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5 ways to improve your AI brand visibility (Using Yoast AI Brand Insights)
AI is changing search and rewriting the rules. If your brand isn’t visible in AI-generated answers, you have a bigger problem than just traffic. You’re missing out on trust, credibility, and customers who now expect AI to recommend the best options everywhere. Table of contents Why modern SEO is about AI visibility AI search is a blind spot for most Controlling the narrative of your brand Yoast AI Brand Insights is here to help Understanding the AI visibility metrics 5 Ways to improve your AI brand visibility How to influence LLMs to mention your brand The future of brand visibility is AI-driven Ready to take control of your AI brand visibility? We see that traditional SEO isn’t enough anymore. Today, it’s possible to rank #1 on Google and still be invisible in the AI responses people now often turn to for recommendations. Yoast AI Brand Insights is a great tool that shows you exactly how your brand appears in AI-generated answers from ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google Gemini. It tracks sentiments and benchmarks against competitors. What’s more, it doesn’t just help build your AI visibility, but also helps control your brand’s narrative. Key takeaways AI visibility matters; brands absent in AI responses lose trust and customers. Yoast AI Brand Insights helps track brand mentions, sentiment, and credibility across AI platforms. Modern SEO now focuses on AI visibility, moving beyond traditional search engines. To improve AI brand visibility, brands should publish authoritative content and optimize for AI citations. Active participation in online communities enhances brand visibility on AI platforms. Why modern SEO is about AI visibility People are no longer just searching on Google. Every day, more people are asking AI tools and Large Language Models (LLMs) like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity for recommendations. Unlike classic search engines, these tools don’t just list links; they curate answers by combining trained knowledge with information they’ve learned from the web. AI platforms combine information from multiple sources to provide a single, context-aware, and custom answer. People even start treating these AI answers as personal advice, not just generic search results. This will happen more and more as search engines like Google increasingly integrate AI into their search results. As a result, the boundaries between traditional search and AI-generated answers are blurring. AI search is a blind spot for most Classic SEO tools track rankings, but they don’t track how your brand appears in AI answers. This leads to blind spots where your competitors might be all over the AI recommendations in your market without you realizing it. What’s more, you might rank well on Google, but you could be invisible to a growing audience if AI systems ignore your brand. Your competitors can appear more often or more positively in AI recommendations. Or there’s negative sentiment in AI responses that can harm your reputation without you even knowing. Controlling the narrative of your brand AI platforms like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini piece together your brand’s story from scattered sources, like reviews, news articles, social media, and your own content. If these send mixed signals, the answers an AI gives will too. That’s why you need to send a unified, consistent message. This is one of the most effective ways to reinforce your narrative across every platform. Repeat your main message, whether that’s “affordable luxury” or “sustainable innovation,” everywhere, from your site content to press releases and from social media to external interviews. Quickly address misinformation and respond to inaccurate reviews by publishing clarifications online. By doing this, you prevent the AI from amplifying outdated or incorrect details. Support your brand’s most important attributes with structured data. Add the awards your brand won, or its unique selling points, so you can give the AI platform an all-encompassing framework to reference. Remember, consistency is about repeating your most important brand aspects everywhere. Shape the narrative in such a way that the AI has no choice but to reflect the brand the way you want it to project. Yoast AI Brand Insights is here to help Yoast AI Brand Insights is a helpful tool that tracks how your brand appears in AI answers. It provides a clear, actionable view of your brand’s visibility, sentiment, and credibility across major AI platforms. Yoast AI Brand Insights helps you: Understand if and how your brand is mentioned in AI responses Track sentiment and see if AI platforms describe your brand positively or negatively Identify the sources to see what AI references when mentioning your brand Benchmark against competitors to see how you stack up We didn’t build this to get you some data, but to turn that AI black box into actionable insights. Understanding the AI visibility metrics Using the Yoast AI Brand Insights metrics helps you measure and improve your brand’s visibility in AI platforms. To make the most of it, you have to understand what metrics mean and why they matter. AI Visibility Index (AIVI) The AI Visibility Index (AIVI) scores (on a scale of 100) how visible your brand is on AI platforms such as ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini. It consists of the following metrics: Mentions, or how often your brand is cited in AI answers Citations, or the number of authoritative sources referencing your brand Sentiment, or the rate of positive vs. negative keywords associated with your brand Rankings, or the relative position of your brand mentions compared to your competitors The higher the AIVI score (on a scale of 0-100), the more visible your brand is in AI search results for the tracked terms. If you find that your score is low, you should focus on getting more mentions and citations. You should also work on positive sentiment around your business. You build your relevance by publishing authoritative content. Try to get featured on relevant sites and monitor and improve negative sentiment around your brand. Learn more about how AI shapes brand perception. Mentions The Mentions section tracks the specific queries for which your brand appears in AI responses. So, if someone asks, “What is the best low-cost CRM system for small businesses?” and your brand is in the results, that is a mention. It’s not hard to understand why this is important. More mentions generally lead to greater visibility. If you don’t show up for the terms and queries relevant to your brand, you need to start improving your content. Use the built-in AI-generated brand queries to find high-intent questions and write content that answers those questions thoroughly. These could be blog posts or FAQ pages, or whatever makes sense. Also optimize for conversational queries, such as “Is brand X good for startups?” Sentiment Sentiment measures the percentage of negative vs. positive words in the query results associated with your brand. So, if the AI describes your brand as “innovative” or “reliable”, that counts as positive sentiment. However, if they use terms like “overpriced” or “unreliable”, that’s negative sentiment. Positive sentiment helps build trust, while negative sentiment can drive potential customers away. That’s why you should always actively address negative sentiments online. Don’t leave those bad online reviews unresponded to. You can also publish testimonials on your site to amplify positive voices, and you can do the same in your marketing messaging by talking about “a brand loved by thousands” or “award-winning” products. Keep an eye on trends in your online sentiment and catch and fix issues early. Citations Citations refer to the sources that AI platforms explicitly reference when generating an answer, not the brands mentioned within those sources. For example, if Gemini answers a query about “the best credit cards” and cites a New York Times article about best credit cards, that New York Times page is the citation. Even if the article includes brands like American Express or Chase, the citation is attributed to the publisher, not to the individual brands. That said, appearing in those cited sources still matters a great deal. If your brand is consistently featured in relevant, high-authority publications like The New York Times, it increases the likelihood that AI systems will surface your brand in their responses over time. In other words, you may not receive a direct citation, but you benefit from being part of the content that AI platforms trust and rely on. Over time, your brand (say, American Express or Chase) becomes more likely to be included in AI responses to queries like “best credit cards,” especially if it consistently appears in trusted sources. AI platforms use citations to validate their answers. Citations from top sources, such as industry publications, enhance credibility. Find where there’s a natural match between your customers and their audience, and publish the type of content people will want to link to. 5 Ways to improve your AI brand visibility Now that you understand the metrics, here’s how to use insights from Yoast AI Brand Insights to improve your AI visibility. Optimize for AI citations AI platforms like Gemini, Perplexity, and ChatGPT use citations to validate their responses. So, citations increase the likelihood of your brand being included and trusted in AI-generated answers Try to get featured on relevant, authoritative sites and publish guest posts on industry sites, news sites, or educational domains. Get mentioned in roundup articles, like “Top 10 tools for doing X”. Ask customers to write reviews on platforms like Capterra, G2, and Trustpilot. All of these tactics can act as proof that your brand is a well-trusted source. Remember, it must be relevant citations. Make sure your content is structured so the AI can read it easily. Use clear, hierarchical headings and bullet points to make the content easy to scan. Add FAQs and publish direct answers to common questions. It is also a good idea to add schema markup to help the AI crawlers understand your content. Don’t forget to update old content regularly. The AI platforms prioritize fresh, up-to-date information when retrieving sources, so refresh your content regularly to stay relevant. Monitor and improve brand sentiment By mentioning your brand, the AI platforms also shape how people see it. If those sentiments in the AI’s answers are negative, it can hurt your trustworthiness and cost conversions. This could signal the need for a broader reconsideration of business strategy priorities. Once you find AI platforms associate your brand with negative terms (like “slow customer service”), respond to this issue publicly. For instance, you could contact customers on review sites to resolve complaints. You can also publish case studies and testimonials to steer the AI towards positive perceptions. In your monitoring, you’ll also find the positive terms AI platforms associate with your brand, such as “trusted” or “innovative”. Use these terms in your marketing, in your site content, and on social media. The weekly scans in Yoast AI Brand Insights track sentiment shifts for your queries over time. If sentiment drops, investigate the cause, like a recent PR issue or a product recall. Benchmark against competitors AI visibility is also about how you compare to the competition. If they are mentioned more often or in a better light than you, they will appear more often in recommendations made by AI platforms. See how your brand stacks up against competitors. Use Yoast’s Competitor ranking tab to see which brands show up a lot in AI answers. Analyze their content strategy. Do they publish more case studies? Are they active on review sites? This tool shows how AI describes your brand compared to others in your market. For example, if you’re a coffee company like Taylor’s of Harrogate, you might find that Lavazza is consistently labeled as “the Italian espresso expert.” Now you know exactly what to highlight, whether it’s your heritage, roasting process, or sustainability, to stand out. Use these insights to sharpen your messaging and compete more effectively. Don’t forget to check your weekly competitor analyses to see if your AI visibility is improving. Double down on the strategy that works for you. The tool also includes an historical view. This lets you look back at earlier analyses by selecting a past date, helping you compare visibility and sentiment across different points in time. Answer brand-specific questions AI platforms are very good at answering specific questions, such as “Is brand X reliable?” or “What’s the best tool to do Y?” You’re missing out on a lot of potential customers when your brand isn’t in these answers. Yoast AI Brand Insights suggests queries you should monitor based on your input, such as “Is [Your Brand] good for small businesses?” In addition, do deep research into the common questions asked in your industry using tools like AnswerThePublic, AlsoAsked, or simply by checking Google’s People Also Ask section. With the insights gathered, publish blog posts, FAQs, or landing pages and directly answer those brand-related queries. Support the content with properly structured data, such as FAQ and how-to schema, to give AI platforms more tools to understand your content. In Yoast AI Brand Insights, track which questions get the most mentions from AI platforms. Don’t forget to keep your content up to date to keep it accurate and relevant. Track progress with the AI Visibility Index Improving the AI visibility of your brand isn’t a one-time task, but a recurring effort. Luckily, Yoast’s AI Visibility Index gives you an easy-to-understand metric that you can use to track your progress over time. Run your first scan to establish the starting point for your AI Visibility Index. Note which areas, like citations or sentiment, are strongest and weakest. Yoast AI Brand Insights runs weekly scans. Please review them to track progress. Check the historical view, but remember these cannot be viewed together. Select the week before and then reselect this week to spot changes. Look for trends, such as improvements in sentiment or a sudden increase in citations. If your score doesn’t improve, revisit the strategies above, such as optimizing for citations and improving sentiment. Be sure to experiment with new tactics and publish original research to secure more earned media. How to influence LLMs to mention your brand Imagine this: A potential customer asks ChatGPT, “What’s the best CRM for small businesses?” If your brand isn’t mentioned in the answer, you’ve lost a customer before they even knew you existed. LLMs like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity don’t just pull answers out of thin air. They rely on data, citations, and patterns to generate responses. If your brand isn’t part of those patterns, it’s far less likely to be mentioned, no matter how well you rank on Google. Publish authoritative content LLMs are looking for well-structured, factually accurate content. These AI platforms love sources that provide unique insights or expert opinions, so be sure to focus on that. Start with original research. Publish surveys, case studies, or industry reports with