In this exclusive
Search Engine Land discussion, four top SEO experts will discuss how to
survive and thrive as search shifts in the AI era.
Why we care. Generative AI is shaking the
foundations of how people find and interact with information online. The
stakes have never been higher for search marketers, brands, businesses,
and creators.
The big questions:
- Is this the end of SEO – or the start of something bigger?
- What matters more now: tactics, terminology, or outcomes?
- How can marketers adapt as the rules – and players – of search evolve?
Who’s talking: I moderated a great discussion between our panel of experts:
- Barry Schwartz, contributing editor at Search Engine Land
- Michael King, CEO of iPullRank
- Myriam Jessier, consultant at Pragm
- Duane Forrester, CEO of UnboundAnswers.com
The conversation. Watch the video above for the full conversation and actionable insights you can use right away.
The transcript. Here is the unedited transcript. (It will be reviewed and corrected shortly):
Danny Goodwin
Hey everybody. I’m Danny Goodwin, editorial director of Search Engine
Land, and we are here for a very special live with search engine land.
We’re gonna be talking about what’s next for SEO and the generative AI
era and about the future of visibility, trust, and connection. Uh, now
we’ve all lived through a lot of huge changes in search over the years,
but the definition of search continues to evolve and what worked a year
or two ago may not work anymore.
And the pace of change in SEO is just. Insane right now. Uh, and it’s
never been faster. Generative AI is reshaping how people discover,
evaluate, and act on information. And for search marketers, brands,
businesses, and creators, the stakes are higher than ever. So today
we’re bringing together a few of the industry’s sharpest minds for
exclusive discussion on what’s all means and how you can adapt, evolve,
and thrive in this next era of search.
So settle in. The conversation starts now. I’ll let our panelists
each introduce who they are and what they do. Mike, I’ll start with
you.
Mike King
Hey, I am Mike King. I am the founder and CEO here at IPO Rank, and
also our first chief relevance engineer. And for anybody watching at
home today is IPO rank’s 11th birthday. So I’m excited. Cool.
Danny Goodwin
Congratulations. That is amazing. Duane, introduce yourself.
Duane Forrester
Hey gang, Duane Forster, founder and CEO of unboundanswers.com. I
help people, what can I say? Been doing this forever. Super happy to be
here with everybody and excited to get into this conversation.
Danny Goodwin
Amazing. Myriam, introduce yourself.
Myriam Jessier
My name is Myriam and I’m the co-founder of Pragm. I have been doing
SEO for a very long time as well, and everything old is new again, now
we’re dealing with cloaking and so many things from like the vintage
era, so I can’t wait to talk about it.
Danny Goodwin
Amazing. Welcome. And Barry.
Barry Schwartz
Hi, I’m Barry. I’ve been writing about what these guys have been doing for the past 20 plus years. That’s about it.
Danny Goodwin
That’s about it. Okay. So let’s dive right in. We’ll start with the
big question that sort of got us all here today. The future of SEO.
Mike, you’ve been saying that SEO isn’t dead, but it’s deprecated. So
let’s start there. What do you mean by that and what are the
implications of that statement?
Mike King
Sure. So first, let’s explain what the concept of deprecated means.
So typically when like a new specification comes out, um, a lot of
software will continue to support that specification, or excuse me, the
old specification, even though the new one is better, right?
And so to that point. You can continue to do SEO the way you’ve
always done it, and you may get some results from it, which is why so
many people are just saying like, oh, it’s just SEO. But fundamentally,
the way these platforms work is different, right? It isn’t just about
the retrieval aspect of it. It’s also about, uh, expanding queries, you
know, to be dozens of queries that are used.
They’re pulling passages and then there’s syn, there’s a bunch of
synthesis that happens. So, you know, there was some data that came out
from ziptie a couple months ago where they talked about how if you’re in
the top 10 of the serp, you have a 25% chance of appearing in like the
AI overview. So that fundamentally tells you that you need to do
something different to have a higher likelihood of appearing in the AI
overview.
So that’s what I’m saying, like just us limiting ourselves to what
we’ve always done is not enough to be effective in these channels moving
forward.
Danny Goodwin
Great. So, Duane, how about you? Would you agree with that?
Duane Forrester
You know, um, I’ve known Mike a lot of years and, um, sometimes I agree with him, sometimes I don’t.
Um, this is one of those moments where, yeah, I agree with Mike. Um, I
have very much taken the perspective that we are in a transitional
phase. Um, if, for example, the SEO life that we’ve been living for the
last 20 years in the industry is the equivalent of high school. Uh, we
are now going to university because there is another layer.
You don’t get to walk away from what you know traditionally, but I
will tell you this, okay, and this is really important, and I think
Mike’s deprecation example really hits on it. And Miriam touched on this
a little bit. Everything old is new. Again, the reality in my head is
this. If you haven’t gotten your ducks in a row with traditional SEO at
this point, a lot of people aren’t gonna help you anymore because we’re
moving.
And I, I don’t know how else to explain this to companies. Like now
is not the time to go back and learn what structured data is or how to
deploy it. Like if you’re having those conversations, I kind of want to
tell you, here’s some remedial studying for the weekend. Come back to me
when you’re serious about moving forward because you had 20 years to
get that done and you’re still struggling.
So I don’t know. But anyone else, but I’m pretty sure that you, this
group is gonna agree with me on this. We are moving so fast now. That it
is a, it is a sprint. It is a 26 mile sprint. There is no more example
of, oh, it’s a marathon. It’s a, it’s a sprint. No, it’s all a sprint
and it’s infinitely long and you either can keep up or you cannot.
And so I fundamentally, I agree with everything I’m hearing so far. I’m right there and mildly frustrated.
Danny Goodwin
Why are you mildly frustrated?
Duane Forrester
Well, I’m mildly frustrated by that, by the, the traditional
oversimplification of something that gets applied to something that is
demonstrably more complex.
Like, like people coming at me saying, I write an article about
chunking, and they’re like, oh, I can’t say that to my executive. I’ll
get laughed outta the room. And I’m like. Do you not understand? That
word is actually from the machine learning lexicon, like it refers to
something that these systems do.
And you have to understand that of course, they don’t understand that
because again, no one reads, they’re scanning things, they’re moving
too fast, tr thinking they’re keeping up. I’m telling you, the cost of
keeping up is you’re not watching television, you’re not playing video
games. You are literally 18 hours a day consuming.
You’re dreaming this stuff at this point. That’s where we are at. At
least that’s where I am at. And I suspect Mike and Maryam Barry and you
and, and a whole bunch of us are in that same kind of overload, buzzy
head space. Mm-hmm. That to Miriam’s Point existed 20 years ago when we
first started going to conferences, sharing these little tidbits of what
worked and what didn’t work, and how it worked and why it worked.
We’re back to that again. And yet people wanna oversimplify it. They want to dumb it down to, oh, just one thing. Right.
