AI is changing our world, indeed but most importantly it’s forcing us, humans, to upskill and adapt to new technologies and ways of working. AI is driving a shift in the skills that are required for success in the workforce.
Can ChatGPT help you with your digital marketing tasks? We tried more than a few ChatGPT prompts to find out ourselves!
Have a cookie :)
Since you are here, you must be interested in Marketing. So help your fellow marketers by accepting these cookies.Cookie SettingsAccept All×
Manage consent
Privacy Overview
This website uses cookies to improve your experience while you navigate through the website. Out of these, the cookies that are categorized as necessary are stored on your browser as they are essential for the working of basic functionalities of the website. We also use third-party cookies that help us analyze and understand how you use this website. These cookies will be stored in your browser only with your consent. You also have the option to opt-out of these cookies. But opting out of some of these cookies may affect your browsing experience.
Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
Cookie
Duration
Description
_ga
2 years
The _ga cookie, installed by Google Analytics, calculates visitor, session and campaign data and also keeps track of site usage for the site's analytics report. The cookie stores information anonymously and assigns a randomly generated number to recognize unique visitors.
_gat_UA-52042964-1
1 minute
A variation of the _gat cookie set by Google Analytics and Google Tag Manager to allow website owners to track visitor behaviour and measure site performance. The pattern element in the name contains the unique identity number of the account or website it relates to.
_gcl_au
3 months
Provided by Google Tag Manager to experiment advertisement efficiency of websites using their services.
_gid
1 day
Installed by Google Analytics, _gid cookie stores information on how visitors use a website, while also creating an analytics report of the website's performance. Some of the data that are collected include the number of visitors, their source, and the pages they visit anonymously.
_lfa
2 years
This cookie is set by the provider Leadfeeder to identify the IP address of devices visiting the website, in order to retarget multiple users routing from the same IP address.
apbct_cookies_test
session
CleanTalk sets this cookie to prevent spam on comments and forms and act as a complete anti-spam solution and firewall for the site.
apbct_page_hits
session
CleanTalk sets this cookie to prevent spam on comments and forms and act as a complete anti-spam solution and firewall for the site.
apbct_prev_referer
session
Functional cookie placed by CleanTalk Spam Protect to store referring IDs and prevent unauthorized spam from being sent from the website.
apbct_site_landing_ts
session
CleanTalk sets this cookie to prevent spam on comments and forms and act as a complete anti-spam solution and firewall for the site.
apbct_site_referer
3 days
This cookie is placed by CleanTalk Spam Protect to prevent spam and to store the referrer page address which led the user to the website.
apbct_timestamp
session
CleanTalk sets this cookie to prevent spam on comments and forms and act as a complete anti-spam solution and firewall for the site.
apbct_urls
3 days
This cookie is placed by CleanTalk Spam Protect to prevent spam and to store the addresses (urls) visited on the website.
CONSENT
2 years
YouTube sets this cookie via embedded youtube-videos and registers anonymous statistical data.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-advertisement
1 year
Set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin, this cookie is used to record the user consent for the cookies in the "Advertisement" category .
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional
11 months
The cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-others
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance
11 months
This cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
CookieLawInfoConsent
1 year
Records the default button state of the corresponding category & the status of CCPA. It works only in coordination with the primary cookie.
ct_checkjs
session
CleanTalk–Used to prevent spam on our comments and forms and acts as a complete anti-spam solution and firewall for this site.
ct_fkp_timestamp
session
CleanTalk sets this cookie to prevent spam on the site's comments/forms, and to act as a complete anti-spam solution and firewall for the site.
ct_pointer_data
session
CleanTalk sets this cookie to prevent spam on the site's comments/forms, and to act as a complete anti-spam solution and firewall for the site.
ct_ps_timestamp
session
CleanTalk sets this cookie to prevent spam on the site's comments/forms, and to act as a complete anti-spam solution and firewall for the site.
ct_timezone
session
CleanTalk–Used to prevent spam on our comments and forms and acts as a complete anti-spam solution and firewall for this site.
elementor
never
This cookie is used by the website's WordPress theme. It allows the website owner to implement or change the website's content in real-time.
