2024 AI & SEO: Your 24-Expert Guide To Successful SERPs

2024 AI & SEO: Your 24-Expert Guide To Successful SERPs

SGE and generative AI are here, and they’re making a splash in a big way. SERPs as we know them are completely changing, and it’s up to us to pivot.

But how do you do that while keeping your SEO strategy strong? And how do you convince your higher-ups (if they need convincing) that your new path is worth the shift?

These are the questions we wanted to tackle in this collection of articles. We know that it can be tricky to keep up with all the latest developments and new tech in SEO, so it’s time to demystify some of the latest trends.

After all, it’s better to embrace change than run from it.

I especially think you’ll like referring to “Google SGE And Generative AI In Search: What To Expect In 2024” as you build this year’s strategy. I know I did. SGE has continued to evolve this year, and I’m already hard at work discovering ways to adjust to this new way of using Google.

Read on and find out how your 2024 SEO strategy can benefit from these new developments.

Until next time!

Katie Morton
Katie Morton Editor in Chief, Search Engine Journal

20 SEO Experts Offer Their Advice For 2026

These expert insights show SEO marketers and decision-makers exactly where to focus in 2026 to protect organic visibility and turn discovery into real business impact.

Shelley Walsh Shelley Walsh 26K Reads
20 SEO Experts Offer Their Advice For 2026

This year has been a continuation of learning and understanding about how AI impacts our industry. It’s been less about the chaos of the initial disruption and more about “how do we leverage this?

My belief is that SEO is a practice that needs to be adaptable to the end goal and not fixed to any predetermined notions centered around Google, ranking, or keywords. The foundation of SEO is about making yourself visible online wherever your audience can find you.

“S’ is for “search engine,” but one of my favorite phrases from the year is from Ashley Liddell, who said “search everywhere optimization,” and that is the perfect approach for the mindset needed to continue in the next level of SEO.

It might be TikTok, YouTube, Google, ChatGPT, or Reddit. Most likely, it’s a combination of all of these.

For the technical side of SEO, it’s fundamental that your pages can be accessed by all search engines and machines. For the content side of SEO, you need to be creating content experiences that can be cited by search engines and machines. And everyone should be thinking about the bottom line: Does this align with the defined business outcome for my client/brand/company? Show me the money.

One critical area I wouldn’t overlook is agentic AI and the development of closed systems completing actions for users. Think booking a holiday, personal shopping for a styled wardrobe, or buying your food shop based on a specific diet. When that happens, you need to ensure you are in the game and included in those closed spaces. Start learning about this now.

As the AI future is coming fast, get ready and go with it rather than resisting it. 2026 is the watershed where you need to get on board to stay in the game.

At Search Engine Journal, we showcase some of the best SEO minds in the industry, and in our usual tradition, we asked 20 of the best practicing SEO experts, including many of our contributors, “In 2026, what should SEOs focus on to maintain visibility and achieve measurable results?”

(Editor’s Note: The following are not in any order of preference and are displayed in the order of who responded first.)

How To Maintain Visibility Online In 2026

1. Be Mentioned In the Right Places

Kevin Indig, Growth Advisor

In 2026, visibility is the result of having the right content, engaging on the right channels, and being mentioned in the right places.

The right content is a mix of hyperlong-tail articles/landing pages tailored to your audience(s) and based on your unique positioning and data stories. People prompt 5x longer than they search on Google, so you want to be the best result for their specific context. LLMs also love fresh, unique datapoints, so you want to create research-driven content.

The right channels are Google, ChatGPT, Reddit, Quora, review sites, LinkedIn, and niche forums. Those are not just the most cited platforms in LLMs but also in Google Search. But being present here takes an engagement strategy rather than an SEO approach.

The right places to be mentioned are authoritative publishers and review sites in your industry. LLMs seem to rely heavily on mentions from other (relevant) sites, so you have to be present in context (surrounding words) that reflect your positioning and market position.

→ Read More: The Alpha Is Not LLM Monitoring

2. We Have To Do More Than Just Appease Google

Cindy Krum, CEO & Founder, MobileMoxie

We have to do more than just appease Google.

Now, to get visibility in all the places where it is needed, having a good website, with high-quality, indexable content, is table stakes; it is the bare minimum, and likely not enough.

For years, Google’s algorithm focused on using content and links to a site to evaluate that particular site, and rank it. AI search utilities and LLMs work very differently. They were designed to find a consensus and synthesize it, and they are looking across all the information that they have access to, to do it.

This means, if you are just relying on your website to create your visibility online, it will not be enough. There is no consensus and minimal synthesis from just one site.

Your branding message needs to be widely distributed across the web to create a consistent but discernibly unique branding message.

