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<item><title>A New Era of Search</title><link>https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/blog/a-new-era-of-search/</link>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Richard Dewick]]></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Fri, 30 Jan 2026 16:31:50 +0000</pubDate>
<category><![CDATA[SEO]]></category>
<guid
isPermaLink="false">https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/?p=1184</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>The 2020s have ushered in a fundamental transformation in how people search for information. The rise of large-scale conversational AI platforms has moved search beyond a simple keyword-matching exercise and into an era defined by meaning, context, and intent. Advances in machine learning, neural networks, and natural language processing now allow systems to interpret queries [&#8230;]</p><p>The post <a
href="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/blog/a-new-era-of-search/">A New Era of Search</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk">Creative Sketch</a>.</p>
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<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p
data-start="192" data-end="452">The 2020s have ushered in a fundamental transformation in how people search for information. The rise of large-scale conversational AI platforms has moved search beyond a simple keyword-matching exercise and into an era defined by meaning, context, and intent.</p><p
data-start="454" data-end="778">Advances in machine learning, neural networks, and natural language processing now allow systems to interpret queries with far greater sophistication. As a result, web strategists can no longer rely solely on traditional keyword-based SEO. Instead, they must consider how content satisfies user intent at a conceptual level.</p><p
data-start="780" data-end="1223">The adoption of generative AI is accelerating rapidly. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman has stated that more than 100 million people use ChatGPT every week, making it one of the fastest-growing consumer applications in history. At the same time, Google’s global share of search has slipped below 90% for the first time since 2015, as users increasingly turn to social platforms and large language models (LLMs) such as ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity AI.</p><p
data-start="1225" data-end="1399">These tools are reshaping search from a list of ranked links into a conversational experience—one where users expect direct, synthesised answers rather than pages of results.</p><h2 data-start="1406" data-end="1455">The Rise of AI Overviews and Zero-Click Search</h2><p
data-start="1457" data-end="1725">Google’s introduction of AI Overviews (AIOs) in May 2024 has further accelerated this shift. AIOs are multi-sentence, AI-generated summaries that appear prominently at the top of search results and aim to fulfil user intent immediately—often without requiring a click.</p><p
data-start="1727" data-end="1840">Microsoft’s Bing Copilot follows a similar approach, embedding AI assistance directly into the search experience.</p><p
data-start="1842" data-end="2234">Together, these changes are influencing both search behaviour and user expectations. Queries are becoming longer, more conversational, and increasingly multimodal (for example, combining text and images). Perhaps most significantly, Zero-click searches continue to climb: in 2024 around <strong
data-start="304" data-end="410">58.5% of U.S. Google searches and 59.7% in the EU ended without a user clicking through to any website</strong>, and this trend persisted into 2025 with roughly <strong
data-start="460" data-end="518">60% of searches overall resulting in no external click</strong> as AI-driven answers satisfy queries directly on the results page.</p><p
data-start="2236" data-end="2401">AI-powered search systems also personalise results using search history, preferences, and behaviour, creating highly tailored responses rather than generic rankings.</p><p
data-start="2403" data-end="2512">This raises an important question: what does a world of zero-click search mean for traditional SERP rankings?</p><h2 data-start="2519" data-end="2556">SEO Is Not Dead—But It Is Changing</h2><p
data-start="2558" data-end="3009">Despite these disruptions, organic search remains the single largest driver of website traffic. Around 53% of all trackable web traffic still originates from organic search, and Google processes over five trillion searches annually. Of the searches that do generate a click, approximately 70% go to the top five organic results. Mobile devices now account for 61% of organic search visits, reinforcing the continued importance of mobile-optimised SEO.</p><p
data-start="2558" data-end="3009"><img
fetchpriority="high" decoding="async" class="alignnone wp-image-1188 size-full" src="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/search-graphic.jpg" alt="organic search" width="1000" height="667" srcset="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/search-graphic.jpg 1000w, https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/search-graphic-300x200.jpg 300w, https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/search-graphic-768x512.jpg 768w" sizes="(max-width: 1000px) 100vw, 1000px" /></p><p
data-start="3011" data-end="3271">However, click-through rates are undeniably under pressure. When AI Overviews appear, organic CTRs drop by roughly 67.8%, while paid CTRs decline by about 58%. This reflects how effectively AI summaries are answering questions directly within the results page.</p><p
data-start="3273" data-end="3405">In other words, visibility alone is no longer the primary goal. Influence within AI-generated answers is becoming just as important.</p><h2 data-start="3412" data-end="3443">Fewer Clicks, Better Clicks?</h2><p
data-start="3445" data-end="3727">A falling CTR might seem alarming, but Google’s Head of Search, Elizabeth Reid, offers an alternative perspective. She suggests that clicks originating from AI Overviews tend to be “higher quality”—users bounce less, spend more time on site, scroll deeper, and explore more sources.</p><p
data-start="3729" data-end="3994">If this is true, then traditional SEO KPIs need to evolve. Metrics such as total sessions or percentage of new users may decline, while downstream metrics—time on site, engaged sessions, qualified leads, and conversions—become more meaningful indicators of success.</p><p
