Digital Marketing From The Coalface

Transcript of Digital Marketing From The Coalface, Episode 172

Written by David Robinson | Jun 23, 2026 8:45:00 AM
This podcast was originally released on 21/05/2026.
Julie 00:00:00

Google's AI overview is pulled from search results. So fundamentally, what they want is the same as as what you would have been doing for SEO. LLMs are actually getting their information in slightly different ways. So this is really just apparently.

David 00:00:20

Well, they get it. They get it in one of two ways training data. They've got their memory, which is their training data, or they go out and carry out a live search.

Julie 00:00:27

Yeah. But I overviews seem to work a lot more like normal search.

David 00:00:32

And they're trying to obfuscate, I think, I think I mean, they're trying to protect their domain.

Julie 00:00:36

Absolutely. Yeah.

David 00:00:37

Really. Because if they don't, then the AI engines will just become the tool of choice. And they'll just base the responses on their training data on their memory.

Julie 00:00:47

Had pretty much no competition for the last.

David 00:00:50

Over twenty.

Julie 00:00:50

Years. Yeah. Suddenly there is competition and they're trying to make sure that they keep people doing things their way.

David 00:01:03

Welcome back to Digital Marketing From The Coalface. It's always amusing, isn't it? Will I get it right? Will I get it right?

Julie 00:01:09

Fifty fifty.

David 00:01:10

We've had a short hiatus while you, um, gallivanted around the northeast of England. Like in. You're down in Newcastle.

Julie 00:01:17

I was, I was I was being a digital nomad for a week. Yeah, that was fun. Apart from the chair situation, it was like there was just these tall stools to sit on at the dining table, which is quite high. And after like about three quarters of a day, I realised that my back had completely seized up. So I had to then take a stack of books and turn it into a standing desk. So there you go. Very, um, flexible way of working there.

David 00:01:45

Plenty of time to think about riveting topics for us to talk about. No doubt.

Julie 00:01:49

I've got tons and tons of things written down here, but.

David 00:01:53

I basically just got moans and groans. So probably you'll lift the tone with your with your fantastic topics.

Julie 00:02:00

But we finished the last one talking about your, um, Keswick to Barrow. So you better update our listener.

David 00:02:07

I finished it. Yay again.

Julie 00:02:09

Uh, how many times is that now?

David 00:02:11

Thirty two. It was brutal.

Julie 00:02:14

Yeah.

David 00:02:14

Brutal. Always brutal. Doesn't matter how many times you do it, it's brutal.

Julie 00:02:18

Yeah, I can imagine. Um, you did it.

David 00:02:21

Forty miles, um, eight hours, fifty five minutes. And it was.

Julie 00:02:25

Such a long time to be out.

David 00:02:27

It is. Yeah. It is, but, um, other than kind of running out of fuel a little bit, um it was fine. You did a bit of running, mostly fast walking, but you know, a fair bit of running early on. Yeah. Um, and then fast walking and um. Yeah, it was good. It's one of those weird things. I don't know if it's a metaphor for life. I mean, it's great. Walking's. Good for the soul.

Julie 00:02:47

Love. Love a metaphor for life.

David 00:02:48

Well, yeah, but, you know, you get to the point where you, you kind of, you know, you get to the sort of twenty six mile point, you've got fourteen miles left, give or take. Yeah. And it's.

Julie 00:03:00

You've done a marathon.

David 00:03:01

And it's over some really steep terrain. There's a massive climb at the twenty. At the twenty six. You've already done some climbs. Yeah. But at the twenty six mile mark you do a big climb over a over a muir. And it's um, it's one of those where it's got like the um false summit.

Julie 00:03:17

So yeah.

David 00:03:18

And yeah. And then there's another hill and it's like that. Yeah, yeah. And at that point you're pretty tired, but you've started to pick up some landmarks which are close to like, you know, eight or nine miles from the finish line.

Julie 00:03:30

So you can see that you're nearly at the end.

David 00:03:32

That's right. And then it gets to the point where you're trying to keep up a good pace because, you know, if you do, it will be over in two or three hours as opposed to if you sort of like, oh, I'm so tired, I'm going to slow down now. It'll be four hours.

Julie 00:03:45

Yeah.

David 00:03:45

Yeah. I mean, some people do take, you know, twelve to fourteen hours to do it.

Julie 00:03:51

Yeah. You know.

David 00:03:52

It's, um, it's a weird thing as well, because it used to just be the Keswick to Barrow and it's it's the sixtieth anniversary of it next week and I've been I was fascinated by it as a very small boy, watching people finish when I wasn't when I was like literally like six or seven or.

Julie 00:04:07

Something like that.

David 00:04:07

Yeah, I was ten when I did it first. Um, I've been fascinated by it. And then in a few years ago, ten, fifteen years ago anyway, maybe. Yeah, at least ten or fifteen years ago they introduced like a mini version called the Coniston to Barrow.

Julie 00:04:23

So do people join in?

David 00:04:24

So the Keswick to join the Coniston to Barrow lot having done nearly twenty miles.

Julie 00:04:30

Right. Okay. Yeah. And so they.

David 00:04:32

Have an orange lanyard and you have a blue lanyard. Other than that, it's just like everyone just piles towards the.

Julie 00:04:37

You can tell the ones that look really, really tired, look really fresh.

David 00:04:39

The interesting thing, because in my opinion, and you know, maybe I'm a bit of a Nazi on this thing, but like a reasonably healthy person should be at a walk twenty miles. That's my view. Yeah. Unless you've got something wrong with you, you should be at a walk twenty miles. Yeah. You know, it might be tough, but you should be able to do it. And honestly, some of the people that were doing the.

Julie 00:04:58

Really struggling, yeah.

David 00:04:59

They were lying on the verge and like, oh, like poor me. And I was like, oh, you know.

Julie 00:05:05

You've.

David 00:05:05

Done ten miles, mate. You know, you've done ten miles. Just get a life really annoyed me. Just kind of like just, I don't know, it shouldn't, but it did.

Julie 00:05:16

And, and.

David 00:05:17

And the ten miles from Coniston.

Julie 00:05:19

Down to Lake.

David 00:05:20

You know, it's it's like it's along the east side of Lake Coniston where Donald Campbell, uh, died when he flipped his boat over. It's right down there and it's a little bit undulating, but it's, there's no real climbing, not till you get to the sort of like they're about ten miles in when they hit the big climb with, you know, heading towards thirty miles. And when we hit the big climb and it's um, yeah, I know, I know I shouldn't, but I just think.

Julie 00:05:41

Do you think people just do it and, and haven't thought it through. They haven't done any sort of training. They haven't even tried to go and see if they can walk. It's really funny.

David 00:05:50

It's really funny. On the you even you get it on the on the walk as well. So you get people at the, at the start line who are clearly not runners running. And you just think, um, you haven't thought this through have you?

Julie 00:06:04

So you're not a runner. And you can.