→ Read More: Google’s AI Search Journeys Are Reshaping SEO With Cindy Krum

3. Optimize For Systems That Read Like Machines

Duane Forrester, Founder and CEO, UnboundAnswers.com

In 2026, SEOs need to treat visibility as something earned through retrieval, not ranking.

Focus on how content is chunked, cited, and most importantly, trusted by AI systems.

Audit what gets surfaced inside chatbots and answer engines, not just in SERPs.

Build authority signals machines can verify: structured data, consistent sourcing, and entity clarity.

Use embeddings, vector search, and retrieval testing to understand how meaning (not keywords) drives exposure.

Replace “optimize for Google” with “optimize for systems that read like machines.” Your goal isn’t a blue link anymore. It’s being the trusted source those systems turn to when humans ask questions. Trust, in 2026, is paramount.

→ Read More: Ex-Microsoft SEO Pioneer On Why AI’s Biggest Threat To SEO Isn’t What You Think

4. Be Retrieved, Cited, And Trusted Wherever Users Search

Carolyn Shelby, Founder, CSHEL Search Strategies

In 2026, SEOs need to refocus on clarity, consistency, and comprehension.

Every channel that describes your brand – your site, feeds, listings, and profiles – must tell the same story, in the same words, in a way both humans *and machines* can understand. That means cleaning up fragmented site structures, removing “hidden” or toggle-buried information, and ensuring the important facts live on the page in visible text. (Note, I did not say Schema doesn’t matter, but I am saying that there are situations where the Schema that is in the JSON-LD is NOT being read, and for those times, it is important that you have valuable product specs and data ON the page, in visible text, and not hidden behind a tab or in a toggle.)

You won’t be penalized or hurt yourself in Google or Bing by *also* optimizing for the lowest-common-denominator crawlers – but you will lose out on that extra visibility if you ignore them. Build pages that are fast (LLMs have a short attention span), crawlable, and semantically clear. Make sure your product, pricing, and positioning statements are consistent across every surface.

The goal isn’t *just* to rank anymore (though ranking is still a necessary first step in most cases). It’s to be retrieved, cited, and trusted wherever users search – whether that’s Google, Bing, or an LLM.

→ Read More: Why AI Search Isn’t Overhyped & What To Focus On Right Now

5. Visibility Will Depend On Agentic Readiness

Andrea Volpini, Co-Founder and CEO, WordLift

In 2026, we are finally designing for the Reasoning Web, where agents will read, decide, and act on our behalf, and SEO becomes the discipline of making these systems effective. Visibility will depend on agentic readiness: clean structured data, stable identifiers, precise ontologies, and knowledge graphs that let agents resolve entities, compare offers, execute tasks, and learn from results.

This is a semantic shift: not simply about being “mentioned” in AI Overviews or ChatGPT, but about exposing products, content, and services as machine-operable assets through feeds, APIs, and tools that make agents smarter every time they interact with us.

The brands that let agents run the show, safely and verifiably, will own the next chapter of search.

→ Read More: How Structured Data Shapes AI Snippets And Extends Your Visibility Quota

6. Search And Product Are Intimately Connected

Ray Grieselhuber, Founder & CEO, DemandSphere

The most important thing, in our view, is understanding that AI search is ubiquitous now across three core experiences: SERPs, LLMs, and agentic experiences.

For the first two, SERPs and LLMs, there is a lot of overlap because they rely on a shared search index (Google in most cases), but the way in which the retrieval process works across these two experiences varies widely. This is why we are hearing that everyone’s No. 1 problem is getting good data, so spend time to make sure your monitoring and data pipelines are accurate and fine-tuned.

For the agentic experience, it’s still early but you should be thinking about how your product strategy will intersect with feeds and APIs (and new, related protocols like MCP). Search and product are intimately connected going forward, and the real ones will know that they always have been.

→ Read More: AI Platform Founder Explains Why We Need To Focus On Human Behavior, Not LLMs

7. Have A Relentless Focus On Being The Best

Barry Adams, Polemic Digital

Whatever you do, don’t lose your mind to the AI hype and try to radically reinvent your SEO efforts. Yes, it will be tougher to grow traffic and revenue from search, but too many SEOs have been coasting along and relying on Google’s own growth to fuel their figures. Now that clicks from Google have stagnated, you’ll need to be smarter about your SEO.

Spend less time and effort on “busywork,” those minor little things that don’t bring any measurable improvement to your traffic. Do the stuff that actually works. Don’t compromise on quality, have a relentless focus on being the best, and make sure you capitalize on your site’s strengths and eradicate its weaknesses.

Sites that are significantly suboptimal, either technically or editorially, will simply not succeed. You have to be all-in on search, without cutting corners and “that will do” concessions. Anything less than that and you will end up on the wrong side of the zero-sum game that Google search has become.

