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Start with the Google SEO guide. It explains the basics.I'm interested, share more informationnnnnnnn
i dont think thats what @Data Swami meant - maybe it is - but it didnt sound like it which is why i asked for more info - i thought he switched from a blog-format to something elseStart with the Google SEO guide. It explains the basics.
A blog is just a way to publish content. It can include anything you want. Including how to guides and answers to questions
Why not have a look at his website and see for yourself. It was I who gave him pointers to switch to answering the questions instead of old-fashioned (and, frankly, now useless) blogs, which was all part of the same conversation in which he asked here for feedback on his original site.i thought he switched from a blog-format to something else
It seems this advice was taken far too literally. Post titles don't need to be questions, they need to be a relevant and obvious solution to queries people actually search Google for.Why not have a look at his website and see for yourself. It was I who gave him pointers to switch to answering the questions instead of old-fashioned (and, frankly, now useless) blogs, which was all part of the same conversation in which he asked here for feedback on his original site.
Thing is; search terms are going to die out and asking AI in a conversational manner is going to replace searching Google like we did in the old days. It may well be that people over 40 might still use Google, but a generation of teens and 20's are coming up who are using AI for their information and that isn't going to change. So training AI on your content is going to replace trying to optimise for the front page of Google like we all used to do back in the day.eg. Search term: best greek islands for beaches (monthly search volume 1900)
AI has a long way to go before it overtakes Google search. It needs to provide the best results before that happens. This thread was aimed at SEO.Thing is; search terms are going to die out and asking AI in a conversational manner is going to replace searching Google like we did in the old days.
You don't answer a question with a question. You answer with a relevant post topic.I’m building pages around specific searches people actually type (often questions)
It may do at some point in the future but unlikely for many years. People access content in many different ways, traditional search and AI can coexist.Thing is; search terms are going to die out and asking AI in a conversational manner is going to replace searching Google like we did in the old days.
To be fair google have already made alot of moves with their AI overviews which is not just looking at SEO when its pulling for content to summarise. And it definitely is a market for a wide variety of markets with people getting leads from AI. Had a few mortgage advisers get leads from it recently.AI has a long way to go before it overtakes Google search. It needs to provide the best results before that happens. This thread was aimed at SEO.
You don't answer a question with a question. You answer with a relevant post topic.
Where are you getting your post titles from?
Hard disagree its already happening especially for the younger generation. Most dont have the ability to easily search google for an answer. So its either a question on tiktok or searching one of the many AIs. Traditional search still exists but alot of what google are doing these days does show their focus on the AI Summary (there is a lawsuit or something going on as to how they properly cite and quote sources in the summaries)It may do at some point in the future but unlikely for many years. People access content in many different ways, traditional search and AI can coexist.
And of course it depends on the intent of your search. I needed a fuse box cover for a 1973 TR6. An AI search failed but Google delivered.
What an odd thing to say.especially for the younger generation. Most dont have the ability to easily search google for an answer.
Why odd? From my experience working with the kids at the college and also my own daughter there is a big skill gap even for searching google due to how they have been brought up with techWhat an odd thing to say.
I agree, I use Google, and for finding a product to purchase I use Google to find that product 100x over any AI search because that is me.I needed a fuse box cover for a 1973 TR6. An AI search failed but Google delivered.
Technically, I agree, but looking to the future, I disagree that it will be that far ahead.AI has a long way to go before it overtakes Google search.
My daughter is 23 and doesn't use Google Search - ever. She uses TikTok search or Amazon Search when shopping for products, and uses ChatGPT to find information. She never uses Google.What an odd thing to say.
I can give some insight into that from my own experience spent in colleges and universities.skill gap even for searching google
hell even whatsapp my daughter cant stand to use in favour of snapchat lol XDI can give some insight into that from my own experience spent in colleges and universities.
Using Google has become an artform to try and find information, you have to craft your search but then often the results are not that useful if you don't craft your search carefully. We have learned how to do that, but the younger generation don't have the patience to learn how to use Google search and to craft a good search query.
In the same way that the younger generation use voice notes all the time to message each other, rather than typing text messages - they don't have the patience to type a text message as we do. They use voice with AI apps, talking to the app to ask their questions. So they can ask an AI tool what it is they want to know, and the AI app on their phone talks back to them with the results. That is what they are growing up with, a search engine like Google is just so old fashioned, it's like that Facebook my grandad uses.
Which means your market research should identify the best place to market your products and services. SEO may not work but neither may AI. If you sell cheap socks all you may need to do is be present on Amazon and eBay.My daughter is 23 and doesn't use Google Search - ever. She uses TikTok search or Amazon Search when shopping for products, and uses ChatGPT to find information. She never uses Google.
Very true, and yet what I see so much of on here is a lack of realisation what is steam rolling down the road ahead of us. Change is coming so quickly and so many people are not prepared for it.Which means your market research should identify the best place to market your products and services
Again, this thread is about SEO. Not AIO. I use AI generated responses every day and I'm a fan.Very true, and yet what I see so much of on here is a lack of realisation what is steam rolling down the road ahead of us. Change is coming so quickly and so many people are not prepared for it.
SEO and AEO are synonymous these days and will continue to optimise together the more search engines use AI summaries.Again, this thread is about SEO. Not AIO. I use AI generated responses every day and I'm a fan.
