SEO Rockstars 2026: Day 2 - Simon Cornelius Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lcK8NViWB_c ============================================================ [00:02] Good stuff. [00:05] All right. [00:06] So, how many of you have ever heard me [00:09] speak before or this is your first time? [00:13] Okay. [00:16] All right. Just so like half the room [00:18] put their hand up and how many of you [00:19] will never put up your hand no matter [00:21] what I ask? Okay. All right. The rest of [00:25] you. Okay. We probably looking at the [00:27] previous presentation go, man, this is [00:28] really good stuff. I So I don't have a [00:31] big grandiose introduction about who I [00:33] am. I'm Simon. I'm lazy and I'm cheap. [00:37] So just remember I'm lazy and what? [00:40] Okay. And I like interaction in the [00:42] audience. Is that cool? [00:44] Right. So I got some got some how what [00:49] mic mic one two. [00:51] There we go. Oh, operator error. Now I [00:53] can hear me as well. Cool. All right. [00:56] So, I am what? I'm lazy [01:00] and cheap. Thank you. And I love [01:01] interaction. So, the good news is that [01:04] I've got a really good presentation [01:06] today. I kept on adding more and more [01:09] and more stuff. But the bad news is I [01:12] got enough stuff to last for the rest of [01:13] the day. So, I'm going to get through as [01:16] much as I can, but you all have access [01:19] to the presentation. It's in my speaker [01:22] bio profile thing somewhere in there. If [01:25] you want to find me, just find me. I [01:27] know there's a few Simon Corneliuses [01:28] around in the world. So, but anyway, I'm [01:31] going to have fun doing this. And who [01:33] wants to know how to make the first [01:35] million with AI, right? Like just a few [01:39] of you. So, there's a story behind this. [01:41] I like stories because stories sell and [01:45] facts tell. Where's my story going? [01:48] There's a a blinding light here. Where's [01:50] Where's our previous speaker, Jim? [01:52] Where's Jim? Stories sell, right, Jim? [01:55] Yes, sir. [01:56] All right. And facts tell. So, I picked [01:59] up this book recently called Making Your [02:01] First Million with AI. I thought that's [02:05] going to be a really good book. And I [02:07] think I'm not to call anyone out, but [02:08] where's Brian Kado here? Is he here? [02:11] Brik, [02:13] did you tell me about this book? how to [02:15] make your first million with AI or some [02:18] someone mentioned it. I so I bought it [02:20] and I read the whole thing in like three [02:22] hours. But the thing is it's written [02:25] like in kid font and there's about 150 [02:29] words per page and it repeats itself [02:32] over and over and over and over and over [02:36] again. You can literally take and [02:38] there's some good stuff in here, don't [02:39] get me wrong, but there's some some good [02:40] stuff in here. You could probably dilute [02:42] to about two or three pages. I kid you [02:44] not. Some good stuff in here, but very [02:46] very high level. But it gets a brain [02:48] thinking. But I wouldn't I wouldn't pay [02:51] to buy this book again. But if you [02:53] anyone wants it, it's theirs. [02:56] Okay. The first person to put a hand up [02:58] his story. All right. So, how to make [03:00] your first million with AI. [03:05] Oh, wait a minute. So, here's the guy. [03:08] If you're at the back of the room, you [03:09] don't have super biote vision, you need [03:11] to be sitting at the front with the [03:13] popular people. So AI made me my first [03:17] million lines of code still waiting on [03:20] the cash. So that's kind of my my line [03:23] here is for all you people that think [03:26] you can code, great. I try it because [03:29] it's it's the only way you learn, right? [03:31] when I learned to code back in last [03:34] century, I'm dating myself now, is I [03:37] made a bunch of mistakes. People told me [03:39] my mistakes, but I got better and better [03:41] and better, but you have to try. So, I'm [03:46] going to just jump into some really cool [03:47] stuff that, and this is not a [03:50] one-sizefits-all, don't get me wrong. [03:52] I'm here to inspire you. To inspire you. [03:55] Is that okay? Because one thing is I am [03:59] lazy. [03:59] Lazy. And the other thing is I'm [04:01] cheap. Cool. How many presentations do [04:05] you all go to where you actually engage [04:07] with the speaker in the audience? Not [04:09] too. I'm a little bit different. [04:12] So, let's take a simple SEO task. This [04:14] is to get you thinking. This is not the [04:17] solution for everyone. So, let's create [04:19] a blog post, shall we? Anyone ever [04:21] written a blog post before? Okay, four [04:23] of you. Okay, cool. All right. Rest of [04:26] you have a VA that does it, right? So [04:28] what do we first do? Let me stand over [04:31] here. I know I'm away from that now. So [04:34] blog post process go come up with a [04:37] topic [04:39] research. Get the reader intent. Oh, by [04:42] the way, Martin Marion taught me about [04:44] the intent behind the intent. It took me [04:46] four years to realize what he was [04:49] talking about. Four years when I did [04:51] like, oh my gosh, research niche. You [04:55] get instructions and a purpose. You you [04:57] give it to your writer. That might be [04:59] Fiverr, an in-house team, AI, whatever. [05:03] Here's the writing