Google's Preferred Sources feature is one of the quieter updates to come out of search lately, but it has a real connection to click-through rates inside AI Overviews. Jess explains more in this video. 🎥
How do you encourage your audience to choose your brand as a Preferred Source? Start by creating a link they can use.
The link to the Preferred Sources page is actually pretty easy to set up. As an example, here's what it would look like if we created a link for you to add us as one of your preferred sources. 😉
https://t.co/jS3ZgaENOX
If you want your audience to add your website, just replace our domain with your own at the end of the URL, and share it in your marketing — on your website, on social media, etc. It's that simple!
Google even provides button assets you can drop onto your site.
The businesses that will benefit from this are the ones already publishing consistently and earning enough trust that their audience wants to opt in. There's no shortcut there.
If you're already doing the work, this is a quick way to make it count inside AI search features.
p.s. Don't forget to add WebFX as a Preferred Source! See above for the link!
Your rankings are up. Your traffic is down.
That's not a bug — nearly 60% of Google searches now end without a click, and AI Mode produces zero clicks 93% of the time.
2026 search market share, explained: https://t.co/kGdvb250I1
The most expensive sentence in business right now?
"My customers aren't using AI."
We've heard variations of this phrase over the last few decades.
In the early days of search, we heard, "My customers aren't using Google."
As smartphones were starting to take off, it was, "People don't visit my website from their phones."
But now, Google dominates the search landscape, mobile-friendly websites are essential, and AI serves as an important touchpoint in many customer journeys.
Even if your customers aren't seeking out AI chatbots, they're likely interacting with the AI tools built into the platforms they know and love.
AI Overviews in Google's search engine are a great example of this. They show up in more than a quarter of all searches. That's an estimated 4.1 billion AI Overviews each day.
The businesses that ignored search in 2005 and mobile in 2012 spent years playing catch-up.
The window on AI is still open, though not indefinitely.
Google Analytics now has a dedicated AI Assistant channel for traffic from ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude.
No custom setup required — it just appears in your acquisition reports.
The real question is what to do with the data once it's there. We built an AI Traffic Quality Ladder to help with that.
More details on our blog!
https://t.co/5dGVzf8hdq
How do you get better results from your AI inputs? Ask what the LLM needs to get the job done.
Here's what Sam D., one of our team's AI aficionados, has to say.
"Sometimes [AI] might need a specific website, or if you're debugging some code problems, it could be a specific error message. Getting that information into the AI that you might not have given it in the first place can help it debug that issue further and go down a better path, which helps you solve your problems faster."
Marketing has always had a lot of acronyms. SEO, PPC, ROI, ROAS, CRM…it can be a lot. And now, with AI thrown into the mix, we’re getting even more acronyms, with one of the most prominent ones being GEO (which stands for generative engine optimization).
“Wait, GEO?” you might be asking. “So, it’s just SEO with a different first letter?” Well, no. GEO is definitely related to SEO, and you need both to have a successful visibility strategy, but they’re not the same thing.
To put it simply, SEO focuses on optimizing your content for traditional search rankings, while GEO focuses on optimizing for AI-generated responses. So, the intent is the same — increasing online visibility in search — but the channels are different, which means the methods generally are, too.
As you likely know, common tactics for improving SEO include:
🔎 Targeting long-tail keywords
🔎 Earning third-party backlinks
🔎 Improving speed
🔎 Optimizing for mobile
GEO, on the other hand, uses techniques such as:
🤖 Providing direct answers to prompts
🤖 Integrating hard data and examples
🤖 Creating dedicated FAQ sections
🤖 Building out brand and entity signals
So, SEO and GEO are often considered separate strategies. BUT that’s not to say they’re entirely disconnected.
Actually, one study showed that more than half of AI Overview citations come from pages that also rank in traditional search results. That means optimizing for SEO also helps you optimize for GEO. Meanwhile, GEO-specific tactics serve as an important new layer in your strategy that helps accelerate visibility in AI features and tools.
At the end of the day, by far the best plan is to prioritize both SEO and GEO in your marketing strategy, optimizing for search visibility across the board.
Learn more on our website! https://t.co/axQpGeXsRS
MCP.
