SEO Rockstars 2026: Day 2 - Joy Hawkins Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FlKTqu-ntf0 ============================================================ [00:04] Oh man, had never had an intro like that [00:06] before. Thanks, Mike. Okay, so where do [00:08] I have to stand to not have echo? All [00:10] right, let's [00:12] here. [00:13] That's good. Okay. All right, so [00:15] speaking of personal injury lawyers, I'm [00:18] going to start with one. Uh, we had a [00:20] client that when AI started really [00:23] getting a lot of attention, this guy was [00:25] like, "Man, I'm going to figure this AI [00:27] thing out and I'm going to make all [00:28] these pages for my website and I'm going [00:30] to make them all different, but I'm [00:31] going to target every single city in my [00:34] entire state and I'm just going to [00:35] create several hundred pages using AI [00:39] and this is going to be, you know, great [00:40] for my business." and he asked for my [00:42] opinion expecting that I'm going to [00:44] praise him and then I'm going to tell [00:45] him this is a great idea and he's super [00:46] smart and I'm like yeah I don't know if [00:49] I do that. I'm like in fairness I [00:51] haven't actually witnessed a lot of [00:52] firms try this but I don't think it's [00:54] going to work. He did not like that [00:56] answer. He went ahead and published them [00:58] anyway. And what's really funny is the [01:00] day that he published them. We go into [01:02] search console and we're kind of looking [01:04] for increased traffic and this guy only [01:06] had like maybe 200 pages on his site [01:09] already. So he like doubled his site and [01:12] you would think that you would have like [01:14] this noticeable imp impact to his [01:16] traffic. I will say that little increase [01:18] had nothing to do with any of these [01:19] pages like one page on his site that we [01:21] had optimized. But basically nothing [01:23] nothing happened. In fact the only [01:25] metric that went up was the number of [01:26] unindexed pages on his site. So this [01:30] really didn't work. Um now if you're [01:32] sitting here thinking that the problem [01:34] is because you use AI, that is not it at [01:37] all. Um, and I'm gonna explain. There [01:39] was another case uh around the same time [01:41] that reached out to me on the local [01:43] search forum, which is a free online [01:45] forum. It's actually, I think, where I [01:46] met Brian. Um, and this guy reached out [01:48] because he had a manual penalty on his [01:50] site for thin content. I don't see this [01:53] often in local SEO. It's pretty rare. [01:55] So, I wanted to look at the site. So, I [01:56] asked him if he could send me the site [01:57] and I took a look. Basically, this guy [02:00] had created thousands of pages, service [02:02] area pages is what we call them, um, [02:04] targeting different cities all over. or [02:06] I believe he was in the UK and this is a [02:09] screenshot showing like the warning he [02:10] got. Um essentially his site tanked, [02:13] everything um stopped ranking. He had [02:16] these location pages literally [02:17] everywhere. And the kicker with these [02:19] was that he's like, "Joe, you don't [02:20] understand." He's like, "Google's giving [02:22] me this manual action, but like I had [02:24] people handwrite these. I paid people to [02:26] go into every page and make them [02:28] different and like reword the content." [02:31] I was like, "Dude, this is such a [02:32] terrible strategy." Because the problem [02:34] isn't like you don't need to go, you [02:36] know, change red to maroon or blue to [02:38] navy. That is not exactly what Google is [02:40] going after when they talk about what [02:42] kind of content you should write. Um, [02:43] and this guy did all that and he still [02:46] got screwed. Um, so what we want to talk [02:49] about today is this concept of good [02:51] content. Like what exactly is Google [02:52] looking for? Because I hate it when [02:54] people just say, "Oh, make good content. [02:55] It's the stupidest thing ever." Uh, what [02:57] Google really is trying to do is figure [02:59] out like, okay, there's a lot of garbage [03:00] out there that AI is producing. There's [03:02] a lot of good stuff and Google's trying [03:04] to figure out what which is which. Um, [03:07] and if there's any site that is doing [03:09] this well, this would be Reddit. Now, [03:11] Reddit is one that I've been keeping a [03:13] really close eye on because they have [03:14] just surged in a way that I've never [03:16] seen before. Um, when you look at their [03:18] traffic trends over the last few years, [03:20] it's actually insane. Uh, I don't see [03:22] too many sites that look like this at [03:24] the magnitude that they have. We're [03:26] talking like millions and millions and [03:27] millions of visitors. Uh, their stock [03:29] price isn't doing so bad either. Um, but [03:32] basically the other reason why we are [03:34] really paying attention to Reddit is [03:36] they are one of the top sources for LLMs [03:38] as well. So there's kind of a big [03:40] trifecta here. Um, I think I never heard [03:43] Reddit spoke about at any conference [03:44] that I ever went to a few years ago. Now [03:47] tons of people are talking about them. [03:49] Um, and the good news is I'm not here [03:51] going to talk about like necessarily [03:52] like how to get on Reddit. I have a tiny [03:53] bit of that, but like it's more like [03:55] what are they doing? Why in the world [03:56] does Google want to surface Reddit so [03:58] much? Um, can you do that with your [04:00] website? I've kind of broken it down [04:02] into six steps that I'm going to go [04:04] through and reasons how Reddit works, [04:07] but also that you can apply to your own [04:08] site. So, the first one is actually [04:10] really simple, but something that I just [04:12] don't see businesses doing ever, which [04:14] is using stories for content. So, what [04:17] we often see on Reddit is people will [04:19] talk about their problems, right? [04:21] They'll be like, you know, long novel. [04:23] This is all the things that I had happen [04:25] to me. Um, I moderate quite a few [04:27] subreddits and this is literally what we [04:29] get. Um, so we're like, how do we figure [04:31] out how to do this for our clients? So, [04:33] first up, we had a criminal lawyer. So, [04:35] basically what we did is we asked them, [04:36] can you give us all the details of like [04:38] various cases that you did? Uh, tell us, [04:40] you know, the details of the DUI. Maybe [04:43] uh you shouldn't be driving if you have [04:44] a fifth DUI from meth. I don't know. [04:46] Just saying. But this is a guy that he [04:48] helped and he talked about all about how [04:51] basically he got the case thrown out [04:53] because the evidence wasn't handled [04:54] correctly by the cops and um talked [04:57] about like the fines and all the [04:58] numbers. We've been talking about [05:00] numbers here. Google really loves [05:01] numbers. If you are a lawyer and you put [05:03] numbers on your page, uh it's kind of [05:05] crazy what we what we see happen with [05:06] that. So the cool thing is is this helps [05:09] organic rankings. It helps local pack [05:11] rankings. All we did was add a story um [05:14] with the details. We repeated this [05:17] concept on a different client which was [05:18] a dentist. Um, same kind of thing. We [05:21] were like, "Okay, let's get a story of a [05:22] patient that you helped. Give us the [05:24] details. Leave out the names obviously [05:25] for privacy reasons." And the cool thing [05:28] was adding this story to his site not [05:29] only increased his traffic and rankings, [05:31] it also increased his conversions, which [05:33] is clearly all that matters. A painter [05:36] was even easier. Um, in this case, we [05:38] basically just like before and after [05:40] photos. How much was the job? How long [05:42] did it take you to paint this house? [05:44] Like, are we talking weeks? Are we [05:45] talking months? Like, you