→ Read More: AI Survival Strategies For Publishers

8. Focus On Quality And Conversion Over The Quantity Of Content

Lily Ray, Vice President, SEO Strategy & Research, Amsive

For many years, I’ve answered this question with some version of “focusing on E-E-A-T,” and believe it or not, I think this answer *still* applies in 2026 with the rise of AI search.

Why? Because being mentioned in AI search is all about reputability, experience, and trust. The more your brand is well-known and well-respected in your industry, the more likely LLMs will be to cite you as a trusted and recommended brand. This requires earning mentions and positive reviews in all the places where it matters; having a well-known and well-respected team of individuals who contribute authentic, expert insights into the brand’s content, etc.

As homogenous, AI-generated content floods the internet, users will continue to want to follow real human creators engaged in honest and authentic conversations. Also, focus on the quality and conversion potential of content over the quantity of content, as the latter can cause major SEO headaches over time.

→ Read More: The Role Of E-E-A-T In AI Narratives: Building Brand Authority For Search Success

9. Maintain A Strong Focus On Retrieval Systems And Search Overall

Pedrio Dias, Technical SEO/AI Discoverability Consultant, Visively

I believe that, in the current scenario where a significant amount of new (AI) technologies have been introduced between users and how we interact with the web, and are currently being seen through a disruptive lens, it’s more important than ever to maintain objectivity and pragmatism in our approach to organic visibility as a whole, and search in particular. As professionals, we need to understand in depth the changes that we’re being faced with, both from a technical point of view, but also (and maybe more importantly) from a behavioral point of view.

It’s tempting to cling to old habits and metrics to chase around, instead of assessing if and how we need to rework our strategies and tactics. We’re currently being bombarded with an insane amount of tools claiming to “give you insights into AI answers” and promising that they can give you directional “data” – and in some cases even bold claims of outcomes – but we haven’t even started to understand if any kind of optimization can be performed on AI, or even if inference can be influenced in any controlled and desirable way. So far, everyone is mostly just poking around, guessing, and hoping.

So, that said, in 2026, I believe SEOs should maintain a strong focus on retrieval systems and search overall. Make sure your SEO strategy didn’t get stuck in 2005 and that you’re considering all areas that contribute to consistency in visibility, be it content, branding, technical, etc.

Above all, make sure your share-of-voice strategy is omnichannel and isn’t siloed. All this while keeping your curiosity sharp and your critical thinking aimed at questioning the inconsistencies, while being cautious with a dive-head-first approach.

Watch out for overpromising claims, outdated methodologies sitting on top of baseless assumptions, and vanity metrics.

→ Read More: AI Overviews – How Will They Impact The Industry? We Ask Pedro Dias

10. Remain Focused On What Drives Impact

Montserrat Cano, MC. International SEO & Digital Strategy

In 2026, SEOs and digital marketers need to combine a deep understanding of how AI platforms work with a strong knowledge of their user base across every market.

As search becomes more personalized, AI-driven, and fragmented, visibility may also depend on understanding local search behaviors, expectations, cultural nuances, and how audiences interact with SERP features and LLMs along the purchase path, often in different ways.

The real value comes from embedding this research into ongoing internal processes such as content planning, prioritization, and testing. This ensures teams remain focused on what drives impact, e.g., the queries and content formats that matter, and the AI experiences users actually engage with.

Grounding strategies in first-party data, current market insights, and continuous learning may protect visibility and help build sustainable growth. In 2026, this becomes a core capability for effective SEO and marketing strategy.

→ Read More: Why The Build Process Of Custom GPTs Matters More Than The Technology Itself

11. Review How Content Is Organized, Linked, And Surfaced

Alex Moss, Principal SEO, Yoast

Site speed, UX, and IA are obvious and constant, but structure is something that needs to be audited and improved in the coming months, as we now need to accommodate for both agents and humans. Review how content is organized, linked, and surfaced.

Schema is essential, where in 2026, they will be utilized more to understand entities and their relationships better, which in turn reduces possible hallucinogenic responses from agents.

Also concentrate on IA, query grouping, and internal linking. These strategies have existed for some time, but also need to be revisited if you haven’t done so recently.

For brand and offsite, shift from old-hat link acquisition and instead focus on brand sentiment through third-party perspectives, including native digital PR (unlinked brand mentions are welcome).

Finally, take advantage of multi-modal content – invest in imagery, video, and platforms beyond traditional search to increase discoverability.

→ Read More: The Same But Different: Evolving Your Strategy For AI-Driven Discovery

12. Focusing On Evaluating The Revenue Impact Of Your Strategies

Helen Pollitt, Head of SEO, Getty Images

In 2026, SEOs should be focusing on evaluating the revenue impact of their strategies. Too often, SEOs fall into the trap of trying to optimize for traffic or following the newest advice or fancy tactic.

