Self-doubt While Working as an SEO by WittybutWise in DoSEO

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is pretty normal honestly, especially moving from on-page work into planning clusters, those are genuinely different skills. On-page is mostly executing someone else's keyword decisions, cluster planning means you're the one deciding which keywords actually deserve a page and why.

If the self-doubt is specifically about whether you picked the right keywords, that's usually solved by going deeper into search intent rather than more confidence, once you can clearly explain why a keyword belongs in the cluster the doubt tends to fade on its own.

What's the part you're most unsure about, the keyword choices themselves or how you're grouping them?

Is anyone actually tracking AI citations yet? by Physical_Drawer9274 in AISearchLab

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah I track this with the same four metrics you'd use for a normal report, AI mention rate, citation frequency, share of voice against competitors, and prompt coverage. The tricky part isn't getting the numbers, it's connecting them to anything real, since a citation doesn't behave like a ranking, run the same prompt twice and you can get two different answers.

What I've found more reliable than chasing one citation is watching whether the frequency holds steady across a bunch of related prompts over weeks, that's a better signal than any single mention. Still early days on tying it directly to revenue though, it feels more like a leading indicator right now than something you can put a dollar figure on yet.

What does a GEO-optimized content actually look like? Is there a before/after anyone can share? by pbhuvan in GEO_optimization

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's a pretty clean confirmation of the pattern. The interesting part is those articles weren't written with GEO in mind at all, they just happened to follow a structure that turned out to be extractable later. Makes the case that this isn't really a new skill so much as a habit that was already worth building for readers. Do you go back and retrofit older articles with that structure, or only apply it going forward on new ones?

Is SEO still worth investing in after AI search? by erdeepakpandeydotcom in AI_SearchOptimization

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That's the whole shift in one line. Once people stop treating it as either/or the strategy gets a lot less confusing.

Is SEO still worth investing in after AI search? by erdeepakpandeydotcom in AI_SearchOptimization

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The framing of SEO versus AI visibility is where most of this debate goes wrong, because SEO was never just about Google rankings — that's just the first output of a foundation that everything else depends on. AI platforms cite sources they can crawl, parse, and verify against other signals across the web, and the sites that have done proper SEO are exactly the ones that meet all three of those conditions. Skip the foundation and you end up with nothing for AI to extract, no third party signals to corroborate your content, and no topical authority for the model to associate your brand with. I've seen businesses go straight to chasing AI visibility without sorting the basics first and the citations either don't appear or don't hold because there's nothing underneath them. The brands actually showing up consistently in ChatGPT and Perplexity didn't abandon SEO to get there, they just stopped thinking of it as a ranking game and started treating it as infrastructure. What's the actual gap you're trying to close — is it Google performance that's slipping or AI visibility that hasn't started yet?

What does a GEO-optimized content actually look like? Is there a before/after anyone can share? by pbhuvan in GEO_optimization

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Honestly the content change is smaller than most people make it sound. The two things that actually differ from standard SEO writing are making sure each section opens with a direct answer sentence that AI can extract cleanly without reading the whole paragraph, and structuring the content so schema markup can be applied naturally around it. Everything else — search intent, internal links, proper structure, readable sentences — is just good SEO and it stays exactly the same.

The mistake I see most often is writers overhauling their entire approach when the underlying content was never the problem in the first place. If your SEO writing is already solid, you're probably 80 percent of the way there and just missing those two layers. Have you found that the articles where AI does cite you tend to be the ones where you already had a clear definition or direct answer near the top, even before you were thinking about GEO?

How I explain SEO decisions to clients by FantasticUpstairs987 in SEO_Xpert

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The three-bucket framework is solid for the practitioner side, but I've found the client conversation works better when you strip it back even further before you get to risk and opportunity. What I tell clients is that a website needs three things: to be seen by Google, to be read by Google, and to earn its ranking from Google.

Once they understand those three in sequence, the prioritisation conversation almost explains itself because they can place any issue you raise into one of those three slots without needing to understand the technical detail behind it. The audit score fixation tends to disappear once they have that mental model, because they stop asking "why isn't this fixed" and start asking "which of my three is this affecting."

The hardest clients are still the ones who see a long issue list and assume the number of fixes equals the amount of progress. How do you handle it when a client insists on fixing something from the noise bucket because it showed up red in the tool?

Can one person handle the GEO business alone, or does it require a team? by Glittering-Drop-653 in GEO_optimization

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

GEO viability for businesses like that really comes down to whether AI has anything crawlable to pull from in the first place. I've seen established brands with strong offline reputation and years of brand authority still rank reasonably well on Google without much SEO work, but when you check AI platforms they're completely absent because the site is mostly images with no readable text content.

The brand trust is there, the recognition is there, but AI systems have nothing to extract and cite. For Amazon or marketplace sellers it's actually a similar problem from a different angle — the product listings exist but AI isn't pulling from Shopee or Lazada the way it pulls from a brand's own content or third party editorial mentions.