Danny Goodwin
Okay. Yep. So, Miriam, I;d love your thoughts. Do you believe that SEO is deprecated as well?
Myriam Jessier
I hope that you would go for Berry because it’s not characteristic
when I’m quiet. Uh, but, uh, I’m going to have a a, a spicy take here.
Um, I think that if you have been doing SEO like 20 years ago, yeah,
this is brand new to you. If you’ve been doing SEO and keeping up with
stuff, you would have noticed that we were headed in that direction.
However, and I’m gonna nuance this, where it gets a bit complicated to
explain this to folks is before we used to have a bit more control,
right?
Mm-hmm. It doesn’t matter. I don’t care about branding. Who cares. I
don’t care about PPC. I can do my SEOI am king or nobility of the world.
Okay? We’re number one. We get money. But nowadays I find myself having
to explain to executives some things that are not comfortable. Number
one, the darn thing, hallucinates.
Okay, so it’s not even your own, um, I don’t know if I can swear,
but, um, let’s just say cow poop. Okay? But it’s not just you pretending
some stuff until reality catches up and your brand is strong. Now we
have sentiment analysis. Now I’ve seen some April Fool’s jokes being
integrated into the ethos of a brand and then spa out in LLMs.
So you have to explain stuff that you would think, okay, maybe the
social media team should be helping as well, but nobody’s rushing. We’re
the only ones in SEO o trying to figure this out. So to me. Yes. SEO O
as people used to do it 20 years ago with a recipe without any
curiosity, trying to understand what’s going on, that’s deprecated.
But if we’re talking about a EOG, I don’t care about the acronyms. At
the end of the day, are we doing this job? Yes or no? I, I’m waiting
the jury’s out on what is gonna be called. I really don’t care. I’m old
enough to know everything that’s old is new again. The one thing that I
would bring about though is I’m obsessed with multimodal and not too
many people are interested in it, but how many times can I just like,
show a video of a broken thing or a microwave that’s in German and go
help me figure this out and it will help me.
Myriam Jessier
And this to me, opens brand new avenues. So now I take pictures of
packaging and I tell people, that’s your landing page. Can we please
optimize it for image? Vision? Yeah. It’s, it’s not that to me.
Everything about SEO is deprecated. However, the concept that we had
needs to be updated for sure. It’s just not the same game.
And now you’re running into new frictions with new teams. You’re no
longer like, I’m Nabil, yay. I don’t care what you say. I’m number one.
We now have to actually grow up and maybe be polite and learn how to
deal with others. Right. So this, yeah. Mike, you, you know what I mean?
Like some of us are struggling with that.
We’re having tantrums.
Mike King
Are you calling me? Not polite.
Myriam Jessier
Oh, this was not towards you.
Mike King
I’m messing with you. I’m messing with you. Yeah.
Myriam Jessier
But I have a few names that came up to my mind and I think the
audience as well, you know, who’s coming up your mind when I say that?
Danny Goodwin
All right, Barry, uh, your, your opening thoughts on the future of SEO?
Barry Schwartz
Um, more on the, uh, I guess Myriam side of things. Um, I don’t think
many SEOs are trying to oversimplify things, nor do I think they’re
playing video games. Um, I don’t, I dunno, I never have, I never, last
time I actually did any entertainment personally. I, I don’t believe in
entertainment. I believe in just working and constantly working.
That being said, um, one thing I’ve been doing is writing about how
SEOs have been operating for the past 20 plus years. And SEOs who are
around today, that were around 20 years ago, are always stepping up.
They’re always, it used to be back in the old days, submit your page to
the index and submit ’em to 20 different search engines over and over
again every single day.
Then it was due OnPage, SEO, then link building, then Universal
search came out, uh, feature snippet optimization. I’m jumping a little
bit, entities, et cetera. We’re constantly stepping stuff up. Um. So the
best SEOs continued to like, add things to their plate? Yes. This is a
huge jump in terms of what SEOs are adding to their plate.
A lot of SEOs were focusing on like one thing or two things. Now you
really need to have, you have to have everything under your belt to make
this possible. And the best SEOs, the ones who’ve been here for many,
many years, um, many of you guys on this, on this video right here, um,
are the ones who could adapt.
The ones that don’t adapt are the ones that die. We’ve seen many SEOs
with big names over the years that either fell off and are, no, no, no
longer doing SEO working for big companies, um, doing marketing in
general and so forth, uh, but no longer doing SEO and like optimizing
their own stuff. That being said, there are a lot of changes coming.
Um, obviously clicks are vanishing for a lot of people. You know,
branding is becoming more and more important ’cause of that. Uh, and
this whole angen experience stuff, having, how do you get, get your
client to think about, you know, building agents that integrate with
these AI engines and so forth. Um. I’m the guy who always, it’s not
always often like will cite Google about things as well.
And Google just, you know, had us, um, just, it was an article right
now in a adage I think, or one of these places where Google spokesperson
told adage that, um, basically everything remains the same when it
comes to optimization or SEO Um, there’s nothing specific you’re gonna
do to optimize, uh, for a I re or AI mode outside of their existing SEO
fundamentals.
But again, how you work with clients is gonna change. Like, are you
gonna count clicks anymore? No, you’re not gonna say, oh, I got you this
amount of clicks or this amount of conversions and so forth. ’cause
it’s, it’s gonna be harder to target and, and, and track and track and
so forth. And only the ones that are actually looking at, you know, how
do I show my clients that this the return on investment?
How do I show my clients what I’m doing? You know, how do I show that
we’re adapting to this are the ones that are gonna survive? And this
happens every several years, but with this change in search, which is
the most fun, I think. I’ve had covering search in a long time because
it’s changing so fast. It it, it’s gonna change.
It’s gonna, it keeps changing like very, very quickly and it’s gonna,
it’s gonna make and break a lot of SEOs. Um, not that we should call
them seo, I don’t wanna call them, but whatever it is, I don’t think SEO
the name is necessarily gonna change so fast. Um, but I think the best
SEOs that are here today, um, are gonna probably stay and adapt.
But at the same time, there are a lot of lazy SEOs out there that
work off a checklist. And those checklists, you know, those checklists
are going out the window. Um, so I do think things are gonna change, but
I don’t think it’s gonna change. Looking back at the 20 past 20 years, I
don’t think it’s gonna be like, oh, they’re, they’re doomed.
The ones that are, were here 20 years ago and that are still here today, I think will be fine.
Danny Goodwin
Yeah. And I, I think that’s a, a key point there, Barry. It’s like,
for the, for the near term, it feels like SEO remains as relevant as
ever. Uh, would you all agree with that? Like, I mean, you know, yes,
deprecated, but there’s still, you know, Google’s saying there’s 5
trillion searches.
