Has the Era of Traditional SEO Ended?

For many years, “we’re working on SEO” meant almost the same thing to everyone: We write articles packed with keywords, build backlinks, and track our rankings on Google.

But that world has changed dramatically. Today, the logical question is:
Has SEO died?

The short answer:
No, SEO isn’t dead… but the old way of playing the game is no longer enough.

Search engines have changed. People have changed.
So our approach has to change, too.

Why the Old SEO Game Doesn’t Work Like It Used To

1. Fewer Clicks from Google

Today, a lot of searches end without any clicks:

  • Google shows AI- generated summaries

  • Ready-made answer boxes

  • Maps, shopping carousels, videos, and more…

Even if your page is in position #1, traffic is often lower because the platform itself takes a large share of the value from its own results.

“Number one = lots of traffic” just isn’t true like it used to be.

2. Discovery No Longer Starts with Google

People discover ideas and products through: TikTok, Instagram, Reddit, private groups, niche stores, and specialist platforms.

Very often, Google is now the last step for double-checking or comparison, not the first.

That’s why you’ll sometimes see your CTR (click-through rate) drop, even though your rankings look good.

3. User Satisfaction Matters More Than Any Trick

Modern search platforms reward things like:

  • Repeat visits

  • People searching directly for your brand

  • Real engagement with your content

You can’t “polish” weak content with headlines and keywords anymore.
A weak offer will not win, even if you perfect every technical detail.

4. Tracking Has Become Harder

Privacy and regulation have cut the clean line of “keyword to visit to purchase.”

We can’t see everything with the same precision we used to.

Relying 100% on “last click” attribution makes us overestimate the importance of final channels (like Google Search alone).

Underestimate early demand-creation moments (content, social, community…)

If “Rank and You Grow” Is No Longer Guaranteed… What’s the Alternative?

There is no longer a single “magic channel.”

Instead, we have a portfolio of tactics that work together to create demand and then capture it.

Think less about: “How do I rank this page in Google?”

And more about: How do I earn attention? How do I earn trust? How do I own my distribution channels?

Four Core Pillars of the New Game

1) Your brand protects you

When people start searching for you by name, you’ve already won.

Invest in moments that build an unforgettable brand:

  • Strong, original research and reports

  • A clear, distinctive, creative identity

  • Community programs and audiences around the brand

The more your name lives in people’s minds, the less you depend on someone else’s algorithm.

2) Treat Content Like a “Product”, Not Just a Blog

Don’t settle for random, one-off articles.

Build real assets your audience values and looks forward to, such as:

  • Reports and studies

  • Benchmarks and industry standards

  • Tools and small apps

  • Structured educational guides

  • Webinars and live/online events

And make them:

  • Solid and regularly updated

  • Built on your own data and expertise

  • Easy to distribute: slice them into short content for social, email, etc.

3) Own Your Audience… Don’t Just Rent Followers

  • A follower on social media = rented

  • A subscriber to your email list or community = owned

Build an email list, SMS lists (where it makes sense), private communities, or customer clubs.

Algorithms are always changing… Your own list is the most stable asset you have.

4) Win Where the Purchase Actually Happens

Today, many customer journeys end on Amazon, the App Store, Booking.com, or other industry-specific platforms.

Treat each of these as its own search engine:

  • Optimize your images

  • Collect strong reviews

  • Answer user questions on those platforms

  • Make the experience from discovery to checkout smooth and frictionless

And All These Terms: SEO, GEO, AEO, SXO… What Are They Really?

The names may seem many and confusing, but they all orbit the same idea:

How do we show up in the places people trust, in a way that helps them choose?

1) SEO – Search Engine Optimization

The classic term: optimizing for search engines.