In reality, the most effective SEO strategies are those that are constantly driving towards revenue or other commercial goals. Keeping this premise front and center to your SEO strategies in 2026 will ensure you don’t get sidetracked by the latest SEO fad rather than working on a plan that drives genuine value to your business.

This means setting out your priorities based on their likeliness of success, and their revenue-generating potential. This simple calculation can help you to identify which projects or activities are worth focusing on in 2026. You will be able to identify if the latest “reverse-meta-optimization-deindexing” fad, or whatever it ends up being, is really worth your budget and resources to pursue.”

→ Read More: Ask An SEO: How Can You Distinguish Yourself In This Era Of AI Search Engines?

13. Treat The Website Like An Enterprise System

Bill Hunt, Global Strategist with Bisan Digital

In 2026, SEOs must stop optimizing solely for pages and singular phrases and start optimizing for topical understanding.

AI-driven search systems are no longer ranking documents but evaluating entities, synthesizing answers, and choosing which brands they trust enough to cite. Visibility now depends on three things: clean, authoritative data; deep topical coverage; and systems that make your content easy to retrieve, understand, and reuse. If your site architecture, structured data, and feeds aren’t aligned to these eligibility gates, you’re invisible before the ranking discussion even begins.

The SEOs who will win in 2026 are the ones who treat the website like an enterprise system, not a collection of pages. That means building durable information architecture, improving data reliability, collaborating with product and engineering teams, and creating content designed for synthesis across formats – not just the blue link.

If you’re not strengthening your site’s underlying information integrity and cross-functional alignment, you’re not competing in the new search environment; you’re just publishing.

→ Read More: Industry Pioneer Reveals Why SEO Isn’t Working & What To Refocus On

14. Develop A Distributed Revenue Strategy

John Shehata, CEO & Founder, NewzDash

In 2026, Brand Authority takes the front seat, replacing traffic volume as the primary metric. AI platforms prioritize trusted entities, so you must prove you are one. SEOs need a dual-speed strategy: a short-term strategy that maximizes today’s Google reality, and a long-term plan for a world where traffic and attention are more fragmented.

In the short term, Google is still the primary traffic driver, so optimize for multi-surface and multi-modal visibility. That means targeting AI Overviews, Discover, Top Stories, video, and short-form reels, not just traditional text results.

Convert every visitor into a direct connection through email, apps, and own communities. At the same time, double down on entity and topic authority, publish useful and unique content that is hard for AI to replicate, such as strong opinion, investigative work, and proprietary data, and strengthen technical SEO, structured data, and answer-ready formatting.

Long-term: Prepare for a post-click reality. Develop a distributed revenue strategy driven by a creator network that monetizes attention directly on social platforms and AI interfaces, accepting that success means revenue generated off-site, not just on your domain.

→ Read More: Google Discover, AI Mode, And What It Means For Publishers: Interview With John Shehata

15. Really Focus On Your Audience

Harry Clarkson-Bennett, SEO Director, The Telegraph

This is very brand and customer-dependent. My best advice is to really focus on your audience. Speak to them. Understand the impact SEO should have vs the impact it currently has. There may still be easy wins on the table. Don’t neglect it.

If you use a last click attribution system, I suspect SEO is over-valued. Work with your analytics team to trial multi-touch attribution and try to figure out the value of each channel. Then work with your PPC, social, and newsletter teams to create a proper marketing and acquisition strategy. Build your owned channels. Improve your blended CPA and solve real business problems.

This is the year you manage up more effectively and stop silo-ing channels and people. Make SEO Great Again.

→ Read More: The Impact AI Is Having On The Marketing Ecosystem

16. Transform Metrics Into Strategic Levers

Motoko Hunt, International SEO Consultant, AJPR

Audit and evolve your measurement framework. Many organizations track extensive data points without translating insights into actionable optimization strategies. The key differentiation lies not in data collection, but in strategic application.

Adapt your metrics architecture for the fragmented SERP landscape. With AI Overviews, featured snippets, and expanding SERP features fragmenting traditional organic visibility, implement granular tracking that isolates performance by SERP element. This segmentation reveals where you’re capturing attention and, more critically, where competitors are intercepting traffic before users reach your listings.

Balance emerging channels with revenue-driving fundamentals. AI search warrants monitoring – track share of voice in AI-generated responses and assess brand mention quality. However, at current adoption rates, AI search primarily serves upper-funnel awareness objectives. Your core optimization efforts should remain anchored to proven conversion pathways: traditional organic search, site experience optimization, and technical excellence that drives qualified traffic and revenue.

Transform metrics into strategic levers. Don’t just report CTR decline from position 3 to 5 – quantify the revenue impact, and identify the ranking factors at play. Connect performance gaps directly to business outcomes, then prioritize initiatives that close those gaps with the highest ROI potential.