I know a lot of those clicks go to Google, uh, and don’t actually go
out to the web. But, uh, how are you sort of po positioning that
yourself with the clients you’re talking to? Um, you know, as AI search
grows, uh, do we just kinda accept like, Hey, this traffic’s not coming
back from Google. Or like, how are you sort of talking about that with
your clients?
Uh, Mike, you wanna start there?
Mike King
Yeah, so I don’t, I don’t think what we’re talking about is that like
SEOs are gonna disappear. Like I, that’s not what I’m saying.
What I’m saying is that everything is fundamentally different. The channel is different. Mm-hmm. The user behavior is different.
The expectations of what we do in order for us to achieve something
in this channel has dramatically changed. And one of the biggest follies
that we’ve done as an industry is just accept that. It’s like, oh,
okay. Core web vitals, we’re suddenly performance engineers. Nobody’s
getting paid more for that.
So it’s like silly for us to just continue to accept things that
Google impresses upon us. Now to the question you just asked me.
Absolutely. We’ve been educating our clients on how the channel is
changing for like the last two years. You know, like I wrote a blog post
on this very site. Like two years ago talking about how retrieval,
augment generation was gonna change everything about our space and how
everyone was gonna see losses between 20 and 60% in traffic.
Here we are, you know, so like we’ve been telling clients that for a
while and they were, at first they’re like, cool, cool, cool, whatever.
And then once they started seeing these impacts from AI overviews,
they’re all ears. And then, you know, when I wrote the thing about, um,
AI mode, again, they’re all ears.
And then everyone at the C level is all about, well, how do we get
visibility in chat GPT? And even though I keep telling them like, Hey,
you’re not gonna get any traffic, it’s not gonna have the same level of
business outcomes, they still wanna be there because of the, uh, immense
growth that these channels are having.
So. Yes, it is a complete reframe of what we do because to the point
that Miriam made, like we have to interface with a whole bunch of dis
different disciplines here. It’s not just about text on webpages, it’s
about what’s going on in video, it’s what it’s about, what’s happening
across the content ecosystem.
And so I had a meeting with one of my clients last week when they
were like, Hey, we are going to stand up a GEO team. How should we
structure this? And that’s my whole point. SEO is defined in a lot of
people’s heads as a specific thing. It’s free traffic, it’s content for
robots. It’s all these like backdoor things that people don’t, um, give
much value to, which is why our industry is very much undervalued right
now.
We’re talking about AI and people are saying to us, what do we do?
How does this work? Who do we need on the team? And so for us to keep
living in this, this limited SEO lens, we’re missing out on this
opportunity to reshape what this is and the media is coming in and
defining it for us. And then clients are starting to come to us with
those questions rather than, than the framework that we can develop as
the industry that’s been here for the last 20 years.
Danny Goodwin
Right. Duane, your thoughts there?
Duane Forrester
Yeah, so this is, this is really interesting, right? Um, Mike is
touching on something here that, uh, I, I’ve written extensively on
recently on my substack. Um, and it’s this whole notion of, um, skill
retraining, um, new skills that we need. Um, I even did a four-part
series on inventing new job titles that might exist.
They’re fictional, right? They’re, some of them are just like tongue
in cheek funny, uh, but the point behind them is very serious. Um, I’ve
had a half a dozen calls with companies looking to restructure teams,
and they want guidance on how, like, what skills should I be hiring? I
took a tremendous amount of heat from people in the industry a couple
weeks back when I suggested that we need to start hiring new skills now
so that in two years those people are executing on the work you need
them to execute on.
If you are hiring someone to do keyword research now. You think
somehow miraculously in two years, they will be an expert at the concept
of query fan out and how to utilize that information in a content
context. You’re delusional if they don’t understand it. You are going to
have to have a training program.
You are gonna have to bring them up to speed or you’re gonna have to
hire people who already have this skillset. And that’s what I’m
advocating is you have to hire the skills today. Look, this, I think the
industry’s gonna be a mess for the next couple of years. I think
companies are gonna be a mess for the next couple of years.
Um, we are back for better or worse, Barry said, you know, like it’s
kind of some of the most fun a lot of us have had in a long time because
the change is so rapid and it’s interesting and, and I don’t, I won’t
speak for everyone else, but I will speak for myself when I say. It
forces me to learn new things every day for hours a day going deep.
And it’s stuff that I normally would not, I would not have gone and
read all these academic papers on all of this stuff just for fun. But it
is such a fundamental part of what we’re doing, what we have to do in
the future, dude. Like I just, it’s not optional now. So you, you need
those skills. You need that understanding.
You need that curiosity. I think, and Barry raised an interesting
point, like we are seeing a lot of people burn out of the industry.
They’re not interested in all of this change we’re seeing. Thankfully a
lot of people willing to adapt, want to learn about it. And we’re
seeing, I had a call, um, really large brand, like a Fortune 50, and
they’re very concerned about their procurement pipeline for tool sets in
2026.
So I launched the quadrant ra like kind of ranking all these 40
different AI tools and where they are on trust versus features and
they’re using that to define the top 10 that they will then go put time
into to interview and look at and demo and all of this. And I’m like,
I’m not saying what I did was the right path, but it is a path, it is
something and it’s saving someone a lot of time.
And we’re gonna see a lot more of this happening. People wanting to
add, excuse me, wanting to identify tool sets and what they can do with
them and what they can use them for. Mike mentioned zip tie. It’s
amazing. It is awesome. Extremely technical. So if you’re not a
technical person, you may not be able to wrap your head around a lot of
it.
There’s a lot of talk about Profound, they just scored 20 million a
few weeks ago in funding, so obviously they have an advantage, but
there’s a lot of new things out there and you know, it’s not just know
the tool, it’s know the tool, know the work, know your work. What are
your goals? This is across everything in your company.
You’re no longer the little pet off in the dark corner doing your
strange language. No, no, this, this work is now impacting everyone and
it is really important that people doing this work truly step forward.
I, I, I can’t stress that enough.
Danny Goodwin
Right. Um, so I’ll, I’ll shift topic just a little bit. Uh, we know
that at this point AI search is still driving, you know, pretty small
amount of traffic to websites despite, you know, what Google’s,
Elizabeth Reed may have, uh, told us in a recent blog post.
Um, I’m just kinda curious, uh, Miriam, I’ll, I’ll send, throw this
to you first. You know, do you think people are expecting like AI search
to eventually become a Google level of search or, you know, ’cause
obviously we’re all seeing a lot of traffic declines, a lot of, uh,
websites are seeing that. So do you, do you, what do you make of all
this, do you think do GEO or whatever we’re gonna call it as over
overblown or, uh, is it just not there yet?
Myriam Jessier
I have plenty of opinions. So first of all, I don’t think it’s quite
there yet. Here’s why many people that have companies will not be
willing to throw a bunch of money on something that could one day just
say the opposite of what it was saying. The day before, and these types
of inaccuracies, like I really appreciate the fact that Mike’s clients
and Duane’s clients are like looking towards the future, are invested in
it.
