EP 289: How To Leverage AI for SEO (for more than content writing)

EP 289: How To Leverage AI for SEO (for more than content writing)

by Everyday AI

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About This Episode

29:42 minutes

published 10 days ago

American English

© 2024 Everyday AI Podcast – An AI and ChatGPT Podcast

Speaker 10s - 13.4s

This is the Everyday AI ORG show, the everyday podcast where we simplify AI and bring its power to your fingertips. Listen daily for practical advice to boost your career, business, and everyday life.

Speaker 215.84s - 266.54s

When you think of using AI for search engine optimization, you might just think it's for writing content, like hundreds of thousands of words and just churning out as much SEO optimized content as possible. But that's not all that AI is good for when it comes to SEO. So we're going to be talking about that today on everyday AI. I'm excited for this one as a former SEO geek and, you know, someone that still does SEO, very stoked for our guest today.But if you're new here, welcome. Like I said, my name's Jordan PERSON. I'm the host of Everyday AI ORG. This is your daily live stream podcast, free daily newsletter and your guide to grow your company with generative AI. So if you're joining us on the podcast, make sure to check out the show notes and go to your everyday AI.com to sign it for the free daily newsletter.People don't understand y'all like it's a university and a half of the amount of information and expert insights that we have for free available on our website. So make sure you go check that out. All right, before we get into our topic for today, let's start as we do every single day with going over the AI news. All right. So California is the first state to go all in on AI. California's governor, Gavin Newsom's administration announced the state's partnership with five companies to develop and test generative AI tools to improve public service.This initiative makes them one of the first states to establish guidelines for purchasing AI technology. Generative AI is obviously the type of artificial intelligence that can create content in response to prompts such as text, audios, and photos. So California's plans to use this technology is to improve customer service call times and wait times, improve traffic, road safety, etc. In the initial trial for California will involve four state departmentsand the public may have access to those tools in the future. So pretty interesting move there out of California. All right. Next piece of AI news. Well, there's a new competitor in the AI music race. So 11 Labs ORG, a voice or text to speech AI startup is offering an early look at a new model thatturns prompts into songs, full songs. So the company hopes to use this technology in various industries, but it may face opposition due to concerns about copyright and job displacement for artists. So 11 Labs ORG new AI model can generate both song lyrics. And it literally just lays down the entire song for various purposes, such as creating jingles or even dubbing movies. So right now it is just in preview.They posted one three-minute song. And I'll tell you, it is pretty good, right? I think it's already at least one preview. I don't know if it's quite at the level of Suno PRODUCT, but it's pretty close for a first attempt. All right, our last piece of AI news and kind of relevant to today,while we have some new OpenAI ORG search news. So OpenAI ORG's new search engine announcement has been pushed to this Monday, May 13th, according to a new Reuters ORG report. Also, model specs and code names have been leaked by a lead engineer at AIPRM, one of the more famous chat GPD Chrome PRODUCT extensions. So the source code of the new Android chat GBT app reveals some future code names called GPT4L, GPT4L Auto, and GPT4 Auto PRODUCT, and which could beactually the new dynamic mode that some users have gotten early access to. So presumably this might be how the new search engine that ChatGPT PRODUCT has been working on to compete with Google, potentially perplexity might be rolled out as soon as Monday. Obviously, tune in. We'll be bringing you the AI News Live Monday.All right, but that is not what you're here for. You're here to talk about how you can leverage AI for SEO. All right. So if you are joining us live on the live stream, appreciate it like Brian, Rolando PERSON, and Denise and everyone else, make sure to get your questions in today. I'm excited to go ahead and welcome our guest for today.Please help me in welcoming Steve Toth, the founder of SEO Notebook ORG. Steve, thank you so much for joining the Everyday AI ORG show.

Speaker 3266.86s - 269.32s

Hey, thanks for having me, Jordan PERSON. All right.

Speaker 2269.36s - 274.64s

Hey, can you tell our listeners a little bit about what you do, your background? Yeah, for sure.

