Category: AI

  • The four horsemen of the AI apocalypse

    The four horsemen of the AI apocalypse

    Yeah – didn’t that headline make you think of thundering hooves and skeletal riders carrying scythes?

    Don’t worry about mental images. Do worry about the impact AI will have on your marketing team, your brand and your budget.

    AI promises are everywhere – from revolutionising your workflows to personalisation at scale (and firing your marketing agency). Below the utopian vision is the misguided reality. Get this wrong and you put your brand and budget under threat.

    Saddle up and meet the four horsemen riding towards us.

    • Horseman #1 – the plague of sameness
    • Horseman #2 – the war on data integrity
    • Horseman #3 – the famine of original thought
    • Horseman #4 – the death of customer trust

    More detail on conquest, war, famine and death, the causes, symptoms and cures later. You’re going to love them all…!

    Horseman #1 – The Conquest of Complacency (the plague of sameness)

    The first critical failure of AI strategy comes in the form of blind, unthinking use of AI to create generic, undifferentiated swill pretending to be content marketing. 

    Since all AI models are trained / training on the same data (the whole of the public internet) there’s a convergence of style, tone of voice and worst, ideas. 

    Your brand voice becomes the same as everyone else’s – a robotic echo of the AI training data. The risk of losing your brand in the sea of sameness and the result is your marketing is invisible – it fails to connect on a human level and your brand authority evaporates.

    Yes this is an AI image – ChatGPT can’t count!

    Real World Example

    Churning out 50 blog posts a month using AI leads to click rates plummeting (and that’s not because of GEO); your value proposition gets further and further away from being unique and the symptoms of sameness proliferate.

    The Antidote: Strategic Curation

    DO use AI for the heavy lifting – research, outlines, drafts. But mandate a human-in-the-loop process for all strategy, brand voice and to add creative spark. Build prompts which incorporate your specific brand characteristics, differentiators and unique point of view.

    Onwards…. Next is horseman #2

    Horseman #2 – The War on Data Integrity (the poisoned well)

    Our second ‘friendly’ horseman comes from building your marketing castle on the sinking sand of dirty, ungoverned and biased data. We all know rubbish in = rubbish out. And AI models aren’t immune – they must be fed with high quality data from trustworthy sources. Those sources are YOU, YOUR BRAND and YOUR CUSTOMERS. All first-party data points. 

    Making business decisions based upon flawed AI insights has clear dangers. These might be personalisation which doesn’t align with customers’ lived reality, creepy tone of voice and lead to customers getting alienated from biased data causing a baked-in misalignment in marcomms.

    Real World Example

    A lead scoring model trained on outdated CRM data prioritises the wrong accounts. The sales team chases (more) ghosts than ever and the real high-potential prospects slip away. Or dynamic creative optimises towards a biased audience segment leading to a PR firestorm. Examples here

    [Note every time smart machines try to use AI it tends towards evil. Why? Because human moral or legal or religious or evolutionary tendencies towards goodness don’t apply to them. Ted Gioia]

    Another AI image creation – it’s a bit dark for my liking

    The Antidote: Robust Data Governance

    Yes, this is stuff we know how to do as it treats your business data as a strategic asset. Intangibles are a part of your business balance sheet (just ask Paul Adams ex EverEdge) and your data builds your brand – directly.

    Yes this means you will need to pay for a private AI so your private business data does not leak. Yes you’ll need to set up regular data health initiatives and checks, yes you’ll need to work harder on your first party data hygiene. Question the source of every AI driven insight. Can you defend it? Do you know where the inputs came from?

    Onwards….to the third horseman.

    Horseman #3 – The Famine of Original Thought (the creativity desert)

    When you don’t use a muscle it atrophies – and creativity is just like a bicep – gotta keep flexing it. If your team outsources the thinking to machines, the human ingenuity which you cultivated (and which got them hired) just stops working as hard. Soft muscles are not robust and strain under pressure. Breakthrough marketing gets noticed, soft porridge does not.

    If your team gets so good at using AI tools that it loses the ability to create truly novel campaigns they’ve become tactical executors not strategic thinkers. Do you think the American Eagle campaign could have come from AI alone? What about this article series? 

    Image credit: American Eagle

    Real World Example

    Iterating your marketing plan for 2026 based on the past performance of your brand and campaigns will optimise the status quo – it won’t move the brand forward. This leaves you exposed to competitors whose human led strategy could blue-sky an opportunity which you missed.

    The Antidote: Mandated ‘human time’

    Set up your marketing cycle to include brainstorming by humans. Use your offsite days to check in that your strategy is strong and defensible and listen really hard to what your customers are saying.

