logo
#

Latest news with #CopilotSearch

With AI Search Rising, Does Traditional SEO Still Matter?
With AI Search Rising, Does Traditional SEO Still Matter?

Hi Dubai

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Hi Dubai

With AI Search Rising, Does Traditional SEO Still Matter?

Search has always been our compass on the internet. You think of something, type it in, and a list of answers magically appears. For the longest time, that magic was ruled by one name: Google. With over 90% of global market share, Google didn't just guide our searches—it defined how we built websites, created content, and grew businesses online. And then, AI showed up with a different kind of magic. The kind that doesn't just find answers but writes them for you. So here's the big question: if AI is answering our queries directly, where does that leave traditional SEO? In this article, we'll explore how AI is changing search, what this means for SEO, and whether traditional strategies still hold their weight in 2025 and beyond. Understanding How Traditional SEO Has Always Worked Before we jump into AI, let's quickly revisit how traditional SEO works. When you publish a web page, Google (and other search engines) send bots (called crawlers) to discover it. Once found, they scan the page, understand what it's about, and store that information in an index. When someone types a related search query, Google ranks and displays the most relevant results. That's crawling, indexing, and ranking in action. If your site isn't technically optimized for these steps, it may never even show up, neither in classic search results nor in AI-generated answers. So the basics of technical SEO (like site speed, structured data, proper metadata, and mobile optimization) still form the foundation of visibility. Then comes content. Good content. Content that's helpful, unique, and designed for humans, not just bots. Google calls this E-E-A-T: Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. It matters because search engines want to serve quality, reliable information, especially on topics related to health, finance, or safety. Link-building and social signals round out the formula. The more trusted sources link back to your site, the more Google considers you worth showing. But what happens when the user doesn't click on a link at all? Enter AI: Search That Skips the Click The biggest shift in recent years is that people aren't clicking anymore. AI tools like Google's AI Overviews and Microsoft Bing's Copilot Search are designed to answer your question right there on the search page. This is what we call a "zero-click search." According to Bain research, over 60% of users now get their answers directly from these AI-generated summaries. That means a lot of the traffic you used to rely on from organic search is vanishing. Let's pause here. If you run a business or create content online, doesn't this mean SEO is dead? Not quite. Instead of killing SEO, AI is changing what counts as "success." Getting users to click is still valuable, but now so is being the source of information the AI pulls from. If your site is cited in an AI Overview, you might not get the click, but you still get visibility. And in many cases, users who do click through from an AI answer are more qualified—they're genuinely interested. Traditional SEO Is Now the Entry Ticket to AI Search Here's the twist: AI search systems still rely on traditional search infrastructure. AI Overviews, AI Mode, Bing Copilot—all of these use crawlers, indexes, and rankings to pull the best content from the web. If your content isn't technically optimized (can't be crawled or indexed), it won't be discovered, and it certainly won't be quoted. That means everything from meta descriptions to schema markup (structured data) still matters. Want AI to notice your content? You still need: Clean, crawlable site structure Descriptive page titles and URLs Proper use of alt text for images Fast-loading, mobile-friendly design High-quality, original content that solves real problems So traditional SEO hasn't vanished. It's become your gateway to AI visibility. The Power of E-E-A-T in an AI World Let's revisit E-E-A-T—Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. AI models are trained to prioritize credible, people-first content. If your article includes original research, real-life stories, and clear signals of expertise (author bios, credentials, trusted links), it's more likely to be selected as a source. This is especially true for "Your Money or Your Life" content \...health, finance, education, safety—where bad advice could harm someone. Google and Bing take these topics very seriously and heavily factor in trust signals.\ Add detailed author bios and credentials Use HTTPS and display clear contact info Collect and showcase positive reviews Publish unique, experience-backed insights Earn backlinks from high-authority websites If AI is the new librarian, E-E-A-T is your recommendation letter. AI Search Means You Need to Think in Topics, Not Keywords Remember the days of writing a blog post just to rank for a keyword? Those days are fading. AI doesn't work like that. It doesn't look for keywords—it looks for themes, context, and relationships. This means instead of stuffing pages with variations of the same phrase, you need to create deep, well-organized content that answers real questions. Topic clusters work better than isolated blog posts. Think of it like building a library on your website: one pillar page covers the main idea, and smaller articles support it with details. This structure helps AI understand you're an authority on the subject. This is the core of "Answer Engine Optimization" (AEO): creating content so useful, clear, and complete that AI picks it as a primary source. Search isn't just text anymore. With tools like Google Lens and multimodal AI models like Gemini, users are searching with images, voice, and follow-up questions. AI understands these formats and links them together. So what does this mean for you? It means your content should work in multiple formats: Add alt text and captions to images Include transcripts for videos and podcasts Optimize for voice queries by writing in natural, conversational language In short: make your content accessible, scannable, and adaptable. AI also personalizes search based on user history. If someone often searches for baking tips, asking "what's the best mixer" might prioritize culinary results. Your content should consider different user journeys and use cases. Table: Traditional SEO vs. AI Search Strategy Shift Element Traditional SEO AI Search Optimization Focus Keywords & rankings Topics, semantic meaning, usefulness Clicks Click-through rate (CTR) Zero-click visibility & source credibility Format Text-heavy pages Multimodal: text, images, audio, video Strategy Link-building & keyword mapping Topical authority & structured content User Behavior Short, transactional queries Complex, conversational, personalized queries Measurement Google Analytics & CTR Visibility in AI summaries, brand mentions So... Does Traditional SEO Still Matter? Absolutely. But its role has changed. SEO is no longer just about climbing the rankings. It's about being discoverable, credible, and useful enough to be included in AI-generated responses. It's about optimizing not just for humans or algorithms but for both. In other words, AI didn't kill SEO. It made it smarter. If you're still relying on outdated tactics—like stuffing keywords or chasing links without building trust—you'll likely be left behind. But if you're investing in strong technical SEO, building E-E-A-T, diversifying content formats, and focusing on real value? You're in a better position than ever. The Future of Search Is a Partnership Think of AI not as a rival to SEO, but as a new kind of search partner. One that doesn't just help people find information, but also filters and summarizes it. That means your job, as a content creator or marketer, is evolving too. You're no longer writing for a search engine. You're writing for a system that speaks, thinks, and answers like a person. In this article, we explored how traditional SEO remains essential, even as AI reshapes the rules. From crawling and indexing to E-E-A-T and topical authority, your content still needs to be optimized, but with a broader, more human approach. Because in the end, it's not just about being found. It's about being trusted. Also read: Best Digital Tools for Small Businesses in the UAE Discover essential digital tools every small business in the UAE needs to thrive—plus government support that helps them grow smarter and faster. The Importance of SEO for Startups We'll explore what SEO entails, why it's a crucial investment for any ambitious startup, and how to harness its potential to gain a competitive edge, forge lasting customer connections, and propel your venture toward long-term success. Why Local SEO Matters for Companies in Dubai By understanding and implementing effective local SEO strategies, companies can enhance their online visibility, attract more customers, and gain a competitive edge in the market. Dubai Rises as a Powerhouse for AI Startup Launches AI startups from around the world are increasingly establishing roots in the UAE, drawn by its accelerating innovation ecosystem and rising reputation as a hub for research and talent.