instructions. You [05:04] review the writer's first draft, usually [05:06] in a Google doc. More on that later. [05:09] There's an email. There's a feedback [05:10] loop. You send it to the client for [05:12] review. Google Doc. Email feedback loop. [05:15] Are you tired yet? [05:18] Then you create a blog post on the [05:20] website. Oh, that's copy and paste from [05:22] Google Doc, which means you have to [05:24] remove the Google Doc formatting. Anyone [05:26] been there before? Yeah. And then you do [05:29] your SEO stuff, which is your title, [05:31] description, link to the service page, [05:33] and the first paragraph, and your [05:35] category of the blog post. Then we got [05:37] to do the featured image. Oh my gosh, I [05:40] was tired after reading this. Go to [05:43] deposit photos, shutter stock, and or [05:46] valley. Remember the four fingers from [05:48] Deli too? I know Chad does, right? [05:51] So resize it. Got to compress it because [05:54] it's four megabytes. [05:56] Oh, then you have to give it a name [05:57] because it's like shutter stop. One, [05:59] two, three, four. Then you have to do [06:01] your alt text. [06:06] Click. Where's click? What's going on [06:09] here? [06:11] A little while later. I found out this [06:14] is from like Spongebob. Yeah. [06:17] A little while later. [06:20] Publish. We Yeah, we published it. [06:23] How long does that take you guys to do? [06:25] I've heard like an hour, hour and a half [06:27] to do that. Right. Right. [06:31] So, what did I say I was in the [06:33] beginning? I was [06:34] lazy. [06:35] Lazy and cheap. [06:37] All right. [06:39] So, let's start with step one. Come up [06:41] with a topic. Cool. [06:45] Push the AI easy button. Boom. Easy. [06:50] So, who can do that? come up with a [06:52] topic. Every one of you in the room can [06:55] do. Can any every one of you push the AI [06:57] easy button? [06:59] Yes, you can. And it will research, [07:01] write, review, email the client for [07:03] review, create the blog post on the [07:05] website, do all the SEO stuff, do the [07:07] featured image, and publish it. Cool. [07:10] So, I've actually implemented this. The [07:12] only one piece I haven't done is email [07:15] the client for review and feedback [07:17] because most of my clients, they don't [07:19] they trust me with content. So, I I [07:21] leave them out of the loop, but you [07:23] could easily do that. [07:25] So, is that cool? [07:28] I'm going to show you kind of how to do [07:30] that. By the way, I'm not I don't have [07:32] enough time. I don't have enough [07:34] stamina, neither do you guys, to go [07:36] through all the nerdy process, but I'm [07:38] but if you want to connect with me [07:39] afterwards, like Anna said, hey, let's [07:41] sit down and nerd out. Cool. I'm I'm [07:44] very accessible. I live around here. [07:47] I I love sharing and networking with [07:49] people. So, about images, they're one of [07:52] the biggest pains in the bum I've had [07:54] forever because I have to go to shutter [07:56] stock or deposit photos, find an image, [07:59] do all that stuff. It takes forever and [08:01] I always miss that one step. Or you have [08:03] the VA that misses a step or five and [08:06] you don't know about it. Like, hey, what [08:08] happened to this image here? [08:11] So, here's how I create featured images [08:14] now or any image. You ready for this? [08:17] Yes. [08:18] So, four people. Okay, are you ready? [08:21] All right, cool. So, read the article. [08:23] This is AI doing this. Read the article. [08:27] Extract the visible entities. Underline, [08:30] highlight, bold. Visible entities. Chad, [08:34] you nodding your head or you just eating [08:36] now? Because you're agreeing with me, [08:37] right? [08:38] Right. So, here's And now, no need to [08:41] take pictures unless you're of me. [08:43] Extract four to six ent visual entities [08:46] from this article. You're asking AI to [08:48] do this for you. I use Claude's haiku [08:50] model because it doesn't need to be that [08:52] that fancy. So, extract four to six [08:55] visual entities. You can read the rest [08:57] of it later. [08:59] Write the prompt for image generation [09:02] and send it to Google Nana Banana Pro, [09:06] the latest and greatest version, not the [09:08] 2.5, but the 30 Gemini preview. I [09:11] believe it's only visible through the [09:13] API or accessible through the API right [09:15] now, which means it costs like 10 cents. [09:19] So there's a link to Gemini Pro image [09:24] preview. Next week or next month, it [09:26] will be another one. So I just send [09:29] everything there to Nano Banana Pro and [09:31] it produces the image. [09:35] I witness click. [09:38] Oh yeah. [09:40] Okay. So, this is what gets sent to [09:43] Google Gemini. The prompts in the file. [09:45] No need to copy it, but it sends all [09:47] this over. It says you need to have this [09:50] in the image. You like it, Bradley? [09:52] I do. [09:52] Stay tuned for the next slide. Okay. So, [09:55] there's all this stuff. Like I said, [09:57] it's in the slides. You're going to look [09:59] at your your camera afterward. Look, [10:01] want to take a picture of me just [10:05] I mean [10:07] All right. Okay. All right, that's [10:08] enough. Don't run out of film. All [10:10] right, [10:12] Bradley, this one's for you. [10:15] All right, this was that previous slide [10:18] went to Nano