David 00:06:05

Clearly see they're not runners, but they're full of vim and vigor and they're going to do this thing and.

Julie 00:06:10

Oh God.

David 00:06:11

You have to do that kind of ultra distance to really get a sense of what it does to your body and your mind. It really becomes.

Julie 00:06:19

Mind both, isn't it? Yeah.

David 00:06:20

It really it starts to become such a one person described it as some guy. He'd finished it and he said, oh, that's the actually, I think he said, that's the thirty third time I've done it. So there are there's about ten of us who've done it an awful lot.

Julie 00:06:35

Yeah.

David 00:06:35

One person's done it over forty times.

Julie 00:06:37

Wow.

David 00:06:38

Um, I had a twenty year break from it when I moved up here. And it kind of frustrates me that I took a twenty year.

Julie 00:06:42

Break because otherwise you could have been like.

David 00:06:44

I would have been like.

Julie 00:06:45

Yeah, the longest.

David 00:06:46

Way out, way out there. Absolutely. But anyway, um but he said, um, you know, that's thirty third time never gets any easier, um, something to do with the pain cave. You know, you kind of, you do kind of go into this people are going, oh yeah, come on cheering you on like, like the support people. And you're just like yeah I'm not interested. And you know what's really funny as well. It's lovely. Lovely people on the last sort of four or five miles and they've got like drinks if you want them, which is fine. They've got sweets and cakes and biscuits and you really just don't want to eat anything. You can't.

Julie 00:07:16

Be.

David 00:07:16

Bothered. And they're kind of offering you this stuff and you go, oh, thank you.

Julie 00:07:20

Probably do you good to have them. And you just.

David 00:07:22

You just can't you just literally can't eat it.

Julie 00:07:25

It's just it's just the focus on moving.

David 00:07:27

Well, they don't understand because they think, well, you must be tired.

Julie 00:07:30

You must be you must be hungry. Yeah. You're tired, you're hungry.

David 00:07:33

The biggest challenge with ultra distances is actually losing interest in eating and not being able to eat, even though you should.

Julie 00:07:40

So yeah, it's weird you think your body would want the.

David 00:07:43

Banana thing I told you about. The banana and honey work fine, but.

Julie 00:07:45

Oh yeah.

David 00:07:46

I kind of rationed it when I shouldn't have rationed it. And then when by the time I should have been eating it, I couldn't be asked, you know what I mean? So I definitely what I've done, I've ordered some gels because I've tried different gels over the years. So I've now ordered some gels and I've tried them and they're actually all right. They're quite liquid and they didn't seem to harm my tummy or anything like that.

Julie 00:08:04

So I'm gonna go.

David 00:08:05

I'm gonna go back to to gels I think. Yeah, I'm not a fan, but they kind of do what they say on the tin.

Julie 00:08:10

Yeah. You've got to just use them strategically anyway.

David 00:08:14

Anything about digital marketing. That's because it's.

Julie 00:08:17

Okay. Yeah. There's, there's sort of lots happening in, in the world. Um, Google seems to have sort.

David 00:08:24

Of in the world of search and marketing. Yeah. Okay. Well, certainly a lot happening in the world.

Julie 00:08:28

World generally, but we won't go there because that would take us more.

David 00:08:32

Dead duck. Prime Minister, somebody who's going to be the prime minister but isn't even an MP yet.

Julie 00:08:36

Yeah.

David 00:08:37

Who? Everyone who doesn't know everyone. Lots of people are hailing as the saviour of British politics and everything else. It's just like, well, why, why, why.

Julie 00:08:44

Yeah.

David 00:08:44

Where's the track record? He's done a good job as mayor of Manchester. That's quite a different job, though.

Julie 00:08:49

We vote for a political party. We don't vote for a prime minister. We vote for a party. So changing the person at the top of the party, that's not what we're voting for. We're voting for a manifesto that that party. Now, if you're in that party.

David 00:09:01

They do need a leader.

Julie 00:09:02

A.

David 00:09:02

Leader. And Starmer isn't that leader. I mean, I think I think it's right that he ships out. But it's it's.

Julie 00:09:08

But then are we not going back to this revolving doors of like a new prime minister every two weeks? And that's not healthy either.

David 00:09:14

Just need to go back to the country don't they. Probably.

Julie 00:09:17

Oh.

David 00:09:18

It's just unbelievable. There's just such a dearth of talent in politics.

Julie 00:09:21

There's no personalities. And.

David 00:09:23

Well, I think I could I'd argue there are personalities, people like Angela Rayner and David Lammy. There's certainly personalities, but I don't see any competence, leadership personalities. No, I mean, there just isn't. You just you need people like, you know, you need people like Blair. You need people like Cameron. He was a good prime minister. I mean, he went far too soon. He should never have quit after the Brexit result.

Julie 00:09:47

He should never have done the Brexit.

David 00:09:48

He didn't want people to vote leave. I mean it's it's sort of like often bandied around that it was like, you know, like.

Julie 00:09:56

He.

David 00:09:56

Didn't.

Julie 00:09:56

Think he didn't think.

David 00:09:58

Nobody did.

Julie 00:09:58

Nobody would go through. He did the referendum on the basis that, well, nobody's going to vote for it and it gets it out of the way, and then we can just get on with things. And it all just went very, very horribly wrong.

David 00:10:07

Absolutely.

Julie 00:10:08

We're still not talking about digital marketing.

David 00:10:11

Should we.

Julie 00:10:12

Try again?

David 00:10:13

Well, you can try, but I'll probably go back to the morning just fine.

Julie 00:10:16

Yeah. As I said, yeah, there's lots happening in the world and also lots happening in the world of Google and stuff. Google.

David 00:10:21

There's always stuff happening in the world of Google. Tell me about what you think is really important just now.

Julie 00:10:26

Apparently, which I have no evidence of as yet in GA4, Google Analytics, they're going to start showing AI assistants as a separate channel group. So at the moment you see organic search and paid search and stuff. They're going to add in or have added in AI assistants. So you can actually measure conversions from AI assistants. So that's going to be really useful, but I can't see it. I've checked a few of our accounts and I haven't seen it yet.

David 00:10:54

They just rolled it out in America or something like that.

Julie 00:10:56

Possibly it is new. Okay. Um, but apparently that's coming. Google ads. They've improved the you're.

David 00:11:04

Not gonna tell me Google ads is changing because that's not news. It just changes every day.

Julie 00:11:08

That's Monday.

David 00:11:10

Yeah.

Julie 00:11:11

No, they're, um, changing the, the way of setting up conversion tracking and making the integration with tag manager and analytics easier within ads. So you don't have to go out of ads. You should be able to do it all from there. Yeah, we will see if that actually makes it any better or not.