know, give me [05:47] numbers, time frame. Um, and this [05:49] basically took this page from nothing to [05:52] actually ranking and starting to get [05:53] traffic and leads. Personal injury [05:56] lawyer. We tried two different things. [05:57] Again, I have a lot of clients that just [05:59] really want to use AI for writing. Um, [06:01] and they're like again, okay, Joy, I'm [06:04] gonna different client, also a personal [06:05] injury lawyer, but was like, I'm gonna [06:07] have uh AI write some content, then have [06:09] my lawyers approve it. Um, check it for [06:11] accuracy, and then we'll publish them. [06:12] And I'm like, h I don't know, guys. [06:14] We've been down this road before. This [06:16] is how their a content performed. Not [06:18] really great. Um, and even when they [06:20] tried to add it to like existing pages [06:22] to see if that would lift it. Yeah. Not [06:24] so much. This is a page that we actually [06:26] used a case that they worked on. So, [06:29] real stories, those actually worked. And [06:32] to give you an idea, like this will help [06:34] them rank as well for just lawyer terms, [06:36] like the really, really good terms that [06:37] people want to rank for. Um, it would [06:39] had a very significant impact. Now, this [06:42] is really easy because anybody can do [06:44] it. The way that we are doing it on my [06:46] agency is we have interviews with our [06:48] clients every month. We try to get them [06:49] on the phone. We have the questions [06:51] listed out, which I'm going to show you [06:52] how to get those. And we ask them and we [06:54] make sure that we dig so that they give [06:56] us those like semantically relevant [06:58] things because that is what's helping [07:00] the ranking here. It's not necessarily [07:01] just the story. It's like if you're [07:03] talking about a DUI, you need things [07:05] like alcohol or meth or a fifth DUI or [07:08] police or all those words that Google [07:10] associates with getting a DUI. Um, and [07:13] those naturally will come out in client [07:15] stories. So, we interview the clients, [07:17] we record it, we have the transcript, we [07:18] use that transcript to come up with [07:20] content. It's actually a pretty simple [07:21] process, one that anybody can implement. [07:24] Great. [07:26] So the lawyer was using AI. So was he [07:30] not taking some of the core documents [07:33] putting that into like hey these are the [07:35] court documents for this and he was mean [07:38] doing that. [07:39] I I don't think any of my clients are [07:40] smart enough to to do that to be [07:42] completely honest. Yeah. No most of [07:44] these guys that I talk to and like [07:45] business owners really like to think [07:47] they can do SEO themselves. Like we we [07:49] work with a lot of those types. We tend [07:51] to attract businesses that research SEO [07:54] and have watched our YouTube channel and [07:55] things like that. [07:59] Like when you do a case, [08:02] you have PDFs from like the like case [08:05] that you're working on, you know, at its [08:08] conclusion stuff. You take those that [08:11] stuff, throw it in there, and you think, [08:13] can you like spit out a decent story [08:16] like she's suggesting? [08:17] So, I think there two answers that [08:19] question. [08:23] bike. [08:26] Here we go. [08:28] This is a great conversation. [08:34] I think they're Oh, so they know that [08:37] the people on the call can say, "Hey, [08:39] I'm actually an attorney." [08:41] Yeah, I stated a holiday in last night, [08:44] but I'm an actual attorney. [08:48] does not make sense. [08:52] I I definitely think you can do that [08:54] with some caveats depending on what your [08:57] jurisdiction is and what your law is [08:59] where you do. We have some restrictions [09:01] in the jurisdiction I practice in that [09:04] we can't disclose documents even to our [09:06] clients. Uh we can't do that. So there's [09:09] a way that you need to make sure that [09:11] you're as the attorney that you protect [09:14] yourself and your bar license. But we do [09:16] interviews like that and try to get that [09:19] data. And I was going to say this [09:22] another time, but I probably won't talk [09:23] again. Uh for those of you haven't used [09:26] Joy, we used Joy, my law firm. Um and we [09:31] lost our Google businesses last summer [09:33] was instrumental in helping get the uh [09:37] the [09:38] What's your law firm? Look, I had no [09:40] idea. [09:41] You don't even know me. I get it. [09:45] Sorry. [09:47] That's amazing. All right, we'll have to [09:48] talk after you tell me. That's [09:49] hilarious. [09:51] Um, yeah, and just to clarify, like I'm [09:53] not anti-AI content. I definitely hate [09:55] chat GBT. I'll throw that. I know that [09:57] there was some comments yesterday about [09:58] that. We have found that the content [10:00] that's coming from chat GBT lately is [10:01] utter trash. Like it is really bad. And [10:03] I do think that's what most of these [10:05] guys were using was chat. Um, and I [10:08] think the other problem is like the [10:09] reason why customer stories work so well [10:10] is they are they were unique, but they [10:12] have all the details that Google wants. [10:14] And we've tried various like variations [10:16] of this, even like transcribing calls [10:17] and throwing it into chat GBT. And the [10:20] problem is the semantics. It's really [10:21] bad at it. And I picked uh Kyle Roof's [10:24] brain because I had him on our YouTube [10:25] channel. And he was like, yeah. He's [10:26] like, LLMs are really bad with [10:28] semantics. And he's like, maybe they'll [10:30] get better with time. He's like, but if [10:31] you're missing that, you know, the the [10:33] the triples, all that stuff, it doesn't [10:35] do that naturally. And I think that that [10:38] um that business that I was talking [10:40] about, actually both of them, fact that [10:41] they're rewarding their content, they're [10:43] they're losing all that value. Like [10:45] they're taking their best content, [10:46] they're rewarding it. They're actually [10:47] making it worse. Um so there's there's a [10:50] lot of things at play here, but I found [10:51] the story angle just works better than [10:54] almost any content strategy we've tried. [10:56] And it's something any business can do, [10:57] which is great. [11:02] Yes. [11:04] Sorry. [11:07] Where are you placing the stories? [11:10] Yeah, that's actually a great question. [11:11] So, that's another thing people often do [11:13] wrong. They have like a case studies. [11:14] This is typical for lawyers. They'll [11:16] have like a cases page. You don't want [11:18] it on a cases page. You want it on the [11:19] page about that topic. So, if you're [11:21] trying to rank for like fifth DUI and [11:24] that story about the fifth DUI you would [11:25] want on your fifth DUI page. [11:32] Yeah. Dead. You don't want that. It's [11:34] the worst. No, my plumbers, they want [11:36] it. [11:40] Well, put it there too then. Make them [11:42] happy and then also put it on their [11:43] other pages. [11:46] Yeah, just do both. [11:48] Yeah. [11:52] Uh I'm trying to think if I have link [11:54] building in here. Uh the link built like [11:55] link building to the stories. All this [11:57] is [12:01] that would [12:04] I don't think so. I don't think that [12:05] link building would have any impact on [12:06] this either way. A lot of these pages [12:08] like for the anchor text I'm sorry [12:10] for the anchor text like on in the [12:12] content or you talking about like links [12:14] coming to the page [12:15] coming to the page. Do you anything that [12:18] would help like storytelling links? [12:21] Um not really. The one thing that we we [12:23] definitely use like anchored links but [12:25] at a very small scale which that's a [12:28] pattern I've been w I'm not talking [12:29] about that today but pattern I've been [12:30] like observing with businesses [12:32] especially small businesses um that are [12:34] getting nailed by the core updates a lot [12:36] of them have heavily used anchored links [12:38] that are like not branded like you know [12:41] best plumber in Seattle 500 times but [12:43] like even like 15 times Google's [12:45] starting to pick up on so we're starting [12:46] to see that the volume that you can do [12:49] it's like oh that's yeah [12:56] Yeah, [12:57] I got [12:59] I got my [13:01] So all these games I'm talking about [13:02] were strictly content. There was no link [13:03] building at play in any of them. [13:06] I was just ask on Reddit when you had [13:10] Google train [13:12] on the Reddit stuff. So would you [13:14] actually if the lawyer gives you back a [13:15] story but it's kind of bland or dry, [13:18] would you then rewide it? Like would you [13:20] would you scrape the Reddit some sort of [13:21] icon from a pattern and then redo the [13:23] story turning just to make sure all the [13:25] various entities or whatever are in [13:26] there or you take the story straight [13:28] because the intern [13:30] uh compliance issues. [13:31] We we definitely add the entities. That [13:33] step is super important but most of the [13:34] time it'll get them a lot of them but [13:36] certainly uh and again these ones we [13:38] didn't but that's usually the next step [13:40] is we will go in and add anything that's [13:42] missing. Um as long as it doesn't change [13:44] the meaning of the story we're just you [13:45] know making the words a little better. [13:48] No problem. Um, so I also want to talk [13:51] about word count because this is [13:52] something especially in a lot of the [13:54] conferences I've attended over the last [13:55] like five years, you hear a lot of [13:57] people talking about how your content [13:58] needs to be very long and very in-depth [14:00] and you have these terms like 10x [14:02] content um that have been really popular [14:04] in the SEO industry. Um, we're seeing [14:06] that that is less and less true uh these [14:09] days that content doesn't need to [14:10] necessarily be long and especially with [14:12] the way that LMS are chopping stuff up [14:14] actually sometimes shorter is better. [14:16] Um, this is just one test. We've done a [14:18] lot of tests on this. We had a realtor [14:19] and like they're notorious for having [14:22] stupid long content. It's kind of just [14:23] as bad as recipe sites. And so they had [14:26] like, you know, 4,000 words is too much [14:29] for a real estate article. They had [14:31] things like real estate prices, things [14:33] to do nearby, commuting, all this crap [14:34] obviously that as SEOs we add because [14:36] we're like, this is helpful. Um, one of [14:39] the things that kind of makes me [14:40] obsessed with this concept is calculator [14:42] pages. I love looking at calculator [14:44] pages that rank for things like alimony [14:46] calculator or child support calculator [14:48] that have no content on them [14:50] and they still rank and I'm like okay so [14:52] if content is all you need then how does [14:54] this page rank and they have no links [14:55] either most of them um calculators are [14:58] one of the things that we have seen [15:01] really great success from um again they [15:03] work really well with lawyers but [15:05] there's other industries you can do them [15:06] like mortgage and even like in home [15:08] services if there's like cost [15:09] calculators and things like that you [15:11] don't need content you just add a [15:12] calculator to the page and this is what [15:14] will happen to traffic for calculator [15:16] terms. So, this was also a lawyer. This [15:18] one was a family lawyer. Um, and the [15:20] great thing is is you can like reuse [15:22] that that code or whatever on lots of [15:24] different um sites. You just have to [15:26] make sure the calculations are correct, [15:27] but like simple prompts can grab you the [15:29] code for this. Uh, I love stuff like [15:31] this because I am not a technical SEO. I [15:33] employ a lot of those. Please don't ask [15:35] me like super technical questions. [15:36] There's many other people here that can [15:38] answer those way better than I can. Um, [15:41] but when it comes to the content side, [15:42] we have just found that more is not [15:44] better. In the case of the realtor, when [15:45] we removed like half their content, the [15:47] rankings didn't drop. And then [15:49] additionally, we've seen lots of cases [15:50] where we add that much content and it [15:51] doesn't improve. Um, so I personally, [15:54] and I know there's SEOs that disagree [15:55] with me on this, I don't like having [15:57] word count as a KPI. I hate it when [15:59] content writers ask me how many words [16:00] they I'm like, as many as you need. [16:02] Please don't ask me to give you a number [16:03] to hit or you'll just usually end up [16:05] with garbage. Um, now this is one [16:07] obviously that's like kind of the thing [16:09] that I feel like will be the best if you [16:12] can figure out the answer to this [16:13] question. How do you figure out what [16:15] content to write? Because pretty much [16:17] Google has articles on every topic. Uh, [16:19] it is getting harder and harder to get [16:20] your content indexed if you aren't [16:22] giving them something they don't have. [16:24] Um, so we've completely changed how we [16:27] decide this. Like when I started in SEO, [16:29] the way that you would do this is what's [16:31] called a content gap analysis. And [16:33] you'll see this in a lot of tools like [16:34] AHF, Samrush, all these tools have stuff [16:36] like this. And what you do is you go and [16:38] you grab your competitor's site and you [16:40] put it in, it tells you all the topics [16:42] your competitor has and then you write [16:43] about those topics. That doesn't work [16:46] anymore because the problem is if you're [16:48] simply writing all the crap your [16:49] competitor has, why would Google index [16:51] you? Why would they outrank your [16:52] competitor when it's just like verbatim [16:54] what they basically have already given [16:55] Google? So, what we've been using um is [16:58] this tool that Steve Toth created uh and [17:01] I know Mike loves his PAAs. So, this is [17:03] a a tool if you haven't seen it that uh [17:05] basically you put it in your browser. [17:06] It's free and it'll scrape the SER and [17:09] it'll give you in a spreadsheet a list [17:10] of all the PAAs people also ask. So, [17:13] again, we're talking about this section [17:15] here just in case anyone's not familiar [17:17] with the term. It'll give you a giant [17:19] list of hundreds of things to write [17:20] about. Um and you can go through there. [17:22] You will obviously have to dduplicate a [17:24] few. There are some repetitive ones. Um, [17:26] but this has been really really crucial [17:28] for trying to define like basically what [17:30] kinds of questions we are asking people [17:32] to put on their site. There's a paid [17:35] version that I'm currently testing. Kind [17:37] of on the fence. It's good for giving [17:38] you really outside ideas like things [17:40] that maybe your competitors don't have, [17:42] but it's kind of pricey. Um, AHS has [17:44] this AI content helper tool. Um, and [17:46] it'll go really deep. Like I tried this [17:49] for lawn care and it was giving me like [17:51] 15 different things that could be [17:52] problems with like a yellow lawn. Um and [17:55] I could go through them individually and [17:56] ask the guy like individually about [17:58] every single one. Of course, once you [18:01] have content, the thing that you want is [18:03] conversions. You want content that's [18:05] actually going to convert. So what's the [18:06] the angle here? Well, a lot of people [18:08] will say images, right? They'll say like [18:10] you need images on your content that [18:11] helps conversions. Um but the problem [18:13] with small businesses is they really [18:14] suck at this. Um, if you run an agency, [18:17] you probably know, you ask your clients [18:18] for images, they're like, "Yeah, yeah, [18:19] I'll get those to you." And