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But SEO is on its last leg. Agencies can survive but nobody is thriving. The HCU might have been the actual final mail after many years of the “seo is dead” joke. There’s plenty of AI features to come to lower the casket.
By “dead” I simply mean SEO will finally take its rightful place as one tool in the marketing tool chest. The gold rush seems to be over since AI has been made overlord already and it’s still a dribbling baby with a pea brain. And it’s not going to be used to expose quality content. It’s going to be used to maximize profit.
For a start what is now happening to Reddit and Quora? The AI scammers are moving over to them and are infesting what has been almost 100% human written posts with the same AI crap that you can see a mile off and it is devaluing those platforms because Ai is awful.
Yeah the number of posts infesting sites now about parasite SEO (spamming UGC sites/paid news placements) for temporary rankings with affiliate links in is huge. Definitely going to degrade a lot of those platforms if it becomes, even for a short while, the 'way' to make some quick cash.
the human desire for decent well written content has not gone anywhere
the demand for going to the movies is higher than it has ever been
What do you mean withI feel the future of high-rev affiliate marketing is boiling down to 2 main skills:
1. Get good at leaking on platforms.
2. Get good at short form video content.
Follow the traffic. The traffic isn't flowing to niche Google operators much anymore. Good content doesn't matter cuz the consumer appetite has changed. A 5,000 word article is not "good content" it's a waste of time. Other forms of content do it better: more efficiently and more authentic.
The market is SPEAKING to what it wants. People vote with their search platform and queries. Real people want real answers, not affiliate blogs. So they go to Reddit, Quora, or TikTok.
My wife uses TikTok for searching anything. I use "query + reddit" increasingly for all my research. And I like it tbh. So much more efficient. So the future-oriented play seems either make the content in the form people want (short form video), or go to the platforms they regular (reddit/quora) and leak traffic.
that comment looks like AI answer lolWith the introduction of ChatGPT and many other AI tools, making content has never been easier. So it seems many sites are popping up at a rapid rate. Also it seems big corporations are dominating a majority of the search results space lately.
However if one follows right methods, SEO still and will work.
A lot of people are pivoting to making SaaS type products. I've actually got a case study of one coming out on my newsletter on Monday but the tl;dr is below for those of you who don't want to sign up:Man, this thread is depressing. I’ve been thinking of selling my site since I have lost interest in working on it. It is down 28% since November/December. One of the big marketplaces sent a cold email asking if I wanted to sell. Maybe I will update my other thread with more details.
I’m interested to hear more about where everyone is pivoting to. I’m not sure what I would pivot to if I dumped the website, but I know I need something to build.
just think SEO 'without any kind of real site or business' just to make money from ad arbitrage is pretty damned hard
Yes, pretty much.I don't think SEO is dead - I just think SEO 'without any kind of real site or business' just to make money from ad arbitrage is pretty damned hard now compared to a couple years ago, and especially the last few months of updates have hit our traditional sector very hard.
Good post. It's not just SaaS, any 'real' B2B or B2C ecom site can thrive in this environment too.A lot of people are pivoting to making SaaS type products. I've actually got a case study of one coming out on my newsletter on Monday but the tl;dr is below for those of you who don't want to sign up:
* SaaS companies don't seem to have been smashed by the 'helpful content update' as hard
* Old fashioned link building is still working for SaaS - they all do A LOT of link swapping (whether 3-way or direct between the SaaS sites they run AND the places where they've managed to become contributors). Those of you outside SaaS might not have done many link swaps - but it's still highly effective if done smartly and not overdoing it (we use it to get real local businesses to link to our clients, for example).
* SaaS marketing lets you do all the 'not SEO' things like build a list, do paid ads, do viral marketing, become a youtube star (think the ChatBotBuilder guy - his youtube videos are more like a sermon preaching to his flock than a traditional youtube video...). Etc.
Here's the graph of the SaaS I studied - they pivoted from 'not SEO' and 'barely AI/automated' in the recruitment space pre-generative AI to all in on SEO, link swapping like mad, and ripping up SEO landing pages for every recruitment agency type you could possibly search for.
I don't think SEO is dead - I just think SEO 'without any kind of real site or business' just to make money from ad arbitrage is pretty damned hard now compared to a couple years ago, and especially the last few months of updates have hit our traditional sector very hard.
"CEO Sundar Pichai tells WIRED that Google’s new, more powerful Gemini chatbot is an experiment in offering users a way to get things done without a search engine. It’s also a direct shot at ChatGPT."