Google Reveals Top Searches Of 2024 via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

Google has released its annual “Year in Search” report, highlighting the top trending searches, news, people, entertainment, and more that captured the world’s attention in 2024.

Based on Google search data, the report offers a glimpse into the topics, events, and figures that defined the year.

Here’s an overview of top trending searches worldwide and a breakdown of U.S.-specific trends.

Global Top Trending Searches 2024

Overall Searches

Globally, the top trending searches were dominated by major sporting events.

The Copa América soccer tournament topped the list, followed by the UEFA European Championship and the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup cricket tournament.

  1. Copa América.
  2. UEFA European Championship.
  3. ICC Men’s T20 World Cup.
  4. India vs. England.
  5. Liam Payne.

News

In the news category, the U.S. presidential election was the most searched topic worldwide, surpassing interest in the Olympic games, which came in third.

Excessive heat and Hurricane Milton also drove significant search interest, ranking as the second and fourth top global news events.

  1. U.S. Election.
  2. Excessive heat.
  3. Olympics.
  4. Hurricane Milton.

Entertainment

In entertainment, veteran comedian and actor Katt Williams topped the global list of most searched actors. Rising stars like Ella Purnell and Hina Khan also earned spots in the top five.

Highly anticipated sequels dominated movie searches, with “Inside Out 2,” “Deadpool & Wolverine,” and “Dune: Part Two” ranking as the top three.

Top Actors:

  1. Katt Williams.
  2. Pawan Kalyan.
  3. Adam Brody.
  4. Ella Purnell.
  5. Hina Khan.

Top Movies:

  1. Inside Out 2.
  2. Deadpool & Wolverine.
  3. Saltburn.
  4. Beetlejuice Beetlejuice.
  5. Dune: Part Two.

United States Top Trending Searches 2024

Overall Searches

  1. Election.
  2. Donald Trump.
  3. Connections.
  4. New York Yankees.
  5. Kamala Harris.

People

  1. Donald Trump.
  2. Kamala Harris.
  3. JD Vance.
  4. Joe Biden.
  5. Catherine, Princess of Wales.

Entertainment

Actors:

  1. Katt Williams.
  2. Jacob Elordi.
  3. Glen Powell.
  4. Jeremy Allen White.
  5. Shane Gillis.

Musicians

  1. Usher.
  2. Diddy.
  3. Kendrick Lamar.
  4. Drake.
  5. Justin Timberlake.

Sports

Sports fans worldwide were captivated by boxer Mike Tyson, the second most searched athlete globally behind Algerian karate champion Imane Khelif.

Sixteen-year-old soccer phenom Lamine Yamal also made the top five, reflecting the growing buzz about the young star.

Among sports teams, American franchises dominated, with the New York Yankees, Los Angeles Dodgers, and Boston Celtics ranking in the top five for global searches.

However, interest in soccer was evident, with Inter Miami CF and German club Bayer Leverkusen also making the list.

Athletes:

  1. Mike Tyson.
  2. Imane Khalif.
  3. Simone Biles.
  4. Scottie Scheffler.
  5. Jake Paul.

Teams:

  1. New York Yankees.
  2. Los Angeles Dodgers.
  3. New York Mets.
  4. Boston Celtics.
  5. Minnesota Timberwolves.

Digital Culture & Gaming

In gaming, the massively multiplayer life sim Connections was the most searched game globally, followed by the creature-capturing open-world adventure Palworld.

The trends point to gamers’ desire for connection and imaginative escapism.

Games:

  1. Connections.
  2. Strands.
  3. Infinite Craft.
  4. Palworld.
  5. Sprunki.

Lifestyle Trends

Aesthetics:

  1. Mob wife aesthetic.
  2. Nancy Meyers aesthetic.
  3. Pillow face aesthetic.
  4. Brat aesthetic.
  5. Decora aesthetic.

Food & Recipes

Olympic-themed chocolate muffin recipes topped global food-related searches, while the traditional Chinese treat tanghulu came in second. Dubai chocolate bar rounded out the top five, showcasing an international palate.

  1. Olympic chocolate muffins.
  2. Tanghulu.
  3. Tini’s mac and cheese.
  4. Mama Kelce’s cookie.
  5. Dense bean salad.

Popular Locations (Google Maps)

When it came to getting out and about, Google Maps searches showed Central Park in New York as the most searched-for park in the world, while the British Museum topped the list of museums.

For sports venue searches, Madison Square Garden led the pack.

Top U.S. Hiking Areas:

  1. Dater Mountain Nature Park, Sloatsburg, NY.
  2. Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, OR.
  3. Garden of the Gods, Colorado Springs, CO.
  4. Looking Glass Falls, Asheville, NC.
  5. Diamond Head Crater Trailhead, Honolulu, HI.

Music Trends

Google’s “Hum to Search” feature, which identifies songs based on audio clips, revealed that people around the world were eager to locate catchy tunes like “Beautiful Things” by Benson Boone and “Die With A Smile” by Lady Gaga.

The sea shanty “Wellerman” also had a global resurgence.

Most Hummed Songs:

  1. Beautiful Things – Benson Boone.
  2. Axel F – Crazy Frog
  3. Wellerman – Santiano.
  4. Past Lives – Slushii.
  5. Too Sweet – Hozier.

A Snapshot Of 2024 Through Search

Google’s Year in Search 2024 reflects what connected people worldwide over the past year.

Key highlights include the World Cup, travel, a renewed love for nature, and virtual adventures. Common themes are sports, entertainment, connection, and comfort.

We’ll be watching to see what people search for in 2025 and beyond.

For a complete overview of this year’s search trends, visit Google’s Year in Search mini-site.

More Resources:


Featured Image: Daniel Pawer/Shutterstock

Google Offers To Loosen Search Engine Deals In Antitrust Response via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

Google has submitted its proposal to address the Department of Justice’s (DOJ) antitrust lawsuit, which accuses the company of monopolistic practices in search.

Google disagrees with the court’s initial decision and plans to appeal. However, as part of the legal process, Google and the DOJ must present remedy proposals.

Background

In October 2020, the DOJ and several state attorneys general sued Google for breaking antitrust laws to maintain its control over search services and advertising.

In September 2024, Judge Amit Mehta ruled in favor of the DOJ.

The DOJ demands that Google sell Chrome, which it argues strengthens Google’s search dominance.

Additionally, the Justice Department suggested Google sell Android if other solutions fail to restore competition.

Google’s Defense

Google has condemned the DOJ’s proposal, labeling it a “radical interventionist agenda.”

Kent Walker, Google’s President of Global Affairs, argued that the remedies would “break a range of Google products” and result in “unprecedented government overreach.”

Lee-Anne Mulholland, Google’s VP of Regulatory Affairs, stated that the case concerns contracts, not broader competition issues.

The company believes its success comes from having better products and innovative ideas rather than engaging in unfair competition.

Google stated in its filing:

“People don’t use Google because they have to — they use it because they want to.”