→ Read More: Effective SEO Organizational Structure For A Global Company

17. Be Aware Of Falsehoods Which Will Continue To Circulate

Dawn Anderson, International SEO Consultant, Bertey

In 2026, SEOs should accept that we continue to have a steeper-than-ordinary SEO learning curve ahead of us. How AI is going to fully impact our industry over time continues to be largely an educated guessing game.

LLMs and agentic search provide a considerable opportunity, but it is important to not simply presume producing copy and paste AI LLM slop will make the cut for performative SEO in 2026, since this is a degenerative downward quality spiral. Instead, we must prioritize adding more authentic value beyond the norm, standing head and shoulders above competitors, and using AI predominantly for efficiency and ideation kick starting, along with prototype generation and concept testing.

Building increasingly robust reputation and authority through quality and connections should remain firmly a key priority. Particularly as the general consensus of opinion in verticals will continue to build via accumulative LLM extractions, shaping competitive narratives.

We should also be aware of falsehoods, which will continue to circulate in the vacuum of genuine knowledge that these severe industry changes create.  Don’t end up going down the wrong paths which may be very difficult to return from in the short to medium term.

→ Read More: Building Trust In The AI Era: Content Marketing Ethics And Transparency

18. Understand The User And How They Make Decisions

Giulia Panozzo, Founder, Neuroscientive

I believe that our key to achieving measurable results in 2026 is looking beyond the tactics and the new shiny tools: we need to get back to basics and really understand the user, their motivations, their frustrations, and mostly how they make decisions.

When customers decide to engage with a brand, a product, or a service, they do so by leveraging a number of micro-decisions that have very little to do with our marketing tactics and a lot more to do with their expectations and needs, their personal experiences, and the perception they have about us. A lot of those choices are made subconsciously, before they are even aware of them – and as a result, they are not visible by looking at traditional metrics.

So, focus on the bigger picture by working cross-functionally to understand not only how people get to your site, but what underlying needs and expectations they have by leveraging social listening, CX logs, and on-site behavioral metrics that will inform what they need to see and engage with before they even click on your result on the SERP.

→ Read More: The Behavioral Data You Need To Improve Your Users’ Search Journey

19. Find Ways To Differentiate Yourself From The Noise

Alli Berry, SEO Director, Marketwise

Looking into 2026 and beyond, I think SEOs need to be focused heavily on digital PR efforts and getting brand mentions and links from influential sites and people. I think we’re going to hit a point where what others say about your brand is going to have more weight than what you say about your own brand.

We’re already starting to see that with Reddit and forums, and as LLMs gain more traction, that is only becoming a more important factor in gaining visibility.

I’d also be focused on finding unique content angles that can’t be easily replicated by AI. Whether it’s telling customer stories or doing primary research, you’re going to need to find ways to differentiate yourself from the noise.

→ Read More: How To Get Brand Mentions In Generative AI

20. Have Influence Where Your Audience Is

Shelley Walsh, Managing Editor, Search Engine Journal & IMHO

During times of significant flux, go to the fundamentals and hold on: Know where your audience is finding its trusted information and have influence in those spaces.

If you embrace this core maxim, it will guide you through all the changes that Google, discovery engines, LLMs, and whatever comes next can throw at you.

However, don’t overlook the significant changes happening with technology that do influence the channels through which audiences can find us. Also, pay attention to how agentic SEO is developing so that you can consider now how you could apply it to your niche.

Don’t get caught up in pointless arguments over nomenclature or caught up in hype cycles chasing distractions. Keep focusing on what a user wants and applying your brand presence and message where they can see it. Everyone is running around like the sky is falling, but it’s all just SEO.

→ Read More: Google’s Old Search Era Is Over – Here’s What 2026 SEO Will Really Look Like

SEO In 2026

What most of our experts are saying is that what is changing is not so much the how, but the where.

Search is happening everywhere, and you need to ensure your brand narrative is accessible and consistent across all the channels where your audience is.

However, that means being mentioned in the right places, and constantly asking: “Does this move the needle for revenue, or is it just more noise?

The future of search is being built in real time, so make sure you’re not just watching it happen, but actively shaping how your brand shows up in it.

More Resources:


Featured Image: Paulo Bobita/Search Engine Journal

2023 Google Algorithms & SEO’s Future: Powerful Predictions For 2024

Maximize your SEO efforts in 2024 with insights on Google's SGE, algorithm updates, and expert tips to keep your site ahead. Stay informed and adapt now!

Conductor Conductor 7.7K Reads
2023 Google Algorithms & SEO’s Future: Powerful Predictions For 2024

Learn how you can leverage 2023’s most significant SEO trends, updates, and challenges to inform and align your 2024 strategy.