If you've seen this acronym floating around your feed lately and thought "I should probably know what that is," you're not alone.
Let's break it down.
✨ MCP stands for Model Context Protocol. It's an open standard created by Anthropic (the company behind Claude) that gives your AI tools a common language to speak with the rest of your tech stack.
Here's the problem it solves.
Right now, many AI tools operate in a silo. Your AI assistant can chat with you out of the box, but it can't pull a report from your CRM, check your ad performance, or look at your analytics unless someone builds a custom connection for each one. And every new tool means another custom integration.
That's complex. 😵
MCP simplifies that by creating one standard way for AI tools to connect to your company's tech stack. Instead of building a unique integration for every combination of AI tool and data source, you have one connection that works across the board.
Think of it like hiring a translator who speaks every language in the room. Instead of needing a separate translator for every conversation, one person handles it all. That's basically what MCP does for AI.
So what does this look like in practice?
Say you're a marketer (which you probably are if you're reading this post 😉).
With MCP, your AI assistant could pull your latest campaign data from Google Ads, cross-reference it with lead data in a CRM, and draft a performance summary, all without you toggling between five different tabs.
MCP adoption has been fast, too. OpenAI, Google, and Microsoft have all gotten behind MCP, and major CRM players like Salesforce and Nutshell are building with it.
📣 The big question: Why should you care right now?
Because the companies that (safely and securely) connect their AI tools to their actual business data are going to move a lot faster than the ones still copy-pasting between platforms.
You don't need to become an MCP expert overnight. But understanding what it is and where it's headed puts you ahead.
The wait is over — ChatGPT has officially launched its self-serve ad portal, meaning businesses can now have ads appear in front of the leading AI tool's audience.
ChatGPT Ads Manager is currently available to U.S.-based businesses, as well as OpenAI partners. Ads will appear in front of Free and Go tier users in the U.S., Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
If your company wants to start advertising with ChatGPT, you'll have to go through the sign-up process, which includes a verification of your business.
The verification process may take time, especially with current demand levels. But once you're in, you can start creating campaigns.
Get all of the details on this new launch and more on our website!
https://t.co/pMNPFvboe2
Meet Rachael — Susquehanna University grad, communication all-star, and expert digital marketer.
In her role, Rachael serves as the main point of contact for her clients and their digital marketing strategies, ensuring that they see growth from their WebFX partnership.
Whether managing SEO, AI SEO, or PPC campaigns, she loves diving into all things marketing.
What does Rachael love most about her role?
🗣️ "The opportunity to work with and create meaningful business impact for clients in diverse industries located across the country."
Get to know more about Rachael right here. 👇
Is third-party or first-party content better for your brand's AI visibility?
We can answer that question with another question: Why not both?
More on that in this quick AI pro tip from Breanna W.
What if the reason your brand isn't showing up in AI-generated answers has nothing to do with your content quality, and everything to do with how it's structured behind the scenes?
AI models need to interpret your content before they can cite it. That's where structured data comes in. Schema markup helps AI systems understand what your content is about and who's behind it, putting it in a format machines can actually work with.
When that's done well, your brand doesn't just show up in a list of results. It becomes part of the answer. That means more visibility, more trust, and more qualified traffic from AI-powered search.
There are several schema types that can improve your AI visibility. Article and BlogPosting help establish authorship credibility. FAQ and HowTo surface step-by-step answers. Product and Review show up in shopping queries. Organization strengthens brand accuracy. And Person helps AI cite your experts.
The key is making sure your schema is accurate, consistent, and matched to the intent of each page. Structured data is only going to become more important as AI continues to power discovery, and the brands that treat it as a visibility strategy now will have the edge.
https://t.co/Bh336ZmFmF
AI doesn't read your website the way a person does. To AI, every word, every page, and every mention of your brand across the web is a datapoint it processes mathematically.
Why that matters: AI is increasingly deciding which brands get surfaced in search. It draws on the full picture it's built of you across every source it can find.
If that picture is clear, you get recommended. If not, you get overlooked.
