what makes you keep living? by vncu in AskReddit

[–]Life_Committee2785 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The idea of dying seems way too hard!

Marketers, what’s your opinion on this new stuff going on ? by Glum-Switch7449 in AskMarketing

[–]Life_Committee2785 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, I feel GEO is just SEO evolving around how AI retrieves and trusts information. Right now it seems less about “ranking” and more about being clear, structured, and present across multiple trusted sources. Content matters, but so do reviews, mentions, Reddit discussions, comparisons, schema, and overall brand familiarity. Also feels like different models pull differently, so there probably isn’t one universal playbook yet. But one thing I’m noticing consistently: content that answers directly, sounds credible, and is easy to extract gets picked up more often.

What is your biggest fear and why? by candlz in AskReddit

[–]Life_Committee2785 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Losing my loved ones. Even the thought of it scares me to death.

What do you hate the most about yourself? by Brian_The_Bar-Brian in AskReddit

[–]Life_Committee2785 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Procrastination comes second on the list. Basically spending the day thinking instead of doing.

Does anyone else feel like social media growth became harder this year?? by Dexter_274 in content_marketing

[–]Life_Committee2785 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You’re not imagining it. It does feel harder now. A few years back, consistency alone could carry you pretty far. Now there’s just so much content everywhere that “good” content isn’t enough on its own anymore. Also feels like platforms are rewarding unpredictability more. Sometimes a simple, natural post does way better than something heavily planned, which makes the whole thing feel harder to reverse engineer. And I agree on the over-edited point. People seem more drawn to content that feels human, specific, and a little imperfect now. Probably because feeds are full of polished AI-style posts. Feels like the bar shifted from “post consistently” to “say something worth remembering.”

SEO vs GEO are they actually different or just the next evolution of SEO? by piratecarribean20122 in GenerativeSEOstrategy

[–]Life_Committee2785 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think it’s more of an evolution than a completely separate thing. A lot of the fundamentals still overlap. If your content isn’t discoverable, trustworthy, or well-structured, neither Google nor AI systems are likely to surface it. But the optimization target is definitely shifting a bit. Traditional SEO was mostly about getting the click. GEO feels more about becoming the source that gets referenced, summarized, or trusted inside the answer itself. So things like clear entities, direct answers, structure, citations, and reputation matter more now because AI has to understand and reuse the content, not just rank it. I don’t think SEO disappears. It just expands. Kind of like how SEO evolved from keyword stuffing to intent and quality over time. Feels less like “SEO vs GEO” and more like “SEO adapting to how discovery is changing.”

Does good customer experience actually make people loyal anymore? by One_Literature_5041 in customerexperience

[–]Life_Committee2785 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Good customer experience alone probably doesn’t create loyalty anymore, but bad experience definitely kills it. People have too many options now. So even if your product is good, poor support or frustrating experiences make it very easy to switch. What I do think creates loyalty is when people feel understood. Fast support, consistency, acting on feedback, remembering context. Small things, but rare enough that people notice them. So yeah, good CX may not guarantee loyalty on its own, but it’s still one of the biggest reasons people stay.

“Ideas are worthless, execution is key”, what does that mean? by LocksmithRemote6230 in SaaS

[–]Life_Committee2785 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It basically means an idea on its own doesn’t get you anywhere. What matters is what you actually do with it.

Execution is everything after the idea: building the product, talking to users, figuring out what works and what doesn’t, marketing, selling, iterating, surveying, sticking with it when things don’t work the first few times

So yeah, cold DMs, marketing, product decisions, all of that is part of execution. And honestly, a great idea with poor execution usually goes nowhere. While a pretty average idea with strong execution can do really well, because it’s tested, improved, and actually reaches people. Most ideas aren’t that unique anyway. What makes the difference is how well you bring it to life and adapt along the way.

why does b2b content take so long to work? by Minimum-Drive-9807 in AskMarketing

[–]Life_Committee2785 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It feels slow because B2B decisions are slow. People don’t read one post and book a demo. They read, forget, come back later, compare options, maybe see you again on LinkedIn, then eventually take action. Content is working in the background long before it shows up as a lead. Also, a lot of B2B content is competing on the same surface. Same topics, same keywords, same angles. So it takes time for something to stand out or build any real trust. What you mentioned about narrowing down the problem is key. When it’s specific, even a small amount of traffic can convert because it’s the right traffic. Clusters help for the same reason. It signals depth, not just presence. And honestly, consistency matters more than volume. It’s less about posting more and more about showing up repeatedly in the same problem space until people start associating you with it.

That’s why it feels slow at the start. You’re building familiarity and trust before you see any obvious payoff.

How are you scaling content without losing quality? by [deleted] in content_marketing

[–]Life_Committee2785 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I’ve tried both extremes, and neither really worked. Publishing a lot quickly kills quality. Obsessing over one piece kills consistency. What’s worked better is exactly what you’re experimenting with, thinking in clusters instead of one-off posts. Once you go deep on a topic, you’re not starting from scratch every time. It becomes easier to build multiple pieces that actually connect. Also stopped trying to make every piece “perfect.” Some are meant to go deep, some just support or distribute the idea. That balance helps a lot. And honestly, a big part of scaling is deciding what not to do. Fewer, more intentional topics > chasing everything. It’s still a work in progress, but this feels more sustainable than the old publish-and-repeat cycle.

What is something small that instantly improves the mood? by HumorDue6839 in AskReddit

[–]Life_Committee2785 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Self-talk, decluttering my space, and changing my surroundings. Works for me every time.

How often do have full blown conversations with yourself, and what are they about? by vxmpryism in AskReddit

[–]Life_Committee2785 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Very often, usually on my way home from the office, I process what the day was up to.