The idea:

  • Help Google and other engines understand our site and content

  • Earn free (organic) traffic from search results

It includes:

  • Technical structure

  • Pages and content

  • Understanding search intent

2) GEO – Generative Engine Optimization

Here we mean generative answer engines such as:

  • ChatGPT

  • Gemini

  • AI overviews and summaries inside search platforms

The question becomes: How do we structure our data and content so that these models choose us as a source when they generate answers?

Instead of saying: “We work only for a search engine.” We say: “We optimize for any engine or interface that can bring us repeatable growth.”

3) AEO – Answer Engine Optimization

Optimizing for answer engines like:

  • Google’s answer boxes

  • Voice assistants

The focus is on:

  • Direct questions

  • Clear, simple phrasing

  • Content that’s easy to quote and use as a ready-made answer

4) SXO – Search Experience Optimization

In other words, optimizing the search experience.

Instead of focusing only on “rankings,” we ask:

  • What happens after the click?

  • Is the page fast?

  • Is the content clear and encouraging the user to take the next step?

  • Do they feel they’ve arrived in the right place, or do they bounce back to the results?

Here we combine:

  • Classic SEO

  • User experience (UX)

  • Conversion rate optimization (CRO)

So… What Do We Write on LinkedIn?

Despite all the labels, the core of the game is the same:

We’re trying to:

  • Understand how people search and discover

  • Show up in the places they already trust

  • Help them understand us quickly and choose us with confidence

You can simply say: “We work on SEO.”

But internally, the team understands that today this includes:

  • Search

  • Experience

  • Answers

And multiple platforms… not just Google.

What Do We Measure Instead of “We’re #3 for Keyword ____”?

  • Focus on metrics that connect to real growth:

    1. Share of Search
      Within your category, how often do people search for your brand?

    2. Direct Traffic + Branded Search
      Are more people coming to you directly, or searching for your name?

    3. Subscribers and Their Activity
      Are you turning visitors into subscribers (email/SMS/community)?
      And are they actually engaging?

    4. Revenue Influenced by Content
      Which assets (reports, tools, pages) consistently appear before a purchase?
      even if they’re not the last click?

    5. Reviews (Volume and Quality)
      Across platforms, reviews are powerful assets.

    Return, Usage, and Retention
    Do people come back to your content, your tools, or your product more than once?

How Do Teams Need to Change to Win in the New SEO World?

  • Put SEO under the Growth team, not just IT.
    It touches brand, content, product, and sales.

     

  • Build a small editorial council:
    a subject-matter expert, a data analyst, a creative lead, and a distribution lead.
    Their mission: launch one strong asset every month and make sure it spreads.

     

  • Tie rewards to real outcomes:

     

    • Share of search

       

    • Qualified subscribers

       

    • Revenue influenced by content

       

  • Not to the number of articles or reports produced.

     

  • Run a simple weekly review:

     

    • What grabbed attention?

       

    • What converted to customers or subscribers?

       

    • What do we double down on?

       

What do we stop?

If You Had One Minute to Explain SEO to the Board… What Would You Say?

You could summarize it like this:

  • SEO isn’t dead, but relying on a single traffic source is.

  • We’re shifting investment from “chasing keywords.”
    to “building demand and owned distribution.”

  • Our risk goes down because we have:

    • A stronger brand

    • A subscribed audience

    • A clear presence at real purchase touchpoints

  • We’ll measure medium-term impact:

    • Branded search

    • Active subscribers

    • Revenue influenced by content

Instead of focusing only on rankings.

Quick snippet:

If we wanted to sum up the whole episode in three questions:

1-  What’s the most overrated tactic today?

Publishing more content just for the sake of keywords.

2-  What’s the most neglected asset for most companies?

Your own data.

3-  If you were allowed to track only one metric for six months, what would you choose?

Search share – Share of Search.

Quick Takeaways

The old SEO game alone is no longer enough. Today’s winners will look like: Strong media-style brands, Products that spread on their own, Names people intentionally search for.

The question is no longer: “How do we rank #1?”
It’s: “Why do people choose us? And how do we show that everywhere?”

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