    Onto the final horseman – number four.

    Horseman #4 – The Death of Customer Trust (the relationship reaper) 

    Trust is so valuable and hard to earn; yet can be lost fast. Be certain that hyper-personalisation efforts are effective, AI interactions are identified (is this a chat bot or a human support team member?) and how does the customer feel after conversing with your brand?

    The danger is that customer frustrations build and loyalty is withdrawn. There’s usually a close competitor happy to take their custom.

    Another AI image. Six horsemen, four horses – one is “riding” a human!

    Real World Example

    Advertising that’s eerily specific leaving customers feeling “big brother is watching me”. Or the endless doom loop of a chatbot that returns to the beginning after every dead end “I’m sorry Dave I can’t do that” response. 

    The Antidote: Ethical and Transparent Deployment

    Be clear when you’re using AI. Say it – name it – explain it. AI is an augmentation to the human experience, not a replacement. Make the hand-offs to human support agents as seamless as possible and explain to customers how to escalate their case. Then reinforce your service team with AI supported information so that they serve customers smoothly as the well-informed brand representatives you need them to be.

    Want to ensure AI strengthens your brand instead of hurting it? Talk to Numero for an AI-safe marketing strategy.

  • The 4 stages of SEO evolution & the AI game changer

    The 4 stages of SEO evolution & the AI game changer

    When the web was young, search engine optimisation was a wild west – back then many, many search engines existed with friendly names like Ask Jeeves and Alta Vista. Most are defunct – you may not know that Yahoo started as a search engine. One of my favourite names was Dogpile – you can imagine who came up with a name like that!

    Once search engine businesses launched to index and create signposts around the world wide web, canny marketers started trying to game the system. They quickly worked out ways to get their websites to appear on the first ten listed results, also known as page 1. This marked the beginning of SEO evolution, a significant shift in the landscape of digital marketing.

    Google only started in 1998 and quickly became the industry leader because they approached search results differently. Their focus on link building (as proof that a site was important because other sites linked to it) rather than keyword matching meant that the answers you got from Google were not only fast, they served to reinforce already-popular websites who had strong inbound links. 

    What is Black Hat SEO?

    Understanding the stages of seo evolution is crucial for leveraging modern strategies in digital marketing.

    Recognizing the importance of understanding the stages of SEO evolution can significantly enhance your strategies and effectiveness in today’s digital marketing environment.

    Unethical and manipulative techniques that have been used to improve website search results, are called “Black Hat”. It’s a wonderful phrase that originated from early cowboy western movies where the baddies wore black hats and the good fellows wore white hats so you could tell them apart!

    Once Google had developed its web bot search spiders to scan web pages, they built a database index of all the websites and links that they could find. This index includes the linkages between sites and assessments of visitor volumes and the frequency of updates with new content and information. Google quickly had a stranglehold on the search industry. And the consequence of this is that once you’re the top dog – you also get to be the policeman.

    Photo by ADESH SRIVASTAVA on Unsplash

    How did AI change SEO in 2024?

    Changes to the Google algorithm affect search results. 

    Over time their engineers have announced major updates to the algorithm – each has a fancy name like Penguin, Florida, and Helpful. Understanding these updates and how they have changed the priority of search results is what has driven the evolution of SEO as a marketing activity. 

    High-profile businesses whose marketing team used black hat techniques got severely penalised after Google updates. Some of the most famous include 

    • BMW (2006) used cloaking and doorway pages of different content for humans vs search engines
    • J.C. Penney (2011) used paid backlinks to manipulate rankings
    • Rap Genius (2013) asked users to embed lyric pages with backlinks in exchange for social shares
    • eBay (2013) created millions of low quality pages such as auto-generated product variants
    • Expedia (2021) used aggressive affiliate linking with keyword-stuffed anchor text

    All these serve to remind us that eventually Google finds you out. Their algorithm updates are often designed to target bad actors demoting them from search results and causing them to publicly apologise and do a lot of work disavowing links and changing web pages in order to regain their rankings. Not a “good look” for a marketing team.

    Put simply, Google may be the policeman, but they are also very clear about what is allowed in their Webmaster Guidelines; you can monitor warnings from your Google Search Console. 

    The AI gamechanger

    Google has been the dominant search engine for the period from 2000 to 2023 when AI again changed the game. Before AI, SEO professionals (like the numero® team) needed to understand 4 things

    1. the search algorithm
    2. the competitive landscape for keywords for each client’s website
    3. technical SEO on websites
    4. ways of writing web content to tick all these boxes.