Banana whatever pro. Do you [10:22] like it? What What's What sticks out to [10:23] you, Bradley, in this image? [10:26] Obviously, it's tree trimming. [10:29] What I thought was real. Looks I mean [10:31] looks believable. [10:33] Yeah. You got the little We got this got [10:35] the harness, the ladder, the safety. All [10:37] the entities in [10:38] all the all the visual entities in [10:40] there. So for 10 cents and like push a [10:44] button. Cool. Cool. [10:46] All right. [10:47] So, uh, let's talk. Can we get a little [10:50] nerdy right now? Let's talk nerdy. [10:53] I know you can't read this, but what [10:55] I've set up is a whole string of AI [10:59] agents doing this stuff for me. All [11:01] right. So if you can imagine you got [11:04] let's say you got uh each of these is a [11:06] person in your organization. [11:08] So we have one that creates a scope for [11:12] the article, the one that actually [11:15] writes it. You have someone that checks [11:17] what they did. You have someone that [11:19] revises the article if it needs to. [11:22] Someone that formats it for the website [11:24] and someone that creates an image and [11:26] someone that publishes it. That could be [11:28] individual people, right? You probably [11:30] have those. So, what I've done is like [11:33] I've trained each one of these with a [11:34] prompt. And if you want to connect with [11:36] me, we can talk about prompts and nerdy [11:37] stuff, but these every one of these [11:40] agents does their work. But do they you [11:44] know how you have a VA and say, "Hey, [11:45] write me an article like follow these [11:47] instructions." Or you have say I know [11:50] where's where's Mike? Mike will send out [11:52] a job uh hunting for jobs and like let [11:55] me know if you read these instructions [11:57] like Philippine jobsonline.ph PH if you [12:01] read the instructions write this in your [12:03] response we've all done that right well [12:05] how do you know that an AI has done that [12:07] job you don't but if it if it hasn't [12:11] right unless in the prompt file say when [12:14] you are done tell output this so every [12:18] step in the stage there's what I call a [12:21] fingerprint it's like yes I've done the [12:24] work and they go okay cool let's go on [12:25] to the next stage so anyway this is not [12:27] meant to confuse you it's meant to think [12:30] of these as people. They're AI agents [12:32] doing work as a person would normally. [12:34] You have detailed instructions. So, it [12:36] goes on bum bum bum bum. You could [12:38] literally do and by the way [12:42] the I have behind this there's a a [12:46] business MD file which has all the [12:48] business information that they're a [12:50] plumber, they're a roofer, they're a [12:51] tree arborist. Here's where they are. [12:53] Here's their avatar. Here's their [12:55] customer ideal customer profile. Here's [12:57] where they work. So all this is in the [12:59] background. So the writer and the scope [13:01] agent know all this in advance. That [13:04] cool, right? So this is literally one [13:07] one click and you can do one at a time. [13:11] You can do 10 at a time. You can do say [13:14] like four clients at one time as well. [13:17] So the only the only limit to this is [13:20] your imagination, right? You would agree [13:21] with me on that one, right? Because who [13:23] wants to be like me? Lazy and Okay. [13:27] Anyone want to be like me? By the way, I [13:30] had a boss one time. He said, "Simon, [13:33] you're the laziest person I know." And I [13:36] knew what he was telling me right off [13:38] the bat. He's like, "Thank you." I was [13:40] one of like the top 10% in his [13:42] organization or something. So, make me [13:44] feel good. [13:47] All right. So, I'm not going through [13:48] each one of these. Like I said, if you [13:50] want to connect with me afterwards, we [13:51] can go through. But what does the scope [13:53] agent do? The layout of the article. [13:55] What sections come first? What comes [13:57] second and third and fourth? The ICP, [13:59] what sections do they have? Here's the [14:02] detailed writing instructions. What is [14:04] the user's intent? You have to answer [14:07] that right out of the gate. Don't stray [14:11] fan out. Anyone heard of fan out [14:13] questions? Yeah. Fan out. Yeah. So, I I [14:17] I saw a post in Signals Lab or something [14:19] a while ago. It talked about fanout [14:20] questions. So, I said, hm, what is that? [14:23] So, I took the fan app questions and [14:25] added it to my agent prompt. [14:30] Don't repeat yourself. So, we've all [14:33] seen AI slop. Yes. [14:35] And 4,000 words. Where's Where's Sean? I [14:39] know we we've seen some sloppy AI [14:41] content, right? 