unique data. For example, “2026 State of [Your Industry] Report: Key Trends and Insights” positions your brand as an authority and gives AI platforms a reason to cite you. Use the proven inverted pyramid structure in your content. Start with the most important information, like key findings and conclusions, follow with supporting details, and end with background information. This makes it easier for AI to extract, digest, and use your content. Don’t forget to optimize for facts. Include statistics, quotes from experts, and actionable insights. For example, instead of “Our tool is great for marketers,” say “Our tool increased conversion rates by 30% for 500+ marketers in 2025, according to our latest case study.” For example, HubSpot built its authority by publishing ultimate guides, like “The Ultimate Guide to Inbound Marketing.” These guides became go-to resources for marketers, earning backlinks from industry blogs, news sites, and even competitors. As a result, HubSpot is now frequently cited in AI responses about marketing tools. Get mentioned on relevant, high-authority sites LLMs trust reputable sources like industry publications, news sites, and review platforms. The more your brand is mentioned on these sites, the more likely it is to appear in AI responses. Please keep in mind that relevance is key here. For instance, if Yoast gets mentioned in Gardeners’ World or Home and Garden, it will do little to nothing for our brand. Find the most important and relevant sources and focus on those. Pitch stories to journalists or industry blogs. For example, try to get featured in “Top 10 [Your Industry] Tools in 2026” lists. Encourage customers to leave reviews on G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, or Google Reviews. Don’t forget to respond to (negative) reviews to show engagement and transparency. If possible, try to reach out to sites like HubSpot, Search Engine Journal, or industry-specific blogs and ask to write for them. Be sure to include a bio with your brand name to reinforce recognition. Optimize for conversational queries LLMs are designed to answer natural language questions. This means you have to optimize your content for conversational queries. Conversational queries are things like “What’s the best CRM for startups?” rather than “best CRM”. In your content, you should use question-focused headings. For example, answer the question “Is [Your Brand] good for small businesses?” directly in the first paragraph to make it clear and easy to understand. LLMs often answer long-tail questions, so you should target long-tail keywords. For example, instead of “project management tool,” target “best project management tool for remote teams in 2026.” In support of all of this, create FAQ pages with schema markup to help AI better understand your content. Build citations Build up a network of high-quality mentions that reinforce your brand’s authority. The more high-quality, relevant citations you have, the more likely LLMs are to mention your brand. Publish assets like ultimate guides, templates, or tools that others want to reference and link to. For example, “The Ultimate Guide to [Your Industry] in 2026.” Reach out to bloggers, journalists, and influencers to reference your content. For example, “We noticed you mentioned [Competitor] in your article. Here’s why [Your Brand] might be a better fit.” Get featured in press releases, podcasts, or webinars. For example, “[Your Brand] Announces Groundbreaking Feature for [Industry].” Make sure AI crawlers can reach your site It’s important to ensure that AI crawlers can discover and index your content. If your site is invisible to them for whatever reason, your brand won’t appear in AI responses. Your site should be technically sound, but you can also help LLMs in other ways. Make sure your site loads fast and is mobile-friendly. Use clean URLs, good meta tags and descriptions, and alt text for images. Also, use schema on your site to help AI crawlers understand what your site is about and how it all ties together. In Yoast SEO, you can activate an llms.txt file. This proposed standard helps point AI crawlers to your most important content. Also, check whether your robots.txt file inadvertently blocks AI crawlers from accessing your content. Be active in online communities LLMs are trained on and can retrieve information from forums, social media, and community platforms such as Reddit, Quora, and LinkedIn. It can improve your brand’s visibility on AI platforms if you participate there. Answer questions on Quora and Reddit. Provide valuable, non-promotional answers that naturally mention your brand. For example, “As a [Your Industry] expert, I recommend [Your Brand] because…” Join discussions on Slack, Discord, or niche forums. Share insights and link to your content when relevant. Post thought leadership content on LinkedIn, Twitter, or Facebook. For example, “Here’s why [Your Industry] is changing in 2026, and how [Your Brand] is leading the way.” The future of brand visibility is AI-driven We’ve seen that AI is changing how people discover brands. There’s a simple rule: if your brand isn’t visible in AI responses, you are missing out on an ever-growing audience. Luckily, Yoast AI Brand Insights gives you the tools to: Track mentions, sentiment, and citations across AI platforms Benchmark against competitors to identify gaps Optimize for high-intent queries to capture more attention Monitor progress with the AI Visibility Index Plus, we have more tips to help you optimize your content for AI LLM comprehension using Yoast’s tools. Ready to take control of your AI brand visibility? AI is the future of search, and brands that adapt early will win the race for AI visibility. Don’t wait for your competitors to take the lead. Start by running your first scan in Yoast AI Brand Insights. Identify your weak spots, implement these strategies, and watch your AI visibility grow. The time to act is now, so start your brand’s future in AI today. The post 5 ways to improve your AI brand visibility (Using Yoast AI Brand Insights) appeared first on Yoast. View the full article
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6 mindset shifts to improve your risk and failure tolerance
It seems that change and volatility are the only things that are certain when it comes to the labor market. Jobs and professions that once seemed ‘stable’ are not immune to the forces of artificial intelligence and other technological advancements. At the very least, AI is changing the nature of what jobs look like and will likely continue to do so at a fast rate. All of this can make it difficult to know what to do to foolproof your career. Liz Tran is a leadership coach to CEOs and founders and the author of AQ: A New Kind of Intelligence for a World That’s Always Changing. After two years of conversations with founders, CEOs, and leaders, Tran found that those who are most successful and fulfilled have one thing in common—they are comfortable adapting to change and uncertainty. This is what she calls the Agility Quotient (AQ), a type of intelligence that she believes will continue to be a key differentiator as AI and technology continue to change how we live and work. Part of increasing your AQ is improving your tolerance to risks and failure. Below are some of the habits and mindset shifts that can strengthen your resilience to both. 1. Assess your relationship with risk and failure The first step is to identify where you’re currently at. Are you someone that’s comfortable with risks and failure, or do the thought of both make you want to throw up? If you’re not sure, Tran has a framework that she sets out in her book. First, she says, “Bring to mind a stressful or intense situation that you’ve been in recently…and think about the way you’ve approached it.” If you find yourself avoiding the problem, distracting yourself, or telling yourself that it’s not going to be a big deal (without actually acknowledging the problem), that indicates a low level of AQ. This means that risk and failure aren’t something that you’re comfortable with. The middle level, Tran says, is when you acknowledge the change and “you do try to improve your situation in some way.” However, you’re still fighting the situation. “There’s a sense that you’re feeling like, ‘why is this happening to me?’ What did I do to deserve this? Why do I have to deal with this? There’s a resentment and maybe even an anger about what your situation is.” This indicates that while you have some level of tolerance to risk and failure, you’re still resistant to it when it happens. The top level is when you’ve decided to embrace whatever change comes your way, failure included. It doesn’t mean you like your circumstances, Tran says, “but it does mean that you’re seeing it as an opportunity...rather than just something you resent.” And when you have this mindset, Tran says, “not only are you setting yourself up to best tackle the change that is in front of you, but it also helps people from getting burnt out.” 2. Strive to be a ‘learn-it-all’ instead of a ‘know-it-all’ Improving your risk-taking muscle requires a change in mindset. Tran references Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella, who transformed Microsoft’s culture from being “know-it-alls” to “learn-it-alls.” IQ, Tran explains, is about being a “know-it-all,” about having the right information and knowing how to process it quickly. AI and technology have made that less important. The new world of work where everything is changing so quickly, Tran says, “rewards people who move fast.” That means letting go of your ego and being “willing to experiment, pivot, and reinvent yourself.” It also means accepting that sometimes, those experiments can lead to public failures. 3. Find an anchor that grounds you and gives you the stability to take risks While it might sound counterintuitive, Tran says that “agility requires stability.” She continues, “In order to feel psychologically grounded and stable enough to go out there and take risks, you actually need a cushion of comfort and security.” That anchor might be a strong relationship with family and friends, or habits and routines like healthy eating and exercise that make you feel good about yourself. It might also be a physical place that gives you a sense of peace, like your home, a park, or a place of worship. Tran says that anyone who wants to take risks should take the time to invest and build these anchors and routines if they don’t already have them in place. “If we push ourselves too far out of our comfort zones too quickly, then that can actually lead us to impaired cognitive functioning. You actually just want to hit that sweet spot where you’re pushing yourself out of your comfort zone, but it’s not so much that you’re tipping into fight or flight.” Creating a sense of security in areas of life that are in our control, she says, gives you the freedom to take risks in areas where the outcome is uncertain. 4. Practice discomfort on a daily basis Tran is also a believer in exposure therapy, and believes that regularly doing uncomfortable things in a low-risk environment can condition us to do the same in a high-risk environment. Tran likes to frame it as a ‘bet’ rather than a ‘risk’. A risk suggests that there’s a downside to it, whereas with a bet, you can frame it as taking action where you don’t know the outcome, while setting yourself up for the possibility of winning, she explains. This can look like something as small as trying out a new coffee shop or reaching out to someone who’s not in your network that you’d love to meet. “You start with risks that are tolerable, ” she says, and as you build resilience to taking those risks, you become more comfortable doing things that you might have once considered “anxiety-inducing.” 5. Work on improving your ‘recovery rate’ from failure For Tran, a practice that has served her well during periods of setbacks has been tracking “recovery rate” rather than outcomes. Say you set out to make seven “bets” during the week, and none of them worked out in the way that you wanted. If you focus on the outcome, you’re going to feel pretty bad, “even though that’s to be expected when you’re putting yourself out there for risk-taking and failure all the time.” “What you actually want to do is to track your recovery rate,” she says. Notice how quickly you bounced back from this, and how strong, resilient, or courageous you were in the process. Hopefully, the time it takes for you to bounce back becomes shorter and shorter, and that’s a good indication that you’re strengthening your risk and failure tolerance. 6. See failure and setbacks as open doors to new opportunities Tran continually stresses the importance of seeing AQ (and tolerance to risk and failure) as a skill to develop, no matter where your comfort level with change might currently be. If you find yourself resistant to change, for example, it’s probably because it’s something that you haven’t prioritized, or you’ve operated in an environment that doesn’t encourage it, she explains. High achievers, for example, can often struggle with risks because they’re used to doing something that they know will reward them in the end—like a pay rise or a promotion. But if we’re optimizing for outcomes all the time, Tran says, “we’re actually missing the broader target, which is to learn and become agile enough to succeed. “No matter how smart you are, we do not know what the future is going to bring for us, especially with the way that the world is operating now.” The key is to be open, Tran says, to new possibilities. It’s also reframing failure and risk-taking as a pathway to opportunities you didn’t know existed. This is something that Tran, whose own career has been full of pivots, has done personally. “In my career, I have failed so spectacularly,” she says. But looking back, she realizes that the setbacks ended up creating openings to the work that she is doing now. “What I had planned didn’t work out,” she says, “but actually, it helped open my eyes to a different path that I never would have mapped out for myself.” View the full article
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Dark Matter names AI-focused CEO, cuts staff
Dark Matter's parent said the decision to promote its chief technology officer aligns the company to the direction of the market, with further changes to come. View the full article
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Autoglass owner Belron prepares €30bn Amsterdam IPO
Listing for world’s largest car glass repair group would boost Europe’s lagging market View the full article
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Record high beef prices won’t be fixed with more cattle, ranchers say. Here’s why