DOJ’s Demands

The Justice Department’s proposal seeks extensive structural changes, including:

  • Mandatory sale of the Chrome browser
  • Possible sale of Android
  • Prohibition of exclusive agreements
  • Mandatory data sharing with competitors
  • Enhanced oversight through a technical committee

Google’s Remedies Proposal

Google’s proposal focuses on search distribution agreements with browsers and device manufacturers.

Here are the key points:

  1. Browser Agreements: Browser companies like Apple and Mozilla would be allowed to negotiate multiple default search engine agreements across different platforms.
  2. Android Contracts: Device makers would have greater freedom to preload multiple search engines and Google apps independently
  3. Oversight and Compliance: A compliance monitoring system would be implemented

Next Steps

A remedies hearing is scheduled for April, at which time Google will appeal the court’s ruling.

Google argues its proposal meets the court’s findings about search contracts, while the DOJ seeks more extensive changes.

This case outcome could impact the search engine market and Google’s business model as we know it.


Featured Image: JHVEPhoto/Shutterstock

The HCU Effect In Google Updates via @sejournal, @martinibuster

It’s fairly commonplace for Google Updates to prompt SEOs to raise concerns about the Helpful Content Update (HCU). A careful consideration of known facts reveals that it may be possible to determine whether a site is truly impacted by HCU-related signals.

Black Box Systems

Black box systems are something that all SEOs should consider understanding because it helps prevent misunderstandings about the consequences of a Google Update, both the core and spam updates.

A black box is a system where someone observing from the outside knows what goes in (the input) and can see what comes out  (the output). What the observer cannot do is infer what is happening inside the box based on the input or the output of the black box.

There are literally thousands of processes going on inside Google’s black box algorithm which makes it impossible to isolate the impact of a single factor. Identifying the ranking effect of the HCU is even more impossible because Google removed it as a standalone system and integrated into the core algorithm.

On a side note, the black-box nature of Google’s ranking algorithms is why SEO ranking factor research based on millions of search results (the output) is unreliable. Those studies make good clickbait and will continue to be created as long as SEOs remain unaware of the principle of the black box.

Helpful Content Update (HCU)

The helpful content system (commonly referred to as the HCU) was integrated into Google’s core algorithm in March 2024 and the system no longer exists.  It now exists as a component of the ranking algorithm among other ranking-related algorithms.

What that means is that it’s not a standalone system that impacts sites a couple times a year. It’s now integrated into the ranking systems that run all the time.

Previously, when Google updated the Helpful Content System, a site’s rankings drop could reasonably be attributed to the system. That’s no longer the case, as it’s now a part of the ranking algorithm that runs continuously.

When Google announces an update they no longer mention if the former HCU was updated because it’s not a system anymore, it’s just a bunch of signals in the ranking algorithm that runs all the time.

This is how Google explained it:

“Announced in 2022 as the “Helpful Content Update”, this was a system designed to better ensure people see original, helpful content written by people, for people, in search results, rather than content made primarily to gain search engine traffic. In March 2024, it evolved and became part of our core ranking systems, as our systems use a variety of signals and systems to present helpful results to users.”

Here’s the exception to that rule:

If Google’s update announcement mentions they are improving the signals for identifying “people-first” content then it’s fairly reasonable to assume that some component of the former HCU was updated.

What Needs To Be Understood About The HCU

It needs to be understood that there is literally no way to claim with 100% certainty that the HCU is the reason why any given site lost rankings during a core algorithm update. There is no way to isolate the effects of the HCU signals from the hundreds or thousands of other signals.

Except for when Google’s update announcement specifically mentions one of the components, but even then it’s important to identify the effects on the site instead of shrugging and declaring it’s the HCU. That’s an excuse, not a diagnosis.

How To Diagnose Effects Of HCU

Google recommends reading their documentation about all the signals for helpful “people-first” content in order to understand the effects of HCU related issues. People-first means content that is not search-engine first.

The documentation says:

“Google’s automated ranking systems are designed to present helpful, reliable information that’s primarily created to benefit people, not to gain search engine rankings, in the top Search results. This page is designed to help creators evaluate if they’re producing such content.”

Google’s documentation on people-first content recommends the following topics for debugging ranking issues:

  1. Content and quality
  2. Expertise
  3. Page experience
  4. People-first content
  5. Search engine-first content

Google’s documentation goes on to say that after identifying relevant web pages, other signals are applied to check if the content exhibit “aspects” of experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness (EEAT).

“After identifying relevant content, our systems aim to prioritize those that seem most helpful. To do this, they identify a mix of factors that can help determine which content demonstrates aspects of experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness, or what we call E-E-A-T.

Of these aspects, trust is most important. The others contribute to trust, but content doesn’t necessarily have to demonstrate all of them. For example, some content might be helpful based on the experience it demonstrates, while other content might be helpful because of the expertise it shares.”

Takeaway

The takeaway from Google’s documentation about people-first content is that there are multiple components to what HCU is. People-first content is super important, especially because it’s the standard SEO practice to create search-engine first content by starting with top ranked keywords, organizing site architecture around keywords, and generally optimizing for keywords and not for people.  For more on that topic read: A Candid Assessment Of AI Search & SEO

Google’s People-First Documentation

Creating helpful, reliable, people-first content

Featured Image by Shutterstock/Studio Romantic

Google Launches (Final?) Spam Update Of The Year via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

Google announced the rollout of the December 2024 spam update.

The update, expected to be completed within a week, arrives amid ongoing industry discussions about the effectiveness of Google’s spam-fighting measures.

This December update caps off a year of spam-fighting measures, including the June Spam Update and the March Core Update, which targeted policy-violating websites and aimed to reduce “unhelpful” content by 40%.

It’s also worth mentioning that this update closely follows the December core update.

Looking Back At A Year Of Updates

This year saw an unprecedented frequency of major algorithm updates, with core updates in March, August, November, and December.

The August update, which took nearly three weeks to complete, targeted low-value SEO content while promoting high-quality material.

The December core update, launched on December 12, came unusually close to the November update, with Google explaining that different systems are often improved in parallel.

Policy Transformation

This year marked a shift in Google’s approach to spam detection and prevention with three major policy updates.

1.Site Reputation Abuse

Introduced in May 2024, Google began targeting “parasite SEO” practices where third-party content exploits established domains’ authority.

This update mainly affected:

  • Major publishers hosting third-party product reviews
  • News sites with extensive coupon sections
  • Sports websites with AI-generated content

The policy change led to notable casualties, including several high-profile publishers receiving manual actions for hosting third-party content without sufficient oversight.

2. Expired Domain Abuse

Google’s enhanced focus on expired domain manipulation addressed:

  • Purchase of expired domains for backlink exploitation
  • Repurposing authoritative domains for unrelated content
  • Domain squatting for search ranking manipulation

3. Scaled Content Abuse

Previously known as “spammy auto-generated content,” this rebranded policy expanded to include:

  • AI-generated content at scale
  • Mass-produced content across multiple sites
  • Content translation manipulation
  • Automated content transformation techniques

See more: An In-Depth Look At Google Spam Policies Updates And What Changed

Spam-Specific Updates

June 2024 Spam Update

  • Week-long implementation period
  • Focused on policy-violating websites
  • Enhanced detection of automated content

November 2024 SRA Enforcement

  • Implementation of site reputation abuse penalties
  • Affected major publishers’ sponsored content strategies
  • Required significant content policy adjustments across news sites

Looking Ahead

With the December core update having completed its rollout and the new spam update now underway, prepare for another round of potential ranking fluctuations through the end of the year.