I deal with the scared clients, okay? Mm-hmm. I deal with the ones
that have the legal department going, what you do in here? Mm-hmm. And
so this is something that I’ve been paying attention to. Whenever Sam
Altman needs money, he’s going to talk about AGI and then there will be
funds coming in. Okay. The other thing is I am.
I’m obsessed with something, uh, that Mike said, and uh, uh, I’ll tie
it in a second. We are redefining the web. We helped build the web as
SEOs. We helped make it a trash fire. Okay? And right now we have a
chance to not make the same mistakes. So this is fascinating to me, but
it also means that, um, rest in peace to all the ex SEOs that ran into
analytics land because now they’re struggling because the metrics are
changing and we have to rebuild them.
So this is a notion that I have and profound, I great for the $20
million. Fantastic. I’m wondering other stuff. Yeah. So what is this
nascent industry built on? Okay. Mm-hmm. So first of all, there’s the
whole, we need money and I, I’m waiting for the hype bubble to burst.
And whatever remains behind will be what we use.
That will be the gold and. For profound. I’m just wondering, okay.
How do you get the data? And this leads me to having this, this thought
that for core web vitals, we have what we call lab data and field data.
So what happens in perfect conditions and what happens out in the wild
when users are coming on your website?
Well, when it comes to tracking LLM visibility, it’s the same. We
have the prompts that us as a company have defined because that’s why we
want, in ideal conditions, no personalization, no memory, nothing. And
then we have the field data. And that field data. Right now, the closest
thing to it is clickstream data.
So whenever I evaluate these solutions, I’m like, where do you buy
that clickstream data? Where is that coming from and how do you cut it
up? Because if I’m in France, I don’t need the US clickstream data.
That’s not the same real world that I’m facing. Mm-hmm. So I think that
all of these situations really need to be figured out on the business
end of things for this to become a viable thing that we look at and go,
okay, this is serious.
We have some compliance, we have some legal frameworks around it, et
cetera. Um, Danny, if you’re comfortable with it, I need to dovetail
into something because I’ve seen a very good set of questions from Navah
Hopkins. I’m going to read them. I don’t know if anyone else has seen
them, but what does ethical SEO look like in the AI era versus Black hat
and.
There’s a few PPC people that thankfully are interested in SEO, and
they had a discussion regarding how brands might be able to fool AI into
believing something about a brand based on UGC or other inputs, and
I’ve seen that happen. I’ve also seen some hackers enjoying themselves
very, very much with poisoning all of these LLM outputs.
So what would a holistic SEO perspective look like? So for me, the
work I’ve been doing with some big enterprise clients is slowly trying
to explain to them. You need to think about your branding quadrants, not
in I own brand, and then I’m gonna make SEO demands and PPC demands.
There’s what you say about your brand, your known brand, all your assets
that you put out there.
There’s the latent brand. Everything that everyone is saying on
social media about you that you may influence but you don’t control it.
There’s the shadow brand, all the stuff, all the leaks, all those
forgotten PDFs on like page four of Google search results. They come
back to haunt you. You had a lawsuit in 2016, you’re still having that
lawsuit according to chat, GPT.
So once it’s out, how do you handle that stuff? And then from all of
these bits, you have the AI narrated brand, it’s now your brand
ambassador. And for better or for worse, and that’s the portion that
brands are struggling with. So. Just before I pass it off to someone
else. When we talk about holistic stuff, that’s what I think about.
And I know I’m going to break Zara’s heart, but when we’re looking
for fun, summer, spring, uh, summer or spring dresses, that typical Zara
model face of, uh, is not gonna cut it because machines are not looking
at the model’s face going, you don’t look like you’re having fun. I
have 89% confidence. This is not joy on your face.
So this is the type of stuff we have to think about now.
Danny Goodwin
Absolutely. Okay. Uh, Barry, I’ll come back to you. Um, I, we sort of
started with is GEO overblown there before we veered off for a minute.
So, I mean, obviously you’ve been covering the industry for, you know,
20 plus years. You’ve seen a lot of stuff come and go. You’ve seen SEO
declared dead probably more than anybody else on this, uh, on this call.
So, um, what are you, what are you thinking as we, as we see this
heading forward? Do you, do you think GE Geo at this point is overblown?
Or, or how are you feeling about it?
Barry Schwartz
Uh, I, I don’t know. That’s a tough question. I, it goes back to our
original conversation about SEO versus geo. I think, I don’t know. I
don’t know if it’s overblown.
There’s a lot of money. At these days being thrown at this place.
Mm-hmm. A lot of, like I said, 20 million to profound. They’re all gonna
get consolidated at some point. Somebody’s gonna buy most of them up
and consolidate them into, into something else. Um, I know several
companies, not just profound, they got a lot of money from massive
investments, um, to build tool sets around this stuff.
So I, is it the new blockchain? No. I think AI search and AI chat
bots and all these things are really the future. Um, I just don’t know. I
don’t know. I don’t, I don’t like to diminish SEO and say, SEO was just
somebody in the back room. It was SEO O is not like it was 20 years
ago. I mean, you have VPs of mm-hmm.
Marketing and SEO Yep. At massive organizations. I don’t think, s se I
try not to believe that SEO is something that’s undervalued anymore. It
used to be undervalued. I, I really don’t wanna believe that it’s
undervalued anymore in this year. 2025. That being said. Yeah,
Mike King
very. What, what Fortune 500s do you work at? It’s still very undervalued.
Barry Schwartz
The, we had a number of, uh, VPs of like SEO for, like their New York
Times and different organizations that are really high end. I mean, I
don’t know, I don’t know off the top of my head, but I know we had them
on search engine land and XMX speaking and so forth with vice president
staff.
Mike King
Sure. There are, there are VPs of SEO, I’ll give you that, and some
of ’em make like $300,000. Yeah. But they manage a channel that yields
billions of dollars and they’re only getting 300 k. Like, that’s a
pretty big disparity. Whereas you’ve got people in the media side that
are making closer to like five, 600.
So I, I don’t, I, I still don’t believe. It’s valued that way. And
also like when people come to go get a, uh, an SEO agency, most of them
wanna spend like 10 grand a month when again, they’re spending millions
on paid search.
Barry Schwartz
I have people coming to me looking to build an Amazon clone for five grand. Yeah, I hear that.
I mean, there’s always people like that out there. So yeah, it’s all,
a lot of that has to do, do what you brand your company. I mean,
there’s one SEO company, a reputation management company charging, you
know, $500 a month and you have one charging, you know, I don’t know,
hundred, you know, tens of thousands of dollars per month for the same
exact service.