It’s never been so expensive for Americans to buy a steak or hamburger, but cutting those costs requires ranchers like Stephanie Hatzenbuhler to raise more cattle — and that’s not an easy ask. For a host of reasons, Hatzenbuhler and other ranchers across the country are reluctant to grow the national herd — now its smallest in more than 75 years — and until they do so, demand will outweigh supply, and beef prices will likely remain high. Adding cattle makes sense for some ranchers, but others are struggling to stay afloat with the cattle they have, Hatzenbuhler said. “They’re good times, and they’re bad times,” she said. “It’s a combination of both.” Why is the beef herd so small? Hatzenbuhler will make her choices as cows give birth to about 700 calves this spring on her family’s Diamond J Angus ranch on more than 2,000 wind-swept acres near Mandan, North Dakota. Does she opt to increase her herd, or does she offset the new arrivals by selling an equal number of cattle to be slaughtered? The national herd size isn’t the only factor that determines what beef costs at the grocery store. Still, the dwindling number of cattle is a key reason the average price of all uncooked ground beef in the U.S. was $6.86 per pound in March, 3 cents off the record high set in February, according to federal statistics. That price in March is up nearly 48% from March 2021. The U.S. cattle herd reached a high of 132 million head in 1975, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, and that figure has gradually fallen to 86 million this year. Thanks to changes in cattle genetics and feeding techniques, ranchers now produce far more meat from each animal, so despite the much smaller herd, the country’s beef production hit a record 28.4 billion pounds in 2022, said Tim Petry, a North Dakota State University livestock marketing specialist. About 26 billion pounds of beef are expected in 2026. About 2.5 billion pounds of beef were exported to other countries in 2025, and the tight remaining supply, along with the high demand, has caused record prices. Ranchers acknowledge the higher prices, but they face plenty of challenges weighing against growing herds, especially from drought. Drought limits land for grazing Dry conditions have persisted across much of cattle country, with about 63% of the U.S. cattle herd in drought areas, according to the USDA. Some areas have also seen giant wildfires that left no grass for grazing. “You’ve got to have rain. You’ve got to have grass to keep cows on because they’re out on pastures for over half the year, and so that’s been the dilemma, is we had forced liquidation of cows,” Petry said. This time of year, as calves arrive, ranchers decide whether to retain young cows called heifers and calves for breeding herds, and a big factor is pasture conditions, said Bernt Nelson, an American Farm Bureau Federation economist. Feed is the highest cost for ranchers, and due to drought in spots like Texas and Oklahoma, they have had to truck in supplies from elsewhere. Those extra costs make it hard to increase a herd. “When these pasture conditions deteriorate, and water becomes an issue, some of these states have to go as far as to haul hay, haul water from other regions of the country that have grass and easy access to water, and that adds a significant cost to operations,” Nelson said. Even if ranchers opted to raise more cattle, it takes 15 to 24 months for a calf to mature before it can be slaughtered. Role of meat processors in beef prices Ranchers often blame the concentrated meat processing systems — primarily driven by four companies — for high beef prices, but the picture is complicated. In a statement and market updates, the Meat Institute, a meat processors trade group, noted that retailers and food service companies, not packers, set prices for consumers. And the organization said livestock producers were “earning record profits” while packers were losing money. The Meat Institute also argued that the concentration ratio hasn’t “changed appreciably” over the past 30 years. “Rhetoric about beef industry concentration implies that consolidation in the beef packing sector is ongoing and that market power is becoming increasingly concentrated. That is not the case,” the group said. John Robinson, a spokesman for the National Cattlemen’s Beef Association, said he sees many reasons for high prices, and in some cases, meat processors are responsible, but that “it’s far more complicated than most people will give it credit for.” A pest forces border closure Another driver of high prices is the closure of the U.S.-Mexico border to livestock imports to slow the spread of a flesh-eating parasite called the New World screwworm. The closures that began in late 2024 have stopped about 1 million cattle from being hauled from Mexico into the U.S., said Warren Rusche, an extension feedlot specialist at South Dakota State University. The border closure particularly affects cattle feedlots and ranchers who graze cattle in the southern plains. President Donald The President has called for increased beef imports from Argentina, but the country’s expanded quota would be only a tiny percentage of U.S. beef production, Rusche said. Are ranchers getting rich? Hatzenbuhler, the North Dakota rancher, isn’t getting rich, but for ranchers who own their land and equipment, she said it’s a good time to raise cattle. It’s not as good for people looking to break into the business, given the high cost of everything from equipment to fertilizer and the difficulty of finding workers. “If you’re a young guy and want to get in, it’s probably not the time to do it, but if you’re kind of established and been doing this for a while, you’re doing good,” she said. California rancher Mike Williams said he wouldn’t discourage someone from getting into ranching but would caution them, “don’t get too far upside down.” “I would say that we’re finally maybe getting a fair price,” Williams said. “I think people are starting to realize the value of beef, and they’re finding that they’re willing to pay maybe a little more than they have in the past for the quality of the product that they’re getting.” —Jack Dura, Associated Press View the full article
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For women, gender disparities in ADHD diagnoses can be deadly
It was long assumed that boys were more likely to have attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). But recent research suggests girls have been widely underdiagnosed—with sometimes devastating consequences. Now, many women who have long suffered from mental health conditions and everyday challenges are identifying ADHD as the underlying cause. “Women are much more likely to have what’s called ‘inattentive ADHD,’ versus ‘hyperactive ADHD,’” says Dr. Sarah Greenberg, a licensed psychotherapist and the vice president of expertise and strategic design for neurodivergence nonprofit Understood.org. “The hyperactivity is really visible to others in the room, whereas for inattentive ADHD that hyperactivity is internal. It might look like daydreaming or staring into space. But I can assure you, there’s a lot happening in the brain.” Dr. Greenberg says that undiagnosed ADHD can create challenges in childhood, from social to academic, leading to lots of self-doubt. Coupled with the over-thinking tendencies of those with inattentive ADHD, many are instead diagnosed with anxiety or depression. That misdiagnosis can have serious consequences, as untreated ADHD has been associated with everything from higher rates of substance abuse to divorce, car accidents, even suicide attempts. Women with ADHD are Often Misdiagnosed According to a study conducted by Understood.org, 72% of women with ADHD have at least two other mental health conditions, like anxiety or depression, and 44% were diagnosed with anxiety, depression or another mental health condition first. Furthermore, 89% say they originally attributed ADHD symptoms—like disorganization, overthinking and chronic lateness—to personal character flaws. “’Hysteria’ was a label given to women for a range of things, from insomnia to anxiety, and the theory rested on uterine imbalance,” explains Dr. Greenberg. “We don’t use that label anymore, but what has persisted is women are more likely to get diagnosed with an emotional disorder rather than ADHD, which is a brain difference.” According to a 2022 study conducted by the American Centers for Disease Control, boys are twice as likely to be diagnosed with ADHD. However, a 2022 study by medical research provider Epic Research found that women aged 23 to 49 were diagnosed twice as frequently as men that year compared to 2020. Males were also diagnosed with ADHD at 28% higher rates than females in 2022, down from 133% in 2010. In the Canadian province of Ontario, prescriptions for stimulant medications—often used to treat ADHD—were more prevalent among adult women aged 18 to 64 than men in 2023. “We’re getting closer to gender parity in adulthood, so that is very much a silver lining,” says Dr. Greenberg. “We’re also getting closer to gender parity in childhood. Whereas we used to see three boys diagnosed for every girl, we’re now seeing two, so that ratio is getting better.” Women with ADHD are Often Treating the Wrong Condition Misdiagnosis is common among women with ADHD, both because of longstanding misconceptions and because many of the diagnostic tools that test for ADHD are based on the hyperactive presentation more common in boys. As a result, women tend to suffer with ADHD well into adulthood before understanding the cause of some of their neurological differences, and the likely culprit behind other lifelong challenges. “It’s really important to get that ADHD diagnosis right, because while anxiety and depression are treatable and can be short term, ADHD is a lifelong difference,” says Dr. Greenberg. “Sometimes depression or anxiety speaks more to symptoms one has experienced, but it’s much more efficient to address ADHD as the primary condition.” There is yet to be a formal study into the relative effectiveness of anxiety and depression treatment on those with undiagnosed ADHD. However, a 2024 study of healthcare records in Wales found that women are more likely to be prescribed antidepressant medication prior to being diagnosed with ADHD, and are more likely to stop using the medication afterwards. “Anecdotally, it’s what we hear from patients all the time,” says Dr. Julia Schechter, a clinical psychologist at the Duke University School of Medicine and co-director of the Duke Center for Girls and Women with ADHD. “We hear that story so often.” “’For years, I was told I was anxious. For years, I was on medication that was not effective. Then I found out I had ADHD, and getting on ADHD medication really reduced the symptoms’.” The Dangers of Living with Untreated ADHD Research shows that those with untreated ADHD are more likely to struggle in school and to maintain employment, have financial challenges, get divorced, get into car accidents and struggle with substance abuse at higher rates. In women, untreated ADHD has also been linked to higher rates of unplanned pregnancy,eating disorders and suicide attempts. According to the Understood.org study, 23.5% of women diagnosed with ADHD report a history of suicide attempts, compared with 8.5% of men with ADHD. “We know that untreated ADHD is linked to so many negative outcomes for everyone,” says Dr. Schechter. “But for women and girls in particular, not treating this condition really can be a matter of life and death.” Awareness and Diagnoses Have Been Skyrocketing Since COVID Longstanding assumptions about ADHD primarily affecting young boys started to change during the pandemic, for many reasons. For one, those with undiagnosed ADHD often learn to cope with the disorder over time, such as by using timers, to-do lists and reminders, sticking to routines and by optimizing their workspace—much of which was disrupted by the pandemic. As a result, adults with undiagnosed ADHD felt the symptoms more acutely. “It was also becoming part of the conversation, and a big part of that was social media,” says Dr. Schechter. “People were turning to social media for medical questions and there was a lot of information out there around ADHD, especially ADHD in females.” Mothers Often Identify Symptoms in Their Children Many parents were also overseeing their children’s remote education, exposing some to signs and symptoms they might have otherwise missed. “They saw more of the challenges they had and started to look for reasons,” says Dr. Emma Climie, an associate professor at the school of applied psychology and director of The Strengths in ADHD Lab at the University of Calgary. “Parents were saying, ‘I’ve had similar challenges, what kind of support is there for my kids, and would that help me as an adult as well?” Dr. Climie explains that ADHD has “a strong hereditary component,” and during the pandemic, parents were more attuned to their children’s learning challenges, prompting more to seek diagnoses for their kids. As they learned more about the disorder, many parents—and especially mothers —identified similar symptoms in themselves. “ADHD apples don’t fall far from ADHD trees,” she says. As a result, the pandemic could go down as a turning point in our cultural perception of ADHD in women and girls, raising awareness of some of the common symptoms and helping those who have long suffered because of the disorder without understanding why. “There’s always been a smaller, vocal group saying, ‘what about women and girls with ADHD?’ but I don’t think they had really found their voice,” Dr. Climie says. “In the last few years, there’s been more people joining that conversation. We’re starting to develop new tools and assessments. And we’re starting to identify that ADHD looks a little bit different in girls and women.” View the full article
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Daily Search Forum Recap: April 16, 2026
Here is a recap of what happened in the search forums today...View the full article
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How to fix a suspended Google Merchant Center account