Speaker 3274.76s - 319.72s

So I was the SEO manager at FreshBooks back in 20, from 2018 to 2020. And during that time, I started my newsletter, which now goes out to 18,000 subscribers weekly. And essentially that newsletter is one actionable piece of SEO strategy. Not a lot of commentary on the industry, not a lot of fluff, just essentially one actionable thing that you can try on the same day. And I've been doing that for almost five years now and just loving it. And yeah, in 2020, I leftFreshBooks ORG, became an SEO consultant for them and now an SEO consultant to a number of mainly B2B SaaS companies and have a team of 14 right now and just loving what I do.

Speaker 2320.54s - 352.62s

So if you aren't an SEO geek and I have to get this out of the way. Like I've been in and out of SEO, quote unquote, I don't know, for five to 10 years, depending on how you look at it. We still do SEO for clients. So Steve PERSON is the real deal. You know, so if you are interested in SEO, make sure in our newsletter today we'll be sending links to all of his information there.So let's just go straight to the end, Steve PERSON, and start off, how can people leverage AI for better SEO, aside from just content writing?

Speaker 3353.28s - 438.06s

Yeah, I think there's just, you know, multiple ways, but one of the interesting LinkedIn ORG posts that I put out focused on using AI after your human written article is done. And there's just some really interesting ways that we can do that. So, for example, Google ORG publishes what's known as the helpful content guidelines.And you can actually ask chat to, you know, digest these guidelines and rate your content against them and give you pointers on how you can better meet those guidelines. So little things like that. Also, you know, I'm using it to strengthen my articles. So I'll essentially ask chat to read the article and, you know, provide a key takeaway summary so that it's, you know, super digestible. I'll also ask it to scan the article and show and help my readers with a good reason to read the article.So really looking at the benefits and what they're going to learn. So, you know, it kind of, for me, the, you know, human written side of things is still really important. And I think it's a way to continue to stand out. And, you know, if we look at the writing talent that's out there, it's also quite plentiful. So I would just say don't sleep on human writers just yet, but use chat to essentially enhance their articles. And that's actually such a great piece

Speaker 2438.06s - 493.98s

of advice. And I want to actually dive into that in multiple steps and multiple follow-up questions here, Steve PERSON. So what you're saying as an example, because a lot of people out there, you know, whether you know it or not, you know, you might actually be getting a lot of business from SEO, right? Like I've worked with clients in the past and, you know, oh, come to find out, yeah, like 75% of, you know, companies, you know, incoming leads or inquiries are coming fromSEO and they may not even know it. So, you know, talking about this keeping humans at the front and center, it seems like so many people are just rushing, right, to use tools like, you know, chat GPT or Claude PERSON or Gemini PRODUCT, et cetera, to just write literally as much AI content and throw it on their website. Is that a bad approach, you know, because you mentioned humans first, which I love. So what should companies, business owners, marketers be doing, you know, when they look at those two different approaches? Yeah.

Speaker 3494.1s - 570.94s

I think, you know, there's still a place for a hybrid version of that. I think where you're going to get into trouble is mass producing AI content. You know, like we were talking about if Google ORG suddenly sees that you're publishing, you know, hundreds of articles a day or thousands of articles a week or what have you, it's going to be like, hmm, how did you actually do that? Maybe we'll take a closer lens and see, you know, the actual quality of this content.So definitely any like flagrant abuse like that that I think is super risky. And Google ORG came down pretty hard on sites that did that and made public examples of sites that did that at the beginning of March of this year. So definitely avoiding that at all costs. But I think, you know, when it comes to authenticity and your readers and honestly the long-term health of Google ORG, I think it's a, you know, a big problem for them to surface 10, 10 blue links or like even an AI summary of AI articles, you know, like that ultimately threatens the long-term health of Google ORG and the faith that usersput in it. So I think they're going to, it's just common sense that they're going to try to combat that in multiple ways. Yeah. And, you know, one other thing that you said there,

Speaker 2570.94s - 575.5s

Steve, in your first response is, you know, using, you know, chat GPT. And, you know, obviously,

Speaker 3575.5s - 579.46s

you know, different large language models are, you know, better at some of these things than others.

