{"id":2857,"date":"2025-04-07T17:46:06","date_gmt":"2025-04-07T17:46:06","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/nurseagence.com\/?p=2857"},"modified":"2025-04-08T13:21:27","modified_gmt":"2025-04-08T13:21:27","slug":"reddits-growth-advisor-on-finding-your-vertical-specific-seo-strategy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/nurseagence.com\/index.php\/2025\/04\/07\/reddits-growth-advisor-on-finding-your-vertical-specific-seo-strategy\/","title":{"rendered":"Reddit's Growth Advisor on Finding Your Vertical-Specific SEO Strategy"},"content":{"rendered":"
Once upon a time, SEO was just SEO. (Cue Mr. Incredible meme.) Whether you were a billion-dollar national brand or a teen with a Spice Girls Tumblr, you played the same game: Trying to get your page in those ten blue links.<\/span><\/p>\n Now, two marketers might not even be playing the SEO game on the same field, let alone with the same rules. So how do they hope to win?<\/p>\n If you\u2019re in SEO, today\u2019s master needs no introduction. <\/span>If you\u2019re not, all you need to know is that he\u2019s done SEO for more big brands than you have fingers to count them.<\/p>\n These days, the type of search you perform can lead to a very different experience. A product search might bring you to Google Shopping, while an informational search brings up an AI Overview. That is, if you\u2019re even searching on Google at all.<\/p>\n The result is that SEO can mean radically different things to otherwise similar marketers.<\/p>\n \u201cBased on what vertical you play in, you might not work with the same tools,\u201d Indig says. \u201cYou might not even optimize for the same platform.\u201d And a vertical-specific strategy is the only way to stay ahead in the new search game. <\/strong><\/p>\n He gives the example of a SaaS or B2B brand vying for real estate in Google\u2019s AI Overviews.<\/p>\n \u201cAI Overviews source a lot of citations from YouTube or LinkedIn,\u201d he tells me. So a business that wants to show up in Google search results might\u2026 not focus on either their website or<\/em><\/strong> Google.<\/p>\n Meanwhile, marketing a B2C product \u201cis much more about Google Merchant Center than Google Search Console. [It\u2019s] a completely different playing field and [there\u2019s] completely different ways to win.\u201d<\/p>\n \u201cThe pattern here is fragmentation,\u201d he says. \u201cWe cannot just talk about SEO. What form<\/em> of SEO are we talking about?\u201d<\/p>\n But no matter what vertical you find yourself in, \u201cSEO should not just be on Google anymore.\u201d<\/p>\n Indig simply means that good SEO is bigger than just Google these days, but it raises the question about Google\u2019s competitors. So I asked if marketers should even be focusing on Google in the first place?<\/p>\n In true SEO fashion, the answer is \u201cit depends.\u201d (It\u2019s comforting to know some things never change, right?) And what it depends on is \u2014 again \u2014 your vertical.<\/p>\n So if you\u2019re a small business with a physical presence?<\/p>\n \u201cWhen it comes to local search, I don\u2019t see anybody getting close to Google in the next decade. [It still] has an absolute stronghold.<\/strong>\u201d<\/p>\n What about eComm?<\/p>\n \u201cI would argue that Google never won. Amazon still holds that space.\u201d<\/p>\n And our fictional SaaS looking to show up in the overviews? That\u2019s where things get a little more gray.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
Kevin Indig<\/h2>\n
Growth Advisor for Hims, Toast, Reddit, Dropbox & more<\/em><\/h3>\n
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Lesson 1: Find your vertical-specific strategy.<\/h2>\n
<\/p>\n
Lesson 2: Decide where you want to be.<\/h2>\n