Google has unique policies for Google Shopping that are stricter than its general advertising policies. If Google thinks you’ve violated any of them, it can suspend your Merchant Center. That cuts off access to Google Shopping, Local Inventory Ads, product feeds in Performance Max and dynamic remarketing, and free listings for products. That means losing your highest-ROI channel overnight. Here’s how Google’s system works — and what you can do to fix suspensions and get back online. Case study: How we reinstated a suspended Merchant Center A UK-based ecommerce retailer came to us after their Google Merchant Center account was suspended for “Misrepresentation,” cutting off their Shopping ads entirely. Like many legitimate merchants, they were blindsided. Their store was real, their products were accurate, and they had no idea what Google’s specific objection was. We started with a full compliance audit of their website and Merchant Center account, working through every area Google scrutinizes. What we found wasn’t one big violation. It was a long list of smaller gaps that, in combination, signaled untrustworthiness to Google’s systems. The website’s Contact Us page lacked a physical address, a domain-based email address, and clear customer service hours, all of which Google expects from a legitimate business. Their policy pages (shipping, returns, refunds, and payment) either didn’t exist or lacked the specific detail Google looks for. Missing elements included cancellation windows, defective item procedures, and accepted payment methods. Beyond policies, their site lacked an order tracking feature and a cookie consent mechanism (required under UK law). A bot blocker was preventing Google’s automated crawlers from crawling the site. Inside Google Merchant Center itself, Shopify’s automatic shipping sync was creating conflicting data. We documented every required change in detail and handed the client a clear, prioritized action list. Once they made all the changes, we requested a review from Google. Google approved the appeal and reinstated the account. Key takeaway: Google evaluates the totality of your website and feed, not just individual policy pages. A successful reinstatement almost always requires fixing multiple issues across your site before submitting an appeal. Dig deeper: Google Ads account suspensions: What advertisers need to know Your customers search everywhere. Make sure your brand shows up. The SEO toolkit you know, plus the AI visibility data you need. Start Free Trial Get started with Step 1: Identify the type of suspension Google will email you the policy they believe you’ve violated. You can also find this information on the Needs attention tab in your Merchant Center. Read the suspension notice carefully because Google’s description, vague as it often is, will be your starting point for the following audit steps. Misrepresentation Misrepresentation is the most common policy we see cited for Google Merchant Center suspensions. This policy covers a wide range of problems, from inaccurate information in Merchant Center, to missing policy pages on your website, to bad reviews about your business on third-party websites. Follow the steps outlined in this guide to focus on improving four key areas: Your Merchant Center settings. Your product feed. Your website. Your online reputation. Counterfeit products You’re most likely to see this suspension reason if you’re reselling products from other brands (such as Pokémon cards, Prada bags, or Nike sneakers). Helpful actions to take: Say on your website whether you have a relationship with the manufacturer. Are you an authorized reseller? Do you purchase directly from the manufacturer? Do you purchase from third parties? Explain your authentication process. Don’t list prices significantly lower than the manufacturer’s suggested retail price (MSRP). Website needs improvement Rather than citing a specific policy violation, Google is flagging that your website doesn’t appear sufficiently complete or functional. Use incognito mode and multiple devices to check your website for: Placeholder images or text. Missing policy pages. Problems adding products to cart or finishing the checkout process. Unsupported shopping content Google has a list of things that can be advertised via “regular” Google ads, but not via Google Shopping. Services as a whole may not be advertised, which is why you won’t see ads for lawyers, doctors, or consultants on Google Shopping. It gets tricky when services are bundled with products (you can advertise car tires, but you can’t advertise the labor to replace the tires on your car). Google tends to aggressively flag things as services, or unsupported digital goods, that don’t actually fall within those policies. What to do: Separate services from physical products on your website. Add explanation text to product pages clearly stating that what you’re selling is a physical good and not a service. Avoid keywords like ebook and PDF that could trigger Google to think you’re selling disallowed digital goods. Healthcare and medicines Google restricts advertising healthcare-related products. The policies are country-specific, so be sure to carefully read the policy for the country, or countries, you’re targeting. To sell prescription and over-the-counter drugs in the U.S., advertisers must undergo third-party certification through a company such as LegitScript and a separate certification process with Google. Google explicitly lists pharmaceuticals and supplements that aren’t allowed to be advertised. Unfortunately, this list is not comprehensive. We’ve had cases where Google support informed us that products not on this list are not allowed to be advertised. What to do: Get certified (if you meet the certification requirements). Avoid making claims about the benefits of what you sell that can’t be directly verified by linking to studies from your product pages. Add appropriate disclaimers to your product pages and customer testimonials. Dig deeper: A guide to Google Ads for regulated and sensitive categories DMCA violation If someone reports your website for content that violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), Google will suspend your Merchant Center. These reports are filed in the Lumen database, where you can see what content has been flagged and when the report was made. What to do: If you’re violating copyright, remove the content from your website. If you’re not violating copyright, document how this content is original to your website and why you believe the report was wrong. After requesting a review of your suspension, you will probably have to engage in back-and-forth with Google support to argue why you should be allowed back on their platform. Step 2: Audit your Merchant Center settings Merchant Center settings are misconfigured in almost every suspension case we work on. Go through every single page in your Merchant Center to make sure you’ve entered as much information as possible and that everything you’ve entered is accurate and matches what’s on your website. Business info Your store name must comply with Google’s policies. Your physical address needs to be exactly right (no misplaced words or numbers) and should match the physical address on your website’s Contact page. You should have accurate contact information, and a link to your Contact page, and relevant social media profiles. Shipping and returns Every product in your feed needs to be covered by at least one shipping rule and a return policy. The shipping methods, handling and shipping times, cost structure, return timeline, refund process, exceptions, and restocking fees need to exactly match the information on the Shipping and Returns policy pages on your website. Step 3: Audit your product feed data quality Think of your product feed as your ads. Just as saying inaccurate things in your ads can lead to disapprovals, providing inaccurate or insufficient product data to Google can result in item disapprovals and account suspensions. Item disapprovals In addition to account-level suspensions, Google often disapproves specific products for product-level violations. There are many things that can cause item disapprovals. Top issues include: Links or images that don’t load. Mismatches between pricing or availability. Missing weight or shipping information. Invalid GTINs. Unsupported product categories like weapons, digital goods, or services. These problems don’t necessarily cause account suspensions, but you should fix as many as possible before requesting a review. You want Google to see you as committed to sending high-quality data and not violating any of their policies. Wrong prices and URLs The price in your product feed must match the price shown when someone lands on that product’s page. Two common mistakes: Using a parent product URL with a product variant’s price, which causes a mismatch between the price in the ad and the price on the product page. Putting a sale price in the feed that is not on the product page, or vice versa. GTINs Global Trade Identification Numbers (GTINs) are the numbers, such as UPCs and ISBNs, that manufacturers assign to their products. If your products don’t have GTINs, you can set the value of the field identifier_exists in your feed to FALSE. If your products have GTINs and you have access to them, send those numbers to Google in your feed. You don’t have to send a GTIN, but if you do, it must be accurate. We’ve seen cases where advertisers created fake GTINs, thinking it would help their products perform better. Instead, Google suspended the entire account. Copied product photos and descriptions Resellers who copy product images and descriptions from manufacturers may run into problems, especially if you don’t provide the product GTINs in the feed. Ideally, you should take your own product images and write your own product descriptions, so that everything on your website is original. Dig deeper: Google Ads’ three-strikes system: Managing warnings, strikes, and suspension Get the newsletter search marketers rely on. See terms. Step 4: Audit your website Even if your Merchant Center settings and product feed are clean, your website itself can be the reason you’re suspended. Crawl issues Google will suspend your account if they’re not able to crawl your website. For example, we’ve seen clients block visits from countries from which a high volume of spam traffic was originating. This accidentally blocked Google’s robots from accessing the website and caused a suspension. We’ve also seen mistakes with the robots.txt file accidentally excluding Google’s bots from accessing key pages, which looks to Google like you’re trying to hide something. Missing information You need clear and distinct policy pages on your website, including: Privacy. Shipping. Refund and return. Terms of service. Order tracking. Payment. You also need accurate contact information on your Contact page and a comprehensive About page. Inaccurate or inconsistent information Any claims you make on your website must be true. For example, if you say you offer free shipping on orders over $25, then you have to actually give free shipping when a cart value is greater than $25. We often see inconsistencies on websites, such as: Different return windows mentioned on the Return policy page than in the Return policy pop-up on the Shopify checkout page. Old phone numbers that no longer work and haven’t been removed. Template language referencing other businesses or products you don’t sell that you never removed from policy pages. Badges and awards Adding badges and awards (such as the Better Business Bureau badge and Trustpilot review widgets) to your website is a way to demonstrate credibility. When you add badges, awards, or “As seen on” logos to your website, make sure to hyperlink them to supporting pages, or else Google may think you’re making unsupported claims. Step 5: Audit your digital footprint Google wants only trusted businesses to run Google Shopping ads, so they look beyond your website and Merchant Center at your digital footprint as a whole. Reviews If you don’t have reviews on third-party websites like Trustpilot and BBB, or worse, if there are many negative reviews about your business, Google will view you with more suspicion. Make a focused effort to ask your customers for reviews and respond professionally to all reviews (positive or negative), so that Google sees you’re an active, engaged business. Social media Google expects websites to have profiles on social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram. There is even a place in your Merchant Center where you can directly link to your social profiles. It can be helpful to claim profiles for your business and make sure that your business info in those profiles (domain, phone number, physical and email addresses) match what’s on your website. Authorized resellers If you’re an authorized reseller for another brand, establish as much of a connection to that brand online as possible. For example: Ask the brand to link to your website from their social media profiles and website. Post any information you’re legally allowed to share about your contract on your website so that Google sees you’re being transparent. Create an authentication guide that details how you authenticate the products you sell. Step 6: Request a review After you have followed steps 1-5 to identify and fix as many potential problems as possible, you are ready to ask Google to review your suspension. To request a review: Log in to your Google Merchant Center account. Click Products & store. Click Products. Click Needs attention. In the box that says “Suspended account for policy violation,” click Fix. Click the button labeled “I disagree with the issue.” Google sometimes makes the button unclickable until you go through identity verification, and in some cases, it also requires a video verification process. Google doesn’t let you write any context when you request a review. Clicking the button is your only option. Google limits how many reviews you may request. The limit varies per account, but often is three or less. Once you’ve reached that limit, Google will tell you that it will no longer accept additional review requests, and the button will no longer be clickable. Google will not review your appeal unless there is at least one product in your Merchant Center. What if I’m suspended for multiple things? Google sometimes flags Merchant Centers with multiple policy violations at the same time. Fix everything possible on your website and in your account, and then appeal the suspensions one at a time. Start with the suspension that looks the most comprehensive. For example, misrepresentation is a more “egregious” suspension in Google’s eyes than sale of service, so start by appealing the former. If one policy issue is a suspension and another is a warning (suspended for misrepresentation and warned for website needs improvement), appeal the warning first. Common questions about Google Merchant Center suspensions Why is my Google Merchant Center suspended? Google will tell you what policy it believes you’ve violated via email, and in a notification in the “Needs Attention” tab in your Merchant Center. These policies are usually quite broad, and narrowing down exactly why you were suspended can be difficult, which is why it’s vital that you fix as many potential problems as possible before appealing your suspension. How long does a Google Merchant Center suspension last? In most cases, it lasts forever unless you successfully appeal the suspension. That said, we’ve seen cases where Google re-crawled a website after changes were made and automatically reinstated an account prior to the advertiser requesting a review (but don’t count on this happening). Can Google Merchant Center support help me? Sometimes, if you know how to ask the right questions, Google Merchant Center support will provide some ideas about what went wrong, or will point to specific data issues with your products. What happens if Google rejects my appeal? Typically, Google will put your Merchant Center into a cool-down period during which you can’t request another review. The first cool-down period is usually seven days, and the timeline gets longer with subsequent rejections. How many times can I appeal a Google Merchant Center suspension? Google typically limits appeals to between one and three attempts, though exceptions exist. Why does Google keep suspending my Merchant Center account? It’s not uncommon for Google to accept an appeal of a Merchant Center suspension and then suspend that account again for the same policy. This could be due to Google’s automated systems re-flagging you for something that its manual reviewers decided was not a violation. It could also be because Google is unfortunately inconsistent with how it flags policy violations and enforces its policies. Can I ask customers to write reviews of my business online? You can. If you’re sending product reviews to Merchant Center, you must disclose to Google if you incentivize customers to leave reviews. Dig deeper: Dealing with Google Ads frustrations: Poor support, suspensions, rising costs See the complete picture of your search visibility. Track, optimize, and win in Google and AI search from one platform. Start Free Trial Get started with Preventing Google Merchant Center suspensions All of the steps outlined in this guide to fix suspensions are things you should proactively do to help prevent suspensions from happening. Doing these things before you’re suspended can potentially save you tremendous time, frustration, and opportunity cost. Here are a few more ideas to help stop suspensions: Check your website weekly via incognito mode on mobile and desktop devices to make sure your website functions properly. Get a real physical business address, and feature that address on your Contact page and in your website footer. Regularly ask your clients to write reviews about you, and respond professionally to every single review. Consistently read the policies on your website to make sure they are still accurate, and update them immediately if you change your processes. Monitor your Merchant Center daily for disapprovals, and quickly fix anything that Google says needs attention. Google has policies in place because it wants to protect consumers. By following Google’s policies and showing that you’re a legitimate advertiser, you can protect your ability to use one of the most important channels available for growing an ecommerce brand. View the full article