So I think a lot of that is around branding, which goes back to a lot
of what we have to do in terms of this whole new model. It’s not really
new per se. I mean, there’s the fundamentals that you need to do, and
there’s the stuff that SEOs, the really good SEOs have been doing, like
yourself, Mike and Duane, you guys, and, and Miriam, you guys have been
doing this stuff for a long time.
Mm-hmm. Um, you’ve been talking about this well before the AI rev
revolution over, when you wanna call it, there’s some new elements to
it, like. That’s really API integration is the whole nGenx stuff. So a
lot of this stuff is new, but it’s really not new. And I think, like,
like I said before, the best SEOs will survive and adopt these things
and tell their clients how to incorporate it.
I don’t know if we need to change the name so that, I don’t know,
some VP could get another 200 grand on a salary. I mean, it’ll be nice. I
don’t care about that per se. Um, but I do think, um, I would like to
see the SEO name become more and more credible and I think this is the
avenue toward, towards it.
And we don’t, I don’t think we have to change it to being GEO or a EO or E-I-E-I-O or whatever you wanna call it.
Mike King
So that’s why I disagree, because if that was true, it would’ve
happened by now. You know, I think it’s been happening. Like you said,
all of these people have been doing great work for so long.
It hasn’t changed the perception of SEO.
Barry Schwartz
I mean, Duane, how many of the former speakers back from the early
SES days that were sitting black hat SEO are now like in. Like massive
corporations doing SEO, um, maybe with bigger taxes, what you’re
thinking
Duane Forrester
And it’s, it’s a very real thing, right? Like, like there, there is a
number of people historically from the industry who were really good
at, at traditional SEO, black hat, SEO, understood all of it.
Um, were very successful. And those people have largely gone into the
background to be the guiding force at larger, technically minded
companies and, and they’re doing good work, right? Like, I, I, I think
both you guys, like, it’s funny, you know, I, I’m kind of envisioning
this like boxing match happening, but it’s all like candy canes and, you
know, like fluff and popcorn and whatnot.
Because I agree with both of you and I disagree with some things. I
fundamentally think that, um, I’d say about seven, maybe 10 years ago,
we hit the peak. Of SEOs getting large titles and large salaries, and
we’ve seen that trailing down because, not because of necessarily a
lowering appreciation of the work, but because a vice president of
marketing is an easier title for a company to understand, especially a
publicly traded company that has to report to a board that has a C-suite
making these organizational decisions.
And marketing then becomes the catchall that holds all of the
disciplines within that, including SEO, which ultimately means as an
SEO, you’re never really gonna get above director. And if you do, it’s
probably a smaller company or sometimes at a much larger company where
they need more executives to spread across.
So I, I think everybody’s right. I mean, that’s my kumbaya statement
on it. Um, but I will say this, um, I, I fundamentally think that, that
we are seeing a change here. Um, you can’t let go of the face. I love
how Miriam put this. You know, when Sam needs money, he comes out and
talks a GI, right? It’s like, this is a really, really, really important
nuance for SEOs to wrap their head around.
Okay? It’s, she says, Sam, right? But really she means perplexity.
She means quad. She means anthropic. Like every one of these companies
has their little pull that they, they go for. And what’s incredibly, so,
very important about this is the 700 million people that use chat GPT,
because most of those people.
Don’t know what search actually is or is not. All they know is they
asked a question and they got an answer that seemed trustworthy and that
seemed trustworthy part is really important. Okay? Because for us to
actually trust answers out of these systems, we need universal verifiers
and universal verifiers are a minimum.
Beta versions are 18 months away, and then probably 20, 27 before we
see practically applied universal verifiers and LLM fact checking and
LLM, I’ll let you go down your own rabbit holes about the efficacy of
that concept, but it’s being worked on. Fact is 700 million people don’t
know the difference and they’re looking at something.
I needed a new washing machine two weeks ago, so I took a photo of
the barcode that was on mine, was shocked to realize I’d had it for 10
years and was like, oh, no wonder. It’s kind of like crapping out on us.
There you go. Immediately, Chachi PT 4.0 comes back with, here are the
top three compete products to that modern version.
You know, would you like a, a summary of each one? And sure enough,
I’m not joking, I went from 11:00 PM at night having that conversation
in the dark because I couldn’t sleep and needed to solve this problem to
the following afternoon. Lowe’s was delivering our new washing machine
to us. And so do I really care whether it’s a search engine, whether we
call this geo or SEO, or no, I don’t.
As a consumer, I really don’t care. And I got a good answer and I’ve
got a great machine, and I love the music it plays every time the, the
cycle ends. Like, like that’s what matters to me. I solve my problem.
And you guys know this. I mean, if you’re on this group, you, you’ve
heard me, you know, go on about this ad nauseum, like this is the
fundamental thing that marketers need to wrap their head around is the
consumer side of it.
Their intent, their interest. And, and the rest of it is, is kind of,
um, I don’t know. It’s a little squishy right now. There’s, you know, I
look, I, I can sit here and argue and tell you there’s all kinds of new
technical stuff and you have to know this, and you have to do these
things. And then Barry can just look at me and say, yeah, but you know
what?
I can find homes for every one of those things conceptually in
content and topics that we’ve already talked about. And I, I can’t
really argue that it’s, it’s maybe a shinier version of that old thing.
Everybody went nuts a month ago for Query Fan out. It just blew up. Like
it was something, and I’m like, I literally do not know a single SEO on
planet Earth who doesn’t understand this concept and hasn’t been
working on it for 15 years.
It’s, it’s the basic concept with a new name on it. And yeah, in the
world of ml it’s important and it, you know, should have that name and
do whatever, but you as an SEO should know better. You should be doing
this already. So nobody should be shocked by it saying, oh my God,
that’s new. Now I have to do this, and I will buy a plane ticket and
give somebody a crisp high five If they end up as the vice president of a
query fan out at some company.
Like I, I swear, I like, that would be just like Fonzie jumping the
shark. And if you’re young and you don’t get that reference, go look
that one up. You’ll enjoy the video.
Myriam Jessier
I need to update my LinkedIn profile right now.
Mike King
Here’s my problem with that though. We, we talk about this idealized form of SEO that very few people actually do, right?
Like when you talk about like, oh, everyone should have known about
Query fan out. Like, yes, query expansion has existed the whole time,
uh, in a partially different way or what have you, but what tools do we
have that explicitly show you this is the direct relationship …
Duane Forrester
Mike. I, I just, just to, to push back on that. I will point out, um,
um, is it answer the people and, um, there’s another tool that’s
similar conceptually to what you are saying, right? Where Yeah. You’re
talking about it goes on.
Mike King
You’re effectively talking about like, okay, I’m mining. People also ask, which is a form of that.
Duane Forrester
Yeah.
Mike King
But it’s not exactly what these systems are doing. Oh, I agree. My
point, my point is this, like a lot of us know these concepts, but the
average practitioner of SEO, the people that watch these videos, read
these blog posts. They, they read all this stuff and they’re like, okay,
well what do I do next?