David 00:11:28

I mean, we've always we've all in fact, I was thinking of writing a blog post about it, but maybe I'll hold off if things are changing again. But but conversion tracking is something that always gets people confused. And it's not just the mechanics of it, because the mechanics of it change all the time and seem it seems that, you know, it'll only work on a Monday afternoon between two and half past two, you know, when when the sun's out and then you might have a chance of making it work. But I mean, the bottom line is I think that the reason it's contentious, I suppose, is trying to understand, excuse me, what a meaningful conversion is.

Julie 00:12:03

Yeah. It's a completely different conversation from.

David 00:12:06

The, you know, in, in B2C land, it's quite simple. You know, if you flog something as a result of a click, then that's a conversion. You made some money in B2B land. It's more complicated.

Julie 00:12:14

And Google can kind of understand that a basket checkout. And I think it seems to find that quite easy to pick up because it.

David 00:12:22

Can understand why you just put a trigger on a thank you page and that's it. Boom. You know, somebody, this person bought something.

Julie 00:12:28

And if there's enough of them. Yeah, the data makes sense. If there's like one or two, I think it struggles to it's never going to be one hundred percent accurate. If you know you've had three sales and it's showing two or four, then it's hard to know exactly what's going on. Whereas if you've got a thousand and it's showing a thousand and one, it doesn't really matter.

David 00:12:49

That's right. Yeah. And I guess really what actually constitutes a conversion as well. We've had this conversation, you know, when you use tools like HubSpot, you can actually decide to feed back marketing qualified leads to Google ads. So it only uses them to try and improve the quality of the traffic that it sends you. Yeah. And I think that's.

Julie 00:13:07

A good idea. Brain the size of a planet to work out how to do it.

David 00:13:11

It's not too bad. Um, but I mean, it's just a life cycle stage thing. Yeah. Which is fine as long as you're using those tools. If you're not using those tools, then it's still not too bad, but then it can just suddenly not work for, for no apparent reason. And it's obviously requires intervention as well, because it means that, you know, somebody clicks an advert, comes to your website, fills a form in you look at them, you decide, ah, these are people worth speaking to. So you change the life cycle stage to marketing qualified.

Julie 00:13:41

Leads and remembering to do it.

David 00:13:44

And at that point, Google gets told that that click was meaningful. Yeah. Um, whereas a lot of the time people just go for the easy option. If they fill a form and it's a lead and you tell Google, yeah, they fill the form and it could be, you know, it could be just absolute crap.

Julie 00:13:57

Yeah.

David 00:13:58

It's, um.

Julie 00:13:59

It's better than nothing. It's, it's filling in a form, but it's not that accurate.

David 00:14:03

But if you listen to this and you're using Google ads, you know, we definitely spend some time and look into what you're classifying as a conversion and how you're feeding that information back to Google, because that's how it will improve the quality of the, of the traffic it sends you in theory.

Julie 00:14:21

So the HubSpot thing is that quite easy to set up.

David 00:14:24

It's easy to set up like form fills. And then if you want to change it from a form fill to an mql, then yeah, you just do it by life cycle stage. so it's fairly straightforward to do. Um, usual thing when I was setting up one last week, it was very straightforward. Apart from the fact that if you're, if you're, you're obviously logged into HubSpot as you. So you've got to connect the Google Ads account so that you can actually do it all. It won't just say, well, somebody connected the Google Ads account. Therefore, you can do everything you need to do. You've got to prove that you've got access to it as well so that you do it. So I just found that a little bit tedious, but it just is. I mean, how much time do we waste just sort of unpicking stuff that's like unnecessarily complicated. It just seems a whole, it just seems that it's part and parcel of digital marketing. It's like, yeah, let's just make it complicated. It's like knitting fog. It's just.

Julie 00:15:21

It really is. It's, um, it's really hard to figure out.

David 00:15:26

What were you saying something about conversions. So they're going to simplify the whole conversion tracking thing between Google ads and GA4 and everything else.

Julie 00:15:32

Yeah, they're going to put it all within Google ads. So you don't have to kind of come out of Google ads, go into a tag manager, set it up there and then or set it up in analytics. And I've never quite worked out which order to do that in and how, again, they even speak to each other at all.

David 00:15:48

Again, with HubSpot, you can, you know, once you've connected your Google Ads account to HubSpot, you can just go in and you can say, show me all the contacts that that campaign created and go and look at the context. So they were, they were good contacts and we followed up on them. And it's generated X amount of business and feed that ROI, you know, back into Google if you want to. You know, it's again, using these tools makes it so much simpler. And I know this sounds like a pitch for HubSpot. I don't care what tool you use, but if you use a tool like HubSpot.

Julie 00:16:14

It is great. Yeah. You can go into the ads section and just go for contacts and then you look and go, well, that actually was someone trying to sell something. So but three of them were decent. So manually it's, you know, you can see straight away which campaigns have worked in terms of like, yeah, that's a great contact. Where does it come from? And you can trace it right back and that's brilliant if you want. But if somebody just wants a report and like, you know, quick, you know, snapshot, it's quite hard to get that go on. But maybe, maybe we'll get easier.

David 00:16:46

Well yeah, maybe.

Julie 00:16:48

Um oh, last week we were last week or whenever it was two weeks ago, we were speaking about um, like people using five search platforms and I was trying to figure out where that number had come from, but I actually have no idea where that number have come from. But I have got data on which platforms people are using to search. Okay. I think it's slightly different data, but it's, um, how many searches per day someone makes on different platforms. Okay, so YouTube is top other than actual search engines, YouTube is top with somewhere around eight searches per day per person. Mhm.

David 00:17:27

Followed by I carried out, I think two or three today. Yeah. On YouTube. Yeah.

Julie 00:17:33

X is next, which surprised me. Well, it's also somewhere between six and eight, which I kind of forget about it because I just abandoned it.

David 00:17:42

Is that not just people going on X and saying, you know, show me that video of Donald Trump falling over and he was getting off an airplane. It could be. Yeah.

Julie 00:17:50

It's still a it's still a search.

David 00:17:52

So it's nothing to get too excited about in the B2B world. No, probably Pinterest next. Yeah. Again, more B2C, more kind of give me some ideas for different wallpaper for my new.

Julie 00:18:03

Yeah, definitely. Yeah. Yeah. Then LinkedIn next at like four ish. Is that LinkedIn? There's two blues here I can't work out which is which. Yeah, that's LinkedIn then. Or is that TikTok? LinkedIn and TikTok are both round about four. I can't actually work out without moving my head miles away from the microphone. I can't work out which is which. Then Facebook connects, then read it or.

David 00:18:27

Read it slower down. Then I thought it would be higher up than that.

Julie 00:18:30

But TikTok, LinkedIn, Facebook, Reddit are all around about three or four. They kind of keep over the graph lines keep overlapping with each other. So there's, um, yeah, six or seven there that are used daily by people to do searches. Yeah. So yeah, it's, um, it's hard to keep track.