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Crypto and AI Pacs raise $250mn ahead of US midterm elections
Investors Marc Andreessen and Ben Horowitz gave $25mn to pro-AI Super Pac in first quarter of yearView the full article
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Bluesky Continues to Have Connectivity Problems
If you've had trouble accessing Bluesky this morning, you're not alone. The social media platform has been experiencing intermittent interruptions to service on Thursday. That's obvious from a glance at Downdetector, which shows thousands of user reports of issues with Bluesky starting at about 1:51 a.m. ET, and really kicking off at 2:21 a.m. ET. (Disclosure: Downdetector is owned by Lifehacker parent company Ziff Davis.) While my Bluesky feed does seem to be working at this time, there are still issues causing downtime for users and parts of the platform, including loading notifications. As of this article, Bluesky's status page reads "We are investigating an incident with service in one of our [regions]," and "We are experiencing further issues. We appreciate your continued patience." Bluesky had previously stated that the issue had been fixed, so the platform may be having trouble isolating the root cause of the problem. To that point, it isn't clear what exactly is causing this downtime across Bluesky. That said, this will likely be resolved in due time. Websites occasionally go down for one reason or another, and apart from an attack or catastrophic issue, the source is usually discovered relatively quickly, and a fix implemented shortly after. My guess is by some point today—perhaps by the time you read this article—Bluesky will be back up and running as usual. View the full article
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Essential Business Registration Requirements
When starting a business, comprehension vital registration requirements is critical. First, you’ll need to choose a business structure and file formation documents with the Texas Secretary of State. Next, check your desired business name for uniqueness and file a DBA if necessary. Tax registration with the Texas Comptroller may likewise be required. Compliance with local regulations and obtaining industry-specific licenses can’t be overlooked. Let’s explore these steps in detail to guarantee you’re set up for success. Key Takeaways Choose a suitable business structure, such as an LLC or corporation, to ensure limited liability protection and comply with formation requirements. Register your business name with the Texas Secretary of State and verify its availability through their database. File a DBA certificate with the county clerk if operating under a name different from your legal business name. Obtain necessary licenses and permits based on your industry, including local zoning and health permits where applicable. Apply for an Employer Identification Number (EIN) and register for relevant taxes, including the Texas Franchise Tax and Sales Tax Permit. Choosing the Right Business Structure When you’re deciding on the right business structure, it’s essential to understand the implications of each option available to you. In Texas, the choices include sole proprietorships, partnerships, LLCs, and corporations. A sole proprietorship is simple, requiring minimal paperwork, but you take on personal liability for debts. Partnerships can be general or limited, and you might need a DBA if your name doesn’t include all partners’ surnames. LLCs and corporations require filing a certificate of formation and offer limited liability protection. When considering a Los Angeles County business name search to verify your desired name is available. Familiarizing yourself with these business registration requirements will help you make informed decisions. Registering Your Business in Texas Registering your business in Texas involves several important steps to guarantee compliance with state regulations. First, you must register with the Texas Secretary of State by filing formation documents, such as the Certificate of Formation for LLCs or corporations, or the Partnership Registration for LLPs. Choose a unique business name and verify its availability using the Texas Secretary of State’s database. If you’ll operate under a different name, file a DBA (Doing Business As) Certificate with the county clerk where your business resides. Furthermore, registration with the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts may be necessary for tax purposes, especially if you’re selling taxable goods or services. Obtaining Necessary Licenses and Permits Maneuvering the terrain of licenses and permits can feel overwhelming, but it’s vital for your Texas business to operate legally. Here’s what you need to take into account: Industry-Specific Licenses: Depending on your business type, you may need licenses like the Texas Sales Tax Permit for selling taxable goods or services. Professional Licenses: If you’re in a regulated field, such as healthcare or construction, make sure you obtain the necessary professional licenses to comply with state regulations. Local Permits: Check your municipality for local permits and zoning compliance, which can include health permits for food service operations. Failure to secure the right licenses can lead to fines and operational delays, so thorough research is important for compliance. Tax Requirements for Texas Start-Ups Understanding the tax requirements for your Texas start-up is crucial, especially since these obligations can significantly affect your business’s financial health. First, you’ll need an Employer Identification Number (EIN) if you hire employees or operate as an LLC or corporation. Most businesses, except sole proprietorships and certain partnerships, must pay the Texas Franchise Tax, which necessitates annual reporting based on revenue. If you sell taxable goods or services, registering for a Texas Sales and Use Tax Permit is required to collect and remit sales tax. Furthermore, you must withhold payroll taxes from employees’ wages. Consulting a business attorney or tax professional is fundamental for guaranteeing compliance with all relevant tax laws. Requirement Description Notes EIN Required for hiring and IRS operations Apply through the IRS Texas Franchise Tax Applies to most businesses, annual reporting needed Exemptions for sole proprietorships Sales and Use Tax Permit Needed for selling taxable goods/services Mandatory for tax collection Payroll Taxes Must be withheld and reported Compliance with state and federal Professional Consultation Crucial for managing tax obligations Helps guarantee compliance Business Banking and Financial Setup Setting up a solid financial foundation for your business in Texas is just as important as grasping your tax obligations. Opening a business bank account is crucial for managing your finances effectively. Here are three key steps to evaluate: Gather Required Documents: You’ll need your Employer Identification Number (EIN), business formation documents, and an operating agreement if you’re an LLC. Protect Personal Assets: Maintaining a separate business account safeguards your personal finances and simplifies tracking expenses and income. Build Business Credit: A dedicated account helps establish business credit, opening doors for future financing options. Many banks offer specialized services, such as merchant accounts and business credit cards, to support your growing business’s financial needs. Frequently Asked Questions What Is Typically Required When Registering a New Business? When you register a new business, you’ll typically need to file formation documents with the state, such as a Certificate of Formation for an LLC or corporation. You’ll likewise obtain an Employer Identification Number (EIN) from the IRS for tax purposes. If you’re using a different name, you must file an Assumed Name Certificate (DBA). Moreover, depending on your business type, you may need specific licenses or permits to operate legally. What Are the 5 SBA Requirements of a Small Business? To qualify as a small business under the SBA, you need to meet five key requirements. First, your business must operate for profit. Second, it must be independently owned and operated. Third, it should adhere to specific size standards, like having fewer than 500 employees or less than $7.5 million in receipts. Fourth, it must be legally organized in the U.S. Finally, your principal office should be located and primarily operate within the country. What Are the Three Essentials Needed to Operate a Business? To operate a business, you’ll need three fundamentals: a solid business plan, adequate funding, and a legal structure. A business plan outlines your objectives and strategies, guiding your operations. Securing adequate funding guarantees you can cover startup costs and sustain operations. Finally, choosing a legal structure—like an LLC or corporation—determines your liability and tax obligations. Each of these elements plays a vital role in establishing a successful and compliant business. Do I Need to Register My Small Business in California? Yes, you need to register your small business in California if you’re forming an LLC or corporation. If you plan to operate under a name different from your legal name, you’ll require a DBA (Doing Business As) certificate. Meanwhile, sole proprietorships don’t need formal registration; filing a DBA is necessary for a fictitious name. Furthermore, check for local business licenses and permits, as requirements vary by industry and location. Conclusion In conclusion, maneuvering the vital business registration requirements in Texas involves selecting the right structure, filing necessary documents, and obtaining relevant licenses and permits. Don’t overlook tax obligations, which may require registration with the Texas Comptroller. Establishing a solid banking and financial setup is additionally important for managing your business effectively. By following these steps, you’ll guarantee compliance and lay a strong foundation for your venture’s success. Taking these actions can help you operate legally and efficiently. Image via Google Gemini This article, "Essential Business Registration Requirements" was first published on Small Business Trends View the full article
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Essential Business Registration Requirements
When starting a business, comprehension vital registration requirements is critical. First, you’ll need to choose a business structure and file formation documents with the Texas Secretary of State. Next, check your desired business name for uniqueness and file a DBA if necessary. Tax registration with the Texas Comptroller may likewise be required. Compliance with local regulations and obtaining industry-specific licenses can’t be overlooked. Let’s explore these steps in detail to guarantee you’re set up for success. Key Takeaways Choose a suitable business structure, such as an LLC or corporation, to ensure limited liability protection and comply with formation requirements. Register your business name with the Texas Secretary of State and verify its availability through their database. File a DBA certificate with the county clerk if operating under a name different from your legal business name. Obtain necessary licenses and permits based on your industry, including local zoning and health permits where applicable. Apply for an Employer Identification Number (EIN) and register for relevant taxes, including the Texas Franchise Tax and Sales Tax Permit. Choosing the Right Business Structure When you’re deciding on the right business structure, it’s essential to understand the implications of each option available to you. In Texas, the choices include sole proprietorships, partnerships, LLCs, and corporations. A sole proprietorship is simple, requiring minimal paperwork, but you take on personal liability for debts. Partnerships can be general or limited, and you might need a DBA if your name doesn’t include all partners’ surnames. LLCs and corporations require filing a certificate of formation and offer limited liability protection. When considering a Los Angeles County business name search to verify your desired name is available. Familiarizing yourself with these business registration requirements will help you make informed decisions. Registering Your Business in Texas Registering your business in Texas involves several important steps to guarantee compliance with state regulations. First, you must register with the Texas Secretary of State by filing formation documents, such as the Certificate of Formation for LLCs or corporations, or the Partnership Registration for LLPs. Choose a unique business name and verify its availability using the Texas Secretary of State’s database. If you’ll operate under a different name, file a DBA (Doing Business As) Certificate with the county clerk where your business resides. Furthermore, registration with the Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts may be necessary for tax purposes, especially if you’re selling taxable goods or services. Obtaining Necessary Licenses and Permits Maneuvering the terrain of licenses and permits can feel overwhelming, but it’s vital for your Texas business to operate legally. Here’s what you need to take into account: Industry-Specific Licenses: Depending on your business type, you may need licenses like the Texas Sales Tax Permit for selling taxable goods or services. Professional Licenses: If you’re in a regulated field, such as healthcare or construction, make sure you obtain the necessary professional licenses to comply with state regulations. Local Permits: Check your municipality for local permits and zoning compliance, which can include health permits for food service operations. Failure to secure the right licenses can lead to fines and operational delays, so thorough research is important for compliance. Tax Requirements for Texas Start-Ups Understanding the tax requirements for your Texas start-up is crucial, especially since these obligations can significantly affect your business’s financial health. First, you’ll need an Employer Identification