PHPSESSID
session
This cookie is native to PHP applications. The cookie is used to store and identify a users' unique session ID for the purpose of managing user session on the website. The cookie is a session cookies and is deleted when all the browser windows are closed.
viewed_cookie_policy
11 months
The cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
vuid
2 years
Vimeo installs this cookie to collect tracking information by setting a unique ID to embed videos to the website.
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Cookie
Duration
Description
_gr
2 years
This cookie captures the email of the user when identified. We have three (3) ways to identify the email of the user. a) when user clicks on a link of a Growthrocks' campaign, b) when user is logged-in and c) when a user submits a form containing an email
_gr_flag
2 years
A simple cookie to capture that information of the user has been sent to Marketing Automation. If true no further information will be sent. If no, the system will try to send information when the email will be filled
bcookie
2 years
LinkedIn sets this cookie from LinkedIn share buttons and ad tags to recognize browser ID.
bscookie
2 years
LinkedIn sets this cookie to store performed actions on the website.
lang
session
LinkedIn sets this cookie to remember a user's language setting.
lidc
1 day
LinkedIn sets the lidc cookie to facilitate data center selection.
UserMatchHistory
1 month
LinkedIn sets this cookie for LinkedIn Ads ID syncing.
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Cookie
Duration
Description
_ga
2 years
The _ga cookie, installed by Google Analytics, calculates visitor, session and campaign data and also keeps track of site usage for the site's analytics report. The cookie stores information anonymously and assigns a randomly generated number to recognize unique visitors.
_gat_UA-52042964-1
1 minute
A variation of the _gat cookie set by Google Analytics and Google Tag Manager to allow website owners to track visitor behaviour and measure site performance. The pattern element in the name contains the unique identity number of the account or website it relates to.
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
Cookie
Duration
Description
__Host-GAPS
2 years
This cookie allows the website to identify a user and provide enhanced functionality and personalisation.
_fbp
3 months
This cookie is set by Facebook to display advertisements when either on Facebook or on a digital platform powered by Facebook advertising, after visiting the website.
fr
3 months
Facebook sets this cookie to show relevant advertisements to users by tracking user behaviour across the web, on sites that have Facebook pixel or Facebook social plugin.
test_cookie
15 minutes
The test_cookie is set by doubleclick.net and is used to determine if the user's browser supports cookies.
VISITOR_INFO1_LIVE
5 months 27 days
A cookie set by YouTube to measure bandwidth that determines whether the user gets the new or old player interface.
YSC
session
YSC cookie is set by Youtube and is used to track the views of embedded videos on Youtube pages.
yt-remote-connected-devices
never
YouTube sets this cookie to store the video preferences of the user using embedded YouTube video.
yt-remote-device-id
never
YouTube sets this cookie to store the video preferences of the user using embedded YouTube video.
Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
Cookie
Duration
Description
_lfa_test_cookie_stored
past
No description
AnalyticsSyncHistory
1 month
No description
apbct_visible_fields_0
session
No description
apbct_visible_fields_1
session
No description
apbct_visible_fields_2
session
No description
apbct_visible_fields_3
session
No description
apbct_visible_fields_4
session
No description
apbct_visible_fields_5
session
No description
apbct_visible_fields_6
session
No description
apbct_visible_fields_7
session
No description
ct_checked_emails
session
No description
ct_has_scrolled
session
No description
ct_mouse_moved
session
No description
ct_screen_info
session
No description
GetLocalTimeZone
session
No description
ifso_last_viewed
session
No description available.
ifso_visit_counts
1 year
No description available.
li_gc
2 years
No description
nitroCachedPage
session
No description
prism_649664625
1 month
No description
“You have to know the past to understand the present.” – Carl Sagan
1. When Dinosaurs Roamed the Network (50s — 80s)
Little is known of that obscure era that took place from the 1950s to the end of the 1980s. Some findings point out the existence of a pre-internet network, called ARPANET. ‘Network Historians’ speak of mysterious computer networks like Telenet, NPL, and Cyclades.
There was no Search Engine Optimization because there was no search engine to optimize.
These were some dark times.