David 00:18:48

It's, I guess it's a case of, you know, like we've said before, it's a case of finding out like where your tribe hang out. Yeah. I would think for a lot of our customers, you know, their, their ideal, their ideal customers are hanging out in all of those places, probably in various in, you know, in different times of the day and in different situations. But it's, um.

Julie 00:19:07

Engineers probably less likely to be on Pinterest, I would imagine.

David 00:19:10

I would imagine, but yeah.

Julie 00:19:11

But who am I to stereotype engineers? Maybe. Maybe they are looking at, you know, yeah, hairstyles for forty five year olds or how to wear cowboy boots or whatever it is. You never know.

David 00:19:24

Yeah. If you get engineers are also twenty two year olds. Yeah, yeah. They might be baby engineers, but they're still engineers.

Julie 00:19:31

Yeah, exactly. They're probably still not hanging out in Pinterest. But if you're an engineer and you love Pinterest, let us know. Um, same research had, um, the percentage of total website visits that are, um, that go to search engines or AI or whatever. So out of all website visits in the UK and Europe, eleven percent is a search engine, one point seven percent is an AI engine and two percent is an e-commerce site. And then the rest is other websites anywhere else. So AI at the start of twenty twenty five was naught point nine percent. By the end of twenty twenty five, it was one point seven percent.

David 00:20:13

It's more or less doubled.

Julie 00:20:14

Doubled in a year. So, you know.

David 00:20:16

Yeah.

Julie 00:20:16

That's one to watch. But the search is, is pretty, um, constant. It looks like people are just searching more. They're not necessarily replacing Google searches with AI searches. They're just doing more searches.

David 00:20:28

Because that that number for. So you're saying only ten percent of the people coming to our website are coming from a search engine?

Julie 00:20:35

No, no, no. It's every time you open a browser, ten percent of the websites you visit are search engines.

David 00:20:41

Okay. All right. No wonder marketing's confusing.

Julie 00:20:45

I know. So yeah, basically fifteen percent of total website visits are searching type things.

David 00:20:52

Okay.

Julie 00:20:53

If that helps at all.

David 00:20:54

Yeah. No, I.

Julie 00:20:58

Didn't think it would.

David 00:20:59

Are you just gonna keep spewing stats at me all day?

Julie 00:21:02

That's it. Beat you until you just.

David 00:21:05

Get the last person just switched off. Yeah.

Julie 00:21:08

Now, Google has also, um, got tennis match on Wednesday, and I've just found out that someone has a garlic and onion intolerance for the sandwich purposes.

David 00:21:17

Well, just tell them to bring their own sandwich.

Julie 00:21:19

I know Right. Um, Google has given guidance on SEO and a e o or g e o or whatever.

David 00:21:29

What's it saying?

Julie 00:21:30

And this is this is new, new stuff from Google. So it's saying.

David 00:21:33

Where is it coming from this information? Is it.

Julie 00:21:35

Actual.

David 00:21:36

Google, actual Google.

Julie 00:21:37

Actual.

David 00:21:37

Google. It says like the actual Google who phoned me last week because they were trying to figure, they were trying to tell me that, that my account, someone had tried to change the phone number on my account, someone in Hamburg or somewhere like that. Right. And, but basically they were scammers, very plausible. And they said so. But we think your your phone has been I think your device has been compromised. We're going to send you a code. Can you please tell us what the number is? And you know, one.

Julie 00:22:04

Of those.

David 00:22:04

G hyphen da da da da.

Julie 00:22:06

Codes.

David 00:22:07

Yeah. I was nearly taken in by it. And I'm pretty good with these things that they were they were pretty.

Julie 00:22:11

Plausible, quite feasible. But what would have happened if you'd given them the code?

David 00:22:14

Well, if I'd given them the code, they would have then been able to. That would have proven to Google that they had my phone and it was me, and then whatever they were going to do after that. Um, luckily, um, I just gave them a another nonsense number, but as soon as I gave them the other nonsense number, they hung up. Oh really? What was that number again? And the line just went dead. And it was from a mobile number as well. Mind you, even when Google do phone from a mobile number these days. Yeah. Well, yeah. Anyway. So watch out if you get somebody rings you up and they ask you to recite the g hyphen, yada, yada number that they've triggered it.

Julie 00:22:50

And have they sent it to your mobile as a.

David 00:22:54

Text? Has they've tried to do something and Google said, right, just to make sure it's you will send a code to your phone. Yeah. And they'll, they'll trigger that event. So it sends the code. So it all sounds.

Julie 00:23:04

Very.

David 00:23:04

Plausible.

Julie 00:23:04

You're helping them hack into it basically.

David 00:23:07

Yeah. It's, uh, what do they call it? Social engineering type thing situation where they just create a little sense of urgency and it sounds feasible. And it sounds like Google very well spoken person at the end of the phone.

Julie 00:23:19

That doesn't sound like Google. I don't actually.

David 00:23:21

Know.

Julie 00:23:21

No.

David 00:23:22

Sorry. What were you saying?

Julie 00:23:24

I have no idea.

David 00:23:25

It was that black bit.

Julie 00:23:26

Yeah. So yeah, Google basically says.

David 00:23:29

It was it was about what Google are now saying about about SEO and.

Julie 00:23:32

SEO. It's the same.

David 00:23:34

Yeah. The same. Nothing's changed.

Julie 00:23:35

They're saying.

David 00:23:37

I think it's useful, good content that helps people solve their problems that they've been saying since two thousand and eight.

Julie 00:23:43

They're saying, yeah, provide non-commodity content, unique expert led. And that adds value beyond common knowledge. So same old, same old. But having dug a little bit deeper into that, that's Google's AI overviews pool from search, the search rankings, search results page and SERPs. God, that's a struggle today. So, um, the overviews are pulling from search results. So fundamentally what they want is the same as, as what you would have been doing for press. Oh, yeah. Um, the like LMS are actually getting their information in slightly different ways. So this is really.

David 00:24:22

Cloudy.

Julie 00:24:23

Apparently.

David 00:24:24

Well, they get it. They get it in one of two ways.

Julie 00:24:26

Training data.

David 00:24:27

They've got their memory, which is their training data. Or they go out and carry out a live search.

Julie 00:24:31

Yeah. But they could be looking like for mentions of you, not just your pages. And their eye overviews seem to work a lot more like normal search. So yeah. Um, unique, expert led, helpful content and.

David 00:24:46

Whatever that means.

Julie 00:24:46

They've said that, you know, the chunking thing that's been bandied around quite a lot, you know, having lots of little chunks of information. They've said, nah, it's fine. You know, the engines are clever enough that they don't need little chunks of information. They can figure it out. So don't worry about chunking. Chunking is chunking is dead. Um, and they've said there's no ideal page length. Shorter pages can work just as well or longer pages, depending.

David 00:25:12

In other words, nothing helpful at all?

Julie 00:25:14

No, no, just.

