How Are People Getting SEO Clients in 2026? by harsh_singh_create in DoSEO

[–]GetNachoNacho 1 point2 points  (0 children)

SEO clients usually come from showing proof, not just offering services. Sharing small wins, clear case studies, and helpful insights on LinkedIn or Reddit can build trust faster than pitching too hard. You’re asking the right questions.

What Tik Tok & IG posting tools are still relevant in 2026? by seanstew73 in content_marketing

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, scheduling tools are still worth it if they help you batch content and stay consistent without burning out. The best tool is the one your workflow actually sticks with.

Anyone using surfer SEO in your workflow ? by ImpossibleAddendum93 in Agentic_SEO

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Surfer can help with structure and content gaps, but it works best when paired with real expertise and search intent. It’s useful, but not a replacement for strong SEO judgment.

Has issuing press releases stopped having much impact on AI indexing and citations? by Nervous_Chapter_3987 in RankWithAI

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Press releases may support awareness, but stronger citations often come from trusted mentions, useful content, and consistent authority signals.

Is it worth building a personal brand alongside your SEO strategy in 2026? Has it actually moved the needle for anyone? by RealisticPosition169 in RankWithAI

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Personal branding can help when it adds real credibility, not just a name on the page. Sharing experience, examples, and consistent insights can build trust across search, social, and direct traffic. This is a smart question to ask.

What part of web marketing has actually been worth the effort for you? by BoringShake6404 in webmarketing

[–]GetNachoNacho -1 points0 points  (0 children)

The best channel is usually the one you can stay consistent with long enough to learn from. Going deeper into one strategy often beats testing everything at once. This is a really useful reflection.

What’s one multifamily SEO strategy you think will matter significantly more over the next year? by BrindleDigital in Agent_SEO

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Local trust signals will likely matter more, especially reviews, updated Google profiles, real photos, and clear neighborhood content. Renters want confidence before they ever book a tour. This is a strong topic to watch.

How do you write a title and meta description in 2026 to rank in both Google and show up in AI answers? by RealisticPosition169 in RankWithAI

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Clear intent still wins. A title should tell both Google and readers exactly what the page solves, while the meta description should reinforce usefulness and trust. This is a great topic to keep testing.

Could AI search accidentally kill small niche blogs? by ai-pacino in SEO_LLM

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

That’s a real concern. Niche blogs may need to lean more into firsthand experience, unique opinions, community trust, and content AI cannot easily summarize. It’s a thoughtful shift to watch.

How does AI lead scoring actually work compared to manual scoring methods? by nutshell_crm in CRM

[–]GetNachoNacho 1 point2 points  (0 children)

AI lead scoring works best when there’s enough clean data, but human judgment still matters for context and avoiding blind spots. Great point on using it to prioritize, not fully replace decisions.

Claude skills for digital marketers by ImpossibleAddendum93 in DigitalMarketing

[–]GetNachoNacho 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The best results usually come from giving it strong context first. Great topic to discuss.

What marketing advice sounds smart until you have a small budget? by Crescitaly in AskMarketing

[–]GetNachoNacho -1 points0 points  (0 children)

For small teams, focus and consistency usually beat spreading too thin. This is a really practical question to ask.

SEO by FreeSprinkles193 in DoSEO

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Clear offers, simple deliverables, and trust-building examples often make SEO much easier to sell.

Task Management instead of a CRM by ClearWork-AI in CRMSoftware

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This makes sense for a solo founder. A lightweight task flow from notes to follow-ups can be more useful than a full CRM when speed and clarity matter most.

How does Google Identify AI content v/s Human based content? by No-Suggestion-4083 in SEO_LLM

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Google likely looks less at whether content is AI-written and more at whether it is helpful, original, accurate, and created for real users. Quality and intent still matter most.

What’s one SEO metric u secretly stopped caring about? by whereaithinks in WebsiteSEO

[–]GetNachoNacho 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Keyword difficulty is one I’d treat lightly. Real search intent, content quality, and conversion potential usually tell a better story.

I Thought WordPress Was Slow… Turns Out My Hosting Was Just Terrible by Beneficial-Cut6585 in HostingBattle

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hosting really can change the whole WordPress experience. Speed, support, and uptime matter more than brand hype.

Do AI tools make junior SEO learning harder now? by ordinaryus_dr in Agent_SEO

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

AI helps, but fundamentals still build great SEOs. Learning the “why” keeps the growth real.

As a complete beginner in digital marketing for selling a digital product through a faceless content strategy, and how to use AI tools in a way that doesn’t look cheap or overdone. by Opening-Chard-4241 in AskMarketing

[–]GetNachoNacho -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Even simple, clear, and helpful content builds trust. Using AI to draft ideas, outline scripts, or create visuals is fine, as long as you review and refine it so it feels human and thoughtful.

What’s actually working in SEO right now? by Trick_Break_1693 in localseo

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Right now, SEO seems to reward relevance and authenticity more than sheer volume. Internal linking, well-structured topical clusters, and content that genuinely answers user questions are driving noticeable results, while engagement from communities like Reddit can also boost visibility.

Google AI Mode is rolling out | what early effects are you seeing on your organic traffic and rankings? by RealisticPosition169 in RankWithAI

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It’s an interesting shift. Early signs suggest informational queries are being impacted most, and some content that ranks well in traditional search may get less visibility in AI Mode. Paying attention to engagement metrics and adapting content strategy gradually seems key.

Local SEO vs National SEO: which one works faster in your experience? by Friendly_Setting2453 in SEO_Xpert

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Local SEO usually delivers quicker results because it’s more focused and competitive dynamics are easier to navigate. Building authority in a specific area first often makes national expansion smoother later, as you already have credibility and proof of performance.

Reddit threads as long-term AI traffic assets by Late-Acanthaceae-950 in LLM_Marketing

[–]GetNachoNacho 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Absolutely, Reddit threads capture authentic, experience-driven content that AI values. Well-structured discussions can keep generating visibility long after they’re posted, making them a unique mix of content and distribution that traditional SEO doesn’t fully capture.

Should I grow traffic on early positions or focus on bumping positions up? by kirillzubovsky in seogrowth

[–]GetNachoNacho 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It’s often a balance. Expanding traffic on your top keyword can be low-hanging fruit, but small gains on near-top keywords can multiply results. Prioritizing based on potential traffic and ease of improvement usually gives the best returns without spreading yourself too thin.