It’s a fair question. But the conclusion most people are jumping to is wrong.
AI hasn’t killed SEO. It’s made it matter more than ever.
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The distinction isn't really between AI and humans. It's strategic versus lazy.
Where the “SEO is Dead” Myth Comes From
The concern isn’t coming from nowhere. AI Overviews are appearing at the top of Google results, giving users instant summaries without them needing to click anything. ChatGPT and similar tools are handling the kind of informational queries that used to send people to blog posts and how-to guides. Zero-click searches are on the rise.
If your SEO strategy relied on generic content to capture search volume, you should be worried. That model is broken. But that’s not SEO dying—just an old approach becoming obsolete.
What AI has Actually Changed
The most significant shift AI has brought to search is fewer clicks. AI Overviews, instant answers and conversational tools are intercepting queries that used to send people to websites. That part of the concern is legitimate.
At the same time, content publishing volume has exploded. Businesses across all sectors can now produce articles, guides and blog posts at speeds once reserved for dedicated marketers. This isn’t inherently bad, but it becomes a problem when the content is generic, untargeted, and lacks strategic purpose.
Google has got sharper at spotting the difference. Content that’s built around genuine expertise, properly researched keywords and a clear understanding of the topic is being rewarded. Content that’s been produced just to fill a page, or tick a KPI, regardless of how it was written, is being filtered out.
The distinction isn’t really between AI and humans. It’s strategic versus lazy.
That doesn’t mean AI has no place in the process. Used properly, it can help with research, structure and refining your thinking. But the content still needs to come from genuine knowledge and real experience. AI can support your writing.
It shouldn’t be doing it for you.
The bar for ranking has gone up, not disappeared. Content lacking expertise, originality, or authority is being pushed out, while useful, knowledgeable content is rewarded by authoritative sites.
What Good SEO Looks Like
Google has put significant weight behind E-E-A-T: experience, expertise, authoritativeness and trust. These aren’t buzzwords. They’re signals Google uses to determine whether a piece of content is worth showing to people.
That means who is writing matters. Whether a business has a credible online presence matters. Whether the content reflects real-world knowledge or just rephrased search results matters.
Technical SEO is still very much alive. Site speed, crawlability, structured data and mobile performance. None of that has gone away. If anything, a technically sound website is a stronger differentiator now that content quality has become so competitive.
Brand signals are also playing a bigger role. Mentions, reviews, backlinks from credible sources and a consistent presence across the web; these all contribute to how Google perceives your authority in a given space.
Rankings Are Only Half the Picture
Google has put significant weight behind E-E-A-T: experience, expertise, authoritativeness and trust. These aren’t buzzwords. They’re signals Google uses to determine whether a piece of content is worth showing to people.
That means who is writing matters. Whether a business has a credible online presence matters. Whether the content reflects real-world knowledge or just rephrased search results matters.
Technical SEO is still very much alive. Site speed, crawlability, structured data and mobile performance. None of that has gone away. If anything, a technically sound website is a stronger differentiator now that content quality has become so competitive.
Brand signals are also playing a bigger role. Mentions, reviews, backlinks from credible sources and a consistent presence across the web; these all contribute to how Google perceives your authority in a given space.
The Bottom Line
The businesses that are winning in search right now are not the ones that decided SEO was dead and stopped investing in it. They’re the ones who recognised that the rules had shifted and adapted accordingly.
Search isn’t going anywhere. Neither is the value of showing up in it. If you want to know where your website stands and what it would take to improve it, we’re happy to take a look. Reach out to start a conversation and see how your business can adapt and thrive in the new SEO landscape.