Speaker 2579.46s - 621.46s

But, you know, using chat GPT after the article is written and, you know, maybe sending it Google ORG's guidelines and saying, how does this stack up? How, you know, take us back to when you first started to do that and talk about some of those results and maybe why that's important, you know, for other people to do. Hey, this is Jordan, the host of Everyday AI ORG. I've spent more than a thousand hours inside ChatGPT PRODUCT, and I'm sharing all of my secrets in our free Prime PRODUCT, prompt, polish, chat GPT coursethat's only available to loyal listeners like you. Here's what Lindy, who works as an educational consultant, said about the PPP ORG course.

Speaker 0621.98s - 640.5s

I couldn't figure out why I wasn't getting the results from chat GPT that I needed and wanted. And after taking the PPP ORG course, I now realized that I was not priming correctly. So I will be heading back into chat GPT right now to practice my priming, prompting, and polishing.

Speaker 2641.34s - 663.32s

Everyone's prompting wrong. And the PPP ORG course fixes that. If you want access, go to podppp.com. Again, prompting wrong. And the PPP ORG course fixes that. If you want to access, go to podpppp.com. Again, that's podpppp.com. Sign it for the free course and start putting chat GPT to work for you. Yeah, I think, you know, when you're doing stuff like that, you can honestly

Speaker 3663.32s - 702.7s

just go and compare yourself to the ranking results. And you can use also chat to evaluate your blog against the other ranking results. And you'll just see that by implementing some of those recommendations, you just add a layer of richness to your content. And essentially, scanability as well is another really important thing. Because as we know, like when most of us happen upon an article, we're just kind of scanning for the answer,you know, checking the headlines and stuff like that. And just making sure that we are offering something that the rest of the articles aren't. I think naturally you're going to get rewarded. And some of those strategies are really going to help you do that.

Speaker 2703.86s - 731.92s

You know, I'm curious. Have you done any, you know, comparisons or testing? I know a lot of people do, you know, they might put in, you know, 10, 10 articles that are fully AI written, 10 articles that are just humans, 10 that are a mixture. But, you know, I'm curious if you've either done any testing, if you've seen any studies, but just overall, you know, performance of, you know,how you find that right mixture of, you know, the human and the AI ultimately writing for humans.

Speaker 3732.5s - 746.34s

Yeah. I think what I've seen is the human AI content tends to have a longer dwell time on that page. Like people that literally the time on the page is longer because you're providing better information. Yeah.

Speaker 2747.06s - 747.2s

Yeah.

Speaker 3747.32s - 750.64s

And you said, you know, you said something which, you know, I kind of chuckle that,

Speaker 2750.74s - 777.3s

you know, if it's, if there's so much AI content out there on the web and then, you know, you have the, you know, Google ORG's search generative experience, SGE or perplexity, you know, creating AI summaries. It's like, okay, AI summaries of, of AI written content. Do you, do you think or feel that at some point there just might be too much AI content or so much AI content out there that, hey, all of a sudden, this human content is justreally going to stick and stand out? Yeah.

Speaker 3777.6s - 859.92s

So one of the things obviously that Google ORG is built on is links, right? So links, I highly doubt that, you know, the super authoritative sites of the world, you know, the newspapers that we have like WSJ or New York Times ORG or whatever, when you get links from those type of sites, it really, you know, bolsters your website. I don't think those, I think Google ORG is going to pay closer attention to the links that super authoritative sites are giving out because those sites havehigh editorial standards and they're not going to be linking out to AI content right so i feel like if you want to win long term and like win at the the links game that essentially you know the human written content is going to prevail in those circumstances. And also, I think that LLMs, when digesting the world's information, are going to prioritize looking at the articles that have the most links, because ultimately those are like the ones that humans have voted to be the best, right? So, you know, if you've got an AI blog and barely, you know,any links to it versus, you know, somebody's, you know, very authentic industry expert type blog that's got a bunch of links to it, you know, the LLM ORG is going to favor analyzing and, and adding, you know, being trained on that type of content versus something that doesn't have links.