The spam update is expected to be completed next week, with progress tracked through Google’s Search Status Dashboard.


Featured Image: JHVEPhoto/Shutterstock

Ask An SEO: How To Move From Page 2 To Top Positions via @sejournal, @rollerblader

Today’s Ask an SEO question comes from Roy in Dinajpur:

“My website URL [is] still [in] position No. 15. How can increase to No. 3 or 4?”

Great question, and likely one of the top five that get asked. The answer is situational, and it is easier to resolve when you don’t overthink it.

The first thing to do is to look at the current pages in the top 10 positions and create a list by page of:

  • What they have in common.
  • Talking points and topics they cover.
  • How many internal links that point to these pages.
  • The number of quality and spammy backlinks each page has.
  • On-page factors like HTML structure, schema, and the quality of the content.
  • Content formatting and if they’re presenting the content in the most easy-to-understand and use formats.

I like to do this in spreadsheets because it lets me either assign values from one to 10 and add them up, or see what is missing and what is included across the sites more easily.

If you assign a number for each page with the aspect I’m looking for, I can add the columns and rows up to see how common it is based on the higher number.

If you only use a one (1), meaning it exists on the page, the higher the number, the more pages have it. If rating the quality of content, UX, formatting, sourcing, etc., I assign one to 10.

Once added up across or down, I can see which pages are the best and look at why. From there, I can begin working on my variation and create an even better experience.

Pro-tip: Better experiences may sometimes mean less content, removing specific sections as they may not be topically relevant, or adding in things I didn’t think of but make sense.

But don’t rely on this alone. Go deeper into the features on the pages and within the websites ranking above you, and then look at your own page.

Start To Review Your Own Content Or Page

Now, ask yourself:

  • Do I have the same content or not?
  • Is my content or page sharing something unique or more useful than these?
  • They all have X content, but is it topically relevant to the query I want my page to show up for?
    • If not, delete it so my page is more on-topic.
    • If yes, add it.
  • What could be better explained, or could clearer examples be used that are missing from theirs?
  • Can I easily absorb the text, or would bullets, tables, videos, sound clips, images, and infographics make it better?

These are ways you can begin to create more helpful content on your page. Then, look at some of the other factors that can help. Internal links can be a good place to start.

Where on my website do I reference this topic, product, or service, and will linking to my page help the website visitor?

If these same pages have traffic and backlinks and get social shares, add the internal link. Just make sure it benefits the end user and is not just there for SEO.

Now, look to see if you have conflicting internal links (links to the different pages off of the same keywords and the same intent).

In some cases, backlinks could be a factor, especially with “Your Money of Your Life” (YMYL) and medical queries. What does your page have that the others do not, and how is it more trustworthy than theirs?

You can use this to ask the websites linking to them to include you or replace their links with your resource instead.

Another option is to begin building quality links to your resource, but avoid spammy tactics like mass emailing, guest posting, scholarships, grants, forum and blog comments, PBNs, and link exchanges.

Technical audit and on-page SEO can help you as well. Schema does not help with rankings, but it does help with rich results and lets search engines know what your page is about. Make sure yours is not deprecated and is up to date.

Check your header tags, titles, descriptions, and wording. When doing that, also ensure that your content is around the same reading level and language style as the audience you want to reach.

Look At The Overall Site

Another thing is to consider the site overall.

Having one or two quality pages is good, but what about other topics that work for the same audience and would be interesting for them to read once they finish the page they’re on? This applies to ecommerce, publishers, and everything in between.

Are you using AI and LLMs to create content? You should probably delete that content immediately if you didn’t go in and edit it to have information only a human with experience would know.

If you’re using LLMs to create content, you’re recycling the knowledge already out there versus adding something new. It is the same as scraping four or five sites and using an article spinner to produce the output.

Is there thin content that is also in the category or being recommended? Delete that, too. Same with recommended articles from third parties and ad networks.

Having a couple of good-quality pages is great, but if the person clicks on the next article and it is thin, outdated, or inaccurate, you’re providing a bad experience, and some algorithms may use sitewide classifiers.

Those thin and spammy pages that do not educate and provide solutions impact the high-quality pages.

If all else is equal between you and another site, these low-quality pages could be the deciding factor if your high-quality page makes it to page one and who stays on page two if all else is equal.

The same goes for page and site speed. Yes, they matter, but not that much unless you’re a publisher.

Do Everything Right And You Should Get There

Sometimes, you can do everything right and have the best experience, but Google, Bing, Yahoo, Baidu, or Naver doesn’t bring you up to page one or top positions. Then you magically jump there, as do other pages during a core update.

There’s no one-size-fits-all solution for moving to the top five positions from page two, but by doing everything right, you should eventually make it there.

Fix the issues above and then keep working on it. Eventually, it pays off, and you’ll likely see your site and pages start hitting page one and going to top positions when you’ve fixed enough.

If you’re on page two, that means your page and your site have some quality that is trustworthy.

Now, it’s a matter of fine-tuning that experience so that it can become a page one result. The above tip should help you diagnose what could be better; once done, it’s a waiting game if your experience is already there. I hope this helps.

More resources:


Featured Image: Paulo Bobita/Search Engine Journal

8 Metrics To Measure The Effectiveness Of Your Internal Linking Strategy via @sejournal, @xandervalencia

You might’ve thought we’ve covered everything there is to know about internal linking.

But few dare to dig into the tricky details of tracking the success of an internal linking hierarchy. That’s because it’s messy, it’s difficult, and it’s not always straightforward – but it’s worth it.

In this guide, we’re covering the metrics that matter most when it comes to internal linking, how to track them, and what they mean in terms of the collective benefit to your website’s SEO strategy.

Is Internal Linking “Measurable”?

Yes, it is measurable, but it’s not always simple.

With something as indeterminate as “internal linking,” it’s easy to assume that the results are more subjective than objective.

For instance, it is difficult to tag individual internal links to assess how a user navigates your site — let alone determine if that results in a goal completion or conversion.

So, measuring the success of your internal linking strategy requires some creative thinking.

While the metrics may not be direct, in context, they can paint a picture of whether the internal links are benefiting your website’s SEO. You just need to know where to look!

Why Measure Your Internal Linking Results?

Internal linking is one of those SEO activities most often treated as a “best practice,” less often venturing into the realm of technical assessment and in-depth strategy.

Sure, there’s an understanding that one should link to the most important pages of their website, but how far do we go beyond that?

Glad you asked because there are a few ways to nerd out about internal linking. If you’re an SEO savant, I’m sure you will appreciate this.