Number (EIN) if you hire employees or operate as an LLC or corporation. Most businesses, except sole proprietorships and certain partnerships, must pay the Texas Franchise Tax, which necessitates annual reporting based on revenue. If you sell taxable goods or services, registering for a Texas Sales and Use Tax Permit is required to collect and remit sales tax. Furthermore, you must withhold payroll taxes from employees’ wages. Consulting a business attorney or tax professional is fundamental for guaranteeing compliance with all relevant tax laws. Requirement Description Notes EIN Required for hiring and IRS operations Apply through the IRS Texas Franchise Tax Applies to most businesses, annual reporting needed Exemptions for sole proprietorships Sales and Use Tax Permit Needed for selling taxable goods/services Mandatory for tax collection Payroll Taxes Must be withheld and reported Compliance with state and federal Professional Consultation Crucial for managing tax obligations Helps guarantee compliance Business Banking and Financial Setup Setting up a solid financial foundation for your business in Texas is just as important as grasping your tax obligations. Opening a business bank account is crucial for managing your finances effectively. Here are three key steps to evaluate: Gather Required Documents: You’ll need your Employer Identification Number (EIN), business formation documents, and an operating agreement if you’re an LLC. Protect Personal Assets: Maintaining a separate business account safeguards your personal finances and simplifies tracking expenses and income. Build Business Credit: A dedicated account helps establish business credit, opening doors for future financing options. Many banks offer specialized services, such as merchant accounts and business credit cards, to support your growing business’s financial needs. Frequently Asked Questions What Is Typically Required When Registering a New Business? When you register a new business, you’ll typically need to file formation documents with the state, such as a Certificate of Formation for an LLC or corporation. You’ll likewise obtain an Employer Identification Number (EIN) from the IRS for tax purposes. If you’re using a different name, you must file an Assumed Name Certificate (DBA). Moreover, depending on your business type, you may need specific licenses or permits to operate legally. What Are the 5 SBA Requirements of a Small Business? To qualify as a small business under the SBA, you need to meet five key requirements. First, your business must operate for profit. Second, it must be independently owned and operated. Third, it should adhere to specific size standards, like having fewer than 500 employees or less than $7.5 million in receipts. Fourth, it must be legally organized in the U.S. Finally, your principal office should be located and primarily operate within the country. What Are the Three Essentials Needed to Operate a Business? To operate a business, you’ll need three fundamentals: a solid business plan, adequate funding, and a legal structure. A business plan outlines your objectives and strategies, guiding your operations. Securing adequate funding guarantees you can cover startup costs and sustain operations. Finally, choosing a legal structure—like an LLC or corporation—determines your liability and tax obligations. Each of these elements plays a vital role in establishing a successful and compliant business. Do I Need to Register My Small Business in California? Yes, you need to register your small business in California if you’re forming an LLC or corporation. If you plan to operate under a name different from your legal name, you’ll require a DBA (Doing Business As) certificate. Meanwhile, sole proprietorships don’t need formal registration; filing a DBA is necessary for a fictitious name. Furthermore, check for local business licenses and permits, as requirements vary by industry and location. Conclusion In conclusion, maneuvering the vital business registration requirements in Texas involves selecting the right structure, filing necessary documents, and obtaining relevant licenses and permits. Don’t overlook tax obligations, which may require registration with the Texas Comptroller. Establishing a solid banking and financial setup is additionally important for managing your business effectively. By following these steps, you’ll guarantee compliance and lay a strong foundation for your venture’s success. Taking these actions can help you operate legally and efficiently. Image via Google Gemini This article, "Essential Business Registration Requirements" was first published on Small Business Trends View the full article
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Your AI Visibility Strategy Doesn’t Work Outside English via @sejournal, @DuaneForrester
Language bias in AI models creates hidden visibility gaps, forcing brands to rethink how they approach multilingual search and content strategy. The post Your AI Visibility Strategy Doesn’t Work Outside English appeared first on Search Engine Journal. View the full article
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What’s next for Live Nation? Jury reaches verdict in antitrust case over Ticketmaster fees
Music lovers who have complained for years about Ticketmaster fees for concert tickets are surely reveling in a jury verdict Wednesday that found its parent company Live Nation has been running a harmful monopoly over large venues across the U.S. But they will have to wait to see if the verdict leads to changes that make concerts more affordable. Here are some things to know about the verdict in the closely-watched antitrust battle: No immediate relief for concertgoers The lawsuit, initially led by the U.S. government under former President Joe Biden, accused Live Nation of smothering competition and blocking venues from using multiple ticket sellers. Days into the trial, however, President Donald The President’s administration announced it would settle its claims against the concert giant. Some states joined the $280 million settlement, which still needs a judge’s approval, but more than 30 states pressed ahead with the trial. A federal jury in New York found that Ticketmaster had overcharged customers $1.72 per ticket in 22 states, which a judge could order the company to pay back. That could cost Live Nation hundreds of millions of dollars. “The jury’s verdict is not the last word on this matter,” Live Nation said in a statement Wednesday. The verdict brings no immediate relief for concertgoers. But the states view it as a step toward opening the market to other companies in a way that will enhance competition and could slightly lower prices. “There might be a few extra dollars that will come trickle down at consumers who bought tickets through Live Nation,” said Shubha Ghosh, a law professor at Syracuse University who focuses on technology and antitrust law. “Whether ticket prices will go down in the long run, I think it largely depends.” Verdict could cost company hundreds of millions The next step will be determining the penalties. Beyond the hundreds of millions that Live Nation could be ordered to pay, possible sanctions could force the company to sell off some of its venues. Live Nation owns, controls booking for or has equity in hundreds of venues, and its subsidiary Ticketmaster is the world’s largest ticket-seller for live events. Live Nation has continued to insist that it is not a monopoly. The company predicted that once the remedies phase of the case plays out and any appeals are resolved, the outcome likely won’t be much different from the deal it reached with the federal government. U.S. District Judge Arun Subramanian told attorneys to meet and deliver a joint letter by next week that proposes a schedule for next steps. Senators urge judge to scrutinize federal settlement A group of Democratic senators wrote to the judge Wednesday after the verdict, urging him to closely scrutinize the The President administration’s proposed settlement with Live Nation before he considers granting approval. The deal includes a cap on service fees at some amphitheaters and new ticket-selling options that could allow promoters and venues to also use Ticketmaster competitors, such as SeatGeek, Eventbrite or AXS. However, it does not separate Ticketmaster from Live Nation, which was an original goal of the Justice Department’s 2024 complaint. U.S. Sens. Amy Klobuchar, Elizabeth Warren, Cory Booker, Richard Blumenthal, Mazie Hirono and Peter Welch argue the deal was “negotiated under suspicious circumstances” and does not go far enough in restoring competition or protecting customers, artists and independent venues. The Justice Department has called the settlement a “win-win for everybody,” and Live Nation has said it is pleased with a deal that increases access for other promoters. Associated Press journalists Wyatte Grantham-Philips and David Martin contributed. —Hannah Schoenbaum, Associated Press View the full article
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Social Security COLA prediction for 2027 could mean bad news for seniors
Social Security’s cost-of-living adjustment (COLA) could stay at 2.8% in 2027, the same as its rate for this year. That’s the latest prediction from The Senior Citizens League (TSCL) and mirrors 2026’s COLA. If enacted in October, it would increase the average benefits check from $2,024.77 to $2,081.46—a $56.69 increase. The TSCL finds the 2.8% increase concerning due to high costs of living, such as rents and mortgages. “The fact is that most senior households already get by on only about 58% as much income as their working-age counterparts, and you’d be hard-pressed to find a middle-class or working-class American who thinks the economy is doing well right now, especially as oil prices rise,” TSCL executive director Shannon Benton said in a statement. She added: “Reforming Social Security needs to follow a two-pronged approach, strengthening revenues and benefits at the same time to ensure prosperity for all Americans, of all ages.” How was the COLA prediction calculated? The nonpartisan senior group’s prediction uses a model incorporating the Consumer Price Index (CPI), the Federal Reserve interest rate, and the national unemployment rate. It releases a new figure monthly, but has maintained a predicted 2.8% COLA since February. The predicted COLA comes as Congress has proposed capping Social Security payments at $50,000 for one person and $100,000 for couples. The “Six Figure Limit” aims to prevent looming insolvency—something that is on track to occur in seven years. However, the TSCL claims most seniors aren’t in favor of the cap, instead in favor of getting rid of a $184,500 limit on income receiving Social Security tax. Notably, TSCL’s prediction is just one estimate floating around. For instance, independent Social Security and Medicare policy analyst Mary Johnson has predicted a COLA of 3.2%, CNBC reports. This figure is up from Johnson’s March prediction of 1.7%, a shift she attributes to rising gas prices. View the full article
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Canva is officially ‘an AI platform with design tools’
Canva built its 265-million-person audience by being the easy-to-use, template-friendly design tool for everyone. And when generative AI arrived, it quickly integrated the technology. Now, Canva is amongst the leading spenders on compute from platforms like ChatGPT, it’s building its own models and acquiring its own AI companies, and it’s launching even more AI design features as part of its Canva AI 2.0 release that it’s announcing today. But the headline marks a deeper, philosophical shift within Canva: From being “a design platform with AI tools” to becoming an “AI platform with design tools.” Connecting with Canva’s CEO, Mel Perkins, I asked about the motivation behind this repositioning. In this age of AI, much of the industry has been discussing what you could call either a flattening or a war between the roles of designers, product managers, and engineers. Was Canva responding to this trend? In response, Perkins pulls up an old idea from 2011 called Canvas Chef, which looks a lot like the Google Search page but with wood paneling and some kitchen kitsch. “From the very early stages, we always believed that you could just be able to type in whatever you want and kind of get kickstarted straight away,” she says. “Obviously, it has been a very long journey to get to this point in time, but really, that is actually what we’re launching today.” Canva AI 2.0 looks like Perkins’s 15-year-old vision, and also the Canva you already know. The real difference now is that Canva’s existing AI tab—which is pretty much a search bar—has been supercharged with more capabilities. A big upgrade is around connecting services. You can now link Google Drive, Gmail, Slack, Zoom, and Notion—plus it’ll crawl for an answer on the web, or even search your old Canva projects—allowing Canva to bring in relevant information that I imagine will be particularly valuable to marketers. Whereas you used to be able to create a somewhat generic deck from a prompt, now you can infuse that deck with data that’s lurking in your emails or spreadsheets. Other upgrades allow you to do a lot more when AI-editing that deck. Formerly, it was a one-shot, generate-the-whole-thing-for-me ask. Now, you can actually edit individual slides with AI prompts instead of starting over. Similar capabilities exist for brand templates. Before, if you didn’t start a project with your brand standards, you couldn’t always update them retroactively. Now, AI will transform any design you throw at it to be more on-brand. And of course, Canva will develop interactive projects, too, which publish straight to the web. “When we launched Canva, the huge innovation was we went from pixel editing, where you had to very deeply know the tools, to object editing, where you could just lay things out,” says Perkins. “And now with Canva AI 2.0 we’re actually moving into concept editing, where you can put in a concept it can then assemble it for you on the fly.” That said, Canva isn’t removing any of the physical tools people are used to. For this big update and grand repositioning, Canva’s vibe is largely unchanged. The more radical updates live under the hood, developed by Canva’s 100+ person AI research team. Multi-agents made invisible Behind the scenes, Canva provides this upgraded AI toolset by offering AI agents to its users—but those users never actually see them. I’m told that Canva’s own AI layer sits between its app and the external AI services it queries, juggling a complicated, multi-agent workflow that the Valley’s top coders are addicted to, without ever asking the user to think about more than one AI question at once. Perkins says this is what allows complicated tasks, that might need to remove the background of an image and generate copy and apply brand standards at the same time. As the capabilities stack up, I wonder if Canva’s subscription prices can offer people the amount of AI processing they’ll need to take advantage of the service. Canva is ahead of this issue, as it’s introducing a special AI Pass that, for $100/mo, offers Pro users 40x more AI and Business users 20x more AI. Despite Canva’s aggressive incorporation of AI, I still can’t help but wonder if it’s being experimental enough, as AI feels poised to melt the boundaries of media as we know them. Canva is excellent at reducing the friction around creating things, but it’s not all that deep for experimentation or exploration. And it’s not challenging the status quo of the prompt. CJ Jones, head of GenAI design at Canva, says the company is rolling out the AI features that its users are asking for. And the fact is that, today, a lot of their users aren’t graphic design professionals who are artists with a mouse. Instead, most people are using AI to remove backgrounds in images and translate text to English (as many users are not native English speakers). Even still, Jones insists that Canva is thinking more experimentally in the larger term, taking a patient, car company approach to redesigning its own software over time. “Part of our product development process is looking at two years from now, five years from now, 10 years from now, and what we’ll do from there is [consider] this might be a really wild idea that completely redesigns Canva,” says Jones. “But we have to keep in mind our base right now…How easy is it to move them from where we are today to that? And so what we’ll do is look at the core of that vision, and how we want to bring that [to the product].” Canva AI 2.0 launches today in a preview to Pro and Business customers. View the full article