4,000 words. Come on, [14:43] man. [14:44] Yeah. [14:46] Like, how to fix a a leaking toilet. You [14:48] had your plumbing example, right? Don't [14:50] need seven and a half thousand words. [14:54] What? Come on. Come on, man. Let's I'm [14:57] trying to do my bite my best mic relo [15:04] meet the reader search intent and [15:07] nothing more. [15:09] Right. Answer the fan out questions [15:11] throughout the document. And apparently [15:13] Google, we don't have any anyone here [15:15] that knows Google really well, do we? [15:17] Joy, [15:19] right? Don't turn your content into [15:21] bite-sized chunks. Like, just you don't [15:24] need to force this stuff. Just be [15:25] natural. It will come out once you [15:27] finish answering the searches intent. [15:29] You're done. Nothing else. By the way, [15:32] content that used to rank for thousands [15:34] of keywords in search console doesn't [15:37] happen anymore. Doesn't happen anymore. [15:39] Hat tip to Chris Castillo, one of my [15:41] best friends. He brought this up [15:42] recently. Like, dang. All right. So, [15:46] some more bangers. By the way, does [15:47] anyone know what bangers are besides the [15:49] other Simon in the room? [15:51] Bangers and mesh. [15:53] Yeah. Yeah. So, bangers are in England [15:57] like like a sausage, but of course also [16:00] be these little firework things. They [16:03] could also be that's a real banger [16:05] that's really good. So, you know, if you [16:07] go to England and you like you talk [16:09] about bangers, they might be confused. [16:11] You're talking about the food about I'm [16:13] I'm a real banger at this or anything [16:15] else. There's another connotation which [16:17] I won't even get into [16:20] that's not for this topic over here. So [16:22] things I I like to do in the content. So [16:25] I love to use tables. Tables and lists. [16:28] Why? [16:31] Google loves data. Why? [16:35] Structured easy to read also by people [16:38] as well. If you're looking for an easy [16:40] to read content piece of content tables [16:42] and lists. So bring it on short images. [16:44] We talked about images. I love sections. [16:47] You can read through this at your your [16:49] leisure. How much time do I have left? [16:52] 30 minutes. Cool. Only like 10% through [16:55] my presentation. [16:57] All right. Some So, more website [17:00] bangers. [17:01] We must have been on the same wavelength [17:03] because I know we've been talking about [17:04] reviews in here. So, let me ask let me [17:07] tell you why I do this. Number one, [17:10] because I'm [17:11] lazy and also because I'm cheap. Look at [17:14] you guys. [17:16] So, I want to bring all my reviews into [17:19] my website. Now, if I have, say, a [17:22] hundred reviews for plumbing, how is it [17:24] house plumbing? And some are about [17:26] toilets, some about slab leaks, some [17:28] about water heaters, I don't want to [17:31] have every single one of those reviews [17:33] on my toilet repair page, right? I just [17:36] want the reviews which are about toilet [17:39] repair. Yes. Right. So, how do I do [17:41] that? I download download every single [17:44] one of my reviews via code because I'm a [17:46] nerd. I'm lazy. I'm cheap. Is I download [17:50] all the reviews into the back end of the [17:51] website as a custom post type CPT. Cool. [17:54] Then I categorize them with AI. Said [17:57] what is this review about? Generic about [18:01] toilets about showers about water [18:03] heaters. What is it about? And it tags [18:05] it with a category. Now on the service [18:08] pages, let's say it's water heater. You [18:10] like that? Right. So, on your water [18:12] heater page, you have a little code [18:13] snippet that says, "Show me reviews just [18:16] for water heaters." It pulls all those [18:18] reviews in. So, the f the most recent [18:21] ones show up first. So, every time you [18:23] add a new review, that's from from the [18:25] GMBB. Now, you got fresh fresh reviews [18:29] coming in. Cool. [18:33] All right. [18:36] By the way, I used to hate public [18:37] speaking. Now you can't stop me. I used [18:40] to belong for now and all with all [18:42] seriousness I joined a com not company a [18:47] organization called toast masters [18:48] international right if you have a [18:51] passion and you just don't feel like you [18:53] want to speak in front of people I [18:55] literally when I gave my first speech [18:57] was called an icebreaker I I kid you not [19:00] I was in a cold broke out in a cold [19:01] sweat I kid you not I had a jacket on [19:04] luckily it was a jacket because I was [19:07] literally just sweating So, it was it [19:10] was scary, but it was the best thing [19:12] that I've ever Didn't cost me hardly [19:14] anything. So, if you ever want to be up [19:16] in front of people, Toast Masters is the [19:19] thing. It's it's a real banger. [19:22] Okay. Uh service pages. Um Oh, so while [19:26] I'm at generating the reviews, I'll put [19:29] all the ADA compliance in there, do the [19:31] schema for the reviews. So, the whole [19:34] thing is coded out. So, I just do one [19:36] short code and it's done. Okay. How cool [19:39] is that? [19:40] Cool. [19:43] Simple to vibe code. Yeah, [19:45] it is super super simple. If if you [19:48] don't if this confuses the heck out of [19:50] you and go like, "Oh my gosh, my brain [19:52] hurts." Just reach out to any one of us [19:54] in here who's done anything with Vive [19:56] Code, you'll love it. All right, [20:00] another one. I I've hardly seen hardly [20:03] anyone. I I've done this presentation, [20:06] this little snippet before. I hardly see [20:08] anyone doing it, so why don't you? Where [20:12] are you located? [20:15] Oh, where? Here's our address. 