From Google’s Search Generative Experience (SGE) to ranking factor changes and other impactful events, the world of SEO has seen plenty of change in 2023.

With all of these changes, you need to stay ahead to keep your website performing at a high level in 2024.

In this article, we’ll explore:

  • Major algorithm updates.
  • Shifts in what are (and aren’t) ranking factors.
  • Impactful events from 2023 that shaped the SEO industry.
  • Expert predictions on 2024’s SEO trends, challenges, and opportunities.

2023’s Google Algorithm Updates & Introduction Of Search Generative Experience

As part of your everyday work, you’re used to algorithm updates and the best ways to pivot.

In fact, in 2023, there were:

  • 4 Google Core Algorithm Updates.
  • 3 Google Reviews Updates
  • 1 Helpful Content Update
  • 1 Spam Update

However, in 2023, Search Generative Experience (SGE) has added a new level of complexity to search.

Google’s SGE is a whole new ballgame for how we search and find information online.

SGE uses generative AI to break down the top SERP content into a single snippet at the top of the page. This helps Google’s overall goal of providing users with quick answers to complex questions.

However, the implications of SGE are huge for your site’s organic discoverability and the future of search as we know it.

What Is Search Generative Experience (SGE)?

SGE is an experimental update to Google’s search engine that uses artificial intelligence to generate contextual answers to complex questions.

SGE leverages AI in the following three ways to enhance its search experience:

  • AI Snapshot: The AI-generated snippet located at the top of the Google SERP that answers the users’ questions. See our screenshot of the AI snapshot answering the query ‘What is the strongest bone in the human body?’ below.
  • Conversational Mode: Answers follow-up questions related to a topic while keeping the context of the original search.
  • Vertical Experiences: Provides a preferred list of features and more product details in commercial searches.

How Will SGE Impact SEO?

AI is now in the spotlight, living in the area that once held the coveted first position on SERPs.

As you know, SEO success hinges on a website’s ability to rank well on SERPs, because _ of clicks are often to the website that holds position one.

Before SGE, search ads and featured snippets were the main hurdles to getting the most clicks for a specific keyword.

Now that the SERP layout has changed, AI is in the spotlight.

The AI snippet takes up the best SERP real estate there is, pushing down the paid and organic results and even the featured snippets, and that’s before we expanded the AI-generated snippet.

As you can expect, once you expand the AI spotlight section, it dominates the page, and every other result is pushed below the fold.

The impact on site traffic and the CTR of organic results will be devastating even if your rankings remain the same. And in case you thought your paid ads would be safe, we have bad news for you. The AI spotlight will take precedence over every result, whether organic, paid, or featured.

While Google’s goal remains to get its users the answers they need, SGE marks a shift in how it gets users from point A to point B.

Specifically, Google used to give users answers to their questions by directing them toward helpful sites and content, ultimately taking them away from the Google SERP.

With SGE, Google is encouraging users to remain on the SERP.

5 Ways To Align Your 2024 SEO Strategy with SGE

The introduction of SGE is poised to significantly disrupt traditional search engine rankings and click-through rates (CTR), signaling a paradigm shift where the focus will transition from mere “rankings” to the more strategic concept of “real estate” in search engine results.

This change underscores the need for businesses to adapt their strategies to maintain visibility and relevance in a highly competitive online environment.

1. Think About Real Estate, Not Rankings

Due to SGE’s conversation snippet taking up the majority of the SERP and pushing your hard-earned positions below the fold, it’s important to begin discovering ways to get your brand back in front of search traffic.

As we mentioned above, Google’s new AI snippet takes up the best SERP real estate, effectively pushing down the traditional paid and organic results and even the featured snippets.

Additionally, SGE’s answers are comprised of everything from specific website snippets down to comments on social media platforms and forums.

To get your brand back above the fold, consider a holistic approach to your SERP takeover.

Aim to position your brand in:

  • Paid Search, to be seen first after SGE.
  • Organic Search, to continue to build authority.
  • Social Media Marketing to increase your brand’s chances of informing SGE on SERPs.
  • Knowledge Graphs to increase your brand’s visibility on SERPs.
  • Rich Snippets to increase your brand’s visibility on SERPs.
  • SGE, to reclaim your position above the fold.

2. Specificity In Content Creation Is Key

As of now, SGE is pulling the most relevant and helpful snippet of the content appearing in the top 2 organic results for its answers.

Google is looking for the best possible answer to user queries, which may be in a comment on a forum, a snippet from an article, or a post on a site like Quora or Reddit.

So, to improve your brand’s chances of gaining more SERP real estate, create content with a high level of specificity and expertise to increase your chances of Google pulling your content as a specific snippet.

3. Solidify Your Author’s Expertise

Experience-Expertise-Authoritativeness-Trustworthiness (E-E-A-T) has become the Google mantra, permeating everything they do.

