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SEO Tools and Resources

Discuss popular SEO tools like SEMrush, Ahrefs, and Google Analytics, and share resources that make SEO easier.

  1. Most businesses don’t fail to rank in the local pack because they lack reviews, links, or proximity. They fail long before that because Google never considers them eligible in the first place. This is a recurring pattern in local search that almost everyone overlooks. Google decides what you are before it decides how relevant you are. From exact matches to broad intent: How eligibility shifts In a niche query, Google is looking for a 1:1 match. They want high-confidence entities that leave zero room for interpretation. However, once you zoom out to a broader search like “restaurants,” that lockdown disappears. Suddenly, the Map Pack opens u…

  2. For most people, “Mad Men” means the TV show. But the phrase points to something more specific: Madison Avenue in the 1950s and ‘60s, when agencies grew brands through persuasion, positioning, and earned trust in a world of scarce media channels and powerful gatekeepers. If you wanted attention, you bought your way in, then made your product the obvious choice. When the internet arrived and Google made the chaos navigable, an entire industry was built on getting brands found. Search and SEO became one of the most commercially valuable disciplines in marketing. That model isn’t disappearing. But something new is taking shape on top of it — and most of the industry …

  3. The March 2026 SEO Update by Yoast is part of our monthly webinar series covering the latest developments in search and AI. Hosted by Carolyn Shelby and Alex Moss, this month’s session explored how AI is reshaping search, Google’s latest moves, and what brands should prioritize now. Watch the full recap on YouTube to dive deeper into these topics, hear audience questions, and see real-world examples. SEO and AI news from March 2026 AI tools become more personal and mobile AI is moving beyond standalone apps, integrating into messaging platforms (like Claude’s Telegram/Discord support) and desktop environments (e.g., Meta’s My Computer). This shift makes AI…

  4. With AI-driven search and hyper-fragmented media channels reshaping how people discover brands, the “set it and forget it” approach to marketing measurement is officially dead. Measuring impact isn’t a static check of dashboard data. Used strategically, measurement is a virtuous cycle where data informs your ad platform settings and those settings, in turn, generate better data (and business outcomes). Here’s how to build a measurement flywheel that keeps your growth efficient. The 4-step measurement cycle Imagine a Bay Area SaaS company, PowerLoop, selling an AI-powered analytics platform. They’re investing heavily in Google Search, LinkedIn, and some eme…

  5. Search has changed – and so has the role of the SEO professional. What began as a technical discipline focused on keywords and rankings is now a multi-faceted role that blends strategy, research, content, and visibility. This article explores: How SEO has evolved. What that means for practitioners. Where we go from here. The early days of SEO: Simpler times, big opportunities I stumbled into SEO by accident sometime around 1999, when the internet was a much simpler place. Dial-up modems were the norm, search engines were still finding their footing, and there were no smartphones, no social media, and certainly no AI in your pocket. To g…

  6. Roll the clock back five, 10, or 15 years, and a PPC practitioner’s value was directly tied to tactical proficiency. Not anymore. Today, Google and Microsoft automate much of the tactical work. Machine learning and AI manage bids, test creatives, and find audiences faster and more efficiently than any human could. Unfortunately, this reality has left many veteran practitioners in a mid-career identity crisis. If algorithms pull the levers, what exactly are we getting paid to do? Where is our sustainable value to the business? Here’s what that evolution looks like in practice and how the hard skills in your playbook have changed. PPC shifted from tactical e…

  7. In 2025, all signs point to SEO moving beyond a fixation on the Google search box and toward multi-modal search. As search behavior becomes increasingly fragmented across platforms – LLM search, TikTok, Reddit, YouTube, and more – relying solely on Google will limit your organic growth. What’s more important than ever is building your brand organically across platforms, technologies, and interactions. Your brand is the connective tissue that ties everything together, whether users are searching for products, services, or simply information. While optimizing for non-brand keywords remains valuable, it shouldn’t be at the expense of a broader brand-buildi…

  8. Something’s shifting in how SEO services are being marketed, and if you’ve been shopping for help with search lately, you’ve probably noticed it. AI search demand is real – but so is the spin Over the past few months, “AI SEO” has emerged as a distinct service offering. Browse service provider websites, scroll through Fiverr, or sit through sales presentations, and you’ll see it positioned as something fundamentally new and separate from traditional SEO. Some are packaging it as “GEO” (generative engine optimization) or “AEO” (answer engine optimization), with separate pricing, distinct deliverables, and the implication that you need both this and traditi…