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This Anker Portable Projector With Google TV Is Over $70 Off Right Now
We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication. Anker’s Nebula P1i Portable Projector is down to $295 on Amazon from its usual $369, and according to price trackers, that’s the lowest it has gone so far. That makes it one of the more affordable ways to get a full HD projector with built-in streaming. The P1i is designed around convenience—it runs Google TV out of the box, so you can jump straight into apps like Netflix without plugging in a streaming stick. Setup is also simple: Anker’s Smart Instant Setup handles autofocus, keystone correction, and screen alignment, so you can place it down and get a usable image in seconds. Anker Nebula P1i Portable projector with wifi and Bluetooth $295.00 at Amazon $369.00 Save $74.00 Get Deal Get Deal $295.00 at Amazon $369.00 Save $74.00 At just under five pounds, it's also easy to move, although that light build comes with a small downside. If the projector gets nudged, the image can shift, which means you may need to readjust it. Using a tripod helps, especially if you’re setting it up outdoors or want something more stable at home. In terms of connections, it keeps things simple with one HDMI port, a USB-A slot, and a headphone jack. You can hook up a console or streaming device if you want, but the built-in interface already covers most use cases. The Nebula P1i can accept a 4K signal but scales it down to 1080p, which is fine for movies and casual viewing. While the image looks good in the center with colors that come across as fairly natural, the edges soften a bit if you’re projecting at an angle. Brightness is another constraint, so it performs best at night or in a dark room—daytime viewing with ambient light washes out a lot of detail. Also, while its fold-out speakers are loud enough for a small gathering and make voices easy to follow, they lack depth, so movies do not feel as full as they should. You can pair Bluetooth speakers for better audio, but that adds to both cost and setup. There’s also no built-in battery, so it always needs to stay plugged in, which takes away some of the flexibility you might expect from a portable projector. Our Best Editor-Vetted Tech Deals Right Now Apple AirPods Pro 3 Noise Cancelling Heart Rate Wireless Earbuds — $199.99 (List Price $249.00) Apple iPad 11" 128GB A16 WiFi Tablet (Blue, 2025) — $299.00 (List Price $349.00) Apple Watch Series 11 (GPS, 42mm, S/M Black Sport Band) — $299.00 (List Price $399.00) Fire TV Stick 4K Plus Streaming Player With Remote (2025 Model) — $29.99 (List Price $49.99) Amazon Fire TV Soundbar — $99.99 (List Price $119.99) Blink Video Doorbell Wireless (Newest Model) + Sync Module Core — $35.99 (List Price $69.99) Ring Indoor Cam (2nd Gen, 2-pack, White) — $59.98 (List Price $79.99) Deals are selected by our commerce team View the full article
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Why log file analysis matters for AI crawlers and search visibility
One of the biggest challenges in AI search is that visibility is being shaped by systems you can’t directly observe. Nothing like Google Search Console exists for ChatGPT, Claude, or Perplexity. No reporting layer showing what’s crawled, how often, or whether your content is considered at all. Yet these systems are actively crawling the web, building datasets, powering retrieval, and generating answers that shape discovery — often without sending traffic back to the source. This creates a gap. In traditional SEO, performance and behavior are connected. You can see impressions, clicks, indexing, and some level of crawl data. In AI search, that feedback loop doesn’t exist. Log files are the closest thing to that missing layer. They don’t summarize or interpret activity. They record it — every request, every URL, every crawler. For AI systems, that raw data is often the only way to understand how your site is actually being accessed. Some visibility is emerging — just not from AI platforms That lack of visibility hasn’t gone entirely unaddressed. Bing is one of the first platforms to introduce this natively. Through Bing Webmaster Tools, Copilot-related insights are beginning to show how AI-driven systems interact with websites. It’s still early, but it’s a meaningful shift — and the first real example of an AI system exposing even part of its behavior to site owners. Beyond that, a new category of tools is emerging. Platforms like Scrunch, Profound, and others focus on AI visibility, tracking how content appears in AI-generated responses and how different agents interact with a site. In some cases, they connect directly to sources like Cloudflare or other traffic layers, making it easier to monitor crawler activity without manually exporting and analyzing raw logs. That visibility is useful, especially as AI systems evolve quickly. But it isn’t complete. Most of these tools operate within a defined window. Some only surface a limited timeframe of agent activity, making them effective for near-term monitoring, but less useful for understanding longer-term patterns or changes in crawl behavior. AI crawler activity isn’t consistent. Unlike Googlebot, which crawls continuously, many AI agents appear sporadically or in bursts. Without historical data, it’s difficult to determine whether a change in activity is meaningful or normal variation. Log files solve for that. They provide a complete, unfiltered record of crawler behavior — every request, every URL, every user agent. With continuous retention, they enable analysis of patterns over time and revisiting data when something changes. Dig deeper: Log file analysis for SEO: Find crawl issues & fix them fast Your customers search everywhere. Make sure your brand shows up. The SEO toolkit you know, plus the AI visibility data you need. Start Free Trial Get started with Not all AI crawlers behave the same way In log files, everything appears as a user agent string. On the surface, it’s easy to treat them the same, but they represent different systems with different objectives. That distinction matters, because it directly affects how they access and interact with your site. AI-related crawlers generally fall into two groups: training and retrieval. Training crawlers Training crawlers, such as GPTBot, ClaudeBot, CCBot, and Google-Extended, collect content for large-scale datasets and model development. Their activity isn’t tied to real-time queries, and they don’t behave like traditional search crawlers. You’ll typically see them less frequently, and when they do appear, their crawl patterns are broader and less targeted. Because of that, their presence – or absence – carries a different implication. If these crawlers don’t appear in your logs at all, it’s not just a crawl issue. It raises the question of whether your content is included in the datasets that influence how AI systems understand topics over time. At the same time, it’s important to consider how much data you’re analyzing. Training crawlers don’t operate on a continuous crawl cycle like Googlebot. Their activity is often sporadic, which means a short log window (a few hours, or even a single day) can be misleading. You may not see them simply because they haven’t crawled within that timeframe. That’s why analyzing log data over a longer period matters. It helps distinguish between true absence and normal variation in how these systems crawl. Retrieval and answer crawlers Retrieval crawlers operate differently. Agents like ChatGPT-User and PerplexityBot are more closely tied to live, or near-real-time, responses. Their activity tends to be event-driven and more targeted, often limited to a small number of URLs. That makes their behavior less predictable and easier to misinterpret. You won’t see the same volume or consistency you would from Googlebot, but patterns still matter. If these crawlers never reach deeper content, or consistently stop at top-level pages, it can indicate limitations in how your site is discovered or accessed. Traditional crawlers still matter, but they’re no longer the full picture Googlebot and Bingbot still provide the baseline. Their crawl behavior is consistent and typically gives a reliable view of how well your site can be discovered and indexed. The difference is that AI crawlers don’t always follow the same paths. It’s common to see strong, deep crawl coverage from Googlebot alongside much lighter, or more shallow, interaction from AI systems. That gap doesn’t show up in Search Console, but becomes clear in log files. What AI crawler behavior actually tells you Once you isolate AI crawlers in your log files, the goal isn’t just to confirm they exist. It’s to understand how they interact with your site – and what that behavior implies about visibility. AI systems crawl the web to train models, build retrieval indexes, and support generative answers. But unlike Googlebot, there’s very little direct visibility into how that activity plays out. Log files make that behavior observable. There are a few key patterns to focus on. Discovery: Are you being accessed at all? Start by checking whether AI crawlers appear in your logs. In many cases, they don’t — or appear far less frequently than traditional search crawlers. That doesn’t always indicate a technical issue, but highlights how differently these systems discover and access content. If AI crawlers are completely absent, they may be blocked in robots.txt, rate-limited at the server or CDN level, or simply not discovering your site. Presence alone is a signal. Absence is one too. Crawl depth: How far into your site do they go? When AI crawlers do appear, the next question is how far they get. It’s common to see them limited to top-level pages – the homepage, primary navigation, and a small number of high-level URLs. Deeper content, including long-tail pages, or location-specific content, is often untouched. If crawlers aren’t reaching those sections, they’re not seeing the full structure of your site. That limits how much context they can build and reduces the likelihood that deeper content is surfaced in AI-generated responses. Crawl paths: How AI systems actually see your site When AI crawlers access a site, they don’t build a comprehensive map the way traditional search engines do. Their behavior is more selective and influenced by what’s immediately accessible, which means your site structure plays a larger role in what they reach. In log files, this appears as concentrated activity around a small set of URLs. Requests are typically clustered around the homepage, primary navigation, and pages that are directly linked, or easy to discover. As you move deeper into the site, crawl activity often drops off, sometimes sharply, even when those pages are important from a business, or SEO, perspective. The practical implication: pages buried behind JavaScript-heavy navigation, or weak internal linking, are significantly less likely to be accessed. As a result, the version of your site AI systems interact with is often incomplete. Entire sections can be effectively invisible because they sit outside the paths these crawlers can follow. This is where log file analysis becomes particularly useful, because it exposes the difference between what exists and what’s actually accessed. Crawl friction: Where access breaks down Log files also surface where crawlers encounter issues. This includes: 403 responses (blocked requests). 429 responses (rate limiting). Redirects and redirect chains. Unexpected status codes. For AI crawlers, these issues can have an outsized impact. Their activity is already limited, and failed requests reduce the likelihood they continue deeper into the site. Cross-system comparison: How does this differ from Googlebot? Comparing AI crawler behavior to Googlebot provides useful context. Googlebot typically shows consistent, deep crawl coverage across a site. AI crawlers often behave differently – appearing less frequently, accessing fewer pages, and stopping at shallower levels. That difference highlights where your site is accessible for traditional search, but not necessarily for AI-driven systems. As those systems become more influential in discovery, crawl accessibility becomes a multi-system concern – not just a Google one. Get the newsletter search marketers rely on. See terms. How to analyze AI crawler behavior with log files You don’t need a complex setup to start getting value from log files. Most hosting platforms retain access logs by default, even if only for a short window. You’ll find that retention varies across hosting providers, but it’s often limited to anywhere from a few hours to a few days. Kinsta, for example, typically retains logs for a short rolling window, which is enough to get started but not for long-term analysis. Start with the logs you already have The first step is simply to export access logs from your hosting environment. Even a small dataset can surface useful patterns, particularly when you’re looking for presence, crawl paths, and obvious gaps. At this stage, you’re not trying to build a complete picture over time. You’re looking for directional insight into how different crawlers are interacting with your site right now. Use a log analysis tool to make the data usable Raw log files are difficult to work with directly, especially at scale. Tools like Screaming Frog Log File Analyzer make it possible to process that data quickly. Logs can be uploaded in their raw format and broken down by user agent, URL, and response code, allowing you to move from raw requests to structured analysis without additional preprocessing. This is where the data becomes usable. Segment by crawler type Once the logs are loaded, segmentation becomes the priority. Start by isolating user agents so you can compare AI crawlers, Googlebot, and Bingbot. This is critical, because behavior varies significantly across systems. Without segmentation, everything blends together. With it, patterns start to emerge. To filter your views by bot, select your bot at the top right of the Log File Analyser. This will update