2. The Stone Age of SEO (early 90s — mid 90s)
If there was a Stone Age, then there had to be a human who took a stone from the ground for the first time and turned it into a human tool. That someone in our case was Sir Timothy John Berners-Lee. He was the inventor of the World Wide Web (WWW).
On August 6, 1991, and thanks to Sir Timothy, the world’s first website went live, running on a computer at CERN.
The very first WebsiteThe first search engine ever, called Archie, had already been created. Since there was no WWW, Archie was exclusively indexing FTP (File Transfer Protocol) Archives, to locate a specific file and transfer it from one computer system to another. Due to its limited capabilities, the content of each site wasn’t available. Only the listings were.
In the next year, there was yet another search engine, named Veronica. Veronica was responsible for updating the database of the names of every menu item on the Gopher servers. Gopher is the effective predecessor using the TCP/IP protocol of the World Wide Web as we know it today, for HTTP wasn’t yet the dominant protocol.
Then came another search engine, called Jughead, which had many similarities to Veronica, except Jughead was searching one server at a time. During these archaic times, there was also the Wanderer, the first web crawler that could measure the size of the WWW.
If Archie was the first search engine that existed, then Aliweb is considered to be the first Web Search Engine. Aliweb came out in 1993. It allowed users to submit the pages they wanted to index. In addition, they could write a custom description, which Aliweb could crawl. This ability to crawl was the first ability for Search Engine Optimization possible – 30 years ago. In effect, it empowered webmasters to define the terms that would lead users to their pages. However, not too many of them submitted their sites, and Aliweb stayed more or less unutilized.
During the same year, JumpStation, another search engine, launched. JumpStation behaved and appeared the way today’s web search engines do. It used document titles and headings to index the web pages found using a simple linear search but didn’t provide any ranking of results.
In every search engine of this era, it was practically very hard to find anything, unless the user was typing in their query the exact title of what they were looking for.
The only SEO technique possible in the history of SEO, if it could be considered as such, was that of Aliweb’s meta description.
3. The Bronze Age of SEO (mid 90s — 90s)
The year is 1994. “Jerry and David’s Guide to the World Wide Web” was created. Maybe you’ve never heard of it, but you have heard of the name that the company was renamed to, a few months later: “Yahoo!”. Now that’s a bit more customer-friendly brand name.
What differentiated Yahoo! from everyone else, was that Yahoo! was the first search engine that didn’t organize the directory of other web pages as a searchable index, but rather, it was organizing the indexin a hierarchy. This changed everything in the search engine landscape.
Yahoo! added informational sites for free, but they expanded to include commercial sites as well, for a price. In the next few years, Yahoo!’s presence wasn’t limited to ‘Yahoo! Search’. What’s more, it built many different properties and created a variety of services, such as ‘Yahoo! Mail’, ‘Yahoo! News’, and ‘Yahoo! Finance’.
The main antagonist of Yahoo! at the time was AltaVista.
AltaVista had found the recipe for the precious metal of the era and entered the Bronze Age as well. Like mixing tin, arsenic, and copper to create bronze, AltaVista mixed different innovative elements: It offered unlimited bandwidth and allowed natural language queries. It also maintained an ‘Add URL’ page that allowed webmasters to ensure that key pages from their site were listed quicker than ever within the index; an index that was fully searchable and crawlable, from their crawler called Scooter. AltaVista was one of the web’s top destinations and was offering new features and search tips daily.
Enter 1996. Two students from Stanford University were working on Backrub, the first search engine to utilize backlinks. This would have a huge impact on SEO, as now the reliability of a site would come from how many people linked to that site, and how trustworthy the linking sites were. Any mention of a website would count as a vote of confidence towards the mentioned site.
In the same year, AskJeeves, what today we know today as Ask.com, entered the search engine arena. The original idea behind Ask Jeeves was to allow users to get answers to questions asked every day, using natural language. Furthermore, it was created with another innovative characteristic in mind: to rank links by popularity. AskJeeves also used clustering to organize sites by subject-specific popularity.
In 1997, the Excite search engine was created and became the first search engine to provide only crawler-based listings.