Helping Google understand who is writing a piece of content and why they are an authority has become a necessity versus a nice to have.

To help Google understand who your authors are, it helps to have a clear answer on who the author is, why they are an expert in the industry, and why they are an expert on a specific topic.

How to solidify your expertise in authorship

  1. Create an author page on your company’s website with a clear breadcrumb that establishes your position at the company.
  2. Ensure that your name and title are clearly stated. Include links to more pieces you’ve contributed to.
  3. Link to your LinkedIn profile
  4. Link to and from Wikipedia
  5. Link to other articles and publications
  6. Ensure your author schema markup is implemented correctly

4. Dive Deeper Into Search Intent

When it comes to search intent in 2024, your goal is to understand what each person is searching for, on a deeper level.

You can uncover these insights by capturing, monitoring, and converting search intent on a holistic level.

What To Do, Starting Now

Uncover performance insights on entire groupings of keywords, such as semantically related keywords and topics.

Long-Term Tasks

Implement recommendations, opportunities, and gap identification based on semantic analysis of topics and topic clusters.

5. Strive For Hyper-Personalization In Results

Because of SGE’s conversational nature, audiences may begin to expect a hyper-personalized experience.

In order to help meet your future prospect’s expectations, it’s important to constantly improve your website’s user experience.

Long-Term Tasks

  • Ingest 3rd-party data to surface which users are in the “unauthenticated web” (Cookieless)
  • Identify the impact of “conversational style search” where users give personal inputs
  • Capture and surface this information in reporting and recommendations

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Maximize your SEO efforts in 2024 with insights on Google's SGE, algorithm updates, and expert tips to keep your site ahead.

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2024 AI & SEO: Your 24-Expert Guide To Successful SERPs

SGE and generative AI are here, and they’re making a splash in a big way. SERPs as we know them are completely changing, and it’s up to us to pivot.

But how do you do that while keeping your SEO strategy strong? And how do you convince your higher-ups (if they need convincing) that your new path is worth the shift?

These are the questions we wanted to tackle in this collection of articles. We know that it can be tricky to keep up with all the latest developments and new tech in SEO, so it’s time to demystify some of the latest trends.

After all, it’s better to embrace change than run from it.

I especially think you’ll like referring to “Google SGE And Generative AI In Search: What To Expect In 2024” as you build this year’s strategy. I know I did. SGE has continued to evolve this year, and I’m already hard at work discovering ways to adjust to this new way of using Google.

Read on and find out how your 2024 SEO strategy can benefit from these new developments.

Until next time!

Do Keywords Still Matter?

Explore keywords' pivotal role in Google's indexing system, user experience, and content creation for effective online visibility and strategic connections.

Winston Burton Winston Burton 17K Reads
Do Keywords Still Matter?

Are keywords still important today?

Keywords – ranging from single words to complex phrases – are still instrumental in shaping website content to boost relevant organic search traffic and essential tools for connecting the target audience with your website.

But just how much? Let’s explore.

There is no short answer to this. If you ask whether keywords in queries are essential to provide a list of relevant files to satisfy an informational need, then the answer is no.

But if you ask if keywords matter to Google’s indexing and retrieval system, the answer is absolutely yes.

Let’s take a closer look.

Why Keywords Matter In SEO

Keywords are the key phrases commonly used by consumers to find what they are looking for online.

They use the search bar in their browser to type in the terms, which are usually made of one or more words that describe what they want.

There are many types of keywords, including:

  • Branded.
  • Non-Branded.
  • Local and Global.
  • Brand + Geography.
  • Brand + Product, etc.

Here are four ways keywords continue to help brands.

1. Keywords Help Indicate User Intent

Keywords are directional. They give very good clues that “point” to the kind of content the searcher is trying to retrieve.

However, there is still a vocabulary problem between the index system and end users, who have many different ways to ask for the same thing or something similar.

This is why Google and other search engines have extremely advanced query expansion technologies.

For example, an end user typing “solar energy” as a query may well see the first result for solar power, which may be more relevant and useful to satisfy the informational need than another page that only has a direct match to the words “solar” + “energy” to qualify it.

Plus, timestamps appended to keywords in the index for temporal analysis give a clue to freshness to help detect trends, and then there has to be event detection for news results.

And so much more.

So, yes, the closer a user can get the query to match the relevant content, the better.

However, users tend not to know what they’re looking for (if they did, they wouldn’t need a search engine), so search engines must be sophisticated with definition and association discovery.

2. Keywords Help Find Quick Wins

Finding quick wins or striking distance opportunities, especially for keywords that bring in conversions for other channels, should be your quickest path to improving organic visibility.