then two [18:21] weeks go by, a month goes by, two months [18:22] go by, you don't get anything. That's at [18:24] least been my experience. Now, when AI [18:26] images first came out, I thought this [18:27] was going to be the golden solution to [18:29] everybody's problems. So, we really like [18:31] dove into this. And um, this example [18:33] that I'm going to show you here was [18:34] actually a garage door repair business. [18:36] We were like, okay, you could easily use [18:38] AI to create a garage door. I could get [18:40] every color of garage door, every style. [18:42] Actually, the images of the the fake [18:44] garage doors look better than the real [18:45] ones. Um, and we would add them to [18:47] client sites and they would have traffic [18:49] lifts. Now, it looks even better when [18:51] you look at image traffic. Uh, image [18:53] traffic went up as well. So, [18:54] everything's great here except Google [18:57] made an update and they figured out how [19:00] to tell if it's an AI image or a real [19:02] image. Um, now again, like there's some [19:05] industries where this doesn't matter. If [19:06] your site is about unicorns, they [19:08] probably don't care. But when it came to [19:10] like home services and a lot of the [19:11] industries that we work with, we saw the [19:14] same trend. Basically, they rolled out [19:15] this update that kind of killed the [19:18] benefit of AI images and we went back to [19:20] like some that we were testing on and we [19:22] saw the same pattern like all the gains [19:24] we got reversed when Google did this and [19:27] this was about a year ago. Um, so that [19:29] was kind of frustrating. Um, but they do [19:30] have a way to detect AI images and they [19:33] weight them differently. This was the [19:34] image traffic same exact uh site. So, if [19:37] you are using AI images, I would just [19:39] really be careful about measuring um [19:41] what impact they're having, if any, [19:42] because we were originally seeing really [19:44] awesome gains from them. And then we saw [19:46] most of those gains getting reversed. [19:49] So, then I'm like, okay, back to the [19:50] drawing board. What kind of images do we [19:52] need to be adding to this site um to [19:54] make it do well? We decided to do a [19:56] small sample of some of our clients. I [19:57] went through and we found in various [20:00] different industries pages that had [20:02] images that were actually getting leads. [20:04] And I was like, okay, I'm going to look [20:05] and see like are there any trends or [20:06] patterns I can see amongst these images [20:09] to figure out uh what types of images [20:11] are actually going to perform better. [20:14] Was not expecting this outcome. First up [20:16] on the list when it came to number of [20:18] clicks was infographics. And I was like [20:20] for real like what decade are we in [20:22] here? I do not want to be talking about [20:23] infographics in this presentation. But [20:26] this is actually what we found when we [20:27] sampled our clients. And I'm going to [20:28] give you some examples because these [20:29] aren't like AI generated infographics. A [20:31] lot of them were uh ones that they had [20:33] somebody custom make. Although I think [20:35] some of the tools we're testing now are [20:37] are actually good enough you could [20:38] probably do this with an AI um tool. [20:41] This was one that was a uh criminal [20:43] lawyer and they basically had this whole [20:45] article talking about gun- rellated [20:47] homicides and he broke it down by state [20:48] and then he made this pretty graphic to [20:50] kind of show you which states were more [20:52] problematic. This thing gets links, it [20:54] gets clicks, um it does really really [20:56] well. So those database studies that [20:58] while it's really uh timeconuming [21:01] strategy that still works. This was a [21:03] less pretty one for an electrician. Uh I [21:05] can't believe this thing got clicked. [21:06] It's so pixelated and it was like from [21:08] 2015. Um but this thing it was like one [21:11] of the highest drivers of clicks on his [21:13] site. Um so certainly something that is [21:15] easy to replicate. This was one one of [21:18] my staff created. Super easy uh simple [21:20] but it was for a dentist just talking [21:22] about the different types of cracked [21:23] teeth. um and one of their top [21:25] performing pages and highest traffic for [21:28] um anything to do with teeth. Um when it [21:32] came for best by conversion rate by [21:34] conversion rate, the highest converting [21:36] rate on all the images we looked at were [21:38] images of bugs. Now, I will clarify this [21:40] was mainly for tree uh tree services and [21:42] pest control businesses. And I think [21:44] there's still a lesson here if you don't [21:45] work with any of those industries um [21:47] showing problems, right? Like the thing [21:49] with the tree care is like you want to [21:51] see the problem in your tree. You want [21:52] to see if it matches what you're seeing. [21:54] And I can tell you with bugs, it's gross [21:56] as it is, uh, if you have a bug problem, [21:58] you want to know what kind of bug you're [22:00] looking at. And I can tell you from [22:02] experience, chat, JBT will not give you [22:04] the right answer. So, please don't use [22:05] it. I'm not going to show you an example [22:07] of that picture. I'll save you all. So, [22:08] here's just a blank slide. We're not [22:10] going to look at bugs. When it came to [22:12] the best by the number of conversions, [22:13] so if you looked at the ones that had [22:15] the highest number of conversions, they [22:16] were photos of people. So, it turns out [22:18] that human beings do still at some rate [22:21] like genuine. this, which I think is [22:22] hopefully a good thing. Um, but [22:24] basically those are the kind of images [22:25] that you would want. Now, um, an SEO tip [22:29] that I'm going to come up with next [22:30] actually helps not only with Google, [22:33] also really helps with chat GBT as well. [22:36] Um, and this is one of the reasons why [22:38] people like Reddit. Now, you might argue [22:39] Reddit is full of crap and garbage and [22:41] uh, lots of people lying and promoting [22:43] their own stuff, but it's also heavily [22:45] moderated. So, I'd say as far as all the [22:47] social platforms go, uh, I think it's [22:49] the place that I go to where I want like [22:52] nonpaid for answers. Um, because people [22:55] are genuinely looking for experiences. [22:58] So, this strategy was not one that um, I [23:00] came up with. It was one again from [23:02] Steve Toth. So, if you don't know Steve [23:04] or his newsletter, he's a fellow [23:06] Canadian, really smart SEO. And what I [23:08] like about his newsletter is he gives [23:09] you all these like actionable tips. So, [23:11] when they come out, I try to like test [23:12] every single one of them, see if we can [23:14] make it work for our clients. This was [23:16] one that worked very well. So in his [23:18] newsletter, Steve talked about um how he [23:21] noticed this particular company that was [23:23] just dominating on chat GBT. When you [23:25] search for best project management [23:27] software, this one business kept showing [23:29] up over and over and over. He's like, [23:30] "What are these guys doing?" So he looks [23:32] at their site on Google and he realizes [23:34] that in all their title tags, for all [23:36] their reviews page pages, all they were [23:38] doing was adding the word honest to [23:40] their title. Okay, [23:42] this shouldn't work. This is too too [23:44] easy. I'm like, nah. like come on, this [23:46] can't be this easy. So, we did it on [23:48] several client sites. We had clients uh [23:50] this was also a garage door repair one [23:51] where they were comparing two different [23:52] brands. All we did was add the word [23:54] honest review. That's it. Uh I think we [23:56] added title and H1 and their traffic [23:58] went up. Another page traffic went up a [24:01] lot. Another one