all subsequent analysis to the bot you’ve selected. You can begin to see: Whether AI crawlers appear at all. How their activity compares to traditional search. Whether their behavior aligns or diverges. Analyze crawl behavior against your site structure From there, shift from presence to behavior. Look at which URLs are being accessed, how frequently they appear, and how that maps to your site structure. This is where the earlier analysis becomes practical. You’re not just asking what was crawled. You’re asking: Are crawlers reaching deeper content? Which sections of the site are being skipped entirely? Does this align with how your site is structured and linked? This is where crawl paths, accessibility, and prioritization start to surface as real, observable patterns. Use response codes to identify friction Filtering by response code adds another layer of insight. This helps surface where crawlers are encountering issues, including: Blocked requests. Rate limiting. Redirect chains. Unexpected responses. For AI crawlers, these issues can have a greater impact. Their activity is already limited, so failed requests reduce the likelihood that they continue further into the site. Cross-reference crawlable vs. crawled One of the most valuable steps is comparing what can be crawled with what is actually being crawled. Running a standard crawl alongside your log analysis allows you to identify this gap directly. Pages that are accessible in theory, but never appear in logs, represent missed opportunities for discovery. Understand what your logs don’t show As you work through log data, it’s also important to understand its limitations. Server-level logs only capture requests that reach your origin. In environments that include a CDN, or security layer like Cloudflare, some requests may be filtered before they ever reach the site. That means certain crawler activity, particularly blocked, or rate-limited, requests, won’t appear in your logs at all. This becomes relevant when interpreting absence. If specific AI crawlers don’t appear in your data, it doesn’t always mean they aren’t attempting to access the site. In some cases, they may be getting filtered upstream. How to scale: Continuous log retention Log file analysis breaks down quickly if you’re only looking at short timeframes. A few hours of data, or even a single day, can show you what happened. It can also make it look like nothing is happening at all. With AI crawlers, that distinction matters. Their activity isn’t continuous. Training crawlers may appear intermittently, and retrieval agents are often tied to specific events or queries. A short log window can easily lead you to the wrong conclusion. A crawler that doesn’t appear in your data may still be active. It just hasn’t shown up within that window. This is where retention changes the analysis. Once you’re working with a longer dataset, you’ll see how often it appears, where it shows up, and whether that behavior is consistent over time. What looked like absence starts to resolve into patterns. Moving beyond your hosting limits At that point, the limitation isn’t analysis. It’s access to data over time. Most hosting environments aren’t designed for long-term log retention. Even when logs are available, they’re typically tied to a short rolling window. That makes it difficult to revisit behavior, compare time periods, or understand how crawler activity evolves. To get beyond that, you need to store logs outside of your hosting environment. Log storage options include: Amazon S3 is one of the most common approaches. It provides flexible, low-cost storage that allows you to retain logs continuously and query them when needed. If the goal is to build a historical view of crawler behavior, it’s a practical and widely supported option. Cloudflare R2 serves a similar purpose and can be a better fit for sites already using Cloudflare. It keeps storage within the same ecosystem and simplifies how log data is handled, particularly when edge-level logging is part of the setup. The specific platform matters less than the shift itself. You’re moving from whatever your host happened to keep to a dataset you control. Bridging the gap with automation Not every setup supports continuous streaming, and most teams aren’t going to build that infrastructure upfront. If your retention window is limited, automation becomes the practical way to extend it. Instead of manually downloading logs, you can schedule the process. Many hosting providers expose logs over SFTP, which makes it possible to pull them at regular intervals before they expire. A scheduled SFTP job – whether built in a workflow tool like n8n, or scripted – is enough to turn a short retention window into something you can actually analyze over time. That’s often the difference between one-off analysis and something repeatable. See the complete picture of your search visibility. Track, optimize, and win in Google and AI search from one platform. Start Free Trial Get started with Getting closer to a complete view As your dataset grows, so does the need to understand its boundaries. Log files show you what reached your site. They don’t always show you what tried to. In environments that include a CDN, or security layer, some requests may be filtered before they reach your origin. That becomes more noticeable over time, particularly when certain crawlers appear less frequently than expected. At that point, edge-level logging becomes a useful addition. It provides visibility into requests that are blocked or filtered upstream and helps explain gaps in origin-level data. It’s not required to get value from log analysis, but it becomes relevant once you’re trying to build a more complete picture of crawler behavior across systems. Log files show you what reached your site. They don’t show everything, but they’re the only place this interaction becomes visible at all. You’re not optimizing for one crawler anymore. And the teams that start measuring this now won’t be guessing later. View the full article
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US ready to restart war if Iran doesn’t agree to deal, Hegseth warns
Defence secretary’s comments come as US also widens scope of blockade of Iranian shippingView the full article
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SNP pledges ‘1970s-style’ food price cap
Pledge by Scotland’s main pro-independence party could provoke constitutional row with WestminsterView the full article
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Allbirds stock is already falling after the AI pivot. History suggests investors should proceed with caution
After rising by more than 580% in a single trading session yesterday, shares of Allbirds Inc. (Nasdaq: BIRD) fell this morning in premarket trading, at one point more than 30%. The steep rise and now potential fall in the stock price followed the company’s unexpected announcement that it intends to transition from a sustainable shoemaker to an AI compute infrastructure provider. But while AI-obsessed investors initially cheered the odd move, history suggests the pivot may be a challenging one to pull off in the long run. Here’s what you need to know. What’s happened? Yesterday, San Francisco-based Allbirds, whose wool footwear had been popular with Silicon Valley locals, announced something completely unexpected: it would stop making shoes and instead become yet another AI company. Specifically, Allbirds said it will “pivot its business to AI compute infrastructure, with a long-term vision to become a fully integrated GPU-as-a-Service (GPUaaS) and AI-native cloud solutions provider.” In other words, the company’s new business model will involve spending millions to buy GPUs, and it will then rent those GPUs out to AI developers. This GPU-as-a-Service (GPUaaS) model puts the former shoemaker against GPUaaS juggernauts like Amazon Web Services (AWS) and Microsoft Azure. Allbirds will be changing its name to NewBird AI, while the “Allbirds” shoe brand will continue to be sold under its new owner, American Exchange Group (AXNY). Allbirds announced in March that it was selling its assets to AXNY for $39 million. But what many found crazier than this out-of-left-field pivot was that investors absolutely ate up the news. After announcing its AI plans, BIRD stock soared 582% yesterday, closing at $16.99 per share. To put that into further context, BIRD stock closed at $2.49 just the day before. Yet today, BIRD stock is already falling. If history is any guide, the shoemaker’s AI pivot might not turn out as well as investors hope. Allbirds stock drops in premarket trading BIRD shares experienced a steep decline this morning in premarket trading. At one point, BIRD was down more than 30%. As of this writing, premarket trading remained volatile, with shares down about 8% at press time. The most likely reason for the decline is simple profit-taking. Allbirds investors made massive gains yesterday, and some of those investors no doubt want to lock in those paper gains, which they do by selling the stock, thereby solidifying their profits. Such profit-taking is very common the day after any stock has a tremendous run. But today’s profit-taking isn’t what should worry Allbirds’ investors the most. What should worry them most is that Allbirds is not the only company to ever abandon its historic business model to pivot to a completely unrelated one just to join the latest hype train. And it didn’t work out well for the most notorious example. The specter of Long Island Iced Tea In 2011, the Long Island Iced Tea Corp was founded. As the company’s name suggests, it was a beverage company that made ready-to-drink iced tea products. But in 2017, when investors were throwing their money at any company operating in the then-burgeoning hot blockchain space, Long Island Iced Tea Corp decided to go all-in on the blockchain hype. While the company said it would continue to operate its beverage business, it said it intended to shift “its primary corporate focus towards the exploration of and investment in opportunities that leverage the benefits of blockchain technology.” As part of this shift, Long Island Iced Tea Corp changed its name to Long Blockchain Corp. And with that “blockchain” keyword in the name, boy did investors bite. As noted by CNN, Long Island’s stock price surged by as much as 380% on the pivot news. But from there, things went downhill. Its blockchain pivot never really materialized, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) launched an investigation. In the end, the company’s once surging stock was delisted from the Nasdaq. While the Long Island Iced Tea Corp’s story doesn’t mean the same thing will happen to every company that pivots its business model, it is a stark example of the potential challenges that lie ahead—possible risks for investors—when a company announces a radical shift toward the latest sector that just happens to be taking Wall Street by storm. Whether Allbirds’ pivot will be successful remains to be seen. But it may serve investors best in the long term to proceed with caution before jumping into such an abrupt change of direction. Maybe sit back and have a nice glass of iced tea first. This story is developing… View the full article
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Machine-First Architecture: AI Agents Are Here And Your Website Isn’t Ready, Says NoHacks Podcast Host via @sejournal, @theshelleywalsh
Websites aren’t built for AI agents, and that’s a problem. Slobodan Manic explains what needs to change. The post Machine-First Architecture: AI Agents Are Here And Your Website Isn’t Ready, Says NoHacks Podcast Host appeared first on Search Engine Journal. View the full article
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Search Ad Growth Slows As Social & Video Gain Faster via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern
IAB's annual report shows search ad growth fell while social media and digital video posted stronger year-over-year gains. The post Search Ad Growth Slows As Social & Video Gain Faster appeared first on Search Engine Journal. View the full article
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This Three-Stage Air Purifier Is 69% Off Right Now
We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication. The Levoit LV-H133 air purifier has dropped to $76.99 on Woot, down from its original $249.99 and still significantly lower than the $199.99 it’s currently going for on Amazon. According to price trackers, this marks the lowest price it has reached so far. This deal is set to run for two days or until stock runs out, whichever comes first, with free shipping for Prime members and a $6 fee for everyone else. Levoit LV-H133 Air Purifier 3-stage HEPA filtration for spaces up to 1,150 square feet $76.99 at Woot $249.99 Save $173.00 Get Deal Get Deal $76.99 at Woot $249.99 Save $173.00 The LV-H133 is built to handle spaces up to about 1,150 square feet, which covers a typical bedroom, living room, or even a studio apartment. The cylindrical design pulls air in through perforations around the base, runs it through its internal system, and pushes it out through a wide radial vent at the top. Setup is simple and takes a couple of minutes, with no complicated assembly beyond removing packaging from the filter and locking the shell back in place. After that, maintenance mostly means wiping down the vents and replacing filters every six to eight months, with a built-in indicator to remind you. In day-to-day use, the purifier leans on a three-stage filtration system. The pre-filter catches larger debris like dust and lint, the HEPA filter targets particles as small as 0.3 microns, and the carbon layer helps reduce odors from cooking, smoke, or pets. There are a few modes to choose from, including an auto setting that adjusts fan speed based on sensor readings in real time, along with low, medium, and high speeds. On its lowest setting, it runs at about 25 dB, and on high, it reaches around 52 dB, so it is fine for overnight use, but you will hear it working when pushed. The controls are on top, with clear buttons for speed, timer, and display. The main tradeoff is the lack of wifi or app control, which newer models offerte. Still, at this price, the appeal is simple: solid coverage and proven filtration without paying for smart features you may not need. Our Best Editor-Vetted Tech Deals Right Now Apple AirPods Pro 3 Noise Cancelling Heart Rate Wireless Earbuds — $199.99 (List Price $249.00) Apple iPad 11" 128GB A16 WiFi Tablet (Blue, 2025) — $299.00 (List Price $349.00) Apple Watch Series 11 (GPS, 42mm, S/M Black Sport Band) — $299.00 (List Price $399.00) Fire TV Stick 4K Plus Streaming Player With Remote (2025 Model) — $29.99 (List Price $49.99) Amazon Fire TV Soundbar — $99.99 (List Price $119.99) Blink Video Doorbell Wireless (Newest Model) + Sync Module Core — $35.99 (List Price $69.99) Ring Indoor Cam (2nd Gen, 2-pack, White) — $59.98 (List Price $79.99) Deals are selected by our commerce team View the full article
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Should You Use Auto-Generated Creative? – Ask A PPC via @sejournal, @navahf
The role of auto-generated creative continues to evolve as advertisers weigh efficiency and scale against control and compliance. The post Should You Use Auto-Generated Creative? – Ask A PPC appeared first on Search Engine Journal. View the full article