{"id":2876,"date":"2025-04-07T11:00:00","date_gmt":"2025-04-07T11:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/nurseagence.com\/?p=2876"},"modified":"2025-04-08T13:24:06","modified_gmt":"2025-04-08T13:24:06","slug":"did-hubspot-really-lose-80-of-blog-traffic-heres-what-actually-happened-and-what-it-means-for-marketers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/nurseagence.com\/index.php\/2025\/04\/07\/did-hubspot-really-lose-80-of-blog-traffic-heres-what-actually-happened-and-what-it-means-for-marketers\/","title":{"rendered":"Did HubSpot Really Lose 80% of Blog Traffic? Here\u2019s What Actually Happened \u2014 and What It Means for Marketers"},"content":{"rendered":"
Earlier this year, HubSpot went viral \u2014 and not exactly in a good way. A few companies posted data<\/a> suggesting that we had lost 80% of our blog traffic. Overnight, the news was all over X and LinkedIn.<\/p>\n As marketers ourselves, we know better than anyone that hot takes drive clicks. But, what actually happened to our traffic? Have we really reached the end of SEO as we know it? And is this really the downfall of HubSpot\u2019s core strategy?<\/p>\n As one of the people who built HubSpot\u2019s SEO strategy from the ground up, I\u2019d like to think I can offer a bit more of a nuanced perspective. And while I\u2019d never begrudge our fellow content creators jumping aboard the latest hot take bandwagon, in this case, I\u2019d argue that the reality is a bit more complex than social media might have you think.<\/p>\n That\u2019s why I wrote this post: Not just to set the record straight (spoilers: no, the end of HubSpot is not nigh) but also to help marketers understand the very real challenges that today\u2019s AI-powered search ecosystem poses. I\u2019ll also share the steps marketers can take to meet those challenges and come out ahead.<\/p>\n Let\u2019s start with what actually happened. There are three important pieces to the traffic puzzle that the clickbait headlines and apocalyptic posts have (by and large) ignored.<\/p>\n None of us could have predicted the incredible impact that AI tools like ChatGPT have had over the last few years. However, we have been taking steps to keep HubSpot\u2019s strategy relevant since long before the recent hype cycle.<\/p>\n Specifically, as far back as early 2020, we began to see that Google was demanding a new approach. While our original SEO strategy focused on providing concrete, informational content, over the last five years search engines have increasingly rewarded influence rather than just information \u2014 and we adapted our strategy accordingly.<\/p>\n We invested in channels like YouTube, podcasts, and social media. We built out HubSpot Academy, and, importantly, we acquired the founder-centric news site The Hustle<\/em>. These platforms came together to transform our content from largely informational into an ever-present part of our target customers\u2019 lives.<\/p>\n We never cared about vanity metrics like traffic, but especially in recent years, we became increasingly focused on cultivating influence rather than just providing information. You can see the results in posts like this one<\/a>, where a HubSpot customer describes the literal years-long journey he took to discover our brand, fall under our influence, and, eventually, buy our product.<\/p>\n Image Source<\/em><\/a><\/p>\n The point was never to maximize page views. We wanted to build influence so that when people eventually need a product that we sell, they come to us first.<\/p>\n Recent updates to Google\u2019s algorithm added new urgency to this shift toward influence over information, but these changes were already in motion years before the recent media kerfuffle.<\/p>\n Today, Google is pushing people to dial into their core areas of expertise, and they\u2019re rewarding sites that focus on content that\u2019s relevant to those areas. That\u2019s a bit of a departure from how it used to work, when search algorithms rewarded quantity alongside quality.<\/p>\n But, we had already been working to dial up the quality piece of our content equation, to focus in on the content that\u2019s most relevant to our customers. This choice put us in a good position to get ahead of these changes when they emerged.<\/p>\n<\/a><\/p>\n
What Actually Happened to HubSpot\u2019s Traffic<\/h2>\n
1. Shifting from Information to Influence<\/h3>\n
<\/p>\n
2. The Disruption (and Opportunity) of LLMs<\/h3>\n