traffic went up. We're [24:04] like this is too easy guys. Like it [24:06] should not be this simple. Um, so [24:09] basically what why I think this works so [24:11] well is when you do a search on Google [24:12] for brand press plus the word reviews, [24:15] what we have found that Google will [24:16] normally do is for whatever reason, they [24:19] will rank that brand site first. So if I [24:22] want to see Sterling Sky reviews, [24:23] they'll actually rank Sterling Sky site [24:25] first. Stupidest thing ever, but that is [24:27] currently what Google does. Then [24:28] generally if they have a Reddit, they [24:30] will show Reddit. That is like next. Um, [24:33] and then basically we were taking the [24:36] third spot for this particular brand [24:38] with our honest review page. So I'm [24:39] like, okay, I'm not going to beat the [24:41] brand and I'm not going to beat Reddit. [24:42] I'll take third place. Pretty good. Um, [24:44] so this strategy works really well. Uh, [24:46] and again, it's crazy that the word [24:48] honest seems to be kind of like magical. [24:50] Um, I don't find a lot of strategies [24:52] that work that are that quick to [24:53] implement. Um, but this kind of begs the [24:56] question about like, okay, let's [24:58] actually end this by talking about like [24:59] what to do about your own brand. um how [25:02] do you get better for that? So this is [25:04] where you do actually want to use [25:06] Reddit. Like I said, we are seeing more [25:08] and more for small businesses that like [25:10] it is the highest ranking site for like [25:13] reputation. When people ask about like [25:15] brand plus reviews, Reddit is usually [25:18] there way more than it used to be a few [25:20] years ago. So people don't often think [25:22] of Reddit as a review site. We talk [25:23] about Yelp, we talk about Facebook or [25:25] Home Advisor, whatever. But I'm like, [25:26] "No, guys. Like don't forget about [25:28] Reddit. somebody posts on Reddit about [25:29] your brand, it's going to rank and that [25:31] could be either good or bad for you. [25:33] Like in here are these examples. Uh you [25:35] know, when we search for Mr. [25:36] Beastburgers, uh you get this giant [25:38] Reddit thread and it's I love how Google [25:40] like puts in like all caps the negative [25:43] stuff. Like it's really not worth the [25:45] price like screaming at you. Or there's [25:48] these guys who's like, "What are they [25:49] highlighting in bolding? They effed up [25:51] my lawn." Um that's literally what [25:53] Google decides to put in bold. And then [25:55] in this case, they're, you know, [25:56] highlighting terrible service, complete [25:57] incompetence, and zero accountability. [25:59] These are all real brands, right? How do [26:02] you deal with this? Like, if you're a [26:03] brand, we've got lots of clients that [26:04] are bigger that are in this scenario [26:07] where they have uh very angry people on [26:09] Reddit talking about them. So, our [26:11] solution to this is to go do an AMA on [26:14] Reddit. And most people are doing this [26:16] because they don't realize it's actually [26:17] pretty easy to do one. Um, I actually [26:19] moderate quite a few subreddits. Um, we [26:22] are looking for AMAs all the time. Like [26:24] if you have a lawyer that wants to do an [26:25] AMA or if you have a HVAC company, uh [26:28] please like talk to me. I've got a few [26:30] that like we are literally looking for [26:31] these because they work really well on [26:33] Reddit. They get a lot of activity. They [26:35] get a lot of comments and that is the [26:37] exact thing you need for a thread to [26:38] rank. So the best way to do that is to [26:40] do an AMA. So I've been doing them like [26:42] almost monthly for my brand on different [26:45] subreddits. Um you will see now again [26:47] like when you search Sterling Sky [26:49] reviews, we get one of the AMAs that I [26:51] did on Reddit. Um, and my site is first [26:54] and then the AMA is second. And the site [26:58] being first is really simple. And I I [26:59] gotta say like almost every small [27:01] business that we audit isn't doing this [27:03] when we first talk to them. They have a [27:05] testimonials page that has testimonials [27:07] as the title. And I'm like, nobody [27:09] searches testimonials. People do search [27:11] reviews. All you have to do is basically [27:13] change your testimonials page to have [27:16] reviews instead and all of a sudden you [27:18] will take that number one spot for your [27:19] brand plus reviews. So, it's again [27:22] stupid easy. Um, between those two [27:24] strategies, you can kind of own the top [27:26] two spots um and hopefully not have [27:28] those negative Reddit threads. Um, [27:31] that's all I've got for today. These are [27:33] all the millions of places that you can [27:34] find me, but I'll be around for [27:36] questions as well. [27:43] Thank you. Thank you. Question. [27:47] Can you tell me two questions for you? [27:50] one, uh, you have to dumb it down for me [27:52] a little bit, right? Uh, can you explain [27:54] to us what an AMA is for those of us [27:56] that don't know what it is? And two, [28:00] we have a review page and we have a [28:04] testimonial page. And the testimonial is [28:06] all videos that clients will give us. [28:08] So, is there a suggestion that we [28:10] combine those two and just call it a [28:12] review page? [28:13] Yeah, 100% combine them. Um, [28:16] for the AMA, sorry, I should have [28:18] defined that. I I really try not to use [28:20] acronyms without defining them and I [28:22] failed. So if AMA is ask me anything um [28:24] and basically you like post. So if you [28:27] were to do one and they're um like hey [28:29] I'm a criminal lawyer in South Dakota [28:32] ask me anything and you'll get like all [28:33] kinds of people that will basically ask [28:34] you questions. Um so it's you have to [28:38] give away your time answering questions [28:40] for free all day. Um, but it is one of [28:42] the only types of threads where mods [28:43] will almost always let you link to [28:44] yourself because they realize you're [28:46] giving up some of your time to help [28:47] their um, and it helps their subreddit [28:49] do better. Um, and a lot of them pin [28:51] them as well. So, whenever we have an [28:53] AMA on any of our subs, like we'll pin [28:55] them, we'll promote them um, because [28:57] they are one of the best ways to [28:58] actually engage on Reddit. Um, but yeah, [29:01] something that I feel like a lot of [29:02] people are not doing. [29:06] I do a ton of videos [29:09] and Bill or uh so that it was either [29:12] last month or the month before I was [29:15] getting these notifications in search [29:17] console that I didn't have a video page. [29:20] Okay, there is there is procedure. You [29:23] got to like go to Bill Herbertzer on on [29:25] his Facebook post about it. If you have [29:28] a ton of videos posted on your website, [29:31] you need a video only page for Google to [29:35] look at. [29:36] I have a question on that. So, I heard [29:38] this at Brighton a year ago and I was [29:39] like, "This is genius." We tried it. It [29:41] did not work. [29:42] It didn't work. We were still getting [29:43] the error from [29:44] No, it wasn't the error that went away. [29:46] The videos just don't The video pages [29:48] didn't rank anywhere. They didn't do [29:49] anything. [29:51] Yeah. So, this concept of like you need [29:53] to have a video only page on your [29:55] website. Problem is Google likes [29:56] YouTube. So, our YouTube video was [29:58] always ranking and if we just put that [30:00] same YouTube video on our website, the [30:02] the pitch that I heard was you'll get [30:04] ranked twice. you don't like they're [30:06] like this is the same content. [30:08] So it didn't work for us at all because [30:10] we're like well the video [30:12] Yeah. I So I don't quite understand the [30:15] point if the video is already on YouTube [30:16] and then you have a ranking from that [30:18] video on Google. You're not