123 Elm [20:17] Street. Oh, big whoop. Well, where is [20:18] it? This is GMBB. [20:22] I don't know. [20:24] So [20:26] what I learned years ago is that you [20:29] have to if someone's coming to your [20:32] office, let's say it's a dentist or [20:33] what? Let's use dentist is how do I get [20:36] to your office? Well, you drive down [20:39] this road and they say, "Oh yeah, you [20:41] just go past the embassy suites by [20:43] Hilton the Lovefield one where second on [20:45] the left." Cool. Well, put that in your [20:47] freaking website. This is where we are. [20:50] Take this like we are near the unique [20:52] landmark. We are near the Embassy Suites [20:55] by Hilton Dallas Lurfield. Just copy and [20:57] paste from Google Maps. We're near the [21:00] intersection of LemonAve because that's [21:04] what Google Maps has and W Northwest [21:07] Highway Loop 12. By the way, in Dallas [21:09] in North Texas, most roads have like [21:12] five names, [21:14] right? Yeah. [21:15] City has five names. [21:18] Like highway five, right? you know that [21:20] map in up in Plano McKini Allen's like [21:23] highway five and Plano road and I don't [21:26] know like which road are you on I don't [21:27] know so take just copy and paste in [21:29] Google maps and just put it in there [21:32] take pictures and I don't know why you [21:35] guys I'm not saying you guys but the [21:37] majority don't do this take a picture of [21:40] the street where you are here's my [21:42] office from the from the street over [21:44] here by by wherever right here's the [21:46] street sign here's the parking here's [21:48] how you get to our office. Sean [21:52] had some troubles with [21:55] you [21:57] from streets, the office, everything [22:00] around there and you just keep it into [22:02] the it helps with the trust factor a ton [22:05] because they're looking at that street [22:06] viewing this and they're like, "Oh yeah, [22:09] been out there." So what so for the [22:11] people online and Sean are saying yeah [22:13] just take pictures from around the area [22:15] like around where the office is located [22:17] add them to your GMBB or GBP and you're [22:20] good to go. [22:22] Cool. [22:23] All right. Um [22:26] here's another one that if you have [22:28] plumbers or trades trees whatever you [22:31] want to have you could do the same thing [22:33] with this. Take a picture of the guys [22:36] out there. Hopefully, it's good and it's [22:38] not like a picture of their thumb or [22:40] anything. You take the pictures of the [22:42] job done. Oh, this is one that I I told [22:45] one of my I have an HVAC client. He he [22:48] started his business in July 4th of last [22:52] year. He works part-time as a HVAC. He [22:55] has a full-time job, but he works [22:57] part-time as a HVAC. He started actually [23:00] doing this. He went around neighborhoods [23:02] and is where, let's say we're in um [23:04] McKenna, let's say up there somewhere. [23:07] and there's all these nice neighborhoods [23:08] and you go take pictures of the [23:10] neighborhood entrance sign and he go [23:12] starts posting them to his GMBB profile [23:14] and says, "Hey, I was out in Aubber [23:16] Hills doing like doing an HVAC repair [23:19] and puts it up there." Now you're [23:21] sending signals to Google. Hey, I work [23:24] at this place over here. Then he did [23:26] like YouTube shorts of his jobs. He he [23:31] made now he made let's see he doesn't [23:35] mind me sharing this he was working [23:37] part-time like 10 15 20 hours a week [23:41] kind of right he made made like 60 grand [23:44] in six months first six months now [23:47] that's not that's not going to take uh [23:49] bring him home from his job that was [23:51] working 10 to 15 hours a week from zero [23:54] to 60 grand in six months is that cool [23:58] so there's another thing in here. I [24:00] won't go through this one, but you could [24:02] basically have a a one one second. You [24:04] could basically have a way to upload [24:07] images to the website from the text. [24:09] Have AI take the images, write a little [24:11] blurb, post it to social media, post it [24:14] to your website, post it to GMBB. This [24:16] is where we were doing XYZ in ABC [24:19] Neighborhood. Some questions over there [24:23] on YouTube. [24:24] You're going into a neighbor. Wait, [24:26] wait, wait. Oh, thank you. [24:29] How to turn it on. [24:36] Just clarif. [24:42] Yeah. [24:42] Come on. There we go. Thank you. So when [24:45] you said add geo in YouTube, you did [24:47] exactly what you said. You go out to [24:48] take the picture of Arbor Hills, which [24:50] is a neighborhood in Ky. Do you geo tag [24:53] the YouTube shorts video to let's say [24:56] that entrance area or to that [24:57] neighborhood? [24:58] No. Although the the images that you [25:02] take that still images, they will have [25:04] XF data and stuff in there right now. [25:07] People say that Google strips the XF [25:09] data. Well, it does, but what happens [25:11] before it strips the XF data? [25:14] It's it's evidence. No, what I'm saying [25:16] on YouTube there is a underneath there's [25:19] a I guess it's a category you can have [25:21] and say where was it taken, where was [25:23] the video taken and say Mckin or Dallas [25:25] or wherever you are. [25:26] Okay. So, but if you wanted to you could [25:28] go as deep as say if you were in Arbor [25:30] Hills to confir if you want to go that [25:32] granular. Yeah, but you can put it in [25:35] there but again it's like cheap and [25:37] lazy. Well, how much do you do? Right. [25:39] So, yeah, go for it. Right. Thank you. [25:42] Yeah, there's another question ma right [25:45] right behind you. [25:48] So, do you go through the