  • User Navigation and Intent: Auditing your internal linking strategy via Google Analytics will reveal surprising insights about how users navigate your site. It will allow you to infer what users intend to find when perusing your site content (i.e., where are they going next?).
  • Page Authority: You’ll likely notice that some pages get more traffic than others. This may be a result of higher search volume keywords, volume and quality of backlinks, page authority, and a range of other factors. Internal links allow you to direct some of this authority to lower-performing pages.
  • Information Architecture: Internal linking is an essential part of facilitating an intuitive and easy user experience. By directing users to relevant pages and posts, you remove friction from their navigational process, lifting barriers to purchase.
  • Content Gaps: Through auditing, you will likely find gaps in your content. Have you thoroughly exhausted the topic “pillar” on your website, or are there more items to cover? Where would a user likely want to venture next? How can you take them there?

In essence, there are several benefits to auditing, analyzing, and updating your internal linking strategy.

If you’re ready to go beyond “best practices” and dig into the data, you’ve come to the right place.

Internal Linking: How To Measure Success

As we all know, in SEO, some things are subjective, and others are objective. An internal linking strategy involves a bit of both.

The metrics used to assess internal linking success are mostly objective, while observations and applications can be wholly subjective.

Feel free to interpret the data as you see fit for your own SEO strategy purposes, and know that you’re not limited to these metrics when it comes to analyzing your internal links.

1. Crawl Depth

One of my favorite metrics for analyzing internal links is crawl depth. This metric, reported by Google Search Console’s Crawl Stats report, measures how many pages search engine bots can access and index within a single crawl.

Before implementing internal link updates, I take a baseline of the site’s current crawl depth.

As internal links are added/updated, I most often see an increase in the number of pages found and indexed (assuming there was a discrepancy at the beginning).

An optimized internal linking structure can help search engines crawl deeper into the site, ensuring more pages are indexed and capable of being ranked by Google.

2. Bounce Rate

There are pros and cons to using bounce rate to measure SEO success. The metric alone can miss a lot of context.

For example, in cases of law firm SEO, a higher bounce rate might not be concerning if the end goal is a phone call rather than a user continuously navigating the site. There are many nuances to measuring and assessing the importance of bounce rate.

But when it comes to internal linking, assessing bounce rate can be informative.

Bounce rate (reported by Google Analytics) measures the percentage of website visitors who land on a website and then leave without taking any action. “Action” here could mean clicking on another page, completing a form, making a purchase, etc.

Internal links can increase the likelihood that a user will venture to another page on your website.

Again, compare the results before and after implementing your internal link improvements. A lower bounce rate may indicate that users are finding more relevant content, and are staying on your site for longer.

3. Behavior Flow

Universal Analytics’ “Behavior Flow” report was depreciated with the upgrade to GA4, but there are other ways to view a user’s navigational path through your website.

With the new “path exploration report,” you can analyze a user’s journey through your site, including the pages they land on and the actions they take.

Though not exactly a “metric,” this report does reveal data about which pages users are visiting and where they navigate to next. It also reveals where they drop off.

This is critical information when it comes to internal linking, as you can add links to pages to reduce drop-off, add visual aids to direct users to important pages, and change the placement of your links to improve click-throughs.

4. Pages Per Session

Another Google Analytics metric, Pages Per Session measures the average number of pages a visitor views during a session.

For example, if a visitor only visits two pages and then leaves, that’s not ideal. But if they visit more than two pages, indicating an intent to find information and, potentially, make a purchase, things are looking up!

This can be a helpful metric because it (in part) indicates whether your internal links are well-placed and are making it easy for visitors to navigate to additional pages.

Effective internal linking encourages users to explore more content, increasing page views per session, and signaling good user engagement.

Note that, like bounce rate, there are many nuances to assessing the importance of pages per session as an indicator of SEO performance.

For example, a business would likely prefer that a user calls them right away rather than venturing to several pages of their website. Immediate action is ideal!

5. Time On Page

While pages per session measures the number of pages a user visits within a session, time on page measures the amount of time a user spends on a single webpage before navigating to another page.

In the context of internal linking, higher time on page may indicate that your links are effective in guiding users to content that holds their attention.

Also, while not a direct ranking factor, time on page can contribute to search engines’ understanding of your site’s quality.

Pages that keep users engaged signal a positive user experience, which search engines may consider when determining your rankings.

In that way,  higher time on page as a result of internal linking improvements may indicate the success of your strategy.

6. Page Authority

Page Authority is a score developed by Moz to assess how well a particular page will rank in the SERPs based on a variety of factors. Scores range from 1 to 100, with a higher score indicating a higher expected ranking.

I like to look at Page Authority when it comes to internal linking because internal links can “send” authority to the pages they link to.

Basically, when you link from high-authority pages to other pages on your site, it helps distribute “link equity” across your site. This practice can raise the authority of less visible or lower-ranking pages.

You may notice that the Page Authority of a destination page increases after you link to it from a high-authority page. Measuring this, across multiple pages, can be a strong indicator of internal linking effectiveness.

7. Conversion Rate

You can use Google Tag Manager (GTM) to track conversions from users who click on internal links.

Internal links can guide users down the sales funnel as they navigate from one page to another and, ultimately, make a purchase, submit a form, etc.

Tracking whether linked pages lead to conversions (e.g., purchases or sign-ups) is crucial for assessing the effectiveness of your internal linking strategy.

Here’s how to track internal link conversions with GTM:

  1. Log into Google Analytics.
  2. Create a conversion event representing the action you want to track (e.g., form submissions, purchases, sign-ups).
  3. Take note of the event name and/or parameters (you’ll use them later).
  4. Log into Google Tag Manager and click “Triggers” in the sidebar. Select “New” to create a new trigger.
  5. Name the trigger (e.g., “Internal Link Click”).
  6. Choose “Click – Just Links” as the trigger type.
  7. In the Trigger Configuration section, set the following:
    • This trigger fires on: “Some Link Clicks”
  8. In the next section, create a condition to target only internal links. Set the condition to:
    • Click URL → Matches RegEx → ^https?://(www.)?yoursite.com
  9. Replace yoursite.com with your actual domain.
  10. Save the trigger.
  11. Next, go to the Tags section in GTM and click “New.” Name the tag (e.g., “Internal Link Click Event”).
  12. Choose Tag Type as “Google Analytics: GA4 Event.”
  13. Under Tag Configuration, fill in the following:
    • Configuration Tag: Select your GA4 configuration tag.
    • Event Name: Name the event (e.g., “internal_link_click”).
    • Event Parameters: Add additional parameters for deeper insights. Example: Parameter Name: “link_url”
    • Value: {{Click URL}}
  14. In the Triggering section, select the “Internal Link Click” trigger you created earlier.
  15. Save the tag.
  16. Back in GA4, click on Admin.
  17. Under the Property column, click on Events.
  18. You will see a list of events that GA4 has already tracked (including any custom events like “internal_link_click” if you’ve set up your GTM tag correctly).
  19. Find the event you want to track as a conversion (e.g., “internal_link_click”). If it is not listed, it means the event hasn’t been triggered yet, and you’ll need to wait until it fires or manually create the event (explained below).
  20. Once the event appears in the list, toggle the “Mark as conversion” switch next to the event. This will now track the event as a conversion in GA4.