Microsoft integrates OpenAI's Sora video creator into Bing
Microsoft integrates OpenAI's Sora video creator into Bing

Engadget

time3 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Engadget

Microsoft integrates OpenAI's Sora video creator into Bing

Microsoft introduced an AI-powered video generator to its Bing search engine. Bing Video Creator is powered by OpenAI's Sora, which creates short clips based on text prompts. The free feature is rolling out to the Bing mobile app starting today and is slated to arrive later on desktop and to Copilot Search. Microsoft has invested multiple billions of dollars into OpenAI in support of its artificial intelligence endeavors over the years. The tech giant integrated the DALL-E image generation capability from OpenAI into the Bing search engine in 2023, so it's not surprising that it has followed a similar path with the company's Sora video tool. However, Sora had a rocky launch with a rebuke from YouTube's CEO not to train on its videos and protests from several of its early testing participants. The model became broadly available at the end of last year. It's also facing more competition from other video AI models offering more complex features, such as Google's Veo 3 .

Microsoft's latest Copilot updates include a mobile version of the multimodal Vision tool
Microsoft's latest Copilot updates include a mobile version of the multimodal Vision tool

Yahoo

time07-04-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Microsoft's latest Copilot updates include a mobile version of the multimodal Vision tool

Engadget has been testing and reviewing consumer tech since 2004. Our stories may include affiliate links; if you buy something through a link, we may earn a commission. Read more about how we evaluate products. Microsoft just announced several updates to its Copilot AI assistant, and some sound downright useful. It's bringing Copilot Vision to mobile, but with some new features. For the uninitiated, this software originally launched for the Edge web browser and gave Copilot the ability to 'see' and comment on the contents of websites. The company is upping its game for the mobile version, adding some multimodal functionality. It'll be able to integrate with your phone's camera to 'enable an interactive experience with the real world.' Microsoft says it can analyze both real-time video from the camera and photos stored on the device Microsoft gives an example of Copilot Vision analyzing a video of plants to determine if they are healthy or not and suggesting actions to take. We'll see if it can actually perform that kind of nuanced reasoning. Modern AI companies love to promise the world and then, well, you know the rest. In any event, the mobile version of Vision is available today in the Copilot app for iOS and Android. The web version is also coming to Windows. Microsoft is bringing Copilot Search to Bing to 'seamlessly blend the best of traditional and generative search together to help you find what you need.' The company is now calling Bing 'your AI-powered search and answer engine.' Like most AI web search tools, this provides summaries to answer queries. Microsoft says this can take the form of a simple paragraph, like Gemini AI for Google searches, but that it also can provide 'images and data from your favorite publishers and content owners.' Copilot Search is rolling out today. The company also introduced something called Copilot Memory. This is Microsoft's attempt to bring more personalization to Copilot. After all, it's tough to have a true AI companion when it doesn't remember anything about you. With this addition, Copilot will be able to remember specific details about your life, like 'your favorite food, the types of films you enjoy and your nephew's birthday and his interests.' The company touts that the software will recommend actions based on what it remembers. To that end, Microsoft says Copilot will be able to do stuff like buy tickets to events, order flowers and make dinner reservations. It says the service will 'work with most websites across the web.' We'll see how that works out. The update brings some other tools to the table, like the ability to auto-generate podcasts based on specific topics and offer shopping advice based on sales history across the web. These updates begin rolling out today, but it may not hit every user for a bit. Microsoft says availability will expand in the coming weeks and months.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store