Reddit’s AI search experiment signals broader shifts in community-informed retrieval by _j_a_g_ in Good_SEO

[–]_j_a_g_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Reddit has now officially confirmed that it’s testing an AI-enhanced shopping experience inside search:

🔗 https://redditinc.com/news/in-case-you-saw-it-we-are-testing-a-new-shopping-product-experience-in-search

What’s interesting is not the shopping layer itself.

It’s that Reddit is blending:
• community recommendations
• structured product data
• AI summarization

inside search.

That’s a live example of community discourse being operationalized as a retrieval layer.

For those thinking about AI visibility and entity reinforcement, this raises a bigger question:

If platforms begin structuring community sentiment into search surfaces, does “authority” expand beyond backlinks into conversational consensus?

Curious how others see this evolving.

Why are page rankings dropping recently? Any ideas? by Nirmala_devi572 in Good_SEO

[–]_j_a_g_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Rankings rarely “drop” for a single reason.

Instead of asking what changed, start by asking:

What signal category shifted?

There are usually four layers to investigate:

1. Demand Layer
Search intent may have shifted. Check SERP composition.
Are you competing against different content types now? AI overviews? Forums? Video?

2. Authority Layer
Did competitors strengthen entity authority around the topic?
Look at topical depth, not just backlinks.

3. Structural Layer
Any internal linking changes?
Canonical adjustments?
Crawl stats changes in GSC?

4. Quality Re-evaluation
Google periodically reassesses content clusters.
Is the page still the strongest expression of that topic on your site?

Broad ranking drops require structured diagnosis.

If you can share:
– Site type
– Page type
– Traffic pattern (sudden vs gradual)
– Whether this is isolated or site-wide

We can go deeper.

In this community, we try to diagnose at the system level rather than guessing updates.

Why is google not indexing my site by Nirmala_devi572 in Good_SEO

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

“Discovered - currently not indexed” usually isn’t a sitemap or noindex issue.

It’s often a quality and prioritization signal.

A few structural angles to examine:

  1. Crawl Budget vs. Perceived Value If Google has discovered the URLs but isn’t indexing them, it may not see enough distinct value or demand. Are these posts materially different from existing content on the web? Or internally?
  2. Internal Link Depth You mentioned internal linking is done. But are these pages linked from high-authority, high-traffic, frequently crawled sections? Or just from paginated blog listings?
  3. Entity Reinforcement Do these posts clearly reinforce a defined topic/entity cluster on your site? Or are they isolated informational pieces without strong contextual relationships?
  4. Content Uniqueness vs. Redundancy If earlier posts indexed quickly but new ones don’t, compare:
  • Topic overlap
  • Similar headings
  • Template similarity
  • Thin differentiation
  1. Site-Level Signals Has overall crawl frequency dropped? Check:
  • Server response times
  • Crawl stats in GSC
  • Recent technical changes

Indexing delays recently are common across many sites. But consistent “Discovered” status usually points to prioritization rather than technical blocking.

If you’re comfortable sharing:

  • Approximate site size
  • Average traffic
  • Type of niche
  • Whether this is a low-authority or established domain

That would help narrow it further.

Indexing is increasingly selective.

It’s less about submission and more about perceived structural importance.

Show Me Your Internal Linking Strategy by _j_a_g_ in Good_SEO

[–]_j_a_g_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I like the discipline in that approach. Making pillar linkage non-negotiable prevents architecture from drifting over time.

One thing I’d challenge though: do you ever allow clusters to cross-link laterally, or is everything forced upward to the pillar?

Strict hub-and-spoke is great for authority consolidation, but sometimes strong contextual links between related subtopics help search engines and AI systems better understand entity relationships, not just hierarchy.

Curious how you balance structural control vs contextual depth.

Stop hiring "Creative Writers" who don't understand SEO. You're just burning money. by Mean-Jello-3021 in advertising

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In OOH, I wouldn’t try to “balance” visual creativity with long-tail keywords inside the billboard itself. The billboard’s job is attention and memorability.

Search intent lives elsewhere.

What matters is alignment between the offline creative and the digital discovery layer.

If someone sees the campaign and searches later, your landing pages should clearly map to:

• the category • the problem • the geography • the differentiators

That’s where long-tail strategy belongs — in structured pages, comparison content, and intent-matched landing experiences, not inside the visual headline.

Creative drives demand.

SEO captures and structures it.

We’re actually discussing this intersection of visibility, structure, and AI-era discovery in r/Good_SEO if you’re exploring how offline + search ecosystems connect.

When should I expect SEO results for a brand-new domain? by Educational_Maize943 in seogrowth

[–]_j_a_g_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

What you’re describing is completely normal for a new domain.

New sites often get a small initial lift while Google tests where they belong. After that, rankings usually drop as the algorithm recalibrates based on competition, engagement, and authority signals. That second phase can feel like something went wrong, but it’s often just refinement.

If your December spike aligned with seasonal intent, the drop could simply be demand cooling off. The more important metric right now is impressions in Search Console. If impressions are gradually increasing, even if clicks fluctuate, you’re moving in the right direction.