8. Organic Traffic

One of the clearest signs of SEO success is increased traffic. However, it can be challenging to directly link traffic growth to changes in your internal linking strategy.

But you can compare traffic stats before and after internal link updates, all else being held equal.

Be sure to track the organic traffic to your website over time using tools like Google Analytics or Semrush.

The addition of internal links can direct more traffic flow to other pages on your site, improve the rate at which pages are indexed, and distribute page authority, which can boost your overall organic traffic.

Improve Your Internal Linking Strategy With These Tips

Internal linking is an important yet oft-overlooked strategy in SEO. It’s so simple that it’s easy to forget how impactful it can be.

With the help of the metrics above and some creative thinking, you can drive better organic results for your site and your clients.

  • Audit Often: Analyze your website performance every quarter (if not more) to assess your internal pages and determine whether any content gaps exist on your site. Audit your website for broken and/or redirected links, fixing these as needed to improve user experience and the crawlability of your website.
  • Add Links Regularly: Any time you add new content, look for opportunities to link to existing pages or articles. Aim for at least three internal links on each page.
  • Examine Your Traffic: Identify high-traffic, high-authority pages and add internal links from these to your lower-performing pages. Compare traffic before and after these changes.
  • Play With Placement: Experiment with the placement and prominence of your internal links. Use different visual components, weight, and colors to make internal links more obvious and enticing.

With this guide, you can get a clear picture of how well your internal linking strategy is performing and make adjustments to improve your SEO results.

Want more user engagement and action on your website? Internal linking is one way to do that!

More resources:


Featured Image: denayunebgt/Shutterstock

Cut The Malarkey. Speaking Frankly About AI Search & SEO via @sejournal, @martinibuster

Search marketing is undergoing dramatic changes, with many debating whether SEO is on its way out as AI Search rises in popularity. What follows is a candid assessment of what is going on with SEO and search engines today.

An SEO School Shuts Down

An SEO school by a group called Authority Hackers recently announced their closure, emphasizing that it’s not because SEO is dead but due to the collapse of the content site model. They cited three reasons for this situation. The following is not about the SEO school, that’s just a symptom of something important going on today.

1. Google Updates is one of the reasons cited for the decline of the content site model. Here’s the candid part: If the Google updates killed your publishing site, that’s kind of the red flag that there’s something about the SEO that needs examination.

Here’s the frank part: Google’s updates have generally crushed websites that begin with keyword research, are followed by stealing content ideas from competitors and scraping Google’s SERPs for more keyword phrases. That’s not audience research, that’s search engine research. Search engine research results in Made For Search Engine websites. This doesn’t describe all websites that lost rankings but it’s a common method of SEO that in my opinion seriously needs to be reassessed.

2. The other reason cited by the SEO school is the “AI content tsunami.” I’m not sure what that means because it can mean a lot of things. Is that AI content spam? Or is that a reference to AI content sites overwhelming the publisher who cranks out two articles a week?

Do I need to say out loud what content output implies about site authority?

3. The third reason for the decline of the content model is the dramatic changes to Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs). Now this, this is a valid reason, but not for the reasons most SEOs think.

The organic SERPs have, for the past 25 years, been dominated by the top three ranked positions, with about 20-30% of the traffic siphoned off to Google Ads for search topics that convert. That’s the status quo: Three sites are winning and everyone else is losing.

AI Overviews has not changed a thing. AIO doubled down on the status quo. According to BrightEdge research, the top ranked websites in AIO are largely the same as the organic top ranked websites. What that means is that three sites are still winning and everyone else is still losing.

The biggest change to the SERPs that most SEOs are missing is what I already mentioned, that made for search engine websites have been getting wiped out by Google updates.

The helpful content update (HCU) is the scapegoat but that’s just ONE algorithm out of hundreds. There is literally no way for anyone to claim with 100% certainty that the HCU is the reason why any given site lost rankings. Google is a black box algorithm. A lot of people are saying but none of them can explain how they are able to pick out the effects of one algorithm out of hundreds.

The thing about being in SEO for 25 years is that people like me are accustomed to dramatic changes. Yes, the SERPs have changed dramatically. That’s how search engines have always done things.

If you’ve only been doing SEO for ten years, I can understand how the recent changes seem dramatic. But when you’ve been in it for as long as I have, dramatic changes are expected. That’s the status quo. Dramatic SERP changes is how it’s always been.

SEO Is Now AEO?

Someone started a discussion with two sentences that said AEO is the new SEO and that ChatGPT was quickly becoming the leading search engine, inspiring well over a hundred responses. The discussion is in a private Facebook group called AI/ChatGPT Prompts for Entrepreneurs.

AEO is a relatively new acronym meaning Answer Engine Optimization. It describes AI Search Optimization. AISEO is more a more precise acronym but it sounds too close to E-I-E-I-O.

Is AEO really a thing? Consider this: All AI search engines use a search index and traditional search ranking algorithms. For goodness sakes, Perplexity AI uses a version of Google’s PageRank, one of the most traditional ranking algorithms of all time.

People in that discussion generally agreed that AEO is not a thing, that AI Search Engines were not yet a major challenge to Google and that SEO is still a thing.

All is not upside down with the world because at least in that discussion the overwhelming sentiment is that AEO is not a thing. Many observed that ChatGPT uses Bing’s index, so if you’re doing “AEO” for ChatGPT you’re actually just doing SEO for Bing. Others expressed that the average person has no experience with ChatGPT and until it’s integrated into a major browser it’s going to remain a niche search engine.

There was one person insisting that Perplexity AI was designed as an AI Search Engine, completely misunderstanding that Perplexity AI uses a search index and identifies authoritative websites with an updated version of Google’s old PageRank algorithm.

AI has been a strong search engine factor in Google since at least 10 years. Longer if you consider that Google Brain began as a project in 2011.

  • AI in search is not new.
  • Search results summaries aren’t new either (Featured Snippets).
  • Google’s Information Gain patent for AI Chatbots filed in 2018.

AI in search feels new but it’s not new. The biggest difference isn’t in the back end, it’s in the front and it’s changing how users interact with data. This is the big change that all SEOs should be paying close attention to.

Featured Image by Shutterstock/pathdoc

18 Essential Accessibility Changes To Drive Increased Website Growth via @sejournal, @skynet_lv

This post was sponsored by “Skynet Technologies USA LLC”.

Did you know that 1 billion people have not reached you or your customers’ websites yet.

1 billion potential customers are waiting for businesses to step up and do what’s right.

Find out if your website is accessible to 1 billion people >>>

Accessibility isn’t just a compliance checkbox anymore – it’s a growth strategy.

The demand for scalable, innovative accessibility solutions has skyrocketed.

And your competition is already making these improvements.

For agencies, this means an unprecedented opportunity to meet clients’ needs while driving revenue.