Speaker 2860.58s - 900.72s

Yeah, it's, there you go. Link building is not dead, right? It's always the, the internal battle among SEOs, right? Is link building matter? Is it dead? So there you go.So Steve, I'm curious because it also seems like, you know, one of the way that you're leveraging AI or maybe, you know, helping clients leverage AI is to actually make it more human or better for humans, right? So how do you think that that process actually plays out? Can a chat, GBT, you know, or a Claude, you know, Gemini PRODUCT, etc? Can you actually use it to improve content that is written by humans to make it more helpful for humans? Can AI actually do that?

Speaker 3901.46s - 961.32s

Yeah, I mean, like I think what I just mentioned around summaries and key takeaways and whatnot, looking at your entire content and making it more digestible, I think that ultimately helps the consumption of, you know, your message. It can, you know, also help you create more catchy headlines. So one of the examples I've talked about in SEO notebook is essentially looking at all of the ranking title tags, so the blue links in Google ORG, counting how many instances there are of each word, reformulating a title based on the most frequent word usage, and then asking chat or whatever modelyou're using to create like a unique spin on that. And I've done that and I have examples in my newsletter about that specific strategy. And the unique angles that it creates just essentially help you stand out so much on the search results. So, you know, ultimately making you more helpful.Yeah.

Speaker 2961.68s - 989.14s

And yeah, that's ultimately what it's all about, right? Whether it's a human, AI, AI plus human is writing helpful content for humans using these search engines. Great, great question here coming in from David PERSON. So asking if crawlers and search engines get smarter and leverage AI will focus on SEO decline as the back end is able to determine context versus us humans guiding it today. Great question. What do you think on that one, Steve PERSON?

Speaker 3989.78s - 1057.08s

Well, I think ultimately we need inputs from humans to tell whether or not something is actually serving them. And if you think about the data that Google has through their Chrome PRODUCT browser, understanding whether or not, you know, people actually scroll all the way to the end of the article, digest the article, click on the links of the article, share the article, book market, you know, just basically engage. Those are things that lend itself to like a human stamp of approval,essentially. And it's, you know, Google also struck a deal with Reddit ORG to use their API to essentially train its own models on, you know, human like everyday language. And they're also going to be looking, I think, at the links inside Reddit ORG, because obviously Reddit ORG is very kind of like highly moderated and hard to spam, harder to spam at least.

Speaker 21058.36s - 1094.56s

You know, one thing that I'm always thinking about. And, you know, I'm not going to ask you to put on your, you know, your wizard hat. But, you know, clearly things are moving in a certain direction, right? So, you know, Google ORG, you know, is coming out with their, you know, search generative experience, which is essentially, you know, very similar to perplexity. You know, you have perplexity. Here you are with, you know, open AI, you know, presumably coming out with a search engine in a couple of days. What does that mean, you know, both for SEO and for how humans maybe are going to be consuming content on the internet?Like what do you think as a, you know, SEO expert on that?

Speaker 31095.38s - 1173.06s

I mean, it's super hard to predict what's going to happen. But what I can tell you is that people have predicted the death of SEO for a very long time. Like when featured snippets first came out and you got your answer all within the SERP, it was like game over, SEO is dead, and that was in like 2014, right?And obviously my Google ORG search consoles tells a much different story. And the other thing that I think is important to realize is that Google ORG is very much in control of how much traffic it sends to the web. And there's definitely certain aspects of the web that it doesn't really want to reward as much, like let's say affiliate content for camping tents that or like,you know, what have you, like toasters or, you know, laptop stands and like, you know, just random affiliate type websites that it doesn't really want to reward as much. And I think SGE is going to be one of the first to wipe out those types of sites. But there's still, you know, I think a long-term viability, especially in the niche that I'm in that I've purposely chosen, which is B2B SaaS. I think that, you know, people still need to go to those sites, watch the videos, consume the contentto really understand what those products are. Yeah.

Speaker 21173.26s - 1213.86s

And, you know, related to that, you know, we talked about Google ORG's SGE, which, you know, essentially it, you know, kind of gives you, you know, oh, here's, you know, highlights from the first three to five just kind of rewritten, you know, oh, here's, you know, highlights from the first three to five, just kind of rewritten for you. You know, does Google ORG know, right? Does Google know when content is AI? I think there's always, you know, different, different takes, different methodologies. And, you know, if so, or if not, you know, what does that actually mean for people producing content for the web, right? Like, oh, if it's allowed, should everyone be doing it?If Google ORG can detect it, should no one be doing it? Where I know it's a gray area, but, you know, walk us through that kind of what that looks like.