What @Data Swami wrote was that the 'younger generation don't have the ability to easily search Google'. If they can search on TikTok or write a prompt on ChatGPT, they most certainly have the ability to search Google. They may not do it, favouring any of the other options available to them. It's learned behaviours, not ability.
I asked ChatGPT 'When will SEO become a thing of the past?' You should too.
As it relates to SEO, I don't believe AI is either 'steam rolling' or moving 'quickly'.
I'm going to quote some prior @fisicx advice given on this forum, in that semantic markup for SEO is the same semantic markup used by AI, and his advice is that if you do your SEO correctly, it will also feed the AI engines too. Then if you take the closing comment in this comment from above, SEO isn't the one silver bullet as you need to look at where your audience is.Again, this thread is about SEO. Not AIO.
How's that working out for you? Should I use Google or ChatGPT to find one of your questions showing up?SEO and AEO are synonymous these days and will continue to optimise together the more search engines use AI summaries.
Totally agree with this.I'm going to quote some prior @fisicx advice given on this forum, in that semantic markup for SEO is the same semantic markup used by AI, and his advice is that if you do your SEO correctly, it will also feed the AI engines too.
I was curious so did do this, and the output does back up what I've been trying to state;I asked ChatGPT 'When will SEO become a thing of the past?' You should too.
Gartner predicts that by 2026, traditional search engine volume will drop 25% as users turn to generative AI assistants. ChatGPT has already crossed 1 billion weekly searches and 800 million users. TTMS To put the scale in perspective, ChatGPT now processes 2 billion queries daily and is the 5th most visited website globally. Exposure Ninja
That said, Google isn't collapsing — it's adapting. More than half of respondents now start a search by opening an AI app, but Google usage hasn't actually declined Orbit Media Studios — the overall search pie is just getting bigger.
Why people are switching
AI search engines offer something traditional search doesn't — conversation. People can ask direct questions, send follow-ups, and get summarised answers without clicking through multiple links. SEO.com Traditional search feels increasingly linear by comparison.
What makes this particularly interesting for businesses
Even though AI traffic is still a fraction of Google's volume, AI search traffic converts at 14.2% compared to Google's 2.8% Exposure Ninja — that's five times more valuable per visitor. The reason is straightforward: AI users arrive having already researched and refined their requirements through conversation — when they click through to a site, they're further along the buyer journey. RankScience
So what does this mean for SEO?
The rules are changing significantly. Traditional SEO was about ranking on page one of Google. The new game is about being cited by AI. A few things now matter more than before:
Being an authoritative source — AI systems act like editors, deciding which content to surface, summarise, and stitch together. The goal is to be part of the answer, not just to rank. Semrush
How your content is structured — AI systems can't synthesise what they can't segment. Content needs to be clear, organised, and written to answer specific questions directly and concisely. Semrush
Where your content appears in the page — 44.2% of all AI citations come from the first 30% of a piece of text Position Digital, so getting to the point early is now critical.
Brand mentions across the web — AI search engines look for consistent brand mentions across third-party websites, social media, and publications — similar to how consumers research by checking multiple objective sources before deciding. SEO.com
The horizon to watch
Several independent analyses suggest AI search could surpass traditional organic search as a source of traffic to many sites by around 2028, particularly in informational and research-heavy sectors. Growth Engines
The practical takeaway is that businesses that start optimising for AI visibility now — not just Google rankings — will have a compounding advantage over those who wait. It's less about chasing keywords and more about becoming the trusted, well-structured source that AI consistently reaches for.
My key takeaway from that, is that Google is not in decline. I think a large percentage of AI model searches are for things you can't ask of a Google search. ie. Create an image, rewrite my resume, or turn this list into sentence form. Things that only AI can do in seconds.I was curious so did do this, and the output does back up what I've been trying to state;
Time will tell if Google “Search” becomes less dominant than AI search. We’ll get a heads up if Google decide to go down the AI route themselves to keep up…think a large percentage of AI model searches are for things you can't ask of a Google search
Going alright while I make sure all my pages get indexed. But one very popular one is if you ask Gemini or Google this:How's that working out for you? Should I use Google or ChatGPT to find one of your questions showing up?
This is from Google themselves with their double down on AI search and AI summaries https://blog.google/products-and-pl...h-driving-more-queries-higher-quality-clicks/Time will tell if Google “Search” becomes less dominant than AI search. We’ll get a heads up if Google decide to go down the AI route themselves to keep up…
I'm not going to argue with you on this. Can you tell me the search volume?Going alright while I make sure all my pages get indexed. But one very popular one is if you ask Gemini or Google this:
Chat gpt or claude for lawyers
Got scored very well where it appears in the AI summary for Google and also shows up in the llm chats too
Indexnow is what can be used for bing and all the others. Here is a GitHub tool that can get it to index for you them and Google. And can host it yourself to run daily https://github.com/Hormold/indexplease@Ozzy you're wrong here respectfully - most AI agents are filtering through google search results anyways
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But I do generally prefer blogs/articles to answer questions, I probably won't abandon them, my google search console is quite active with thousands of impressions just from my articles.
Example articles we post:
*I know, URLs will be better SEO if refactored to `hammervm.com/x/how-to-do-something-cool` instead of ID based*
Is there any platform that lets you manage your search console presence for Google Bing Yahoo etc?
I think you're arguing with yourself as not sure how answering your question is arguingI'm not going to argue with you on this. Can you tell me the search volume?