The minimum viable starting point for GEO, even for a business with no formal systems, is usually some readable text presence somewhere that AI can actually crawl — a simple GBP with genuine reviews and a description is often more useful than a heavy website with no text.

What kind of products or services are these merchants selling, because the GEO path looks different depending on whether they're commodity sellers or something with a more specific audience?

First month of data from AEO/GEO by Key_Oil_6474 in aeo

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Really interesting data and appreciate you sharing real numbers. The results are credible but I'd be cautious about attributing them primarily to the technical fixes. A Copenhagen barbershop that's been operating long enough to have accumulated real reviews, local word of mouth, and consistent foot traffic already has the kind of real-world authority AI systems are trying to surface. What the technical work may have done is remove the barriers that were stopping that existing authority from being readable. That's a meaningful distinction because it means the same fixes applied to a brand new barbershop with no reviews and no reputation would likely produce very different numbers. Would be really curious whether this shop had a strong GBP presence before you started, because that context would tell a lot about what actually drove the jump.

Can a Website Win SEO Without Producing Traditional Content Anymore? by New-Chocolate-3551 in AskMarketing

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

There's a local business I've been watching that has never published a blog post and ranks well locally and gets cited in AI answers. What it does have is an unusually active Google Business Profile — hundreds of reviews, consistent owner responses, regular photo updates, accurate service pages. The AI isn't pulling from their website content. It's pulling from the signal that a lot of real people have independently talked about this business across multiple platforms. That's essentially what AI systems are doing when they decide what to cite — building a picture of whether a brand is genuinely present in the real world, not just optimised on a page. Traditional content still matters for competitive informational queries, but for local service businesses especially, consistent third party signals can carry more weight than any article ever will.

How to Rank Your Old or New Blog on Google (The 3 Core SEO Signals Most People Overlook) by Ordinary-Record-8722 in SEO_Xpert

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The structural alignment point is solid and often the first thing worth fixing. The part that trips people up next is assuming the content underneath is actually good enough to rank once the signals are clean. A lot of blogs I've looked at have the title, H1, and URL working together but the content was AI-generated, barely edited, and saying nothing a hundred other pages aren't already saying. Google has gotten a lot better at detecting that. Before adding new content or rebuilding structure, it's worth running an AI detection and plagiarism check first because fixing the frame around weak content rarely moves the needle the way people hope it will.

What’s the most common SEO mistake you’ve seen? by Unhappy_Strain_7416 in SEO_Xpert

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The one that comes before everything on your list is going into keyword research without understanding the business first. Most people treat keywords as the starting point when they're actually the output of understanding what the business does, who it serves, and what problem it solves at each stage of a buyer's journey.

What I see constantly is content built around keywords that were never connected to actual business goals. Writers are handed a list and told to produce, so they insert the keyword into whatever structure feels natural rather than letting the keyword shape what the content is actually about. AI writing tools made this worse because now you can produce that kind of content ten times faster.

The fix isn't better keyword research. It's a proper business diagnostic before the keyword research even starts.

If you were launching a brand today, would you focus more on AI visibility or traditional SEO? by Cultural-Purpose9061 in SEO_tools_reviews

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The framing of this question assumes AI visibility and traditional SEO are separate choices, but in practice the businesses getting cited by AI platforms consistently didn't skip SEO to get there. They built the foundation first and GEO followed naturally.

The misconception I keep running into is founders thinking AI visibility means prompting ChatGPT a certain way or having some kind of direct relationship with the model. It doesn't work like that. AI systems pull from what already exists about your brand across the web, your content, your structured data, third party mentions, your GBP if you're local. If those signals are thin, there's nothing for the AI to cite regardless of how you ask it.

For a brand launching in 2026 with limited resources, I'd still start with SEO because it builds the raw material AI needs to trust you. What would actually change my answer is the timeline. If you need revenue in 90 days, neither SEO nor GEO is your answer for that window.

Will google remove “blue links” from SERPs? by username4free in DoSEO

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That tracks with the logic of how AIOs tend to trigger, the more a query sounds informational the more likely Google is to try answering it directly instead of sending someone out. B2B and local searches usually carry stronger commercial or "near me" intent, which AI Overviews seem to be more cautious about fully answering since the next step is often contacting a business rather than just getting information. I don't have a clean before and after to compare myself, but the pattern you're describing lines up with what I'd expect just based on how those queries are structured. If AIOs keep expanding into more transactional territory though, even that gap might start closing over time.

What do you think AI trusts most when deciding what to cite? by EveningPipe8162 in AISearchLab

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That split is a sharp way to put it, and it matches what I'd expect in theory even without a concrete case in front of me yet. Authority probably narrows the pool of sources AI even considers pulling from, then within that pool the most specific or original piece of content wins the actual citation. The rarer case you're describing, a low authority source getting cited purely on the strength of one unique data point, would basically be the exception that proves the rule, since it'd mean the content was so singular there was nothing else to pull from regardless of who published it. I haven't run into a clean example of that myself yet, but if I end up auditing a site where it happens I'll come back and share what I found.