And so then they don’t do anything different than the checklist. So
yes, the knowledge, yeah, that’s fair, but it’s not actually happening
because our space is just so backwards in that regard.
Myriam Jessier
It, I would say that it is happening, but we haven’t been paying attention to it. So here’s why we have done our job so well.
That search is now. Democratic, I mean, watching people go on
Instagram, like community managers and social media experts explaining
to me how hashtags are working. And I was looking at them for years
going, you are adorable. Thank you for doing the SEO work. I don’t wanna
do good for you. So it’s, it’s one of those situations where I think
it’s the opposite.
People take search for granted and there’s nobody else but us going
into the LLM space trying to figure this out. So it, it’s, it’s bit
unusual. And when it comes to query fan out, I’ve been dealing with this
as an internal search nerd forever because what do you do when people
go on your own website to buy groceries and they’re typing for healthy,
um, um, healthy cheap snack.
Of course you’re gonna query fan out in your own internal search
engine. You need to match that expectation with your own store and with
what you know about your audience, how they purchase stuff. So. I think
that just certain things have caught up and are going much faster, but
then there’s some stuff that is just so backwards.
Like, I am not going to recommend to clients that they remove all
their JavaScript just because some crawlers from LLM are slow,
inefficient, and costly. I’m sorry, I’m not here for this. So we’re No,
no, I, I see you laughing and I agree. But I mean, uh, Chris Green was
bringing up an example with a big e-commerce site where in the code it
said, product is available and product is not available.
These were the two states available in the code. And then what do
LLMs do take for granted that if it says not available, let’s ignore the
available, we’re gonna say the product is not available.
Mike King
Right.
Myriam Jessier
So now we’re, we’re, we’re dealing with things that are going way too fast. And to me, it seems normal.
It’s like, Hey, weren’t we all on the same page that we have to write
good content, just period for humans? And then there’s this other end
where we have to figure. Okay, so Agent Agentic AI stuff, I think about
in the shower, INP as a core web vital is super important now. Mm-hmm.
What happens with mobile overlap?
Like if the bot is going on there and you have three popups, it’s
gonna be pretty deterministic. It’s gonna go first button, I don’t care.
I’m not gonna mm-hmm. Waste my time. So you are gonna end up with even
weirder behaviors that you may attribute to humans going, oh, humans are
getting less smart. No, they’re sending bots to do the job.
Mm-hmm. And we have to think about that as well, these new mm-hmm.
Behaviors. And, um, FYI for my PPC people, yeah. INP is now something
that you should get friendly with your SEO about your technical SEO
because this will impact you. People are buying shoes with agents now. I
know that. Um, I think it was like the SEO max, uh, waffle.
I’m so sorry for pronouncing your last name like this. I can’t
German. Well, he purchased a pair of his own brand’s shoes with an agent
and it’s working super well for him. I don’t know how well it’s working
with everyone like Duane, I’m glad that you did not delegate the
purchase of your washing machine to an agent so far.
Okay. Yeah. I don’t trust it quite well. And last but not least, no.
Yeah, not quite. Tinfoil hat moment perplexity is headed by people who
have a. Contract with Google. They used to be with Google Labs, and in a
few years they have to return. Haven’t you noticed that some of the
stuff that works well in Gemini, that they want to popularize, they will
take out and put in perplexity and vice versa?
Like the check sources from Gemini is now in perplexity and there’s
other stuff I see like, uh, let’s just say a walkway between the two.
Mm-hmm. And when we know that Google had a few moonshots as well, would I
say that, um, Google and so SEO as a whole, because they are the main
driver behind that industry at the end of the day, not saying that they
like it, just saying they have to deal with it.
Are they going to really lose out? I don’t think so. That clickstream
I was talking about, Ooh, isn’t that useful for AI mode ads that are
coming? Isn’t that a leg up on the competition? Mm-hmm. I, I can’t wait
to see how it plays out.
Danny Goodwin
All right. So I wanna circle back to something we touched on a little bit earlier.
Uh, you know, if we call the, if we do call this a new marketing
discipline, which is, you know, being found on AI engines, is this
something that SEOs today are going to own? And do you think this will
allow them to maybe get big, bigger budgets, uh, and maybe salaries too,
like Mike was alluding to? So, uh, Mike, do you wanna answer that one
first?
Mike King
Yeah. Mike, check 1, 2, 1, 2. Okay. Um, yeah, so. It’s my hope that
they can do that because again, you’re in a space where you’ve got a lot
more responsibility. You have to do this across a bigger content
ecosystem rather than just your website. And again, it’s an opportunity
to reframe because people associate a very high value with AI, and this
is AI.
So I think if we’re smart, it is an opportunity for everyone to
reframe. And the question on the name, I mean that that ship is sailed,
guys. Like as soon as Andreessen Horowitz was like, this is generative
engine optimization, that’s what it’s, as soon as the media starts
saying, this is generative engine optimization, that’s what it is.
We can push back all we want, but it’s too late. We should have done
that a year ago when this thing first popped up, rather than just saying
it’s more SE. So I think that there’s an opportunity, but again, just
as we generally have as SEO to begin with, it’s a huge branding problem
that needs to be overcome.
Danny Goodwin
Duane, what do you think?
Duane Forrester
Yeah, um. You know, I think that, is there a chance for more budget?
Yeah, I think so. Um, but you know, as we’ve seen since the pandemic
budgets have been slashed, there’s been massive headcount reductions.
Um, you know, people are slowing their purchasing, um, large companies
still have large procurement cycles that take, you know, six months to a
year to get through sometimes.
Uh, forget government, i, I if you’re gonna look at that, just, you
know, plan for your kids to take over your contract because it’s, it’s a
long haul with, uh, with.gov. Um, I think that, um, what we’re likely
to see in this kind of interim. Timeframe is you’re gonna see a lot of
people who don’t understand the space, didn’t understand SEO, but were
responsible for the teams managing that work.
Um, understood it enough to listen to the team and, you know, like
accept the guidance or say no to the guidance that the team gave them.
Um, but, but they’re not practitioners themselves. They don’t have a
deep knowledge. They’re not gonna have a deep knowledge in this space
either. But they’re going to accept responsibility.
They’re gonna hire the people with the skills, they’re gonna listen
to the conversations they’re gonna spend, the company’s budget. Um, I
think there’s gonna be a lot of that. And I think that maybe in five
years, um, we will see people with skills in those positions because it
will matter to companies.
Right? Like, you know, something that Mike was talking about earlier,
right? Like this decline in click volume that we’re seeing. Like I
don’t see a lot of people talking about the fact that if. If we can
agree that our future is built around an answer as opposed to, you know,
a clickable link, for example.
