3 posts tagged with “seo

Sam Bradley, writing for Digiday:

One year in from the launch of Google’s AI Overviews, adoption of AI-assisted search tools has led to the rise of so-called “zero-click search,” meaning that users terminate their search journeys without clicking a link to a website.

“People don’t search anymore. They’re prompting, they’re gesturing,” said Craig Elimeliah, chief creative officer at Code and Theory.

It’s a deceptively radical change to an area of the web that evolved from the old business of print directories and classified sections — one that may redefine how both web users and marketing practitioners think about search itself.

And I wrote about answer engines, earlier this year in January:

…the fundamental symbiotic economic relationship between search engines and original content websites is changing. Instead of sending traffic to websites, search engines, and AI answer engines are scraping the content directly and providing them within their platforms.
X-ray of a robot skull

How the semantics of search are changing amid the zero-click era

Search marketing, once a relatively narrow and technical marketing discipline, is becoming a broad church amid AI adoption.

Earth 3 Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.comdigiday.com
How Everything We Know About SEO Is Full of Lies

How Everything We Know About SEO Is Full of Lies

SEO is riddled with myths like overvaluing keywords, backlinks, and content length. Success lies in focusing on user intent, creating valuable content, and adapting to changes. Stop chasing shortcuts and diversify your strategy, as Google prioritizes its own interests over yours. Build genuine authority and deliver what users need for lasting results.

Earth 3 Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.comwebdesignerdepot.com
Surreal scene of a robotic chicken standing in the center of a dimly lit living room with retro furnishings, including leather couches and an old CRT television emitting a bright blue glow.

Chickens to Chatbots: Web Design’s Next Evolution

In the early 2000s to the mid-oughts, every designer I knew wanted to be featured on the FWA, a showcase for cutting-edge web design. While many of the earlier sites were Flash-based, it’s also where I discovered the first uses of parallax, Paper.js, and Three.js. Back then, websites were meant to be explored and their interfaces discovered.

Screenshot of The FWA website from 2009 displaying a dense grid of creative web design thumbnails.

A grid of winners from The FWA in 2009. Source: Rob Ford.

One of my favorite sites of that era was Burger King’s Subservient Chicken, where users could type free text into a chat box to command a man dressed in a chicken suit. In a full circle moment that perfectly captures where we are today, we now type commands into chat boxes to tell AI what to do.