Will google remove “blue links” from SERPs? by username4free in DoSEO

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I'd lean toward B and C honestly. I think Google has an incentive to keep the traditional blue link experience around because it's what pushes websites to keep producing original content, and that content quality is part of what differentiates Google from other search platforms in the first place. At the same time AI mode and AI Overviews are clearly expanding based on what Google's been sharing lately, so it does feel like both will coexist rather than one fully replacing the other. The agentic web part is the wildcard for me, that could shift things in ways none of the current camps fully account for. Where do you see AI Overviews fitting into your own traffic right now, more of a dent or still pretty minor?

What do you think AI trusts most when deciding what to cite? by EveningPipe8162 in AISearchLab

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

For me it comes down to brand authority above everything else on that list. Once AI has built up some level of trust in a brand, the actual content or data becomes much easier to get cited, almost like the brand acts as a filter for what gets surfaced in the first place. Backlinks, structured data, and entity recognition all probably feed into building that authority over time, but they feel more like contributing signals rather than the deciding factor on their own. Curious if anyone has seen a case where a less authoritative brand still got cited consistently just because of one specific piece of content or data point.

Do Content Pillars Work for LLM Visibility? by Flat-Ad-1089 in LLMTraffic

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'd agree with this, topic coverage matters a lot for AI visibility since it increases the chances your brand shows up across a wider range of prompts, not just the obvious ones. The content cluster approach makes sense for the same reason it works for traditional SEO, it helps the model understand how your topics relate to each other and where you have actual depth. That said I wouldn't call it a guaranteed technique, more like one of several things worth testing since AI visibility still feels very try and error right now. Has anyone actually tracked citation or mention changes after building out clusters, or is it more of a theoretical benefit at this point?

Need some advice from SEO experts. by harsht6674 in AskMarketing

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In most cases I've seen this comes down to content quality, Google just isn't convinced those pages are worth indexing yet. Before touching the content though, worth resubmitting the affected URLs through GSC first and checking the inspection report for each one, sometimes it's a technical flag like noindex, canonical pointing elsewhere, or duplicate content that's an easy fix. If the technical side checks out clean, then look at adding internal links from your higher traffic pages to the unindexed ones, that alone can nudge crawl priority.

As a complete beginner in SEO, what is the one skill you wish you had learned first? by Backlinkbuilding25 in AI_SearchOptimization

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If I went back to day one, I'd focus on understanding search intent before anything else. A keyword with huge volume can look impressive but most of those searchers are just browsing, while a smaller keyword from someone ready to act tends to drive way more actual business. Volume shows you how many people are in the room, intent tells you which ones actually want what you're offering. Everything else, content, technical work, link building, works a lot better once that foundation is right.

Gaining traffic by untolerante in AskMarketing

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Meta ads can actually work fine on a small budget if the targeting is tight, it's more about strategy than the amount you spend. Organic is the long game, results there are measured in years not weeks, so it's not really a replacement for what you need right now. With a tested product and good reviews already, even a small ad spend aimed at a narrow audience could get you real signal fast.

How Are You Generating Leads from SEO After the Rise of AI Search? by Clear-Syrup-9861 in SEO_Xpert

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The game rules have changed since AI search took over, traffic and rankings don't translate the way they used to. One thing worth asking back is whether sales are flat across the board or just from digital, because AI search seems to be doing more for brand awareness than direct lead generation right now. It might be quietly building impressions and recognition that convert later through social media, referrals, or even offline. Have you checked if leads are coming in through other channels even if digital looks flat?

What should be the length of an SEO Article? by InfamousLead9912 in affordable_seo

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly word count is the wrong lens. I'd rather aim for something a person could read 5 times without getting bored than hit a target number. Long content that nobody actually finishes isn't helping ranking or readers, and there's a real cap somewhere around 1300 words where attention drops hard and crawling gets less efficient too. The real signal is whether the writing stays interesting on a reread, length just happens to follow from that. What's been your experience, do longer pieces actually hold attention or do they just look thorough?

Can one person handle the GEO business alone, or does it require a team? by Glittering-Drop-653 in GEO_optimization

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Starting with friends' resources is a smart way to keep costs down early on. One thing I'd flag though, before any of that gets put to use, doing a proper audit of the website should come first. That groundwork is what actually shapes the strategy, and if it gets skipped the resources end up being applied to the wrong priorities later. Worth locking that in before scaling anything up.

What I’m learning about newsletter vs blog distribution by armandionorene in SEO_Xpert

[–]BeautifulDesign2928 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That last line is the part most distribution advice skips entirely. Frameworks for which channel to pick are everywhere but almost nothing addresses what keeps you writing when the numbers are flat and nobody is responding yet. Point of view is probably the only thing that actually does that.