had been live for 11 years.
The problem with broad keyword targeting isn't just that it's competitive — it's that it misaligns your page with the actual search intent of your most valuable buyers. A supply chain director at a Dubai FMCG company isn't searching "freight forwarding Dubai." They're searching "freight forwarder for FMCG Dubai" or "FCL shipping rates Dubai to Rotterdam." Generic pages don't match specific intent. Google knows this and ranks them accordingly — which is to say, not at all.
Zero Location Pages — Invisible in Suburb-Level Searches
Not one of the 10 companies had a dedicated location page for Jebel Ali, JAFZA, Business Bay, Al Quoz, Dubai South, or any other specific commercial zone in Dubai — let alone Abu Dhabi or Sharjah.
This is a catastrophic missed opportunity. Suburb and zone-level searches have dramatically lower competition than city-level searches and far higher conversion intent. A logistics manager at a company based in Jebel Ali Free Zone who searches "freight forwarder Jebel Ali" is not browsing. They are ready to shortlist. They want a company that specifically serves their location, understands the JAFZA import/export process, and has experience with Jebel Ali Port documentation requirements.
Without a dedicated page targeting that search, you simply don't exist in that conversation.
No Route-Specific Pages — Losing the Highest-Intent Traffic of All
Every single freight forwarding website we audited treated shipping routes as a bullet point on a generic services page. "We ship to over 150 countries" was a common line. Not one company had a dedicated page for "Cargo Shipping Dubai to India," "Air Freight Dubai to UK," or "LCL Shipping Dubai to China."
These are searches made by buyers at the very bottom of the funnel. They're not researching. They have a shipment. They need a forwarder. Now. The buyer searching "cargo shipping Dubai to India" has already decided they need a freight forwarder — they just haven't decided which one yet. That single page, if it ranks, is a direct pipeline to your most valuable prospects.
Critically Slow Mobile Load Speed — Destroying Rankings Before the Page Is Even Read
Eight of the ten websites we audited scored below 50 on Google's PageSpeed Insights mobile test. Three scored below 30. To put that in context: Google itself classifies anything below 50 as "Poor" — the lowest possible category. These are websites actively being penalised in rankings every single day because of load speed alone.
The cause is almost always the same: uncompressed images, no caching configured, poorly coded themes, third-party scripts loading in the wrong order, and hosting servers located in Europe or the US with no CDN configured for UAE visitors. Every millisecond of added load time costs you in both rankings and conversions.
A 1-second delay in page load time results in a 7% reduction in conversions. — Akamai, 2025
53% of mobile users abandon a site that takes more than 3 seconds to load. — Google, 2025
As of early 2026, server response time should be less than 800 milliseconds. If your site is hosted on a server in the US or Europe without a CDN, every visitor from Dubai will have to wait while data travels thousands of kilometres before the page even begins loading.
No Schema Markup — Missing Rich Results Entirely
Schema markup is structured data that tells Google — in language it can parse without guessing — exactly what your business is, what it does, where it operates, what its reviews say, and what its services are. Without it, Google has to infer all of this from your content, which it does imperfectly.
With schema correctly implemented, your business becomes eligible for rich results: star ratings, business information, FAQ answers, and service details — all displayed directly in the search results page before a user even clicks. In a category like freight forwarding where trust and credibility drive shortlisting decisions, appearing with a 4.8-star rating and structured service information in the SERP is a significant competitive advantage over a bare blue link.
Not one of the 10 websites we audited had any schema markup whatsoever — not even the basic LocalBusiness schema that Google explicitly recommends for every local service business.
Thin, Duplicated, or AI-Generated Service Page Content
Seven of the ten service pages we audited were under 300 words. Two were clearly copied from another freight company's website with the name swapped out. Three were AI-generated boilerplate that said nothing specific about the company's actual capabilities, routes, or operational strengths.
Google's March 2026 Core Update specifically targeted thin, generic content produced without genuine expertise or originality. If your "Sea Freight" page says "We offer comprehensive sea freight solutions including FCL and LCL shipments to destinations worldwide. Contact us for a quote," you have a thin content problem. That page will not rank. It cannot rank. There is nothing there for Google to evaluate as useful to a searcher with specific sea freight needs in Dubai.
Pages with 1,000+ words of original, expert content rank for an average of 3.7x more keywords than pages under 300 words. — Backlinko, 2025
Google's E-E-A-T framework (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) evaluates not just what you say but whether a real expert with real operational knowledge clearly wrote it. For freight forwarding, that means specific route knowledge, documentation detail, customs nuance, and industry terminology used correctly — not generic logistics language anyone could have written.
Zero Blog or Content Strategy — Invisible for Question-Based Searches
Not one of the 10 companies had published a blog post in the last 12 months. Three had blog sections that had never been used at all — empty pages with placeholder text. Two had articles last updated in 2021 that were still visible and actively hurting their credibility.