Learn how you can generate additional revenue and boost your clients’ SERP ranking by gaining access to:

Ready to get started?

How Accessibility Improvements Can Increase Growth

The digital economy thrives on inclusion.

There is a large market of individuals who are not included in modern website usability.

With over a billion people globally living with disabilities, accessible digital experiences open doors to untapped markets.

Do Websites Need To Be Accessible?

The short answer is yes.

How Does An Accessible Website Drive Traffic?

Traffic comes from people who have needs. Of course, everyone has needs, including people with disabilities.

Accessible websites and tools cater to all users, expanding reach to a diverse and often overlooked customer base.

Global Potential & Unlocking New Audiences

From a global perspective, the global community of people with disabilities is a market estimated to hold a staggering $13 trillion in spending power.

By removing barriers and ensuring inclusive digital experiences, you can tap into this 1 billion-person market and drive substantial economic growth.

Digital accessibility helps to increase employment opportunities, education options, and simple access to various banking and financial services for everybody.

Boosts User Experience & Engagement 

Accessibility improvements run parallel with SEO improvements.

In fact, they often enhance overall website performance, which leads to:

  • Better user experience.
  • Higher rankings.
  • Increased traffic.
  • Higher conversion rates.

Ensures Your Websites Are Compliant

Increasing lawsuits against businesses that fail to comply with accessibility regulations have imposed pressure on them to implement accessibility in their digital assets.

Compliance with ADA, WCAG 2.0, 2.1, 2.2, Section 508, Australian DDA, European EAA EN 301 549, UK Equality Act (EA), Indian RPD Act, Israeli Standard 5568, California Unruh, Ontario AODA, Canada ACA, German BITV, Brazilian Inclusion Law (LBI 13.146/2015), Spain UNE 139803:2012, France RGAA standards, JIS X 8341 (Japan), Italian Stanca Act, Switzerland DDA, Austrian Web Accessibility Act (WZG) guidelines aren’t optional. Accessibility solution partnerships ensure to stay ahead of potential lawsuits while fostering goodwill.

6 Steps To Boost Your Growth With Accessibility

  1. To drive growth, your agency should prioritize digital accessibility by following WCAG standards, regularly testing with tools like AXE, WAVE, or Skynet Technologies Website Accessibility Checker, and addressing accessibility gaps. Build accessible design frameworks with high-contrast colors, scalable text, and clear navigation.
  2. Integrate assistive technologies such as keyboard navigation, screen reader compatibility, and video accessibility. Focus on responsive design, accessible forms, and inclusive content strategies like descriptive link text, simplified language, and alternative formats.
  3. Providing accessibility training and creating inclusive marketing materials will further support compliance and growth.
  4. To ensure the website thrives, prioritize mobile-first design for responsiveness across all devices, adhere to WCAG accessibility standards, and incorporate keyboard-friendly navigation and alt text for media.
  5. Optimize page speed and core web vitals while using an intuitive interface with clear navigation and effective call-to-action buttons, and use SEO-friendly content with proper keyword optimization and schema markups to boost visibility.
  6. Ensure security with SSL certificates, clear cookie consent banners, and compliance with privacy regulations like GDPR and CCPA. Finally, implement analytics and conversion tracking tools to gather insights and drive long-term growth.

We know this is a lot.

If this sounds good to you, let us help you get set up.

How Can Digital Accessibility Partnerships Supercharge Your Clients’ SEO?

Partnering for digital accessibility isn’t just about inclusivity — it’s a game-changer for SEO, too!

Accessible websites are built with cleaner code, smarter structures, and user-friendly features like alt text and clear headings that search engines love.

Plus, faster load times, mobile-friendly designs, and seamless navigation keep users engaged, reducing bounce rates and boosting rankings. When you focus on making a site accessible to everyone, you’re not just widening your audience—you’re signaling to search engines that the website is high-quality and relevant. It’s a win-win for accessibility and SEO!

12 Essential Factors To Consider For Successful Accessibility Partnerships

  1. Expertise: Look for a provider with a proven track record in digital accessibility, including knowledge of relevant global website accessibility standards and best practices.
  2. Experience: Consider their experience working with similar industries or organizations.
  3. Tools and technologies: Evaluate their use of automated and manual testing tools to identify and remediate accessibility issues.
  4. Price Flexibility: Explore pricing models that align with both the budget and project requirements. Whether for a single site or multiple sites, the service should be compatible and scalable to meet the needs.
  5. Platform Compatibility: Ensure seamless accessibility integration across various platforms, providing a consistent and accessible experience for all users, regardless of the website environment.
  6. Multi-language support: Enhance user experience with global language support, making websites more inclusive and accessible to a global audience.
  7. Regular check-ins: Schedule regular meetings to discuss project progress, address any issues, and make necessary adjustments.
  8. Clear communication channels: Establish clear communication channels (for example: email, and project management tools) to facilitate efficient collaboration.
  9. Transparent reporting: Request detailed reports on the progress of accessibility testing, remediation efforts, and overall project status.
  10. KPIs to measure success: Review the partner’s historical data, especially those similar projects in terms of scale, complexity, and industry.
  11. Evaluate technical expertise: Assess their proficiency in using various accessibility testing tools and ability to integrate different APIs.
  12. Long-term partnership strategy: Compare previous data with the current one for improvement and optimization process. It is crucial for a long-term partnership that there is a specific interval of review and improvements.

    Scaling Accessibility With Smart Partnerships

    All in One Accessibility®: Simplicity meets efficiency!

    The All in One Accessibility® is an AI-powered accessibility tool that helps organizations to enhance their website accessibility level for ADA, WCAG 2.0, 2.1, 2.2, Section 508, Australian DDA, European EAA EN 301 549, UK Equality Act (EA), Indian RPD Act, Israeli Standard 5568, California Unruh, Ontario AODA, Canada ACA, German BITV, Brazilian Inclusion Law (LBI 13.146/2015), Spain UNE 139803:2012, France RGAA standards, JIS X 8341 (Japan), Italian Stanca Act, Switzerland DDA, Austrian Web Accessibility Act (WZG), and more.

    It is available with features like sign language LIBRAS (Brazilian Portuguese Only) integration, 140+ multilingual support, screen reader, voice navigation, smart language auto-detection and voice customization, talk & type, Google and Adobe Analytics tracking, along with premium add-ons including white label and custom branding, VPAT/ACR reports, manual accessibility audit and remediation, PDF remediation, and many more.

    • Quick Setup: Install the widget to any site with ease—no advanced coding required.
    • Feature-Rich Design: From text resizing and color contrast adjustments to screen reader support, it’s packed with tools that elevate the user experience.
    • Revenue Opportunities: Agencies can resell the solution to clients, adding a high-value service to their offerings while earning attractive commissions through the affiliate program.
    • Reduced development costs: Minimizes the financial impact of accessibility remediation by implementing best practices and quick tools.

    Agency Partnership: Scaling accessibility with ease!