Speaker 31214.22s - 1285.96s

Yeah, for sure. So I don't think Google ORG has the ability or the, they won't, they won't want to like go through every article on the web and run an AI detector detection tool and say this is AI or this is not. That's not a scalable solution for them. It's not very much. It's not in line with the kind of things that their engineers would do. But in this beginning of March update that happened that essentially made an example of a lot of sites that were abusing AI content, they looked for patterns,right? So as an AI language model, you know, like things like that, if that was in your content, then obviously, like, that's pretty risky, right? So basically it looked for footprints. And the other thing I think that they'll be able to do is like what we mentioned, looking at publishing frequency and kind of raising some potential red flags for sites over abusing and launching too much content in a short period or essentially looking at the type of content that you're producing.Does your content only really answer one question? Well, that's a piece of content that's very easy to, you know, write with AI. But if your content is really, you know, a comprehensive guide very easy to, you know, write with AI. But if your content is really,

Speaker 01286.04s - 1306.8s

you know, a comprehensive guide and goes through, you know, multiple viewpoints and very well researched and lots of links, those are the kinds of content pieces of content that are, you know, generally not going to be 100% produced by AI. And I think that that's the type of content that's going to be favored long term. And that's the kind of content that's going to get links.

Speaker 21307.48s - 1309s

Yeah, that's a good point, right?

Speaker 31309.72s - 1314.22s

And, you know, speaking of long-term, you know, so Steve PERSON, earlier, you know, you mentioned

Speaker 21314.22s - 1374.44s

the Open AI kind of partnership deal with Reddit ORG. We just saw the same about two days ago with Stack Overflow PRODUCT. So there has, and, you know, maybe Stack Overflow PRODUCT is one of those early examples of, you know, large publishing sites that really just saw, you know, a lot of their traffic just just kind of go away, right? And it may be just in certain niches that maybe people are using, you know, for, you know,chat, GPT or a different large language model instead, you know, but if someone out there, you know, has seen, you know, a huge, you know, drop off in traffic, you know, what advice, you know, might you have for them? If it is something that, hey, maybe this is one of those things that, you know, an AI search engine or an SGE or perplexity might really just take a long term big chunk out of this type of search. You know, what advice might you have for them or what could they be doing to, you know, maybe regain some of that because, yeah, like organic traffic is super important for companies.

Speaker 31375s - 1419.92s

I think you really have to take probably like at least a week going through the SERPs that the search engine results pages that you used to rank in and really taking stock of the pages that have won right so understanding then like what google is replacing you with and doing your best to achieve parity or you know even go above and beyond what's what's currently ranking um if somebody has lost, you know, a ton of traffic, my guess is that your content was deemed low quality from Google ORG and that you probably want toget rid of a lot of it and probably consolidate your topics into a fewer number and more high

Speaker 21419.92s - 1445.98s

quality articles. Yeah. Yeah. No, that's that's that's very, very helpful advice. Yeah. And I think, you know, a lot of companies don't even take the time, right, to do exactly what you said when it's, it's a fairly, fairly simple step and extremely important. Great, great question here from, from Tara PERSON. So just asking, right? And I'm curious, too, you know, so when it comes to AI, you know, what are your favorite tools for SEO?

Speaker 31446.96s - 1533.32s

Well, for AI, like specifically, I guess the open API, we do a lot of work with Python PRODUCT and utilizing that. But I will just shift the topic to my favorite tool that is the most underrated tool that there is, and that is Google.com. So looking at the auto-suggest results, the related searches, the people also ask, all those elements really help us kind of understand the path that Google ORG wants to steer users down. And I can give like a very quick tip that is super useful. What you'll, and this was in one of my newsletters, essentially you can Google a keyword likebest mortgage rates, for example. And then you go back up to the search bar and delete best mortgage rates and begin typing sort of question-based keywords. So like what is, when does, how to, and then you're going to start getting auto-suggests that are related to mortgages, right? So when I did that and I typed in when does, it said, when does the Fed ORG meet again, right? After you've typedin best mortgage rates, and it's like you're never going to get any SEO tool connecting topics like that. So I'm a huge fan of using Google ORG for keyword research. And then beyond that, I would say H.RFs is probably my favorite.