  9. Link building has to evolve. For years, SEOs measured visibility through keywords, rankings, links, and click-through traffic. Those things still matter. But the return signal has weakened, especially at the top of the funnel. The bigger shift is how your prospective customers solve problems. Buyers* no longer have to compress a question, constraint, fear, or doubt into a keyword. They can ask AI systems in natural language, add context, and explain what they need in order to make the best decision for their situation. If teams sleep on that shift, they’re going to wake up with visibility nightmares they can’t explain with old SEO metrics. That ch…

  10. With the rise of AI-powered features, search engines are not just directing users to information but delivering answers directly. This shift is redefining how people interact with the web, raising questions about the future of SEO, content discovery, and digital marketing. Here’s what’s coming next. From ChatGPT to Grok 3: The breakneck pace of AI advancements The world has seen rapid and significant advances in AI technology and large language models (LLMs) within two years. Looking back just three years ago, Google’s Gemini and Meta’s LLAMA did not exist, and OpenAI’s ChatGPT was later released in late November 2022. Fast-forward to January 2…

  11. The debate on SEO‘s changing practice and its transition to AI has heated up recently on podcasts, blogs, news sites, and social spaces around the web. While the discussion is focused on what we should call it and why – be it “GEO” (generative engine optimization), “AIO” (artificial intelligence optimization), or something else – one linguistic element keeps surfacing. No matter the acronym, it will most likely include the word “optimization.” Most people debating the term likely do not know the details of its origins, as a similar debate about optimization occurred almost 30 years ago – before many of today’s debaters were even born. While naming and de…

  12. There’s a phrase PPC experts reach for whenever they get a tough question. At conferences, online, and on client calls. Two words, a smug smile, and absolutely zero useful information: “It depends.” This has been bugging me for as long as I can remember. Turns out it’s not just a PPC thing, either. Aleyda Solis gave an excellent presentation calling out the exact same pattern in SEO. So we’re dealing with an industry-wide epidemic here. Two disciplines, same cop-out. Not every question is equally hard to answer. “What’s the maximum number of RSAs per ad group?” Just look it up. “Why did my CPA spike last week?” That takes data plus interpretation. “Wh…

  13. While initially criticized as a black box, Performance Max has evolved into a fairly critical campaign type. With each passing quarter, Google has introduced more functionality and visibility. Additional reporting is helpful, but what matters is what you can actually act on. While you can’t control everything in Performance Max, there are specific levers that can have a meaningful impact on performance. Here are the parts of PMax you can control and how to use them effectively. Control what you can: Search terms and placements One of the most exciting updates in the last year to Performance Max has been the ability to add these campaign-level negative keywords.…

  14. When you hear the term “contact page,” you probably think of a simple page containing contact info and maybe a form. I’m here to tell you why that’s a big miss from a local SEO perspective and show you how to build a contact page that builds your prominence with Google and helps you convert more leads. Google pays special attention to your contact page The former head of Google Business Profile Support, Joel Headley, once told me that Google specifically crawls and parses your contact page to gather information about your business. This led me to realize that most businesses have awful contact pages. They list their name, address, and phone number (NAP), e…

  15. Table of contents The scanning habits of our brain Factors that determine reading depth The impact of mobile evolution on content consumption The psychology behind bullet points The science of information processing The hierarchy of scannable elements Implementing psychology-driven content Respecting your reader’s brain Your content has 15 seconds. That’s it. In those precious moments, your reader’s brain makes a critical decision: scan or abandon. The statistics are sobering. Users read only 20-28% of webpage content, spending an average of 15 seconds on a page before deciding whether to stay or leave. Yet many content creators still write as if their audie…

  16. In 1998, submitting a website to search engines was manual, methodical, and genuinely tedious. I remember 17 of them: AltaVista, Yahoo Directory, Excite, Infoseek, Lycos, WebCrawler, HotBot, Northern Light, Ask Jeeves, DMOZ, Snap, LookSmart, GoTo.com, AllTheWeb, Inktomi, iWon, and About.com. Each had its own form, process, and wait time, and its own quiet judgment about whether your URL was worth including. We submitted manually, 18,000 pages in all. Yawn. Google was barely a year old when we were doing this. But they were already building the thing that would make submission irrelevant. PageRank meant Google followed links, and a site that other sites linke…

  17. As the SaaS market reels from a sell-off sparked by autonomous AI agents like Claude Cowork, new data shows a 53% drop in AI-driven discovery sessions. Wall Street dubbed it the “SaaSpocalypse.” Whether AI agents will replace SaaS products is a bigger question than this dataset can answer. But the panic is already distorting interpretation, and this data cuts through the noise to show what SEO teams should actually watch. Copilot went from 0.3% to 9.6% of SaaS AI traffic in 14 months From November 2024 to December 2025, SaaS sites logged 774,331 LLM sessions. ChatGPT drove 82.3% of that traffic, but Copilot’s growth tells a different story: SaaS AI Tra…