David 00:25:15

They're trying to obfuscate, I think. I think they're trying to I mean, they're trying to protect their domain.

Julie 00:25:21

Absolutely. Yeah.

David 00:25:22

Really?

Julie 00:25:23

Yeah.

David 00:25:24

Because if we. Because if they don't protect their domain, then the AI engines will just become, you know, the tool of choice. And they'll just base the responses on their training data, on their memory.

Julie 00:25:36

Google's had pretty much no competition for the last, well, you know.

David 00:25:42

Over twenty years.

Julie 00:25:42

Yeah.

David 00:25:43

Yeah.

Julie 00:25:43

So suddenly there is competition. And yeah, they're trying to make sure that they keep, you know, keep people doing, doing things their way. So that's, that's what they're saying. They've also put out some kind of guidance about, um, AI basically is a skilled content abuse is when many pages are generated for the primary purpose of manipulating search rankings and not helping users.

David 00:26:10

Yeah. But that's been going on for a long time, hasn't it?

Julie 00:26:12

Now. But then they've sort of added a little bit about sort.

David 00:26:14

Of because there was a.

Julie 00:26:16

AI generated content.

David 00:26:17

As well, or late twenty four, where a lot of these things were coming out like that can detect whether something was written by a human or written by AI. And now, you know, you can you can get AI to write content that, you know, let's face it, there are plenty of bad writers in the world, you know, so if you look at something and you just think, well, this, you know, the grammar's not very good. This isn't this isn't put together very well.

Julie 00:26:38

It's probably written by human.

David 00:26:39

It's probably written by a human.

Julie 00:26:41

I've seen people who are very good writers get pulled up for being AI because it's too good.

David 00:26:46

Yeah. Tell you a little story about that. When I was when I worked at the University of Aberdeen, my boss at the time, who sadly is no longer with us, uh, Doctor Neil Hamilton, he, um, he wrote something once and he asked me to check it and I was, I was reading it. I was like, Doctor Neil Hamilton wrote this. He's got numerous papers and it was awful. And I went back to him and I said, I said, this isn't this isn't. He said, oh, sorry, I should have explained. It's written for a child it's written so a child would understand it. So it was very slim.

Julie 00:27:14

It to me as if I'm a five year old.

David 00:27:16

Yeah. It was that kind of ah, right. That makes sense now because it didn't quite resonate like what he'd written. But, um, where were we were that we were talking about like humans.

Julie 00:27:26

If you write really well, you get flagged up as AI because it actually doesn't sound human because it's too perfect.

David 00:27:31

Yeah. I mean, developing a tone of voice to use makes makes absolute sense, you know, where AI is concerned. But, you know, ultimately, you know, using AI can take the grind out of producing great content. Yeah, it just, it really can, as long as you don't rely on it. And we've said this plenty of times, there's nothing wrong with using AI. And the search engines are saying the same thing.

Julie 00:27:52

Yeah. I mean, it's not saying don't use AI to generate it says don't use AI to generate many pages to manipulate search rankings and, and make it unhelpful. It's said this abusive practice is typically focused on creating large amounts of unoriginal content that provides little or no value to users, no matter how it's created. So it's not just how it's created. Just don't generate garbage, basically. So basically, Google has produced guidelines that say exactly the same thing as all its other guidelines have ever said.

David 00:28:22

All Google's ever wanted people to do. I mean, it's ridiculous. Even that statement makes me teeth itch because Google has made, you know, a multi-billion pound business out of consuming other people's content. Yeah, great. Somebody needed to do it because otherwise how would we possibly find stuff? You know, if you if you rely.

Julie 00:28:40

On.

David 00:28:41

Like a librarian to, um, you know, to kind of, you know, put it all in the, whatever that system is called, um, you know, so it needed indexing, it needed curating, you know, automatically not, not, not human, not with a human curator in order for it for, for content to be discovered, content to be found. But it quickly turned into, you know, what Google recognised, I suppose, was that, you know, the fact that people come to them looking for information. So you make sure your information is presented in a way that we can consume it. So we can then regurgitate it to people and send you traffic. And in the meantime, we'll maybe intercept some of that traffic and get them to click our adverts and make tons of money, which is, you know, in simple terms, that's what's happened.

Julie 00:29:23

That's all it is.

David 00:29:23

Yeah. That's all it is. I mean, like most of the internet is fueled by, you know, people getting tricked into clicking adverts or clicking adverts because they want to click the advert. Um, but Google's never said anything different. It's always just said, you know, you know, create content that people are looking for. And if you do, we'll reward you by sending you traffic. And in the meantime, we'll probably just nick some of that content and put it on our page so they don't have to visit you. But thanks for the content anyway. Yeah, you know, but you know, so it's just a massive game. It's exhausting. I've said that before.

Julie 00:29:56

It's just saying, well, help us make our product better because if you provide more useful content that makes, that makes Google more useful. Yeah. Um, yeah. And if you provide garbage, it makes Google garbage. So if people are going to continue using Google at all, it needs to be full of useful content. But having said that, it doesn't police it. No, it, it says.

David 00:30:17

It trusts the internet to police it.

Julie 00:30:19

Yeah.

David 00:30:20

By looking at citations and trust signals and all that kind of stuff. And it's the only way it can do it. It's too much content for it to be done any other way. It has to be an automatic automated process and algorithm.

Julie 00:30:31

It is. It's better.

David 00:30:33

So the revelation from that little snippet of stuff is.

Julie 00:30:36

Google's changed nothing.

David 00:30:37

Google's changed nothing. But you know, the interesting thing, I mean, Leslie sent some stuff through for us to look at and possibly talk about. We said some good stuff in there and it's talking about a March update. I don't know. I don't follow the updates.

Julie 00:30:49

Particularly, but, um, I think that's.

David 00:30:51

What Google has always tried to do with the updates is, is weed out, weed out.

Julie 00:30:57

The crap.

David 00:30:58

The crap, basically. So if you found a little way of fooling Google like in back in the day. Private blog networks. They were the big thing.

Julie 00:31:08

So you're talking.

David 00:31:09

About somebody a few hundred dollars, you got access to their private blog network where you could put as much content content as you wanted with links back to your website or your clients websites. And that would sure. That would look like to Google. It would look like trust signals, private blog, blog networks. Then they got discovered and they. And they figured out how to. So, so all those people that were relying on the private blog networks got stuffed. Yeah. And so, and it's always been the case that if you're looking for ways to game the system, then eventually, probably not always. Yeah, you'll get caught out. And that's all they're saying. Now they're saying exactly the same.

Julie 00:31:45

It's also saying inauthentic mentions are a no no. And that's things like buying links. It's still talking about like don't not buying links, although everyone knows that that actually does work. Yeah. If you do it well.

David 00:31:58

Because they have no way of detecting it if it's done properly.

Julie 00:32:00

Yeah. But they're, they're still banging on about that as well. Mhm.