Speaker 21534.32s - 1585.16s

Love to see those hacks from someone that knows. Yeah. Like originally I was like, oh, kind of like answer the public. But then when you said that, I'm like, oh, that works in a little bit better or maybe a different way than even answer the public. But then when you said that, I'm like, oh, that works in a little bit better or maybe a different way than even answer the public. So I think that's a great tip for people that, you know, costs zero dollars and zero cents. So, you know, one other, you know, question that that I had, you know, what about how you can use AI to call users to do something, right?Are there certain ways? Because I think, you know Are there certain ways because I think, you know, sometimes great copywriters and, you know, providing value are maybe just doing that. But maybe they're not really, you know, putting that extra effort to say, how can we, you know, convert this person?How can we, you know, get them to take an action? Is there a good way to use AI to, you know, really improve that call to action? Yeah, you can definitely look at the call to action of your competitors improve that call to action.

Speaker 31587.88s - 1624.78s

Yeah, you can definitely look at the call to action of your competitors and feed them into chat and ask them for something similar or something better. Another thing that I like to do is after my article's done, is ask it to essentially find places in the content that it would be great to add a CTA. So little things like that and just, you know,getting it to assist with your copywriting. Let's say you even have a CTA, but you're just unsure of this one word that's in it. You know, ask it, what are some other words I could use in place of X? Things like that are, you know,hugely valuable and ultimately end up enhancing your content and just are time savers as well.

Speaker 21625.36s - 1666.48s

Yeah, that's great. Another great point there. So, Steve, we've talked about a lot in today's show. We've talked about, you know, how you can use AI after, you know, a human rights and article to improved it. We kind of talked a little bit about Google ORG's, you know, shifts on their stance aroundAI and some of the best practices for actually making content more human and better for humans. But, you know, if you, you know, as we wrap up, if you had to give, you know, that one piece of advice to someone on, you know, the best way that they can use AI, aside from just, you know, writing content, you know, in bulk, What is that takeaway piece of advice that you have

Speaker 31666.48s - 1725.52s

for people? Probably looking at what you have produced either on a page or as your sort of map of all your content, so-called topical map on your website and asking AI to essentially enhance what you've already written. You know, asking things like, what, you know, out of this comprehensive guide that I've written, what are some topics that I haven't yet thought about, right? And then really getting that sort of last layer of polishon what you've already produced and already researched. And then just one other, you know, really important thing, I think, is don't neglect, you know, don't just work within chat, GPT. Utilize the Google ORG search results as much as you can get an understanding of what Google likes by actually looking at that stuff and then pull it into chat and ask it to analyze and synthesize that data.

Speaker 21726.12s - 1732.82s

Got to love it. Just such great advice from an industry expert. Steve PERSON, thank you so much for your

Speaker 31732.82s - 1737.36s

time and for joining the Everyday AI show. We really appreciate it. Thanks. My pleasure, Jordan PERSON.

Speaker 21737.36s - 1744.58s

And hey, as a reminder, yeah, a lot of great advice there, whether you are an SEO expert, a marketer,

Speaker 31744.66s - 1745.84s

or just trying to get your

Speaker 21745.84s - 1759.56s

small business off the ground with a little more organic traffic. I think that there is great insights in there for all of us. So if you haven't already, make sure to go to your everyday AI.com. Sign up for that free daily newsletter. And we'll see you back for more Everyday AI ORG.

Speaker 11759.76s - 1782.42s

Thanks y'all. And that's a wrap for today's edition of Everyday AI ORG. Thanks for joining us. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave us a rating. It helps keep us going. For a little more AI magic, visit Your EverydayAI.com and sign up to our daily newsletter so you don't get left behind.Go break some barriers and we'll see you next time.