trouble of [25:50] changing any other um elements of the [25:53] exit data? So, like ITC tags or titles, [25:57] captions? [25:58] No. [25:58] No. Okay. [25:59] No. I mean, why should if if my guy is [26:02] out there in his truck? Oh, sorry. I [26:05] missed out an important point. So, he [26:07] parks his truck. So ABC HVAC in front of [26:11] the Arbor Hills sign. So now you've got [26:14] his truck with his with his logo, his [26:18] his his um website, his brand name in [26:22] front of Arbor Hills McKini. Right. So [26:25] now you've got entities like backing up [26:27] another entity. So it's evidence brand [26:30] association. See? Thank you. Right. Is [26:32] that cool? Right. So where's the mic? [26:42] I assume these are service area [26:43] businesses. Have you looked at all to [26:46] see like the polygonal shape for your [26:49] service area and if posting this kind of [26:52] content will push the lines around on [26:54] your service area at all? [26:56] It seems like it should. [26:58] Well, so all I can all I can tell you is [27:01] this just a it's a test of one. So just [27:04] take it with a grain of salt. But he's [27:07] ranking like in let's call it M Mc Mckin [27:09] is a really affluent area by the way. So [27:11] I I'll use that as the example went from [27:13] zero to having lots of ones across like [27:17] call it 10 mile by 10 mile. So it [27:20] definitely works. So I think the two [27:22] things that he was doing and Mike Molina [27:24] will also tell you do your YouTube video [27:27] shorts be be active on social. So, he [27:29] does his YouTube shorts. He does take a [27:31] whole bunch of pictures and he gets [27:33] reviews and he replies to the reviews. [27:37] Okay. Does that answer your question? [27:41] Okay. You think so? Okay. [27:43] Yes. [27:44] Yes. All right. Can you guys take this [27:45] home and implement this tomorrow or [27:47] tonight? [27:48] For sure you can. [27:49] Hard to get the clients to do it though. [27:51] With tree service, I've been telling [27:52] them this for five years and I could [27:54] maybe 20% of them will actually do it [27:56] consistently. [27:57] Yeah. No kidding. Tell tell them that [27:59] tell them that that house pros and [28:02] they're forced to with house pros. It [28:04] forces you when those guys [28:05] No, but I sell services. [28:10] Hey, real quick. Simon sir [28:12] and Brad like you do lead gen, bro. You [28:15] do AI. I mean, sorry, stock photo, flip, [28:18] screenshot, then add in, right? I've [28:20] been doing it for years, bro. When I [28:22] take a van, [28:23] I don't got no fleet, but Google thinks [28:25] I have 74 vans in a certain geo. That's [28:28] what they think cuz I put a number on [28:30] the pan. Like a real business foot, [28:32] right? You know what I'm talking about? [28:33] Yeah. [28:34] Yeah. Crew four was over here. Crew 19 [28:36] was over there. [28:39] Yeah. [28:40] So, I kind of What? How's my time? [28:44] I'm good. I got another hour left. Cool. [28:47] All right. I'm like [28:49] another 400 slides to go. All right. By [28:51] the way, I I I halfway joke about having [28:55] so many slides, but I was sitting down. [28:58] I was at home yesterday and doing some [28:59] stuff like, "Let's add a few more [29:00] slides." Like, you know how that goes, [29:02] right? I I love to give because it's a [29:05] community that when I first got started [29:08] in SEO, there's a a Facebook group [29:10] called Local Client Takeover, right? [29:13] True story. So, I'm being authentic here [29:15] and being vulnerable. Is I went in [29:17] there, I knew I didn't even know what a [29:19] GMBB was. didn't know what it stood for. [29:21] I knew nothing about I didn't know the [29:23] questions to ask. So, I was in there [29:26] being one of these lurkers and going, [29:28] "Dang, I need to know about this SEO. I [29:29] probably can make some good money with [29:31] SEO." So, I I went in there reading the [29:34] stuff and someone had a question like [29:37] that seems like a really good question [29:39] to ask. Like, I have no idea what [29:40] they're asking, but let me go off and [29:42] like research it. So, I went to Google, [29:44] went to YouTube, like, oh, that's what [29:47] they're asking. And I came back and [29:50] understand please this is not me trying [29:52] to brag to you or to the people in local [29:55] client takeover. I said oh by the way an [29:58] this is the answer to your question I [30:00] found is like x y and z and an goes well [30:02] thank you so much that's really cool. Oh [30:04] no problem. And then someone else had a [30:07] question like and I did the same thing [30:09] like why is it so hard? Why can't you [30:12] just go to Google and YouTube and find [30:14] this for yourself? What's what's wrong [30:15] with your hand? Why can't you find this? [30:18] After about a month, [30:20] it was like so crazy. People saying, [30:22] "Simon, you know this stuff really well. [30:24] Can you help me out?" Like, dude, I've [30:26] been here for like I'm I'm still still [30:28] crawling. I'm still wet in my diapers [30:30] type of thing. But it kind of gave me a [30:33] reputation, which was really weird for [30:36] me because I didn't see myself as a [30:38] guru, but I I was trying to give back to [30:41] the community. And that's what I'm here [30:43] today to give to you is give back. So, [30:45] there's a bunch more slides