going to [30:20] have your video page on your website pop [30:22] in as an additional position [30:24] because it's like they want the video [30:26] page but I don't give a [ __ ] about being [30:28] there. I want it on the actual blog page [30:31] talking about the crap I'm talking [30:32] about. Well, you want it on YouTube [30:34] because that's like Yeah. [30:45] Yeah. I was really excited about that [30:46] strategy, but it did not it did nothing. [30:48] I ended up deleting them. I left them up [30:50] for months. They got no traffic. They [30:51] didn't rank anywhere. Um and I was like, [30:53] "Well, yeah, Google's going to want to [30:55] surface YouTube because they own it." [30:57] Right. Exactly. And yeah, [30:59] back on that bunch of questions there. [31:01] Just adding in right whatever page [31:04] you're using it on. I really don't give [31:05] a [ __ ] Make sure you're using a video [31:07] object schema. [31:09] Make sure you add a video sitemap to [31:11] your website. And if you don't do the [31:12] basics, then don't [ __ ] complain. And [31:14] that error, I've never had that [ __ ] do [31:16] nothing negative to me at all. My team [31:19] used to always bother me about stop [31:21] [ __ ] talking about that dumbass [31:22] error. [31:24] Okay, infographic. So I tried napkin [31:27] when it first came out but you know [31:29] paragraph of a blog in there. We using [31:32] notebook LLM infographics. What else are [31:34] you testing that's working that are you [31:35] willing to share? [31:36] Yeah, there's I can get you I don't [31:38] remember the name off the top of my [31:39] head. We tried a a bunch of different [31:40] tools and there was two that I really [31:41] like. Both are paid. Um but they've been [31:44] working pretty well. I don't think [31:45] you're going to need a paid tool pretty [31:47] soon. I think that like a lot of the AI [31:49] like especially Google's Yeah, I was [31:51] gonna say that's like [31:53] Yeah. [31:54] into the ranking. I've got the test, but [31:56] I want to get 50 that work for sure. But [31:59] right now, inner scoop, right? Got a lot [32:01] of tests, PA. Bro, I'm not even supposed [32:04] to drop this because I haven't put it in [32:05] my mastermind yet. So, forgive me if [32:07] you're in my mastermind, right? Take the [32:10] PAA. The whole just the PAA title. Drop [32:14] that [ __ ] in Google Nano. Get [32:16] the infographic, use that as your [32:18] featured image, and thank me, lady. [32:20] That's all I'm saying. [32:24] Yeah. So, this is actually a question [32:26] from both I guess myself. Where do we [32:29] get the bulkies? [32:30] Yeah. WHAT'S UP WITH THE BULKIES? [32:32] GOD, [32:33] is that even a thing anymore? Like, are [32:35] there actually people that have bulk [32:37] accounts that can get multiple [32:38] businesses verified? I don't know. [32:40] Google Google really tried to shut that [32:42] down. So, if it's still working, I would [32:44] keep that quiet. [32:47] Yeah. [32:48] I definitely don't have one. [32:50] I do not have one. I do not consider. [32:52] Yeah. Don't have one [33:06] um this is just one point about the AI [33:09] images. Um one this is the way that I do [33:12] right. Um when I create an AI image, I [33:16] don't I don't upload the AI image. just [33:20] take screenshots, right? No metadata, [33:24] right? So, that way I'm I'm running [33:27] safer. I think [33:29] it's a good idea. [33:30] Anyone else had another question? Yo, [33:32] and if you're using stock images that [33:34] you know, still, right? Take them, flip [33:37] them, then take a screenshot and that [33:38] [ __ ] works. Never stop working, you [33:40] know? And if you need unique images, now [33:43] this is a [ __ ] two second thing [33:45] included on anything. Go to YouTube. a [33:48] video that's non-branded and just take [33:50] screenshots every second. Put it in a [33:53] folder. Ask AI to sort it by only images [33:55] by category that are nice looking [33:57] images. There you go. Don't [ __ ] talk [34:00] to me about images. [ __ ] [34:03] Before that, that [ __ ] was easy. Now [34:05] it's like [34:08] I was gonna say ask the same question on [34:10] that. Um, but so we built a system to [34:13] test this out. We haven't tested it yet, [34:15] but we're telling like roofers, plumbers [34:18] who don't have the time to create [34:19] content or don't prioritize it. We just [34:21] have them take a a minute or two video [34:23] on the job or what they're doing in 60 [34:25] frames a second on their phone and then [34:27] they upload it into into this system we [34:29] built that just cuts it. We have 4,000 [34:32] images every frame is an image. Exactly [34:35] what you said. [34:36] And that's creating GP post content, but [34:38] like all the things they can post and [34:40] do. Obviously, you're not choosing. You [34:42] get to choose which ones look better and [34:44] stuff, but I was wondering your opinion [34:46] on that if if you think it's a good [34:47] idea, a bad idea that it has a similar [34:49] effect on AI images that you're talking [34:50] about or thoughts on. [34:52] Yeah. So, I would say the only negative [34:53] is when you're leaving it up to like the [34:55] tech, they may not include the right [34:57] information. The reason why interviews [34:59] work well is like my team has a list [35:01] like we need these keywords, we need [35:02] this example. They also have um when we [35:04] use the people also ask scraper it [35:06] includes the link um to the actual like [35:09] part of the page that Google is grabbing [35:11] the answer from. You know how it [35:12] highlights it in purple. So like we have [35:14] that link with all the the um data in it [35:16] and it highlights it. So we're like [35:18] pulling that up on the interview with [35:19] them and if they give us like a wrong [35:21] answer like that doesn't really match [35:22] what Google's like looking for, we'll [35:25] come back and like okay why this and [35:26] that. So it it probably will work. But [35:29] like we saw this when we were trying to [35:31] do um transcripts from calls because [35:33] we're like we can just use their call [35:34] center. All the the phone calls they [35:36] have with clients just take that. It [35:38] didn't work as well because it was [35:39] missing a lot of detail that we needed. [35:41] Um so I think that's the only part where [35:43] it might break down. You might need to [35:44] like send them like okay we need a video [35:46] about this. Can you mention this? You [35:48] might need to coach them a bit more. [35:54] Okay. Uh, Peter says, "Google said they [35:57] are watermarking [35:59] nano banana images. One, is there a way [36:02] to remove those? Two, do you think that [36:04] would solve the AI image filtering for?" [36:08] It's worth testing. I have not tested [36:09] it, so I don't know. [36:13] Yeah, the screenshot thing. I would try [36:15] the screenshot thing. That's a That's a [36:17] great idea to test. So [36:20] can I just tell you that there is a [36:22] already litigation that has started [36:24] of course [36:25] with the removal of trademark. So [36:29] you might want to take your nana banana [36:32] and have something else done to it [36:35] because at least I was reading an [36:37] article in California that [36:40] there's Google is going to has already [36:42] started litigating it people who are [36:44] taking the image removing the watermark [36:47] and then putting it up as their own in [36:50] the process and because they have the [36:52] metadata tied into it it's not very hard [36:54] for them to figure out. That is really [36:57] great to know. Um I can tell you we've [36:59] had clients that have gotten like the [37:00] law, you know, the lawsuits they get in [37:02] the email for images and stuff. Like a [37:04] lot of them are legit. We've had several [37:06] clients have actually gotten um to not [37:08] for like a stupid amount of money, but [37:09] some of them were pretty high for not [37:11] having the rights to the images that [37:12] they were using on their