Um, if we continue to see that growing and it goes in that direction,
we will inevitably find ourselves trying to track a mention versus a
citation versus a linked citation. And was that my phrase that was used
in that answer? And how exactly do I do it right? Which kind of comes
back to the tools and their ability to do these things properly.
And, you know, the viability of all of that. Um, it, it becomes kind
of an ecosystem unto itself. Uh, its own arcane, um, vertical of data
tracking basically. Um, I think that we’re gonna see expansion in that
area. We’re going to see, unfortunately, a lot of people, um, you know,
look, we got, I’m tracking 40 tools right now.
Like there’s probably gonna be another 20 in the next year. And then
we’re gonna see to Barry boy, like. A metric crapton of consolidation
where all of those ones and twos that made up, the companies are just
gonna drift off because they never got funding. They’re just gonna walk
away. They didn’t care in the first place and the whole thing dies.
Um, but until that two to three years from now, everybody’s gonna be
walking around this weird kind of landscape of, well, this does this and
this does that, and this does this over here, and this does this, and
it’s, it’s going to be hugely messy, which means there’s opportunity for
some people. And some of those people will be internal people looking
to bulk up their, you know, budgets with their teams and proposing new
headcounts.
And because AI is so shiny, when you start talking in that direction.
Boards of directors lean in and pay attention, and C-suites start to
lean in and headcounts get approved. I need a keyword researcher on my
content team. No, you get no more head count. I need somebody to manage,
query fan out to determine what content that we should be focusing on
moving forward.
Is that related to ai? Yes. Great. Have two headcount. Like it’s this
type of world that I think we’re about to see turbulence for the
airplane, right? It’s gonna be a lot of it over the next couple years.
Myriam Jessier
You wanna talk about messy? I wanna complain about something. My work
is being attributed to another SEO called MIM because some person took a
YouTube transcript of one of my talks.
Yeah. And because my name is not spelled with a Y, it automatically
assumed that because I’m talking about local SEO, well who’s the other
MI that’s known for local SEO. And all of a sudden my entire. Life. Like
my Hawaii references, my Jewish background. All of that is attributed
to that poor woman out there.
And in lms. I’ve been working hard and the agency that published that slop, it’s literally, I slop
Myriam Jessier
Has not changed it. And the efforts I’ve had to do to fix that, I
mean, I, I dug into this and that’s why I say like it, like LLMs do need
to grow up because the ai Oh yeah. Brand semantic drift is Yeah.
Off the walls. It’s not just one thing. You have like factual drift,
you have intent drift, you have the drift of people on Reddit, memeing
your brand, you have narrative collapse, like all of these things. Are
going to be something we have to deal with and we’re gonna have panicked
brands coming and going.
Clean that up. No, I can’t just bury the body in page two of Google search results. Now you have content debt.
Barry Schwartz
It’s funny, it’s a, it’s funny because I have people coming to me and
saying, you know, this is what I, this is what some topic, what could
be anything, like what’s the best washer and dryer to buy?
Or whatever it is. And then this, this is the answer from Chatt PT
and I’m gonna go with it. I’m like, it’s, you’re like, it’s like, first
of all, on our topic, I know about SEO O they ask this question that I
know about, which is only SEO. Um, I’ll be like, that’s wrong. And it’s
just outright wrong. Yeah. And it’s like talking to a really confident
friend who thinks they know everything, but they know nothing.
Yeah.
Mike King
Drunk and that’s what confident. Yeah, but they’re gonna
Barry Schwartz
get better. But at this time, it’s like, you
Mike King
mean it’s like talking to SEOs?
Barry Schwartz
Exactly. Uh, but you know what I’m saying? It’s like you have that
one friend that really knows everything. Yeah. And they act like they
know everything and they’re so confident about it.
That’s what it’s like asking these chat GPTs and these ai, and
they’re getting better. Mm-hmm. Um, but then optimizing for that, like
they could run out, you know, chat. GBT came with a new model last week,
it’s brand new. And they had to like, they, we were getting rid of all
the other old models and they’re like, right.
And everybody’s fighting and like, we want the old models back. We
don’t like the new models. We want the old models back. Yeah. It’s,
it’s, it’s, we’re in a really exciting space. It will get really, really
good. And the AI will, we’re not gonna have to hire anybody, Duane.
It’s just the AI’s gonna do it all for us.
Duane Forrester
yeah. So, you know, it’s funny you say that Barry, and like half
joke, half truth, right? Yeah. Where, where like, like I, if, if you’d
have talked to me like nine months ago, I would’ve been telling you we
gotta be careful with Chachi BT five, because it’s probably gonna be
capable of doing a lot of work that SEOs do.
And like it’ll get there. Right. And so I believe in that, but now
that it’ll live through a bunch of cycles. The hockey stick is further
away, right? That moment where it ramps up and it becomes a truly
utility-based trustable asset, we are not there and, and I just like, we
will get there. I believe that, but boy oh boy, you need human in the
loop now more than ever.
Right? Miriam’s example is like critical for this, right? I mean,
anything at all. I do a lot of writing and I put my writing into these
systems and I say, find the facts that are incorrect. Find examples of
backup, this statement. Go do this, go do that. I asked chat GBT the
other night, and this is on 5.0. I asked it, I have a YouTube channel,
it’s got nothing to do with SEO.
And I said, Hey, you know what I’d like is I’d like a ten second
bumper that I can add a video that I can add to the beginning of every
one of my videos. Kinda like an opening reel, right? Can you do that? Oh
yeah. No problem. About 18 hours into the project, I asked it, can you
actually make this video? And it assured me it could make the video.
The problem was uploading it. Now Dropbox wasn’t working. Google
Drive wasn’t working, all these things weren’t working. So after about
another hour, I said to it, are you lying to me? And it said, well that
depends. And I’m like, what? Uh, there is no version of this answer that
should start with that depends coming from you.
And then it went on to it. It went on to explain how it was working
on everything I asked theoretically as a simulation in the background.
And it was not capable of building a video interfacing with any of these
third party systems or doing any of the work that I thought we were
doing that it kept telling me we were doing.
And, and then it just went on to like apologize a bunch of times and
whatever else. Right. And I’m just like. Okay. Object lesson, right?
Like this is, you see
Mike King
Canadian
Duane Forrester
God, dude. I dunno. Right? Like, like I get, you know what? I can
find it. I’ll ask it about maple syrup. I know this. So, so like, I’ll
dig in deep on it.
But, but the point is like, like you cannot, every single word has to
be vetted. Every single concept has to be vetted because the basic
concepts, like if I ask about my king in relation to an article, I’m
assuming there’s no other, my king in this industry that is well known
as the My king I know. And therefore my reference is solid.
And it turns out that there’s like two other Mike Kings in America.
One’s a real estate agent and one’s this, and, and then the system just
conflates those Mike Kings with my reference in SEO. And it gives me a
link to someone’s company that has nothing to do with the topic. And I’m
like, geez, you know, this creates more work than it fixes.