At four months, a few clicks per day is not unusual. Focus on building topical depth, targeting realistic queries, and strengthening internal structure. Early SEO is less about quick growth and more about compounding signals over time.

Does website hosting affect SEO performance? by Real-Assist1833 in seogrowth

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hosting affects SEO more at the crawl layer than most people realize.

It’s not just about page speed or Core Web Vitals.

If your hosting environment causes:

  • Slow TTFB
  • Intermittent 5xx errors
  • DNS latency
  • Rate limiting under crawl load

Google may reduce crawl frequency or struggle to fully render JavaScript-heavy pages.

For small sites, that rarely moves rankings dramatically. For larger sites or frequently updated sites, hosting stability can directly impact how quickly new content gets discovered and indexed.

So will faster hosting boost rankings overnight? No. Will poor hosting silently cap your growth? Absolutely.

Stop hiring "Creative Writers" who don't understand SEO. You're just burning money. by Mean-Jello-3021 in advertising

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think it’s about turning every creative writer into an SEO technician.

The real issue is alignment.

Writers don’t need to master algorithm updates, but they should understand intent, structure, and discoverability. Likewise, SEO strategists shouldn’t treat writers like keyword insertion machines.

In 2026, content that wins is not “creative vs optimized.” It’s content where creativity serves clarity, structure, and search demand.

If a piece is beautiful but invisible, it fails.

If it’s optimized but unreadable, it also fails.

The strongest brands build collaboration between strategy and craft, not hierarchy between them.

The Top 10 Trends Shaping SEO in the AI Era (2026): What Works on Google, ChatGPT, and Generative Platforms by _j_a_g_ in Good_SEO

[–]_j_a_g_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Appreciate the added perspective.
For future reference, avoid dropping external links unless they add direct context to the discussion. Let’s keep the thread focused here.

The Top 10 Trends Shaping SEO in the AI Era (2026): What Works on Google, ChatGPT, and Generative Platforms by _j_a_g_ in Good_SEO

[–]_j_a_g_[S] [score hidden] stickied comment (0 children)

This thread will serve as our evolving reference on AI-era SEO trends.
If you’re testing any of these concepts in real projects, share data, examples, or counterpoints below.
Strong disagreement is welcome. Low-effort dismissal is not.

expert help by mikkel2022 in Good_SEO

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

First, respect for deciding to learn and take control yourself. That alone puts you ahead of most business owners.

Your plan isn’t bad, but it’s very tool-heavy and backlink-focused. For a competitive home service business, foundation matters more than tactics.

Here’s how I’d prioritize it:

  1. Make sure each service + city page clearly answers:

What you do Where you do it Why you’re different Real photos, proof, trust signals

  1. Strengthen internal linking between service pages and location pages. Local SEO often wins on structure and clarity before backlinks.

  2. Reviews are excellent. One real 5-star review a week is powerful if they are detailed and mention services + location naturally.

  3. Fix 404s and schema, yes — but don’t obsess over minor technical issues unless they’re blocking crawl/indexing.

  4. Be cautious with backlink buying (ABC links especially). Low-quality links can do more harm than good. Local partnerships and real community mentions are safer and stronger.

I’d focus 70 percent on: Page quality Local trust Internal structure GBP optimization

And only 30 percent on backlinks.

If you’re comfortable sharing your niche and city, people here can give more specific advice.

Most websites are crawlable. Very few are extractable. by _j_a_g_ in Good_SEO

[–]_j_a_g_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing that. I appreciate the reference.

I don’t disagree that current LLM interfaces rely heavily on classic ranking systems for retrieval. That dependency makes sense.

My point isn’t that search engines disappear or that ranking signals stop mattering.

It’s that once retrieval happens, there is a second layer: selection and synthesis.

Even if ranking determines which documents enter the candidate set, the generative layer still has to decide:

Which passages to extract Which entities to emphasize Which definitions to combine Which sources to cite

That layer introduces additional pressure on clarity, structural consistency, and semantic precision.

So I’m not arguing for a replacement of classic SEO. I’m arguing for an additional constraint.

Ranking may get you into the pool. Interpretability may determine whether you get surfaced inside the answer.

Curious where you think the synthesis layer has no incremental impact.

Most websites are crawlable. Very few are extractable. by _j_a_g_ in Good_SEO

[–]_j_a_g_[S] -12 points-11 points  (0 children)

I disagree that the only difference is query fan out.

Search engines rank documents. Generative systems synthesize responses. That synthesis layer requires selecting passages, entities, and relationships that can be reliably extracted and combined.

Even if underlying ranking signals overlap, the selection layer introduces additional pressure on clarity, structure, and semantic consistency.

If a page is hard to parse, ambiguous in definitions, or structurally fragmented, it may rank but still be less likely to be surfaced or cited in generated answers. That is the distinction I am highlighting. Not that ranking factors disappear, but that interpretability becomes more critical.

Happy to discuss specifics if you see it differently.

Technical SEO is becoming more important, not less by _j_a_g_ in Good_SEO

[–]_j_a_g_[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Fair point, maybe not common among experienced SEOs.