  18. Negative keywords aren’t a checklist anymore. In 2026, they’re a series of strategic decisions — and how you make them shapes how the algorithm interprets your account. If you’re still treating negatives like maintenance, you’re missing the point. Every exclusion is a signal: who you want to reach, what you’re willing to pay for, and how your campaigns should perform. Here are six decisions that define modern negative keyword strategy — and why they matter more than ever. How negative keywords shape campaign performance Negative keywords are how you sculpt a campaign so the right ad shows up for the right person. The user’s query should match the ad. The ad…

  19. At $50+ CPCs, Reddit beats every vendor organically 67.3% of the time across 8,566 keywords. The study from Ross Simmonds and his team focused on B2B SaaS, but the underlying dynamics don’t stop there. The higher the advertising competition on a term, the more likely a Reddit thread sits above every brand in organic results. If you’re in legal, financial services, premium home services, or insurance, those CPCs aren’t unusual territory. This study is worth your attention. The SEO community has been talking about this for a while, and the conversation has largely stayed in SEO territory: Reddit is eating organic search, so build your glossaries and invest in …

  20. A year and a half ago, I wrote “The rise of forums: Why Google prefers them and how to adapt,” arguing that brands should build their own online forums and communities. Let’s look at what’s happened since. As of this writing, Reddit’s stock price has risen 177.6%. If you’d bought 100 shares of RDDT then, you’d be $13,113 richer today. In a June 2025 analysis of 150,000 AI citations, Semrush found that Reddit was the top source, appearing in more than 40% of LLM responses. So what happened? It comes down to the law of supply and demand. The supply-and-demand crisis of online answers The demand for answers has skyrocketed as people increasing…

  21. FAQ schema is no longer a quick SEO win. In August 2023, Google reduced the visibility of FAQ rich results in search, restricting them to authoritative government and health websites. The update effectively rendered the tactic useless for marketers who once relied on it to expand their SERP real estate. Google also clarified that FAQPage markup should never be used for advertising or promotional purposes. It belongs only on genuine FAQ pages created to answer user questions. For years, many SEOs – including myself – added structured FAQ data to marketing pages as a best practice. It’s time to rethink that habit. Google’s shifting guidance isn’t new.…

  22. For decades, the SEO world has been divided into two camps: black hat and white hat practitioners. These opposing forces have waged countless battles across digital forums and social media. But now, a new breed of SEO has emerged. One that’s mastered the art of attention-grabbing and self-promotion. Enter the “like hat.” SEO practitioners who trade in social currency rather than business outcomes. They’re not optimizing for search engines or users – they’re optimizing for likes. And it’s becoming one of the industry’s most pressing problems. The social media mirage Nowhere is the like hat trend more visible than on LinkedIn, which has be…

  23. Brand performance in generative search relies on measurable reputation and entity signals. But those signals are only as good as the infrastructure machines can fetch, parse, and trust. Treat the website, feeds, and APIs as brand training data. Pair technical governance with brand strategy to stop narrative drift and preserve brand equity. Search and brand are one system now, bridging the gap between intent and machine narration. “Google doesn’t just index your pages – it indexes your reputation.” – Jono Alderson That only happens when the site’s performance, semantics, and integrity make the brand easy to select. Machines prefer brands they can read c…

  24. Return on ad spend (ROAS) has been the default metric for evaluating Google Ads performance for years. It’s easy to calculate, works well with automated bidding, and provides a quick snapshot of efficiency. However, as ad costs rise and tracking becomes less reliable, relying solely on ROAS is no longer enough, especially for businesses focused on long-term growth and profitability. This article: Unpacks why ROAS can be misleading. Introduces better metrics to consider. Explains how to start moving toward a performance strategy that aligns with real business outcomes. Why ROAS can be misleading ROAS seems like the perfect metric. Spend $1, …

  25. The customer journey used to start on the SERP. But that’s no longer the case. By the time a buyer types a search query into Google, they usually already have a few potential brands in mind. They’ve: Seen the same product recommended across multiple Instagram Reels over the course of days or weeks. Read a Reddit thread where five strangers agreed the same tool was the best option. Watched peers recommend a specific service inside a Facebook group. Google has become the confirmation step, not the starting point. Nobody searches with a blank mind. Buyers arrive focused on confirming assumptions and gathering more specific information, not browsing for optio…





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