David 00:32:05

Yeah. Because, you know, if, if their algorithm is manipulated sufficiently, as you rightly say, the search results start to become even worse than they are. And let's face it, they're quite often awful. Yeah. Search results. Um, I was looking at cars at the weekend online. I went, actually went to a garage. I might talk about that. Christ, that was exhausting.

Julie 00:32:26

Oh. It's painful.

David 00:32:27

Um, but I was looking at cars and I thought, oh, well, I wonder if there's a Lexus dealer in Perth, you know, Perth's ninety miles away.

Julie 00:32:34

Yeah. It's quite close.

David 00:32:35

Yeah. So Lexus Perth. Oh they go great. Click. Started searching. Well why, why why the price is in dollars. Perth Australia. Yeah. I mean it's just watched me go. Dundee Aberdeen. I'll check Perth.

Julie 00:32:47

Australia.

David 00:32:48

Perth must must mean Perth Australia must be wanting to buy a car from Perth in Australia. That's how clever those systems are, you know.

Julie 00:32:55

Yeah, yeah. My daughter's in Newcastle and she said that she got really excited about something or other opening up in Newcastle and.

David 00:33:02

Newcastle, Australia.

Julie 00:33:03

Yeah. Newcastle, Australia.

David 00:33:04

I've driven past that.

Julie 00:33:06

So yeah, it's like, well you know, surely it must know where she is. I don't know whether it was tick tock or whatever Instagram or whatever, but you know it knows her location. Why on earth would you show something. You know, it's get it right. Yeah. The other thing Google are doing, what's Google?

David 00:33:24

Did you say Google was saying something about e e o as well? Or is what you just said apply?

Julie 00:33:29

It said it's it's the same. It said that for, for its purposes, um, it's, it's, it's still SEO that it's, it's not differentiating.

David 00:33:39

Yeah. But is it saying that so that you don't differentiate to help the LMS learn faster?

Julie 00:33:45

Yeah.

David 00:33:46

Probably because the LMS quite like structured data, don't they. They quite like schema. Yeah. And Google's been saying for quite a while now. Oh, don't worry about schema anymore. It does mention.

Julie 00:33:54

Schema. Yeah. It's very much when it said about the chunking. And it also mentioned, um, it wasn't that bothered about schema, but it did say, you know, yeah, you can use it to in certain circumstances, but it was, it was very much playing down the schema thing.

David 00:34:08

It would possibly playing it down because when it started talking about it, marketers the world over went, oh, schema, let's, let's just ram everything with schema because that works now. And, you know, do that thing that marketers do.

Julie 00:34:20

Yeah. Break everything, break everything. Essentially. Um, in the AI responses there now.

David 00:34:28

Um, is this the AI overviews in search results as opposed to AI mode?

Julie 00:34:35

Possibly both. Okay. But AI overviews, I think, um, they're going to have actually have the, um, where, where the source that they got the information from.

David 00:34:44

Okay. I think I might have seen them introducing that.

Julie 00:34:46

LinkedIn or Reddit or whatever they're actually going to put in where it was.

David 00:34:49

A link to the actual source or just to the domain of the, of the source.

Julie 00:34:54

It says we're adding more context to these links, like a creator's name, handle, or community name to help you decide which discussions you might want to read or participate in. So it's keeping its options open there. Um, but it is going to give you more detail on, on the source of the random information that it's chucking at you. Okay. But I mean, if it's from Reddit or LinkedIn doesn't make it more accurate. It makes it probably more likely to be a load of rubbish, but I'm not sure if that's helpful or not. But at least you know where the rubbish is coming from.

David 00:35:26

That's right. Yeah.

Julie 00:35:27

So that's another thing it's introducing. It's also in Google business profiles. It's um adding social links.

David 00:35:36

Okay.

Julie 00:35:37

And they were never in there before. And it's, but it's going in and generating them itself. So it's worth going and checking if it's got them right and, and adding it got checked out. Yeah. It's got hours. Right.

David 00:35:50

Um so they are in there then.

Julie 00:35:51

But it didn't have.

David 00:35:52

Us talking about doing it. They are doing.

Julie 00:35:53

It. Yeah. It didn't have our LinkedIn or our TikTok though, so it doesn't seem to be be pulling in the LinkedIn ones. So if you're, if you're a LinkedIn person.

David 00:36:03

Who owns LinkedIn, is it meta? Yeah, it's but they are putting Facebook.

Julie 00:36:08

Is it. No, no, it's not meta. It's Microsoft.

David 00:36:10

Microsoft. Oh that's right.

Julie 00:36:12

Yeah. Just want to be aware of that. Um go and check and and add in any that it's missed out.

David 00:36:18

I can see why they're doing it because I do see traffic. Um like through search will land on our site, look at a few pages and they'll click away to one of our social platforms. Quite often it is LinkedIn. Yeah. Um, yeah. So I can understand why they may be doing that.

Julie 00:36:35

Yeah. I think people want the sort of validation of, you know, this is a company and they're, they're sort of active or they're, they still exist or it's just sort of where people are comfortable.

David 00:36:45

Yeah. Makes sense.

Julie 00:36:46

Um, well, apparently a new new scam and the, the marketers break everything world. Okay, people, web developers, web designers are speaking to people and saying that if your website's old, then the AI engines can't read it.

David 00:36:59

Okay.

Julie 00:37:01

On LinkedIn, somebody said the answer to that is, well, it can read Jane Austen, so it probably can read a ten year old website. Um, yeah. Nonsense. Sounds like be fooled. I mean, if if it's structured wrongly and you've got a, like some sort of block that the AI engines can't read it, fine. But I mean, that's not going to be there if your website is ten years old, because it wouldn't have been in place, wouldn't, wouldn't have existed. So yeah. Nonsense.

David 00:37:26

So yeah. And if you do searches, you'll quite often get links, search result links to very, very old websites. Yeah. But what if the content's good? The content's good, I suppose. Yeah. But yeah, I suppose people will, you know, try anything in order to.

Julie 00:37:40

Oh yeah. Your website's old. Yeah. You won't get picked up by engines because it's too old and they don't recognise it or whatever.

David 00:37:46

Yeah.

Julie 00:37:47

Not true.

David 00:37:47

It kind of feeds in a little bit to something I was I wrote I scribbled something down last week, you know, potentially as a potential topic of discussion. And we've kind of we don't need to discuss it in, you know, in any detail, but this kind of marketing, marketing is getting increasingly exhausting. And it's like, that's one of the reasons because like, you get people say, oh, well, if you're not doing this, you're, you know, you're, you're dead in the water. You've got to do this and you've got and, you know, those people never have to do it necessarily, you know, they're just good at telling people what to do. Oh, if you want to get fit, you need to go running. You need to do ten miles. You need to do.

Julie 00:38:19

fifteen thousand steps.

David 00:38:20

A day. What do you do? Oh, I'm not doing anything, you know. Yeah. Yeah, absolutely.