Remember Backrub we mentioned earlier? It’s now called Google. Not exactly the Google we all know today. More like a Google that was struggling to keep up with the competition. But Google had an innovative idea: to sell search terms. This move had a significant effect on the search engine business. A bright future for the search engine world was about to come.
But then, the dot-com bubble burst.
It was a heavy blow to the search engine industry. But it survived – only to become stronger.
4. The Middle Ages of SEO (early 00s — mid-00s)
Like with the real Middle Ages, there was War. Our SEO Middle Ages, and what came before them, was a thing of digital violence. The SEO warfare was ON.
The search engine landscape was a free-for-all arena where anything went.
Major algorithm updates would take several months to complete, which only enforced illicit tactics from the webmasters, also known as Black-hat SEO.
Illegitimate practices and spam -a lot of it- occurred in most parts of the internet. That form was and still is, known as spamdexing. Spamdexing was a way to try and manipulate a search engine’s understanding of a category so that the webpage can find favorable rankings in the search engines.
An example of spamdexing
Other Black-hat SEO tactics include:
Content Automation
Doorway Pages
Hidden Text or Links
Keyword Stuffing
Reporting a Competitor (Negative SEO)
Sneaky Redirects
Cloaking
Link Schemes
Guest Posting Networks
Link Manipulation (including buying links)
Article Spinning
Link Farms, Link Wheels or Link Networks
Rich Snippet Markup Spam
Automated Queries to Google
Creating pages, subdomains, or domains with duplicate content
Pages with malicious behavior, such as phishing, viruses, trojans, and other malware
https://www.wordstream.com/black-hat-seo
But battles were not only fought between webmasters and their pages.
The great monarchs of the search engine land, Yahoo!, Google, Microsoft’s MSN Search, AltaVista, and others, were in an ongoing digital conflict.
AltaVista soon lost ground to Google and was purchased by Yahoo!, in 2003. Alas, their forces combined could not endure what Google had become and Yahoo! lost a big proportion of the market share.
Source: andrewjdupree.com
Google, as a verb, was added to the Oxford English Dictionary and the eleventh edition of the Merriam-Webster Collegiate Dictionary. Google was now The Ruler. And an official word in our dictionaries.
As it usually goes with every new ruler, Google had big plans for its people. The name of this new plan: Florida Update.
Florida Update was the first major Google algorithm update – the update that changed SEO forever. The purpose of the algorithm was to fight against keyword stuffing, so it penalized any website that was practicing such actions.
Before the Florida update, many retailers relied almost entirely on affiliates to drive traffic to their websites. After the update, a lot of major and minor retailers saw significantly reduced traffic.
Many of the sites that previously populated the top 100 were cleared out. Webmasters reacted to that change with a lot of mumbling and some serious SEO. But mostly mumbling. With time, more and more site owners started focusing on their webpages and started making them of higher quality.
G00gle -The King- had ordered some music, and now everyone was dancing to the tune.
5. The Renaissance of SEO (mid-00s — late 00s)
We are well into Web 2.0.
A new model for information exchange has risen, which changed the internet experience as we knew it. Sites on the web stopped being static, and information wasn’t flowing in just one direction, ‘Website to Reader.’
Internet users got access to faster internet speeds, and the interactivity of websites made a huge leap forward: The User could now be the Creator. Many new sites, such as Wikipedia, YouTube, Myspace, and Blogger, quickly became popular and introduced a new concept of user-submitted content.
In 2007 Google changed the Search Engine Results Page (SERP) for good. Until then, the Google results page was only listing 10 blue links. Now, with ‘Universal Search,’ Google results were listing videos, images, maps, and additional media, above, to the right, and amongst the organic search results.
Google SERPS before and now
The results were no more exclusively keyword-dependent. Several factors, such as location, search history, and cookies, would drastically affect the results.
The addition of these factors created a whole new chapter for SEO, as now, businesses and marketers had more formats than just words to get to the user. This user-focused approach to SEO helped lay the foundation for a more captivating and personalized web. Webmasters began optimizing new content media to increase exposure.
Meanwhile, Spamdexing continued, but on a marginal level. Although there were many cases of Google bombing, the search engine reality was very different.