websites. [37:15] Yeah. Yeah. And yeah, that's good to [37:18] know that Google I mean I could see why [37:20] Google would do that. So, [37:21] okay, next question. Do you recommend [37:24] putting your Google reviews on your own [37:27] website review page or unique reviews? [37:30] 100%. And at at a minimum, you want to [37:32] copy like or download. We use a software [37:34] called Place Scout that stores all the [37:36] copies of the reviews. Google's [37:37] notorious at, you know, just deleting [37:38] all your hardened reviews. And you can [37:40] often get them back if you have copies [37:42] of them. If you don't have copies with [37:43] them, you're screwed. So, you always [37:45] want to have copies. Adding them to your [37:46] site is one way to have a copy of them. [37:48] And what she means just to explain, [37:50] right? Like take a [ __ ] Google sheet, [37:52] but the whole text, the name of the [37:54] person, a screenshot of the review, and [37:57] then I like to because you know I'm [37:58] being OCD with it. I'm clicking into [38:00] their profile and I'm taking a [38:02] screenshot of as much of their [ __ ] [38:04] review history if they're showing it as [38:06] I can. [38:06] So you can [38:07] you can do that if you I mean an easier [38:09] way is just keep the emails. If you have [38:11] the email, [38:12] yeah, if you keep the email [38:13] notification, it has all the data in [38:15] like the source code of the email that [38:17] Google would need. It has a link to the [38:18] person's profile. It has the text of the [38:20] review. You just like we have folders [38:22] for all of our review alerts and like [38:23] you know for different client names. We [38:25] just show them in there. [38:26] If you're doing spam like me, take the [38:28] screenshot. [38:32] Next question. Your findings on content [38:34] gap analysis make sense. EAS are also [38:38] content that already exist. How are [38:40] those topics different from a content [38:43] gap analysis? Yeah. So, they seem to be [38:45] heavier focused on things like price, [38:47] which we were talking about yesterday. [38:49] Um, I'll notice like that's often [38:50] something you're not going to find on a [38:52] competitor's site is like cost [38:53] breakdowns or pricing or things like [38:55] that. So, it definitely will give you [38:57] content that your competitors don't [38:58] have. But, we are starting to see now [39:00] like, okay, what's the next step? [39:01] Because like you said, there's a lot of [39:03] PAS that show up that do exist on your [39:06] competitor site. Um, I have Noah [39:09] currently working on building. Noah's [39:11] Noah learn is a genius guy that I hired [39:13] that um builds all of our internal [39:15] tools. He's trying to solve that. So I [39:17] don't have the answer yet, but that's [39:18] like one of the big things we're trying [39:19] to solve this year is like where do you [39:20] go to get the topics that like nobody [39:22] has that you need to publish? Um so [39:25] we're we're trying to find a better [39:26] solution than just the [39:27] PAAAS. [39:39] So don't don't share this with the whole [39:42] world, but yes, it's price, but we upped [39:46] it by doing the time frame. [39:48] They're looking Google, you said it. [39:50] Google's looking for numbers. Yep. [39:52] And so I am trying to differentiate my [39:55] EAA because I now I have the price [39:58] range, [39:59] but the time frame is also a number. [40:01] Yep. Okay. So, you got to think about [40:02] the business. What other extra number [40:05] can you add in there to make it more of [40:08] a unique piece of content in the time [40:11] frame has really been like working for [40:13] us very well on on capturing more PAAs [40:17] and getting better rank because they're [40:18] just so hungry for the numbers. [40:20] Yeah. For the personal injury lawyers [40:22] that we've been doing ranges for the [40:24] other problem that you'll run into is if [40:25] you don't match the consensus. Like if [40:27] you're like, "Oh yeah, your average [40:28] settlement is $5 million and all the [40:30] other lawyers are saying the average is [40:31] 50,000." We've actually seen that as a [40:33] blocker. Google won't actually give you [40:35] the AI overview if your data is so [40:37] different than everybody else's that [40:39] they've got, which is annoying. But [40:43] one one more question back here. So [40:45] we've noticed that when you post on [40:47] Google business profile with industry [40:50] that includes if you put it through [40:51] Google vision or Google's AI [40:55] vision AI whatever API if it pulls the [40:59] keywords out of the image that you're [41:00] trying to rank for you'll notice you [41:02] search like Austin or Chief all imagery [41:06] will be it'll pull the teeth images in [41:09] the top three. Yep. [41:10] Same thing with car accident attorney [41:12] keyword. I'm curious, are you guys [41:15] seeing that be part of your strategy now [41:17] the imagery for certain keywords to get [41:20] that? [41:21] We we haven't gone that far. Images we [41:23] found are usually only a ranking factor [41:25] in that case when you get a local pack [41:27] with images. Whenever you get that then [41:29] the images all of a sudden are weighted [41:31] higher. Um I hate image packs though. [41:34] They're in general they're just terrible [41:36] because they remove call buttons on [41:37] mobile. So, you will find the moment [41:39] that those image packs roll out for your [41:40] industry, which there was a whole [41:41] whackload of industries that got them in [41:43] the fall that didn't have them before, [41:45] your calls in your business profile will [41:47] drop and it's irritating. So, my [41:49] solution actually, it's terrible. I [41:51] actually hate saying this, but like for [41:53] those clients that are like getting that [41:55] loss of calls now, we're like, you [41:56] should start running ads because the ads [41:58] have the call button. And so, like I [42:00] posted this on Reddit the other day and [42:02] like people are like, "This isn't new, [42:03] Joy." I'm like, "It's new because all [42:04] these industries that didn't have this [42:06] before now have it. And if you want a [42:07] call button, your only way to get it is [42:09] a is an ad. Not local service ads, [42:11] traditional ads, your location assets, [42:14] if you have one, and it shows up in the [42:15] local pack. They have a website, a [42:16] directions, and a call button, and [42:18] nobody else has one. [42:19] Has to be. [42:20] Yeah. Yes. Yes. You can't do it with [42:22] service area businesses. [42:24] Yeah. Yes. I for I always forget that [42:27] detail, but yeah, service area [42:28] businesses just get screwed in every [42:30] way. Yeah. [42:33] Yeah. Joy, you mentioned that you saved [42:34] the review emails. Did you also you were [42:36] using a tool saved automatically or not. [42:38] Yeah, we use Places Scout. They don't [42:40] like I talk about them all the time like [42:42] screenshots and stuff. They don't pay me [42:43] to do that. Um, but they are a pretty [42:45] clunky like old school tool that just [42:47] got acquired by Yex, so who knows what's [42:49] going to happen to it, but I know, [42:51] sorry. Well, actually, we have some Yex [42:52] lovers in the room. I've heard Yex a few [42:54] times. Yeah. [42:56] All right. All right. All right. Uh, I'm [42:59] not a Yex fan. I think they charge way [43:00] too much for their service. But um yeah, [43:02] places scout just got acquired by X. So [43:04] I think there's a bunch of upgrades [43:05] coming. But what I like about them is [43:07] they store everything. I can go back [43:09] years ago and look at screenshots of [43:11] SERs and see like that's that's what [43:13] makes things make sense for me because [43:14] I'm like, "Oh, this is what it looked [43:16] like a year ago. This is what it looks [43:17] like now. There was like two ads, now [43:19] there's six. This would explain this, [43:21] this, and this pattern." Um so they're [43:23] big on