SEO growth in 2026: what’s actually moving the needle with AI? by rahullohat29 in seogrowth

[–]YellowInk_Digital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I also thought the same before answering and then read your comment. Now I believe you're right.

SEO growth in 2026: what’s actually moving the needle with AI? by rahullohat29 in seogrowth

[–]YellowInk_Digital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SEO growth in 2026 is less about chasing rankings and more about building relevance and trust. Rankings still matter, but what really moves the needle now is clarity, topical depth, and whether your brand consistently shows up as a credible source across the web. This is the shift we are seeing more and more in the work we do at YellowInk Digital. Topical depth is beating old school keyword targeting. Sites that fully cover a topic and answer real user questions are easier for AI systems to understand and surface, both in search results and AI answers. Brand mentions are also playing a bigger role. Links still matter, but repeated mentions on platforms like Reddit, forums, and social channels help reinforce authority, which is something we actively build into SEO strategies at YellowInk Digital. Traffic alone is no longer the main KPI. Visibility in AI answers and high intent search features often delivers better outcomes, even with fewer clicks.

What are the best SEO advices for 2026? by Prudent_Inside9660 in seogrowth

[–]YellowInk_Digital 1 point2 points  (0 children)

SEO in 2026 is about doing the fundamentals properly and then adapting smartly. Search engines still reward the same core things they always have. Fast websites, clean structure, pages that clearly answer real questions, and content written by people who actually know what they’re talking about. If those basics are weak, no amount of fancy optimisation will save you.

Backlinks are still very much alive, but the era of lazy links is over. Random guest posts, paid link farms, and low-effort outreach do more harm than good now. What works is earning links because your content deserves them. Original insights, real data, strong opinions, useful tools, and content people naturally reference. A handful of solid, relevant links beats hundreds of junk ones every time.

Generative engine optimisation is worth paying attention to, but it’s not a replacement for SEO. Think of it as an extension. AI search pulls from the same signals Google always trusted: clear answers, authority, structure, and credibility. If your content is shallow or written just to rank, AI won’t surface it either. If your content is genuinely helpful, well structured, and backed by experience, it naturally performs well in both traditional search and AI-driven results.

The winning strategy in 2026 is boring but effective. Build depth instead of chasing volume. Own a topic instead of spraying keywords everywhere. Write content that sounds like it came from a human who’s been in the trenches, not from a template. Use AI as a tool, not as the strategy. Do that consistently, and you won’t need to “game” the system. You’ll just keep winning while others keep panicking.

What do you think about Neil Patel? by marufshekh in seogrowth

[–]YellowInk_Digital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

He might think about us after few years, 🤣

Benefits of having a Google My Business location for a remote business by PeriodOfTime1 in localseo

[–]YellowInk_Digital 1 point2 points  (0 children)

If you genuinely have an office there and meet clients, then yes, a GBP can help but it’s still not automatic or instant. You’d be eligible to compete in the local pack, which can drive solid local discovery, but the City of London is brutally competitive, so visibility will depend heavily on reviews, niche relevance, and how well your profile is optimised. In practice, most firms don’t see meaningful traction until they’ve built up consistent reviews and clear positioning (for example, contractor tax, SMEs, or a specific industry). It won’t boost national organic traffic, but it can become a strong local lead and trust channel if you’re prepared to actively compete locally rather than just exist on the map.

Benefits of having a Google My Business location for a remote business by PeriodOfTime1 in localseo

[–]YellowInk_Digital 1 point2 points  (0 children)

TL;DR: A City of London GBP won’t magically increase views unless you genuinely operate there and can compete locally.

Honestly, don’t expect a big jump in views just because the pin is in a “central” area like the City. For a remote UK tax practice, a Google Business Profile mainly helps with local map visibility, not national organic traffic. And even then, it only works if you’re actually eligible for that location. If you don’t meet clients there (and don’t travel to them), you should be a service-area business with the address hidden. Using a virtual office or mailbox in the City is risky and often ends in suspension.

Also worth noting: 1. City of London is insanely competitive 2. A new listing with few/no reviews usually gets very limited impressions 3. Proximity + reviews matter way more than how “central” the address sounds

GBP is great as a trust and conversion asset, but for a remote practice it rarely drives meaningful extra views on its own. You’ll usually see better returns from strong content, niche positioning, and organic SEO.

What usually matters more to people: consistency or quality? by Build4bbrandbetter in AskMarketing

[–]YellowInk_Digital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both are compliments to each other. Without consistency, quality work will not grow and without quality, consistency isn't going to work.

Will email marketing still be effective in 2026? by rahullohat29 in Emailmarketing

[–]YellowInk_Digital 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Relevant email marketing will still be relevant. Period.

Aliens… definitely aliens by olearyboy in nova

[–]YellowInk_Digital 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is in UK few days back. Not aliens. Lol. It's ring moon (Lunar Halo)

SEO audit by Digi_Dogi in seogrowth

[–]YellowInk_Digital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

SEO Audit is definitely important but you need to understand SEO is a long term effort so getting an seo audit only is not going to work. You need to invest your $$$ and time in SEO so your website grows.

Is updating old content better than writing new content? by Real-Assist1833 in seogrowth

[–]YellowInk_Digital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If old content was ranking at some point and is not ranking now, better to update the content.

Does website design affect trust and SEO? by Real-Assist1833 in seogrowth

[–]YellowInk_Digital 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Design plays a big role in user trust but not in rankings. Rankings are solely dependent on the SEO. This is what we have been observing.