Google Bombing
In 2008, Google Suggest was launched, which was displaying suggested search options based on the universal internet trends and historical data of the user.
New user insights from keyword research tools, Google Trends, and Google Analytics were also major additions that brought digital marketers a new (big) box of tools.
SEO had become an industry of its own.
6. The Enlightenment of SEO (early 10’s — mid-10s)
Our history of SEO continues in the 2010s. At the beginning of the decade, Google released the Panda Farmer Update. This update punished websites that had thin, non-original, and low-quality content, like content farms and scraper sites. The new release forced SEO to focus on higher-quality content.
In 2012, Google continued to keep webmasters on their toes. There was another update, the Penguin Update that penalized everyone that was buying links or obtaining them through link networks that were designed to boost search rankings. Google kept on leading the crusade against low-quality links, keyword stuffing, and web spam.
A year later, Google released another update. The Hummingbird Update was the largest algorithm update until then. The update gave Google Search the ability to analyze the intent behind a query, rather than just the language itself. Hummingbird placed greater emphasis on natural language queries, considering context and meaning over individual keywords.
The most significant change to Google’s algorithm in years forced a change of habits for webmasters. They had to optimize their sites with natural writing rather than forced keywords. They also had to make effective use of technical web development for on-site navigation.
Around that time in the history of SEO, Google’s Knowledge Graph rolled out to include panels in SERPs. Those panels presented additional information to the readers. The user could now get immediate answers without the need to dig through content.
Google also enhanced localized SEO, and results were listed directly in SERPs. All local information was organized, and businesses now had more advertising options than ever before.
7. Modern Times (mid 10’s — Now)
Here’s a fact you probably know due to common sense.
The time users spend on social media is ever-growing.
Source
Google’s algorithm is famously secretly guarded and was stating that social media isn’t a direct ranking factor.
However, according to Searchmetrics, this was not the case.
“The correlation between social signals and ranking position is extremely high, and the number of social signals per landing page has remained constant when compared to with the values from last year’s whitepaper. … The top-ranked websites in Google’s rankings displays vastly more social signals than all other pages … This is primarily due to the overlap between brand websites performing strongly in social networks and being allocated top positions by Google.” – 2016 Rebooting Ranking Factors White Paper
This simply means that, indeed, social media affect SEO.
Content that was shared throughout the web and social media created valuable backlinks and engagement that built authority. These trends lead to the fast-paced, personalized, and more engaging web we know today.
Mobile devices are also gaining ground over desktops and laptops every day.
2016 is the year that Mobile internet usage surpassed desktop usage in the US.
Google has become the ruler not only because it’s setting trends. It is also (successfully) following them to stay relevant and competitive.
So, naturally, Google wanted in the mobile era, and it came with a bang: ‘Mobilegeddon.’
Mobilegeddon was the unofficial name for the update. Its purpose was to benefit mobile-friendly pages in mobile search results and push things forward.
Now, SEO had yet another mission: to be mobile-friendly.
Through all this time, Panda and Penguin version updates kept rolling out. Every new version did more or less the same job: penalizing any site that wasn’t complying with the changes. Here are some of the most notable ones.
In 2017, Google released a search algorithm update. The update, named Fred, punished sites with low-quality backlinks, and anyone that was prioritizing monetization over user experience.
In 2019, Google announced the BERT (Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers). Google itself called it the biggest change to its search engine in the past 5 years, as the update impacted both search rankings and featured snippets.
In 2021, Google announced an algorithm update aimed at identifying and nullifying spammy links. After this update, any websites taking part in link spam tactics with their sponsored, guest, and affiliate content were forced to find other kinds of tactics.
And in 2022, Google rolled out the Link Spam Update. The purpose of this particular update was to further neutralize the impact of unnatural links on search results. For the first time, Google used its Google’s spam-detection algorithm called SpamBrain. Needless to say, since then, link-building has become more difficult -and more genuine- than ever.
Conclusion
Today, SEO is more multidimensional than ever. And it seems like there is no going back.
And with impactful updates rolling out every few months, can you be certain that what you do on your SEO today will hold up tomorrow?
In this life, there are no certainties but with these 5 steps you are as close to creating a Google-update proof strategy as it gets: