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by almusdives
387 days ago
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I get why this is problematic for industries that depend on high traffic for ad revenue etc, but is bad for websites who are actually trying to market services that provide tangible value? Like if I’m searching for a dry cleaner in Glasgow, if I end up with the same provider, I don't care (and neither does the dry cleaner) whether I find them through traditional links or an AI-mediated search? |
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We were complaining about this and a friend of ours said something very insightful: "There's a lot of good contractors out there who suck at SEO."
So we reached out in some local Facebook groups and had people out THAT DAY and the work was starting the very next day.
Point is, the companies we were reaching out to were the absolute busiest of the busiest because they were showing up at the top of search results. As soon as we stopped using web searches, we actually started getting results.
Now, this problem exists in spite of AI but I'm worried that it's going to make it even harder for smaller, less busy companies to show up AT ALL. AI is taking the system that already existed and is curating it further with "summaries" ... so what can we expect? Only the first "top 3" businesses in your area?
Google and other search engines were already starting to kill off the "long tail" ... but with AI I think its going to be the final nail in the coffin. If you want to search for the less popular options, if you want to try and find the niche stuff ... I don't know how well it's going to work. I suppose if you can prompt it: "All the 'top' options are ghosting me, give me some alternates" then maybe people will find ways around that with these tools. Or trying to find businesses with web search was already not going to give good results anyway in current year (return to classifieds and job boards was our recent experience).