This matters because the buyers who eventually become your highest-value clients don't always search "freight forwarder Dubai" first. They search questions: "how to clear customs in UAE for first-time importers," "what is LCL vs FCL shipping," "Dubai to India shipping documentation required," "cargo insurance UAE what does it cover." These are searches with real commercial intent made by buyers in the early and middle stages of their decision journey.
If your website answers those questions clearly and authoritatively, you enter the buyer's awareness before your competitors do. You become the company they already trust before they've ever spoken to you. If your website has no content, you simply don't exist in that conversation.
Broken or Missing Internal Linking Structure
Nine of the ten websites had essentially no internal linking strategy. Pages existed in isolation — the LCL page didn't link to the customs clearance page, the blog posts (where they existed) didn't link to service pages, the homepage didn't pass authority signals to the pages that needed them most.
Internal links serve two critical functions. First, they distribute PageRank — Google's measure of authority — from your strongest pages to your most important ones. Second, they help Google understand the topical and hierarchical relationship between your pages, which is how it determines whether your site deserves to rank as a topical authority in freight forwarding.
A website where the homepage has decent authority but the service pages are orphaned from it is a website that will consistently underperform its potential.
No Backlink Profile — Google Sees an Unknown Entity
Nine of the ten companies had fewer than 20 referring domains linking to their website. Six had fewer than 10. One had a single backlink — from a directory that had been taken offline. In Google's view, a website with no external links pointing to it is an unverified, unendorsed entity. The algorithm has no third-party signal that this business is legitimate, operational, or trusted by anyone in the industry.
Backlinks are still one of Google's strongest ranking signals — particularly for competitive commercial keywords in markets like Dubai where domain authority gaps between players are significant. You don't need hundreds of backlinks. You need the right backlinks: from freight directories, UAE business directories, logistics publications, industry associations, and partner company websites.
Pages ranking in Google's top 3 positions have an average of 3.8x more backlinks than pages ranking in positions 4–10. — Backlinko, 2025
For UAE freight companies, the most impactful backlink sources are: FIATA member directory, Dubai Chamber of Commerce listings, industry publications like Lloyd's Loading List, partner company websites, and guest articles in UAE logistics trade media.
The Cumulative Cost — What It All Adds Up To
Let's be concrete about what these 10 mistakes cost a freight forwarding company in Dubai operating at a typical SME scale.
| Mistake | Prevalence | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| No optimised Google Business Profile | 9 of 10 | Critical |
| Wrong homepage keyword targeting | 10 of 10 | Critical |
| No location pages | 10 of 10 | Critical |
| No route-specific pages | 10 of 10 | Critical |
| Mobile PageSpeed below 50 | 8 of 10 | High |
| No schema markup | 10 of 10 | High |
| Thin or duplicated service pages | 7 of 10 | High |
| No blog or content strategy | 10 of 10 | High |
| Broken internal linking | 9 of 10 | Medium |
| No backlink profile | 9 of 10 | High |
A freight forwarding company making all 10 of these mistakes is essentially operating without a digital presence. Their website exists but doesn't function as a lead-generation asset in any meaningful way. They are 100% dependent on referrals, cold outreach, and repeat business — all of which have natural ceilings and zero compounding effect.
The companies in Dubai that fix these issues over the next 6–12 months will own the search results for UAE freight forwarding keywords that their competitors have left completely uncontested. The UAE freight and logistics market is growing at a 6.55% CAGR toward USD 31.63 billion by 2031. The question is whether your company's digital presence will be positioned to capture a share of that growth — or whether you'll watch it flow to competitors who figured this out first.
"We thought our website was fine. It looked professional, it had all our services listed. It wasn't until someone showed us that we ranked on page 6 for our own service name that we understood what 'fine' was actually costing us." — Operations Director, Dubai freight company, post-audit
Where to Start — If You've Recognised Your Website in This List
The natural instinct when confronted with a list like this is to feel overwhelmed. Ten problems. Where do you begin?
The answer is sequenced by impact and effort:
Week 1 — Zero Cost, Maximum Impact
- Fix your Google Business Profile completely — every field, real photos, all services listed
- Rewrite your homepage title tag and meta description with your primary keyword
- Submit your site to FIATA's directory and Dubai Chamber of Commerce
- Run PageSpeed Insights and identify your top 3 speed issues
Month 1 — Foundation Build
- Build and publish 4–6 location pages (Jebel Ali, Business Bay, Al Quoz, Abu Dhabi, Sharjah)
- Rewrite your 3 most important service pages to 800+ words each
- Implement LocalBusiness and Service schema on all key pages
- Fix internal linking so all pages connect logically to your homepage and to each other
Month 2–3 — Content and Route Authority
- Build route-specific pages for your top 5 trade corridors
- Launch a blog with your first 2 posts targeting high-intent question searches
- Begin a systematic review request process with existing clients
- Fix mobile page speed with developer support
Done in this sequence, most freight companies see the first organic enquiries from Google within 90–120 days and a consistent, compounding flow within 6 months.
For more on the specific SEO strategy that gets Dubai freight companies inbound leads without ad spend, read our companion guide: How Freight Forwarders in Dubai Can Get More Clients Without Paying for Ads.
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