    • Extended Service Offerings: The All in One Accessibility® Agency Partnership allows agencies to offer a powerful accessibility widget – quick accessibility solution into their services, enabling them that are in high demand.
    • White Label: As an agency partner, you can offer All in One Accessibility® under their own brand name.
    • Centralized Management: It simplifies oversight by consolidating accessibility data and reporting, allowing enterprises to manage multiple websites seamlessly.
    • Attractive Revenue Streams: Agencies can resell the widget to clients, earning significant revenue through competitive pricing structures and repeat business opportunities.
    • Boost Client Retention: By addressing accessibility needs proactively, agencies build stronger relationships with clients, fostering long-term loyalty and recurring contracts.
    • Increase Market Reach: Partnering with All in One Accessibility® positions agencies as leaders in inclusivity, attracting businesses looking for reliable accessibility solutions.
    • NO Investment, High Return: With no setup costs, scalable features, and up to 30% commission, the partnership enables agencies to maximize profitability with their clients.

    Affiliate Partnership: A revenue opportunity for everyone!

    The All in One Accessibility® Affiliate Partnership program is for content creators, marketers, accessibility advocates, web professionals, 501 (c) organizations (non-profit), and law firms.

    • Revenue Growth through Referrals: The All in One Accessibility® affiliate partnership allows affiliates to earn competitive commissions by promoting a high-demand accessibility solution, turning referrals into consistent revenue.
    • Expanding Market Reach: Affiliates can tap into a diverse audience of businesses seeking ADA and WCAG compliance, scaling both revenue and the adoption of accessibility solutions.
    • Fostering Accessibility Awareness: By promoting the All in One Accessibility® widget, affiliates play a pivotal role in driving inclusivity, helping more websites become accessible to users with disabilities.
    • Leveraging Trusted Branding: Affiliates benefit from partnering with a reliable and recognized quick accessibility improvement tool, boosting their credibility and marketing impact.
    • Scaling with Zero Investment: With user-friendly promotional resources and a seamless onboarding process, affiliates can maximize returns without any costs.

    Use Accessibility As A Growth Engine

    Endeavoring for strategic partnerships with accessibility solution providers is a win-win for agencies aiming to meet the diverse needs of their clients. These partnerships not only enhance the accessibility of digital assets but also create opportunities for growth, and loyalty, top search engine rankings, boost revenue, improve compliance with legal standards, and make you to contribute into digital accessibility world.

    With Skynet Technologies USA LLC, Transform accessibility from a challenge into a revenue-driving partnership. Let inclusivity power the success.

    Ready to get started? Embarking on a digital accessibility journey is simpler than you think! Take the first step by evaluating the website’s current WCAG compliance with a manual accessibility audit.

    For more information, Reach out hello@skynettechnologies.com.


    Image Credits

    Featured Image: Image by Skynet Technologies. Used with permission.

    What An Enterprise Client Wants From Their SEO Agency via @sejournal, @danielkcheung

    A lasting relationship with an enterprise client is good for business. It gives you authority, it gives your staff exposure to how large organizations work, and there should be a financial element.

    But winning the pitch is just the beginning. Many agencies make the grave mistake of misunderstanding their role in the relationship, and it is this: The relationship is transactional – at least, at first.

    This is what an enterprise client needs from you:

    • Clear, consistent communication.
    • Alignment with business objectives.
    • Flexibility.
    • Integrity.
    • Operational efficiency and responsiveness.
    • Proactive problem-solving.

    In many ways, these six things overlap on a Venn diagram. And when you get it right, we will see you not as an external vendor but as an extension of ourselves.

    1. Clear, Concise Communication

    Enterprise clients don’t just want emails or reports. They want clarity, alignment, and confidence that you’re on the same page.

    If they’re left guessing what’s happening, you’re failing.

    Always ask yourself: What is the message you wish to convey?

    Oftentimes, less is more.

    Instead of a lengthy email, sometimes a 15-minute Teams call will not only address the topic but also the bigger picture and the next steps. But this doesn’t mean long emails don’t have a place—they do.

    Context is everything.

    I get it – it’s purely subjective from one point-of-contact to the next. But that’s the name of the game.

    Be adaptable, and don’t assume. Reach out and ask how your point-of-contact prefers to communicate.

    At the start of every engagement, even when I was agency-side, I would ask for clear directions on ways of working.

    And lastly, before you hit send, ask yourself: Does this have to be mentioned/asked/challenged right now?

    How to do this effectively:

    • Send a pre-read ahead of time. Strive for two business days ahead of time, 24 hours worse case.
    • Include an executive summary at the beginning of every presentation. There is nothing worse than having skim reading a deck full of slides without an executive summary. I’m busy. My boss is busy; their boss is busy. If you’ve made the effort to create a presentation deck, put a TL;DR at the front for us.
    • Sign up to use the same team collaboration app as your client for quick updates. Most people don’t reply to emails immediately. Instant messaging such as Slack or Teams? Completely different rules. Plus, I speak from personal experience that shooting a Slack message in a dedicated channel takes far less mental bandwidth than crafting an email. The best part is that it works both ways, so win-win!

    Here’s the truth: Great communication reduces friction, builds trust, and keeps you in the loop when priorities shift.

    2. Alignment With Business Goals

    Increasing quarter-on-quarter traffic is nice. Rankings are cool. But if you’re not moving the needle on their actual business goals – revenue, customer retention, market share – you’re just noise.

    The biggest lesson I learned when moving agency-side to client-side was this: If your recommendation doesn’t ladder up directly to business goals, then you’re wasting everyone’s time with your research, audits, and recommendations.

    And, as SEO professionals, we default to problem identification mode because that’s how most of us got started. That is, find all the problems related to a particular pillar (e.g., content, technical SEO, off-page) and mistake this list as the strategy.

    This is what I did the first week I started my first enterprise SEO role.

    I fired up Screaming Frog and found all the things.

    But I had no context as to who was responsible for resolving each issue and what their priorities were.

    What may seem like an important SEO activity may not be a business priority.

    How to do this effectively:

    • Transparency goes both ways. Just as an enterprise client expects you to be transparent, you can as well by asking what their strategic pillars are for the quarter or year. To go a step further, get tangible guidance by requesting your point-of-contact what their objectives and key results (OKRs) are. Trust me, they’ll have them because that’s corporate life.
    • Bring the right people along the journey. If you wish to propose adding content, ask your point-of-contact what stakeholders are involved in making this change happen. If you’ve discovered crawling, indexing, and rendering issues, ask who can make changes to robots.txt, to the , and to the frontend stack. Chances are, they’re all separate teams who work in their own silos and backlogs.

    The lesson is this: Your role is not to fix all the things because you simply cannot. Instead, take a minute to understand who’s who because even your point-of-contact is an advocate, not an executioner.

    Why this matters: Clients don’t want SEO in a silo. We want strategies that tie into our biggest priorities.

    Why? Because our performance review and bonuses rely on them. So, speak our language and show us how SEO helps us win.

    3. Flexibility

    Markets change. Leadership changes direction. Enterprise clients want partners who can adapt to their evolving needs without skipping a beat.

    I don’t care that you’ve sunk 80 hours into something I asked you to do. I only care about what is top-of-mind right now.