data, which I feel like most [43:25] tools don't do because it's expensive. [43:27] places [43:28] places scout. [43:30] Yeah, it's really really awful UI. Just [43:32] fair warning. Yeah. [43:36] So, one thing that made me think about [43:37] how much you need members um the GDP has [43:41] found here [43:44] that needs to be on your website too and [43:47] quality service since 1947. [43:51] Did you say that because you find Google [43:52] changes it if it doesn't match your [43:54] website? [43:54] No, I'm just saying that's not our [43:55] authority. [43:59] Yeah, the year that you opened is one of [44:01] the primary things that we are seeing in [44:02] the description fields. Um, so the AI [44:05] local packs that are surfacing on [44:06] mobile, uh, they're only in the US and [44:09] they're only on mobile and they're for [44:10] about 8% of queries right now. They have [44:12] descriptions that actually show up like [44:13] in the local packs. So, I've been like [44:15] obsessively looking at them and one of [44:17] the biggest things they feature is [44:18] anything with numbers. So, what year [44:20] you've been open, uh, we were able to [44:22] get like for a lawyer like how much [44:24] they've been able to win, you know, when [44:26] they're like, "Oh, we've recovered 50 [44:28] million in compensation, blah, blah, [44:29] blah." We were able to get that in there [44:30] because it's a number. Um, and Google [44:32] wants it, but they're grabbing it from [44:33] the website, not from the GMBB field, [44:35] GBP. [44:41] It should match. Yes. Anything [44:42] everything should be the same. All [44:45] again, basics, right? I want to pick [44:47] back on. It's not what he mentioned [44:49] about the image. Uh, let me just say it. [44:53] You always put the keyword that you're [44:55] trying to rank on the [ __ ] image. I [44:59] don't care about nothing else, right? [45:01] Except what they're talking about [45:03] different, right? But if you want Google [45:05] to read your images and know what the [45:08] [ __ ] you're talking about on an entity [45:10] level, [45:11] you have to do that. That's why I even [45:13] created my own tool for it, right? And [45:15] I'll show a little bit of it tomorrow. [45:17] You could do it free, but you got to do [45:18] it one image at a time with Google [45:20] Vision AI. Right? When you do that and [45:22] you go to AI, the picture mode, you show [45:26] up like almost easily, especially if [45:28] it's a client that has any type of brand [45:30] or authority. It's almost like easy [45:32] case. I want [45:33] Do you put in like size eight fonts at [45:35] the very bottom? So, put it nice and [45:36] big. [45:37] I was like, then your competitors won't [45:38] be able to like see it and copy you [45:40] again. [45:40] Yeah. No, I put it nice and big and they [45:41] do copy Joy. And then half the time I go [45:44] into AI overview since me and the old [45:46] partner Brent of mine, put people on to [45:48] that little hack. I just see people [45:51] using the same thing and it's, you know, [45:52] makes me feel good. It works. I wanted [45:54] to ask you s if you don't mind. I [45:56] thought I had messaged you this, but in [45:58] my messenger I see I did. [46:00] I'm not going to read all that out. Have [46:01] you seen this these people in Miami? [46:04] No. [46:05] Hey, grab my phone real quick, right? [46:06] And just look at these reviews when you [46:08] get a chance. [46:09] Are they just fake reviews? [46:10] No. No. Oh, [46:12] just check it out real quick. I'mma tell [46:13] them. So, there's something I'm showing [46:14] her, right? There's a car accident [46:16] attorney Miami, right? The people [46:18] ranking number one, 1.2K reviews. Just [46:21] go look at their reviews. Nugget drop. [46:25] All right. [46:26] Which one is it? What's [46:28] car attorney? And it's nothing to do [46:30] with me. I don't know all these people. [46:31] And I'll tell you what it is. It's [46:33] photos, bro. They got pictures right in [46:36] their office with the one of the [46:37] attorneys with all types of different [46:39] people and consistently. [46:41] So did I like have you heard the story [46:43] about photos when we were testing [46:44] photos? So we did a test with um [46:46] reviews. We wanted to know like what [46:48] causes the order. So you know how like [46:50] when you pull up a business, you'll get [46:52] like a negative review stuck at the top [46:53] and it's like eight months old and [46:54] you're like how do I get that thing to [46:56] like move down because it's like old. So [46:58] they're not like ordered um [47:00] chronologically. They use factors. So, [47:02] we did a a test on a whole bunch of [47:04] reviews. We tracked it for a year and a [47:05] half, and I wanted to know what made the [47:07] order change. Biggest thing is photos [47:10] and reviews. So, the the I don't want to [47:12] call it a hack, but like the the thing [47:14] that we tested that was just [47:15] mind-blowing to me is we had um we had a [47:18] negative review come in from my agency [47:20] because the guy couldn't get through on [47:21] our phone lines. Our phone lines were [47:22] down. And we're like, "This is the [47:23] stupidest review." And of course, it's [47:25] like the first thing that showed up. So, [47:26] we're like, "Okay, we're going to try [47:28] something." We emailed a client that [47:29] left us a year a review two years ago [47:31] and we said, "Can you just go add a [47:32] photo to the review that you left us?" [47:34] He goes and he adds a photo. The entire [47:37] order changed. His came to the top even [47:38] though it's a two-year-old review. [47:40] Pushed the other ones like way down. [47:42] That negative review wasn't even in the [47:44] top 10 anymore. So photos are like crazy [47:46] powerful. usually ends up the feature [47:48] review usually. [47:55] All right, talk about for a second, but [47:58] this is what I feel like. So, we're [48:00] doing it Mike's method for photo [48:03] is text on the image. I've got the logo [48:05] on there. I've got the phone number. [48:07] Most my clients are multilocation, so [48:10] there's some variance with those photos. [48:12] And when I start like doing like uh an [48:15] image audit, okay, and I start seeing [48:17] that like dude, we're like completely [48:19] for this keyword, it's nothing but my [48:22] paa images, [48:22] bro. [48:24] It's freaking nuts. [48:26] What I have seen talking out my ass. I [48:29] feel like when I start dominating the [48:32] image section, when you go to the image [48:34] on the Google, I am also seeing organic [48:37] rank increase and also map increase. [48:40] Mhm. [48:41] That's Hey, just to be clear, in that [48:43] method that I taught, I told all y'all [48:45] we doing this organic play with social, [48:47] but it's to bring the maps up. Yeah. [48:50] And that was before AI overview existing [48:53] that you're dominating. [48:55] You start seeing it lifting everything. [48:58] What kind of queries are these for? [49:00] Uh this Okay. So, like when we're doing [49:02] a PAA, we're just putting in [49:04] Okay. [49:05] Okay. And then we get the PAA off of [49:07] that and then we're creating a whole [49:08] bunch of PAAs. Um, we do our I'm not [49:11] going to spill like Mike's being on [49:13] I'll show tomorrow. [49:15] The PAAs are constantly ch changing. [49:17] Okay. So, the PAA changes [49:20] all throughout the entire day. So, we'll [49:22] always do our PAAAS up to the second. [49:25] We're going to that zip code or that GPS [49:28] and GS location changer and we get that. [49:31] Okay. So, we do it every time. It's not [49:33] like we scrape a hundred. We don't do [49:35] that. I think that's a huge issue [49:37] because they change. All right. [49:46] Car accident attorney Miami. They [49:49] probably rank for car accident law. It [49:51] probably ran for [ __ ] everything [49:52] honestly. Just the way they doing that [49:54] [ __ ] Any other questions for Joy? [49:57] No. Sure. All right, everybody give it [50:00] up for Joy.