And so that’s like the reality I tell people, it’s like you are
working with a genius level 7-year-old who has access to humanity’s
knowledge, but is so interested in saying yes to you that they will lie
and not necessarily care about the lie, so that you, you’re constantly
needing to be on top of it.
We’re not there yet. And it kind of makes me think, and it kind of
makes me wonder, look, the money that’s being poured into these tools,
you are building your tool on the backbone of Chachi PT that API call
into their system using their logic to come up with an answer to this
admittedly very narrowly focused questions.
Okay. And I think we can all agree that if you can narrowly focus in
AI on narrow data, the hallucinations dropped precipitously. Like it
gets very accurate and it’s really good. Okay. But are the tools that
narrow? Is the training set that focused versus what the customer’s
asking for? I don’t know if we’re there yet.
So my fear is that we’re seeing a lot of money thrown into these
systems and we’re gonna find ourselves like kind of hitting the edges of
the envelope really quick. And a lot of customers who are paying on a
monthly basis or an annual basis are gonna back away when they get stung
a couple times and they’re like, oh, the data told me this and I made
this decision.
The decision you made was dollars, cents and resources and it was
made on data. You have no way to really validate or that you just
trusted and didn’t validate. So I, you know, this is, this is like a
hugely problematic layer. I think that’s there. And we have a lot of
people taking shortcuts right now. We see it already.
We know it.
Danny Goodwin
Alright, I’m gonna move on because we are rapidly running outta time.
I’d love if I could get kind of maybe a quick tip from each one of you.
How can the people watching adapt as AI search continues to evolve? Or
any new skills that we need in the next era of search. Barry, I’ll throw
it to you first.
Barry Schwartz
Um, yeah, I’ll just repeat what I said. You know, branding, which is,
yeah. And then, uh, I would look into all the new stuff around Ntic,
experiences, agents and so forth. Play with it a lot. It’s new, but play
with it. All right, Myriam.
Myriam Jessier
I actually have more than one tip. I always have more than one tip. So number one, you don’t need to be technical.
Just disable the JavaScript and see if the important stuff is still
there. I could nuance this. If you’re a technical SEO, let’s go talk.
That’s fine. But if you are just trying to survive out there, disable
the JavaScript and see if all the real information you need on there is
on there, like the price of your product, for example.
The second tip is you’re not happy with the output you get in an LLM
for your brand. Click the thumbs down button and give some feedback as
to why it’s bad. I know, I know it sounds completely just, you’re
wasting your time, but I believe that Chad GPT stopped. Working, like
speaking in Croatian, because Croatians, unlike Americans, are not
positive.
They were like, you are crap. It got so overwhelmed. I was like, I
don’t wanna speak anymore. Okay. I just don’t do it anymore. And the
third tip that I have is go on perplexity.ai and select, because you can
do that. The Reddit, the social search, disabled the web. Just look for
Reddit and check what people are saying about your brand because that
stuff is getting eaten up.
Like beyond that in social. I love the fact that Biba a huge
financial group. Their logo, if you ask, Hey, who is this brand? They
will go pull from bird logos, volume one on Pinterest from some dude
named Marco or whatever. Pay attention to social. It does some weird
stuff. So go on perplexity and check it out.
Danny Goodwin
Duane, your tip or tips?
Duane Forrester
Okay. Um, I’m gonna keep this one pretty simple and I’m, I’m hoping a
lot of folks are already doing this. Um, you should be using the major,
um, models in all of the systems. Um, my preference would be that you
have a paid account, even at the lowest level of paid. Um, however, I’m
not gonna spend your money.
You know, you, you could go in with the free ones. ’cause what you’re
gonna do here, start with your query fano. Create a whole bunch of
actual prompts that are related to your company, a hundred, 200. Run
those daily, weekly, monthly, through the system. Track the results that
you’re seeing with dates. Make a matrix for yourself of where you’re
showing.
Then start applying all of this logic that Barry and Miriam have
shared, and I’m pretty sure the genius that Mike is gonna add here.
Start applying it to what you are seeing as the actual outputs. I am not
aware of a tool that does this for you on mass. Currently. It may be
out there and I simply haven’t found it yet.
That’s fine, but you have to have this view. You have to see what’s
happening in these systems. You already have tools that’ll do that in
traditional SEO and the regular engines. You need to create your own
version and these new systems. It’s a really, really important view for
your company.
Danny Goodwin
All right, Mike, you get the final word.
Mike King
All right, I got three thoughts. One, SEOs, you need to demand more,
demand more from your tools, demand more for what the work is that
you’re doing. You’ve been the janitor for the web, for Google for the
last 20 years. Like you deserve more. Um, and also you gotta demand more
from yourselves. ’cause again, there’s so much that’s happening in this
space that you need to learn the nuances of difference.
Like if you don’t understand what a vector embedding is, and you
don’t really know what you’re doing in this space right now because
everything operates on that. Next thing is, um, embrace omnichannel
content strategy. Again, it’s not just about what’s on your website,
it’s what’s across your ecosystem.
So you need to be thinking about what are we doing in Reddit? What
are we doing on YouTube? What are we doing on LinkedIn Pulse? ’cause for
whatever reason, you publish something there and then you’re in an AI
overview, right? Like overnight. And then my last thought is really on
measurement, especially if you work at the enterprise, like that is the
first.
Thing that needs to be solved. I think Duane wrote a great blog post
on this that you can check out on his substack. But the way I I break it
down is in the three different buckets. So you have your input metrics,
that’s things like, um, you know, your passage. Relevance for the
queries. Queries and the, the fan out matrix, what have you.
Also bot activity. Also the classic rankings ’cause they’re all
inputs there. Then you’ve got your channel metrics. Those are the sorts
of things that you get from profound. And for the record, from my
perspective, profound is the only tool. There’s 40 tools out there, but
none of them are as good as profound and profound.
Has the lead on collecting the, um, the clickstream data as well. As
far as I know, like few of those other tools have clickstream data. And
the last bucket gonna your, um. Performance. And that’s not, not any
different from what it’s, that you already look at. That’s like, okay,
how many people come to your website from this channel?
And then what do they ultimately do? So traffic, conversions, things
like that. But the main thing to know is that there’s no connective
tissue between there, there is no Google search console for uh, GPT and
so on. So the best you’re gonna be able to get, at least in the short
term, is gonna be that clickstream stop.
So yeah, those are my three tips.
Danny Goodwin
All right, well, this has been an absolutely amazing conversation,
but we’ve got to end it there. Thanks to Mike king, Duane Forrester,
Myriam Jessier, and Barry Schwartz. Uh, and as a reminder, SMX Next is
coming November 18th to 19th, and of course, we’ll be continuing to dig
deeper into the future of AI search and where we’re heading next.
Thanks to all of you for watching. Bye everybody