in here. You [30:47] won't see them here live, but you'll see [30:49] them in the in the file later on. And [30:50] like I say, if you want to connect with [30:51] me, find me. I'm I'm not that active on [30:54] Facebook, but you can still find me. So, [30:57] I won't reply like in five minutes, but [30:59] maybe a day or two, maybe. Cool. Uh, all [31:03] right. Again, lazy and cheap. I don't [31:06] use WordPress themes anymore in new [31:07] sites because [31:10] a I'm lazy and b I'm cheap more like [31:15] lazy like divvy like Sean loves divvy. I [31:18] used to like evader and I used to like [31:20] divvy but man it's like by the time I [31:22] want to change the color in the [31:24] background of something like oh my gosh [31:27] how hard can it be? Here's the thing. AI [31:32] can write really, really good HTML. [31:37] So if you give it precise instructions, [31:39] guess what? AI can update HTML much [31:43] faster than you can without using page [31:46] builders, right? So why don't we do it? [31:50] So I've now replaced all the Yoast and [31:53] SEO Press plugins. I do a bunch of nerdy [31:56] short codes for really cool stuff and I [31:59] use AI a lot. You know the drill. [32:04] Okay, so that's kind of like section [32:07] one. How am I doing on time? [32:08] You're doing good. [32:09] It's good. What does that mean? [32:13] 30 minutes left. [32:14] 20 at least 20. Then we're going to take [32:16] a break. So [32:19] cool. All right. Back in the old days, [32:23] anyone kind of familiar? Who's who's old [32:25] like me? [32:26] Right. So, back in the back in like this [32:29] is where you show your grandkids this [32:31] like hey back in the day we used to have [32:33] like a phone that was plugged into the [32:35] wall like for real like how did they go [32:39] outside without a cell phone like like [32:41] they just can't fathom it. So, believe [32:45] it or not they used to use like IBM XTS [32:49] is that 286 chips from Intel. You have [32:52] someone over here writing their specs [32:54] for the future of someone [32:57] writing it, someone reviewing it, [32:59] someone testing it. Reams and reams and [33:02] reams of paper. This is probably not too [33:06] far out from what it used to look like. [33:08] A bunch of people in a room, you know, [33:10] got the 80s stuff going on there. It it [33:13] was like this. I used to work at a [33:15] company. We would have a group called uh [33:19] they were like systems engineering or [33:22] something and they would create this [33:23] product requirement document the big big [33:26] thing. Then we'd give it to the [33:27] engineers and the engineers would write [33:29] feature requirements. Then we give it to [33:31] the coders and the coders would code it. [33:33] Then it would go to testers and they [33:35] would test it. And it was a good process [33:37] to have when you when you're coding at [33:39] scale. It worked and it worked really [33:41] well. So, but we don't have we don't [33:45] need all these people today because we [33:47] have AI. [33:49] Cool. So, [33:52] I I dislike vibe coding. Not to upset [33:56] anyone in this room because you can get [33:58] results with it, but there's also a [34:00] level of frustration, right? You if [34:02] you've been there before. Chad, do you [34:03] vibe code? [34:06] Depends on how you define it, but I [34:07] definitely use code these days. [34:10] Yeah. So here's here's where most people [34:13] start because they've heard about the [34:15] latest fad going on with AI and it can [34:17] do all this wonderful coding like hey [34:19] let me write this this this like feature [34:21] to do X Y and Z. Bam off it goes and [34:24] then go like [34:27] it's not like how I wanted it to turn [34:29] out. Then you go back and make some [34:31] tweaks like h I guess it's good enough. [34:35] Well here's what you need to do, right? [34:38] Let's get nerdy, but I want to make you [34:40] feel uncomfortable, then give you a [34:42] solution. Is that okay? Right. Is it [34:44] okay being uncomfortable to get better? [34:46] Okay. How many of you work out? [34:50] Brian, why don't you work out? Uh, by [34:52] the way, shout out to to Brian Hung at [34:54] the back. He's like one of the most [34:55] nerdiest fitness guys on the planet I've [34:58] known. He's like, "Oh my gosh." So, so I [35:02] love stories because stories tell or [35:05] sorry, stories sell, facts tell. [35:08] the So, we're in this group every [35:10] Friday. We're talking about health. I'm [35:11] sitting there in my office chair going [35:13] like, I haven't moved for like three [35:14] hours. I need to get up and move around. [35:17] So, like Brian goes, "Yeah, I've been [35:19] doing this and that." Okay, that's cool. [35:22] I'm feeling a little bit bad, but also I [35:24] know in my head I need to move around a [35:26] bit more. Go like, "You know what? I [35:28] went to I went to see a nutritionist [35:30] because it was covered in my insurance." [35:32] And a nutritionist said, "Hey, would you [35:34] like to have to go see a personal [35:36] trainer twice a week? doesn't cost [35:37] anything. Like, okay, cool. So, I see a [35:40] personal trainer now for six weeks. I've [35:42] been seeing him since uh April of last [35:45] year. Doesn't cost me anything. But man, [35:48] do I feel so much better now. So, I [35:51] mean, it beats sitting around all day [35:53] long. So, non SEO, non