Julie 00:38:24

That was a marketer as well.

David 00:38:25

Yeah I know.

Julie 00:38:27

Surprise, surprise.

David 00:38:28

We're talking about steps. Just go quickly back to the K two B seventy six thousand seventy six thousand steps.

Julie 00:38:37

Oh my God. Did you watch explode at that point.

David 00:38:42

This watch the Apple ultra that I use it it manages the previous watch. I had whatever version it was it kind of it got it just sort of ran out of interest and sort of stopped at like thirty six miles or something. It's like, I'm done, I'm done, I'm finished.

Julie 00:38:54

I can't, I.

David 00:38:54

Can't carry.

Julie 00:38:55

On.

David 00:38:55

The ultra was fine. So that's how I know it was like what it was.

Julie 00:38:59

That's crazy.

David 00:39:00

It is.

Julie 00:39:01

Yeah. But yeah, yeah. Ten thousand steps was was invented by somebody trying to sell pedometers. So it was like, you need to measure your steps, you need to do ten thousand and look, here's a, here's a gadget.

David 00:39:12

I got plenty of conversations. Oh no, I just gotta get my steps in. I gotta get my steps. Yeah.

Julie 00:39:16

I mean, yeah, it's really good.

David 00:39:19

Absolutely.

Julie 00:39:20

But seven thousand is the sweet spot. And anything over seven thousand is neither here nor there. But everyone's different.

David 00:39:26

Yeah. That's right.

Julie 00:39:28

What else have you got.

David 00:39:29

I've been I mean the whole marketing, you know, is getting increasingly exhausting stuff. We've we've kind of covered. I know that, um, some of the stuff Leslie was sending, sending through was, you know, about the whole SEO thing and SEO, all that stuff. And you've, you've kind of covered most of it anyway. It's kind of like sort of business as usual. If you're if you're producing good content and you're getting good citations and you're, you're credible and you.

Julie 00:39:52

Get.

David 00:39:53

You get mentions and all the rest of it, then. Yeah. But, you know, it's, it does feel hard still like it always has like a racket.

Julie 00:40:01

Oh, yeah.

David 00:40:02

And you are going to be up against people who are just playing the system and will do anything and don't really care whether it works or whether it doesn't or whether it could get.

Julie 00:40:10

Them long term.

David 00:40:10

Get them, you know. Yeah. Penalized or whatever. They'll always do it. So and it's, you know, it's, it's always the, one of the difficult ones when you're working with customers is the, you know, the whole justifying your existence. And that's often the.

Julie 00:40:25

Stick that she ordered through something and it says all these things. And then you've got to spend time kind of going, well, yes, that's important. And we're working on that. And you know, that isn't important. And yes, we're not doing this because there's only so many hours in a day or that's not our speciality. And, you know, we're focusing on these things and they sort of expect you to tick all the boxes in one of these reports. And, you know, you just have to prioritise.

David 00:40:53

Exactly. Yeah. You do anything else?

Julie 00:40:56

Yeah.

David 00:40:57

Oh go.

Julie 00:40:57

On. There's more. Um headless CMS seem to be reappearing as a thing.

David 00:41:03

Okay. Is that I wonder why. What's the context?

Julie 00:41:06

Um, because apparently I wrote this down fast. They provide fast delivery of content and they resist the heavy load of AI agents, whatever that means. But the, um, yeah, they can ping stuff out very, very quickly. And, and basically, the AI agents seem to like the way that.

David 00:41:23

Content management systems are always separated content from presentation. That's what they did. I mean, Joomla, WordPress, even HubSpot, all of them separate the two things out. Yeah. Headless CMS, for anyone who doesn't understand the concept, is that you have a content.

Julie 00:41:41

It's like a database repository. Yeah.

David 00:41:44

See how I paused there? Content repository. And the reason that that could be fast is that you could then put a very lightweight web page together that has no, um, nothing in it that isn't doing something. And then you just squirt the information into it remotely from the headless CMS. You can use HubSpot as a headless CMS with WordPress to manage all your content, including all the funky stuff that HubSpot does, but actually display it, give it to people using a hub, a WordPress plugin that goes and grabs the content from HubSpot, which is on a massive content delivery network. So it's ultra fast.

Julie 00:42:23

You can also use it if you want to send content to an app and a website and a shop and lots of different places. You only need to do it once and it can squirt it to lots of different places at the same time. Yeah. But then somebody said something like.

David 00:42:37

Somebody said something.

Julie 00:42:40

That's a great webinar. Somebody said something. No, just started my brain going. So is there a case for. Basically, you don't have a website as such. You just have a. The AI agent asks a question and you create the answer on the fly. Yes, I think that.

David 00:42:58

But then how's that going to work in search?

Julie 00:43:01

Yes. Yes. No. It would it would just be free if if it gets to the point where, you know, AI agents are, are the majority of searches and like blue links don't really count anymore. Yeah. You just have a ton of information. And when the AI agent asks the question, you would just generate it to answer the very specific question. Yeah, yeah, it's probably coming.

David 00:43:26

Yeah. I mean, I suppose it already does because I mean, people are using agents, you know, with their websites and people land on a website and instead of looking at the content, they'll just speak to the agent and ask it for the information. So it's doing that already.

Julie 00:43:40

Yeah. HubSpot has it in the like the knowledge bank things. All the chatbots have it. So you've got the knowledge bank and somebody types something into chatbot and it. Yeah, it makes up the answer on the fly. So that could be your whole website.

David 00:43:54

But in order for LMS to learn, they need to be able to crawl and read content. In order for Google to work, it needs to be able to crawl and read and regurgitate content so that content has to be there. But yeah, but it might be, you know, it might be that you almost create a website just for the LMS. You don't, you don't, you don't want people going anywhere near it. That project that I mentioned last time, which, you know, I'll mention again now even I'm not talking about what it actually is. It's primarily for the LMS. Yeah. You know, the one, the one that we're working on internally.

Julie 00:44:27

Yeah.

David 00:44:27

That's true because nobody's ever going to bother to read the content that that we're putting together. But the LMS might because they.

Julie 00:44:34

Want to consume.

David 00:44:35

That, that kind of content. So, um, I think, I think, you know, I've, I've spoken about headless stuff over the last few years. I've struggled to get the guys interested to investigate it. But, um, you know, I think there's something in it. I quite like the idea of just having your content and then you just say, right, let's, let's use, I don't know, something like Astro, which is an ultra fast framework. And we'll deliver the website using Astro, but we'll manage all the content inside HubSpot. Yeah. You know, just to, to, to produce a website that's lightning fast and will tick all of the, you know, core web vitals boxes and all that kind of good stuff. Be interesting to see how effective it was. But yeah, you know, just to explain to people quite often, like with a content management system like WordPress, Joomla, HubSpot, all the rest of it, you know, when you, when a web page renders a lot of the, a lot of the stuff that's behind the scenes, if you go like view source of website of the web page, stuff that doesn't really need to be there like entire libraries of JavaScript because one functions used things like that. And so, you know, I guess if you have this headless thing, you can just think what type of page is this? It's literally just a blog post, right? So we just have a header, title element, yada yada.