    It’s nothing personal. I probably feel frustrated, just as you are. But priorities shift, so learn to go with the flow and be an asset instead of a blocker.

    When you’ve got my back, I’ve got yours because we’re in this together.

    The key: Be agile. Show that you’re not just a plan-follower but a partner who can pivot without losing focus on results.

    4. Integrity

    Integrity is the currency of trust. Enterprise clients need to know they can rely on you to tell the truth, even when it’s inconvenient or uncomfortable.

    If there’s a mistake, own it. If timelines slip, address it early. If you think the client’s ask won’t work, say so – and back it up with data or reasoning. The worst thing you can do is over-promise and under-deliver.

    Recently, a vendor blamed their lack of access to a Sharepoint file.

    Perhaps it was true; Sharepoint can be fickle with external vendors. But the fact that this was their explanation when I asked why there was a delay in the delivery disappointed me greatly.

    In my mind, I assumed they were overextended and did not get around to the task.

    There’s a really easy fix to this: Every time your client shares a file with you, open it and see if you have the required access. Don’t wait two weeks later because that’s too late and sends a very bad message.

    Similarly, not all campaigns go to plan. For example, perhaps your digital PR campaign didn’t produce the results you expected. That’s fine.

    The second worst thing you can do is lie about it. The worst thing you can do is buy backlinks to pad the numbers.

    Enterprise search marketers know that there are no guarantees with Google. What my boss, their boss, and their boss expect are learnings.

    What did we learn from this exercise?

    What can we do better next time?

    Did we document what we didn’t plan and why in a wiki so that we don’t make the same investment in something that doesn’t work?

    The flip side of this is to stand up for yourself because I’m not looking for a lackey. Not every idea I come up with is appropriate, and I expect – no, rely on – you to tell the truth even when it’s inconvenient or uncomfortable.

    5. Operational Efficiency And Responsiveness

    Enterprise projects are a symphony of moving parts, and delays in one area can cascade into chaos. Your job is to deliver fast, precise work while minimizing bottlenecks.

    I think most enterprise SEO professionals will agree with me on this – my calendar is full. On some days, it’s literally back-to-back meetings with different stakeholders.

    I don’t have the time or mental bandwidth to hold your hand.

    When I give you a task, speed matters – not just for execution but for acknowledgment. A simple “We’re on it, here’s when you can expect an update” goes a long way in showing you’re reliable.

    Efficiency isn’t just about working quickly – it’s about working smart. Streamline processes, remove redundancies, and bring structure to chaos. Help us feel like we’re in capable hands, no matter how derailed the project gets.

    The play: Deliver fast, precise work, and be responsive. They’ll keep coming back to the agency that gets it done.

    6. Proactive Problem-Solving Without Access To First-Party Data

    Enterprise clients often operate in silos, and as an external agency, you’re rarely handed direct access to our analytics platforms.

    Limited access to first-party data is the norm, but that doesn’t excuse you from identifying issues or presenting solutions.

    The best agencies thrive under constraints. If you don’t have access to first-party data, get creative with proxies. Use publicly available tools, competitive analysis, and trend data to craft recommendations.

    When possible, suggest ways the client can share aggregated insights or anonymized data that protect internal policies while giving you enough to work with.

    Your goal is to demonstrate that you can solve problems without needing to see everything. And if data gaps are creating risks, flag them early.

    Be proactive in suggesting solutions, such as data clean rooms or integrations that can provide the insights you need without breaching compliance.

    Do this instead: Leverage external data sources.

    If there’s one thing I know from working agency-side, it is that you have access to all the tools. So, pull insights from other data sources to identify patterns and opportunities.

    Why this matters: First-party data is a privilege, not a given. By showing that you can deliver value despite limitations, you position yourself as a resilient, resourceful partner who doesn’t let obstacles stand in the way of results.

    The 6 Pillars Of Enterprise SEO Success

    Enterprise clients don’t just want vendors. We want long-term partners because procurement and onboarding are painful.

    Here’s what we value most:

    • Clear communication that aligns and inspires.
    • Strategies tied directly to business outcomes.
    • Agility in the face of shifting priorities.
    • Integrity and transparency in every interaction.
    • Efficiency that respects our time and resources.
    • Creative problem-solving that delivers results, even under constraints.

    Master these six pillars, and you’ll become more than a service provider. You’ll be a partner we fight to keep.

    More resources:


    Featured Image: wee dezign/Shutterstock

    Bing Search Updates: Faster, More Precise Results via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

    Microsoft has announced updates to Bing’s search infrastructure incorporating large language models (LLMs), small language models (SLMs), and new optimization techniques.

    This update aims to improve performance and reduce costs in search result delivery.

    In an announcement, the company states:

    “At Bing, we are always pushing the boundaries of search technology. Leveraging both Large Language Models (LLMs) and Small Language Models (SLMs) marks a significant milestone in enhancing our search capabilities. While transformer models have served us well, the growing complexity of search queries necessitated more powerful models.”

    Performance Gains

    Using LLMs in search systems can create problems with speed and cost.

    To solve these problems, Bing has trained SLMs, which it claims are 100 times faster than LLMs.

    The announcement reads:

    “LLMs can be expensive to serve and slow. To improve efficiency, we trained SLM models (~100x throughput improvement over LLM), which process and understand search queries more precisely.”

    Bing also uses NVIDIA TensorRT-LLM to improve how well SLMs work.

    TensorRT-LLM is a tool that helps reduce the time and cost of running large models on NVIDIA GPUs.

    Impact On “Deep Search”

    According to a technical report from Microsoft, integrating Nvidia’s TensorRT-LLM technology has enhanced the company’s “Deep Search” feature.

    Deep Search leverages SLMs in real time to provide relevant web results.

    Before optimization, Bing’s original transformer model had a 95th percentile latency of 4.76 seconds per batch (20 queries) and a throughput of 4.2 queries per second per instance.

    With TensorRT-LLM, the latency was reduced to 3.03 seconds per batch, and throughput increased to 6.6 queries per second per instance.

    This represents a 36% reduction in latency and a 57% decrease in operational costs.

    The company states:

    “… our product is built on the foundation of providing the best results, and we will not compromise on quality for speed. This is where TensorRT-LLM comes into play, reducing model inference time and, consequently, the end-to-end experience latency without sacrificing result quality.”

    Benefits For Bing Users

    This update brings several potential benefits to Bing users:

    • Faster search results with optimized inference and quicker response times
    • Improved accuracy through enhanced capabilities of SLM models, delivering more contextualized results
    • Cost efficiency, allowing Bing to invest in further innovations and improvements

    Why Bing’s Move to LLM/SLM Models Matters

    Bing’s switch to LLM/SLM models and TensorRT optimization could impact the future of search.

    As users ask more complex questions, search engines need to better understand and deliver relevant results quickly. Bing aims to do that using smaller language models and advanced optimization techniques.

    While we’ll have to wait and see the full impact, Bing’s move sets the stage for a new chapter in search.


    Featured Image: mindea/Shutterstock