For example, if you’re a large-scale retailer like Walmart and you’re ranking in position 13 for Nintendo Switch, which has millions of searches per month, that would be on my priority list to optimize.

I would examine and optimize the landing page, internal and external links, etc., to see what you need to do to get this term on the first page of Google to drive more sales and revenue.

search volumes for Nintendo Switch
Screenshot from author, December 2023

3. Keywords Help Identify The Right Target Audience

When we perform competitive analysis and look at keyword visibility for a prospect or current client versus the competitive set, we can uncover a content gap.

We could find they don’t have content related to that topic or that the content they have is not ranking or optimized.

For example, I previously had a financial client who wanted to rank for “Tesla Loans.”

After looking at competitor visibility, we noticed competitors ranked for “Tesla Financing,” and my client did not have “Tesla Financing” in their page title, headings, body content, etc., and therefore did not rank for the term.

But loans and financing are not synonymous.

Once we developed content for “Tesla Financing” instead and optimized it, marked it up with schema, built content around it, did some internal linking, promoted the content, etc., conversion rates increased by 15% YOY.

The keyword “Tesla Financing” helped us identify the proper target audience that had a much higher search volume than Tesla Loans.

bulk keyword analysis
Screenshot from author, December 2023

4. Keywords Help Drive Traffic

Most traffic occurs on page one of Google. In fact, the top result alone takes 28.5% of the clicks.

If you increase visibility into the first page, your site can drive a considerable amount of incremental traffic, which can potentially lift sales on keywords that have high volume.

Having a top position on a low-volume keyword is not meaningful.

Instead, focus your efforts on keywords that drive business value and have some volume and holistic content that answers questions end users will find useful.

Far too many clients and articles focus on counting keyword success stories instead of measuring the impact of those successes (or not).

Should We Still Track Keywords?

The answer here is an overwhelming yes. Keywords still provide value by delivering traffic, conversions, visibility, and sales in prime positions.

For enterprise-level brands with a lot of products and services, it can be expensive to track keywords because there can be thousands or millions of keywords to monitor across desktop and mobile.

It’s a great idea to keep a golden keyword list of terms that deliver the most business value to your brand, i.e., traffic, revenue, and conversions, and a mixture of non-brand, brand, and product keywords that are vital to your first-page visibility.

A brand wants to know what its highest volume terms are doing and get as much traffic as possible from those keywords.

It makes sense to track a few hundred keywords per core business line and region for enterprise-level brands.

Tips For Finding The Right Keywords

Before you start using a wide variety of keyword research tools, always think like a customer and ask, “What is the purpose of my website and what problem am I going to help end users solve and satisfy their information need?”

If you can answer that question, you are on the right path to defining your audience and your content and keyword strategy.

One of the keyword research data sources I like to use is paid search data if it is available. If you have historical paid search data, you can see which keywords resulted in conversions and sales, which can help define what content you should create.

Additionally, you can use tools like Google Keyword Planner, KW Finder, Moz Keyword Explorer, Semrush, Ahrefs, and Long Tail Pro, offering diverse functionalities to aid in finding the right keywords.

At the end of the day, SEO is all about delivering qualified traffic that converts into customers. If your site is receiving a lot of traffic and no one converts, what is the point?

(Unless, of course, you have a site that depends on ad revenue, affiliate traffic, or any other advertising model.)

When Keywords Are Actually Useless

Some SEO pros are still focusing on keyword density. News flash: Keyword density does not matter.

Stop trying to stuff keywords into content – it won’t help you get higher rankings if you have your primary keyword at 10% KD, etc.

Focus on writing content that will satisfy the informational need and give users what they want.

I also still see sites using the keyword meta tags. Google devalued that a long time ago, and it has no ranking value and won’t move the needle.

Lastly, using exact match anchor text for all your links is not a good idea. Anchor text should be a mixture of brand and non-brand with different keyword variations.

Google is sophisticated, and if you have too many keywords with exact match anchor text links, you can send off an alarm, and your site can potentially get penalized.

Wrapping Up

While the landscape of SEO and the role of keywords have undergone significant changes, especially with the advent of AI and NLP technologies, keywords remain a crucial element of SEO strategies.

Their proper usage and understanding are integral to connecting with the target audience, understanding market needs, and ultimately driving traffic and conversions.

Always focus on the user experience and E-E-A-T as Google’s focus on providing valuable, relevant content to users has led to the emergence of E-E-A-T (Expertise, Experience, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness) as a key ranking signal.

Creating content that genuinely addresses user queries and demonstrates first-hand experience is crucial.

The evolution of SEO practices towards a more holistic, user-centric approach underscores the need to stay updated with the latest trends and tools to maintain effective online visibility.

More resources:


Featured Image: Red Deer/Shutterstock

Top tips to create a flexible & effective SEO strategy in 2024.
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