Julie 00:45:47

Yeah. You don't need all.

David 00:45:48

This stuff, all the rest of it. And then just pull in that information, raw information, you know, display it HTML and it's a really, really, you know, fast resource. Yeah. And again, because you've got complete separation between content and presentation, you're never going to be worried about, well, let's, let's move our website to WordPress from HubSpot or HubSpot.

Julie 00:46:06

To.

David 00:46:07

Webflow or whatever. Doesn't really matter. You can be completely almost, you know, display presentation agnostic. Yeah. But all of your content is safe in this. As you said, it's like a massive database.

Julie 00:46:19

Yeah. But.

David 00:46:21

But but. Oh, no, no.

Julie 00:46:23

Talking about like making your things to make your site really, really fast and everything. There are, um, like plugins that kind of Make sure that I'm really struggling today. The content only.

David 00:46:37

So many different to usual.

Julie 00:46:38

No, I know the content only loads us. People scroll down the page.

David 00:46:43

Oh yeah. I mean the guys use that lazy.

Julie 00:46:45

Lazy load images. But there there's a version of that for text as well. So it only loads the top of the page. And then as people scroll down, it loads the rest of the content. I engines can't read that. They can't read the content because they don't scroll. They just look at the whole page. Yeah. So if you're using um, that sort of thing to speed up your site. Yeah. You're screwed. So that is a, although that was quite interesting.

David 00:47:11

It's not difficult to, um, programmatically to detect that it's an agent. This is an agentic visit to our website. Right. Render everything. Just render it render the lot straight away. I'm sure. But yeah, because, you know, we should always be trying to create the best result for people.

Julie 00:47:29

Yeah.

David 00:47:30

And if that is a good result for people because it's faster or whatever. Yeah. Um, I mean, how many web pages really need to load a bit at a time other than videos and things? Yeah. You know, it's like, you know, it's kind of like just because you can do it doesn't.

Julie 00:47:45

The words aren't the thing that take ages is.

David 00:47:48

Generally.

Julie 00:47:48

That's, uh, yeah, that's something.

David 00:47:50

Especially, you know, bandwidth is less of an issue anyway because matter, whether it's the device in your pocket or your desktop or your laptop or whatever, you've usually got access to huge amounts of bandwidth.

Julie 00:47:58

Yeah. But talking about humans and machines, that was part of the webinar that I was talking about. Okay. They were talking about headless CMS. They were also saying that websites need to work for humans and machines, but you need to think about it slightly different for both. And you just said that I'm like, oh, actually I wrote that down. Yeah. So humans, it's all about the experience, the hierarchy. So things are easy to find. The journeys through the website, the interaction and the branding for the AI. It's basically none of that. I doesn't care about any of that stuff. It cares about the structure, the entities, the metadata, the context, and the relationships between the things. So you've got to do both. And yeah.

David 00:48:43

Yeah.

Julie 00:48:44

So, you know, yeah, it's got to be easy to travel through and find your way around and look pretty for the humans. But then the AI is very much just about like how it's all laid out and how it's all labeled and headings and things like that.

David 00:48:59

Being slightly contentious, this idea of the humans journey through a website. Yeah. I don't think that's real.

Julie 00:49:08

I mean, it is to an extent, if you're on a generic page, you're going to learn, click through and get more information if you're really interested, or you're either going to go to a case study or a contact page. You know.

David 00:49:20

Very occasionally we get people who go like they seem to go through our website, like the whole thing. And they seem to look at it very occasionally. Most people, it's one or two pages. Well, usually it's like, you know, you can see they were looking for website management or they were looking for branding or they were looking for search or what the HubSpot help or whatever. And then they might go contact us. They might go about us. Sometimes portfolio, sometimes they'll go home, sometimes portfolio. But this idea that people will carefully go through and look at all your pictures.

Julie 00:49:49

No, no, not all the pages.

David 00:49:50

They just don't do that.

Julie 00:49:51

But the journey is very much. Yeah. Um, home page or product page or whatever page they landed on then then some sort of validation. Uh, it's about us or portfolio or something like that. And then contact. That's a very typical journey. Yeah.

David 00:50:07

Yeah. That's right.

Julie 00:50:09

Yeah. So yeah, the AI engines don't care about that. And you've kind of got to think about both when you're building a website, which just again, just makes it all more exhausting and confusing and, and hard, which is fun.

David 00:50:19

Well, yeah, the, the, the agentic, um, the, the agentic searches or crawls or whatever they are, They struggle with content that's rendered using JavaScript as well, which is the same thing, which is exactly what you've been saying. Yeah. So it's just broadly speaking, if it's if it's rendered with JavaScript in order to make it more efficient or whatever, or to make it pretty or to make it fade in or whatever it does. Yeah.

Julie 00:50:40

That's not helpful.

David 00:50:41

It's not, it's not gonna, it's not going to help things. No. Probably not.

Julie 00:50:44

There we go. Um, I think, I think I've run out of steam.

David 00:50:47

That's okay. We've been yapping away now for, you know, fifty odd minutes. So, you know, two or three people that are still left probably thinking, yeah, you know, that's enough. I've driven round and round the block in order to make sure I get to the end of this fantastic.

Julie 00:51:01

Podcast in the car outside the house going. Will they shut up now? Because I need my tea.

David 00:51:05

Do you ever do that thing where you drive in, you know, a distance, you might just come back from Aberdeen or something, which is like, what, thirty or forty miles to get home and you just get home and you just sit in your car and you go, ah! And you just feel quite restful in the car.

Julie 00:51:18

Kinda. But, um, I know people that do.

David 00:51:21

Karen does.

Julie 00:51:22

Sit.

David 00:51:22

She gets back and she'll sometimes have a nap in the car rather than go in the house because it's just like, I don't know if it's like something soporific about about the journey home because, you know, it's a, it's a, it's a nice drive from out to this part of the world from here, from the city.

Julie 00:51:38

Some people struggle with transitions.

David 00:51:41

Mhm.

Julie 00:51:41

So like going, just going from one situation to another. They just need a little moment to adjust. So they just like sit in the car and get ready for the, the transition into a house. And I think sometimes it's just the, the sort of like giving your brain time to adjust to being in a different place.

David 00:52:00

Anyway. You've been listening to all kinds of stuff today from, uh, myself and Julie in the, uh, in the podcast. Hopefully little bits of it were interesting. And if none of it was interesting, but you just like listening to people babble on, then maybe you've enjoyed it as well. We certainly enjoy doing it. All right.

Julie 00:52:16

Thank you.

David 00:52:17

Bye.