More on how to optimize your brand for AI on our blog.
https://t.co/U1mYEUAh4N
Apple Maps may look a bit different starting this summer. 🍎
Apple is planning to introduce sponsored placements within Apple Maps, starting in the U.S. and Canada. Businesses will be able to show up as promoted results when people search for things like home services, hotels, auto repair, or healthcare providers inside the app.
Ads will likely appear in two places: in the search results and within a "Suggested Places" feature that recommends businesses based on what's trending nearby and a user's recent searches.
So, what should your business do right now?
The biggest step you can take before Maps ads are live is to make sure your company information is complete up to date. Apple Business, a new all-in-one management platform, can help you keep track of your company details and ensure that the people who reach you are getting the right information.
Claim your locations, update your hours and categories, upload photos, and make sure your listing is accurate.
Apple uses this information to power how your business appears across Maps, Siri, and other Apple services.
Beyond that, it's a good time to audit local SEO fundamentals like NAP consistency, local citations, reviews, and location schema.
We broke down everything we know so far on our website. https://t.co/TBhHmaqJgR
"Which of these channels is actually making us money?"
If your team is drowning in data but still can't confidently answer that question, marketing mix modeling (MMM) might be the missing piece.
MMM gives you the big-picture view of your marketing performance, using historical data to understand how every channel — plus external factors like seasonality — works together to impact your bottom line over time.
Learn more about MMM on our blog! https://t.co/pH1mCIVEFD
Revenue is the north star for our clients' strategies. Whether we're crafting a GEO plan, managing social media ads, or updating your local presence, we put your revenue growth at the heart of what we do.
Want to learn more about how our team can positively impact your bottom line? Get in touch with us!
https://t.co/CX3h4rB0mS
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We analyzed 2.3 billion website sessions to better understand how AI has shaped information discovery over the past two years. The data tells a story with some surprising twists.
As you may expect, traffic from generative AI has increased nearly 800%. But it's not just traffic that's shifting with AI adoption.
We found that people who landed on a website from a generative AI source converted at a rate about 1.2x higher than those who arrived from organic search.
This does NOT mean that organic search is dead. We repeat: organic search is NOT dead. It's very much alive and remains an important piece of your strategy. Why?
Well, despite the accelerated AI growth, organic search is still one of the leading website traffic drivers. Direct and organic search traffic actually make up a combined 63% of market share. That's quite significant.
In addition, traditional SEO signals impact how AI finds information to cite.
If you're wondering what this means for your business, we lay everything out in our blog.
You'll find even more details on how users engage with brands online, plus what you can do to adapt.
https://t.co/9IyphBFWCW
AI affects basically every area of marketing in some way, and lead generation is no exception.
As buyer journeys continue to fragment and become more complex, it’s more important than ever for your lead generation process to be fast, precise, and relevant. By automating routine tasks and providing deeper insights, AI helps your business meet that need.
If you’re unsure whether AI lead generation is right for your business, ask yourself:
🤔 Is my lead volume high enough for me to need automation?
🤔 Do I have a hard time following up with leads in a timely manner?
🤔 Am I willing to provide human oversight for AI?
If you answer “yes” to those questions, you can likely benefit from AI in your lead generation strategy. But how can you actually use it?
Some of the top use cases for AI lead generation include:
✅ Scoring and prioritizing leads based on how likely they are to close
✅ Hyper-personalizing lead generation email outreach campaigns
✅ Analyzing user behavior to identify buying intent before competitors
✅ Optimizing paid advertising campaigns in real time
✅ Predicting future pipeline performance and buyer intent
Of course, for AI to truly benefit your lead generation strategy, that strategy needs to be well-optimized. You can’t fix bad lead generation just by throwing AI at it. For that reason, be sure to clearly define your goals and audit your existing processes before adding AI into the mix.
And even after you do introduce it, be careful not to rely too heavily on it. Letting the AI handle everything without human oversight won’t turn out well for you — it may result in misinterpreted signals and poorly timed messaging. That means you should keep human judgement at the center of your lead generation strategy.
When you combine AI automation with human-made decisions, you get a killer lead generation strategy that decreases the length of your sales cycles while boosting your revenue.
https://t.co/sWqelxDAF8