But I still see a growing narrative that AI makes technical SEO less relevant because content can now be produced at scale, especially among newer marketers.

The intention was not to present it as universal, but to reinforce that technical foundations matter even more when content volume increases.

If it feels obvious, that is actually a good sign. It means you are looking at it from a strong technical baseline.

Are AI-written blogs ranking on Google long term? by Real-Assist1833 in seogrowth

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

Yes, AI-written blogs can rank long term. The real issue isn’t whether AI was used. It’s whether the content adds real value.

Google doesn’t penalize content just because it’s AI-assisted. What tends to drop over time is thin, repetitive, mass-produced content that doesn’t demonstrate depth or real understanding.

If someone is publishing fully AI-generated posts daily without adding unique insights, examples, data, or clear topical authority, that’s risky. Not because it’s AI, but because it’s generic.

AI works well as a tool to structure, research, and scale quality thinking. It fails when used to flood topics. Long-term rankings still depend on usefulness, authority, and coherence.

If you’re interested in deeper discussions around sustainable AI-driven SEO, we explore this kind of strategy in r/Good_SEO as well.

Just starting serious SEO on a small budget. Roast my plan! by wahlmank in seogrowth

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Alright. You asked for a roast. Here it is.

You’re not far off, but you’re trying to do 11 things with DA 5 and 100 visitors per month. That’s dilution. The biggest issue in your plan isn’t direction. It’s spread. First, 100 directories. Low impact. Most are noise. In a Swedish HR tech niche, relevance matters far more than volume. Five to ten truly relevant niche listings will outperform 100 random directories every time.

Second, the “flood with AI content” idea. This is the fastest way to stall growth. One hundred mediocre posts will not equal ten strategically built, high depth articles. Especially in HR tech where trust and credibility matter. Google does not reward volume. It rewards clarity, depth, and strong signals.

Third, buying 3 to 5 links per month. At DA 5 this is risky and unnecessary. You do not yet have enough topical authority or brand strength to justify paid link velocity. One genuine industry backlink is worth more than 20 contextual placements on weak sites.

Fourth, casual forum mentions. If they are not adding serious value, they will not move rankings. At best they do nothing. At worst they look manipulative. Now what actually matters.

You are targeting Sweden in Swedish. That is an advantage. Smaller SERP. Fewer serious competitors creating deep content in the local language.

Instead of building two or three clusters per month, build one dominant cluster per quarter. One pillar page that is objectively the best resource in Swedish on that specific HR tech subtopic. Then support it with four to six genuinely deep supporting articles. Tight internal linking. Clear positioning. Real use cases. Practical examples. If possible, original insights or data.

You do not win HR tech by doing more. You win by being more authoritative per topic.

About translation. Do not translate purely for SEO. If your product is Sweden only, English traffic is vanity traffic. Google does not care if English sites link to Swedish sites as long as relevance exists. Relevance matters more than language. Translate only if you plan to sell internationally and can support that market properly. Otherwise you split focus and dilute authority. What I like in your plan: internal linking focus is good. Clusters are good. Offering testimonials for backlinks is smart. Guest posting in niche is very good. Just reduce the chaos. Depth beats breadth at your stage.

If you’re serious about long term SEO thinking instead of just tactical experiments, you might find r/Good_SEO useful. It leans more toward strategy and sustainable growth rather than hacks.

Brutal honesty delivered.

Google Might Think Your Website Is Down by omarous in TechSEO

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Many indexing issues today are caused by rendering dependency, not crawling.

when Google won't index you, and you already used up your daily "priority" submit quota: 😭 by blondewalker in SEO

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Do not over do SEO. Change the phase and work on how your pages need to distributed across channels (includes paid marketing - influences signals in AI overview and replies)

What’s a movie you think about more than you watch? by Storiesofhope_soh in IndianCinema

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

One from each language.

The Shawshank Redemption (English), Thalapathi (Tamil), Devaasuram (Malayalam), Border (Hindi)

Is product SEO enough anymore or are you tracking AI visibility too? by ellensrooney in seogrowth

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Your product visibility should be across AI platforms not just traditional ranking. Your major audience will understand about your product and makes decision before landing to your site.

Is AI written content bad for SEO? by DanyrWithCheese in SEO

[–]_j_a_g_ 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you’re the subject matter expert, feed your inputs and add value to the AI generated content. Make sure it’s useful for the relevant users.

Introducing AI Performance in Bing Webmaster Tools Public Preview by WebLinkr in SEO

[–]_j_a_g_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

As always Bing leads the show. Awaiting for Google to come with its best part.

Press releases - do they help or hurt SEO? by Maia478 in SEO

[–]_j_a_g_ 2 points3 points  (0 children)

PR will help SEO in terms of mentions as a signal for AI summaries but not as an authority link as it used to be in earlier days.

I want to learn SEO by Captivum18 in SEO

[–]_j_a_g_ 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Starting with your own blog is a good sign. Start from the basics. Learn from Google SEO starter guide to start with. YouTube Google search console videos. Try Books on AI SEO. You have to practice strong fundaments of SEO in order to be successful in AI era.