nerdy tip, don't [35:56] forget about your health, guys. It's the [35:58] only health that you have. You'll have [35:59] you you you'll never get I know there's [36:02] probably a better way of saying this, [36:03] but this you could be in the worst shape [36:05] today and then six months from now be in [36:07] the best shape ever. So I'm probably in [36:09] the best shape I've been in about 10 [36:10] years, right? And I feel great. So thank [36:13] you, Brian. Back to this. [36:17] Run a PR product requirement doc. Is [36:20] that right, Chad? [36:21] Yeah. [36:22] Turn it into tasks. We we talk in [36:24] acronyms. Turn to task. Write the code. [36:26] We have another LLM verify it and then [36:30] there's this thing called Ralph Wigum [36:32] which I'll explain on the later slide. [36:34] Does anyone before like last week or [36:36] last month does anyone know who Ralph [36:38] Wigum is? [36:40] Simpsons. [36:43] All right. So here's the shift that [36:45] we're seeing in in effort allocation. By [36:48] the way, this slide was created just a [36:51] cool tip. If you go to Gemini [36:54] Pro think three, there's a drop down and [36:57] then you can do what's it called? Um [37:01] canvas and you say I want to build a [37:03] presentation and you drop in everything [37:05] it will present a PowerPoint slide or [37:08] create a PowerPoint slide for you. It's [37:09] really good. [37:11] So most people when they buy code little [37:13] bit of planning some coding and they're [37:16] like oh man 70% debugging and testing [37:18] and getting frustrated. [37:21] The right way to do a big pro a bigger [37:23] project is let's plan and spec it out. [37:27] Let's implement it and that's maybe like [37:29] 10 20% of recode. So now you're asking [37:32] me [37:39] how do I build a PRD? I know that's only [37:41] a tip of mind, right? How do I build one [37:43] of these PRDs? Well, everything's in the [37:45] slice, by the way, unless you're just [37:46] taking pictures of me secretly on my [37:48] own. Okay, so you build a PRD. It [37:51] launches in an agent. You can use claw, [37:54] you can use cursor, you can any one of [37:57] these is pretty good. It builds a PRD. [38:00] It builds a set of discrete tasks for [38:03] for the coder to do. And each task has [38:06] define inputs and output success [38:08] metrics. You got to inspect what you [38:11] expect all the time. So then the AI [38:14] codes it then the output is inspected or [38:17] audited by a new AI session. That's [38:19] really important. So you have here's the [38:22] thing, right? If any of you have ever [38:23] like tried to like do something on the [38:26] website and you're like, "Yeah, this [38:27] should work." And you sit there and [38:28] you're going around and around and [38:30] around and like I can't see what's going [38:32] on. Have we've been there before? Like [38:35] you just can't see the forest for the [38:36] tree. Like why on earth is this not [38:39] working? It should work. You spent an [38:42] hour then you say hey an can you take a [38:45] look at this like what's going on and an [38:46] goes you missed a semicolon like like [38:51] duh when you're doing doing schema if [38:53] you've missed a semicolon in schema you [38:55] know what I'm talking about comma or [38:57] something so feedback so you have a [39:01] little bit of human verification now if [39:03] you want this PRD generator you go here [39:07] it's a it's a GitHub thing so I I love [39:09] GitHub it's in the slide BK so you can [39:12] see all the slides. So, oh, he was just [39:15] taking a picture of me to post up like, [39:17] "Hey, I saw this really cool guy like [39:20] cool accent." It's like, "Man, this guy [39:22] is is is the is a real banger over [39:24] here." Not don't say that. Don't say [39:26] that. [39:28] So, go to GitHub. You can see it. You [39:30] can install it. It's it's a skill. You [39:31] can put it in Claude Code. I love Claude [39:34] Claude Code. So, you can put it in [39:36] there. It helps you make coding so much [39:38] more fun. So, who is Ralph? [39:42] I I don't know why the guy had this. I I [39:45] don't know. Maybe he's a he's some nerd [39:48] who likes the Simpsons. So, you can read [39:52] all this. But basically, we have this [39:54] feedback loop, right? When you code [39:56] something, how do you know it's correct? [39:59] If you have the same coder inspecting [40:02] their own work and going, "Oh, it's has [40:04] some mistakes. Let me go fix it again [40:06] and again and again," they get tired. [40:09] They make mistakes. They don't see it. [40:11] So what the Ralph Wiggum [40:14] plug, not plugin, because there's one [40:16] for Claude doesn't do this. But what it [40:18] does, it takes a new agent, as I say, it [40:21] takes an as a new tester and an looks [40:24] through it again. It's like, oh, I found [40:25] these issues. So then you feed it back [40:28] and it goes to Bradley like Bradley, is [40:30] this okay? And Bradley goes, yeah, [40:31] that's good. Okay, fantastic. So that's [40:33] Ralph Wiggum. kind of nerdy, but it's [40:36] it's important to know about [40:39] uh AI context. Rock, I explained this [40:43] before is that when you're chatting with [40:45] a with an AI, when it's got through [40:48] maybe half of its context, it's going [40:50] like it gets lazy. It gets confused. [40:52] It's like, man, I'm tired. It makes [40:54] mistakes. So,