    Since 1988 we’d visit a search engine and type in our question or search sentence, and results would be delivered as links to websites (natural search results) and as advertisements (from companies advertising against those keywords). No longer.

    Today, writing in mid 2025, this has all changed. Many customers experience “zero-click searches” when they use a search engine but never click through to a destination website. Many people only use AI tools like Grok or ChatGPT to get answers which they’d previously got from search results. 

    Read the answer in the AI Overview search result and not need to click anywhere.

    Zero-click GEO search results

    Richard Gilbert, numero’s Founder, described search engines in 2024 as “answer engines” because using voice search means we now expect conversational questions and answers in our search results. 

    I see a future when chatbots provide search answers which may be drawn from multiple sources, not necessarily Google, and these are faster, more personalised and concentrated on the very top websites only. This has implications for non-US business websites and smaller niche businesses who risk never being cited in AI search results. In 2025 numero created a SEO service that neutralises these tendencies.

    The search engine professional has also adapted so that all the Google algorithm changes (RankBrain 2015, BERT 2019, MUM 2021) as well as the Helpful Content Update from 2022 are incorporated into our best practices. Numero prides ourselves on staying at the forefront of SEO evolution, best practice and ethical SEO so that our clients benefit.

    The many changes to SEO marketing have been classified into four stages by Rob Hoffman, Founder at Content Studios. He defined each with a phase in an ebook, the Road to SEO 4.0. 

    • SEO 1.0 Wild West from early 1990s – 2000
    • SEO 2.0 Content is King from mid-2000s – early 2010s
    • SEO 3.0 Machines Start Thinking from mid-2010s – 2020s
    • SEO 4.0 The AI Revolution from 2022 onwards

    These are somewhat helpful for us all to understand because the SEO techniques used in each are different – and many of the methods used in earlier phases are now classified as Black Hat after Google’s algorithm updates specifically outlawed their practices.

    If you are discussing SEO services with a performance marketing agency, take a close look at what they offer to do for you. Not all the early techniques are bad – many are the foundation of best practice SEO today.  But if you’re being offered only SEO 2.0 techniques in 2025, beware.

    SEO techniques through the 4 evolutions of SEO

    These are the top-level SEO methods which align with each of the major development stages since the 1990s. Do ask us to explain any which you need in more detail and context.

    • SEO 1.0 Exact match domains, dense keyword stuffing, link farming, directory listing 
    • SEO 2.0 Low quality, thin, and duplicate content, social media sharing strategies, shareable content, influencer outreach and guest blogging. 
    • SEO 3.0 User-friendly meta titles, descriptions and tags. Mobile first results, conversational queries, and links between people, concepts and place entities. Page experience becomes a ranking factor, complex query resolution, E-A-T for YMYL content, E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness and Trustworthiness) firsthand experience for all content, local SEO and featured snippets
    • SEO 4.0 Programmatic SEO, AI created content, E-E-A-T with verified credentials, citations and peer reviews.SGE delivers answers directly in SERPs followed by Answer Engine Optimisation [link to our blog article]. Vertical search for social, visual and AI search results as well as search engines. 

    While the AI machines have got smarter and faster, so have the AI policemen!

    Any content which is not fact-checked and high quality will not rank well; E-E-A-T is an ever-larger quality signal, and programmatic SEO has to be high quality. Underlying all of this is the deep reliance on user intent signals and website schema markup / structured data. That’s why numero builds websites as well as offering SEO services – the two sit side by side mutually reinforcing each other. Numero continues to see deep advantages for client websites who are SEO optimised. You can be sure we’ll be continuing  to test new SEO methods which help your website to rank well and bring the right sort of customers who are ready to buy.
    CTA.

    Want your website to thrive in the AI era of SEO? Contact us today or explore our SEO solutions for 2025 and beyond.

    Author Expertise: John Anthony Talaguit

    John brings comprehensive digital marketing expertise spanning strategic planning, technical optimisation, and multi-channel execution to numero®’s clients. His core strengths include developing timeline-driven marketing strategies, advanced SEO implementation with schema markup and Core Web Vitals optimisation, and comprehensive Google Analytics tracking. He excels in paid advertising across Google Ads, YouTube, and display networks, whilst maintaining expertise in conversion rate optimisation and email marketing. Technical capabilities encompass WordPress development, mobile-first optimisation, and scripting in HTML, PHP, CSS, and JavaScript. John’s experience extends to social media management, e-commerce optimisation, and cross-team project management, making him a well-rounded digital marketing strategist with strong technical acumen.