data-start="3996" data-end="4241">This shift has helped drive the emergence of Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO): a discipline focused on optimising content for inclusion and citation within AI-generated responses, while blending AI-referral data with traditional SEO metrics.</p><p
data-start="4243" data-end="4419">The strategic question is no longer:<br
/>
<strong
data-start="4280" data-end="4313">“How many clicks did we get?”</strong><br
data-start="4313" data-end="4316" />but rather:<br
/>
<strong
data-start="4328" data-end="4419">“How effectively did we answer user intent—and what business outcomes did that create?”</strong></p><h2 data-start="4426" data-end="4454">Not All Queries Are Equal</h2><p
data-start="4456" data-end="4559">AI Overviews do not appear uniformly across all searches. Their prevalence is highly context-dependent.</p><p
data-start="4561" data-end="4886">Google tends to surface AIOs most often for informational, high-trust, and non-sensitive queries—such as definitions, explanations, and FAQs—where summarisation is relatively safe. For transactional searches, sensitive topics, subscriptions, and breaking news, users are still more likely to click through to source websites.</p><p
data-start="4888" data-end="4917">This distinction is critical.</p><p
data-start="4919" data-end="5276">Rather than treating AI as a universal threat, businesses should audit their content portfolios and identify which pages are most likely to trigger AI summaries. Informational content is typically the best candidate for GEO-focused optimisation, while commercial and transactional pages should continue to prioritise classic SEO and conversion optimisation.</p><h2 data-start="5283" data-end="5298">The Takeaway</h2><p
data-start="5300" data-end="5417">Search is no longer just about ranking—it’s about relevance, usefulness, and authority in an AI-mediated environment.</p><p
data-start="5419" data-end="5477">The winners in this new landscape will be the brands that:</p><ul
data-start="5479" data-end="5660"><li
data-start="5479" data-end="5547"><p
data-start="5481" data-end="5547">Create genuinely helpful, well-structured, authoritative content</p></li><li
data-start="5548" data-end="5590"><p
data-start="5550" data-end="5590">Optimise for intent, not just keywords</p></li><li
data-start="5591" data-end="5660"><p
data-start="5593" data-end="5660">Measure success through engagement and outcomes, not just traffic</p></li></ul><p
data-start="5662" data-end="5838" data-is-last-node="" data-is-only-node=""><strong>SEO isn’t disappearing. It’s evolving into something broader—where SEO and GEO work together to ensure visibility not only in search results, but inside the answers themselves.</strong></p><p>The post <a
href="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/blog/a-new-era-of-search/">A New Era of Search</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk">Creative Sketch</a>.</p>
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<item><title>Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) Basics</title><link>https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/blog/search-engine-optimisation-seo-basics/</link>
<dc:creator><![CDATA[Richard Dewick]]></dc:creator>
<pubDate>Tue, 11 Apr 2023 15:56:01 +0000</pubDate>
<category><![CDATA[SEO]]></category>
<category><![CDATA[Web Design]]></category>
<guid
isPermaLink="false">https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/?p=886</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) is the method of targeting a page for a keyword or phrase to help that page rank/appear near the top of the search engine results pages (SERPs). Here I&#8217;ll outline what your page needs in order to help it rank as high as possible in Google and Bing SERPs. In order [&#8230;]</p><p>The post <a
href="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/blog/search-engine-optimisation-seo-basics/">Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) Basics</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk">Creative Sketch</a>.</p>
]]></description>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) is the method of targeting a page for a keyword or phrase to help that page rank/appear near the top of the search engine results pages (SERPs). Here I&#8217;ll outline what your page needs in order to help it rank as high as possible in Google and Bing SERPs.</p><p>In order for a page to rank it needs the following basic SEO components:</p><ul><li>A keyword or phrase</li><li>Placement of that keyword or phrase within<ul><li>the page title</li><li>SEO title</li><li>description</li><li>URL</li><li>page copy</li><li>h1 heading and h2 sub-headings</li><li>image alternative text</li></ul></li></ul><h2>SEO Keyword Research</h2><p>You may think you already have a keyword or phrase in mind but is it what people are actually searching for? Keyword research is the bedrock of your Search Engine Optimisation strategy and the best places to start are via <a
href="https://ads.google.com/intl/en_uk/home/tools/keyword-planner">Google Ads keyword planner</a> or the <a
href="https://moz.com/explorer#index">Moz keyword tool</a>. These keyword tools provide valuable information such as search volume, the number of monthly searches for a keyword, a difficulty rating, how easy or hard it is to rank for the keyword, along with suggested alternative keywords that you might not have thought of.</p><p>Does your keyword or phrase need to be targeted at a certain location or place? This is called localisation and should be part of your keyword research.</p><h2>Placement Of Your Keyword</h2><p>Now you have researched your keyword, found one that has a reasonable volume of searches and is not too difficult to rank for, you can now start to add it to your page.</p><p>To start with your keyword should be within these key places:</p><ul><li>the page title</li><li>SEO title</li><li>description</li><li>URL (slug)</li></ul><p>The Yoast SEO plugin is helpful when it comes to optimising your page and, as per the preview below, you can see where I have used the keyword &#8216;Search Engine Optimisation&#8217; within these 4 areas:</p><p><img
decoding="async" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-888" src="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/yoast-preview.png" alt="yoast preview" width="594" height="695" srcset="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/yoast-preview.png 594w, https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/yoast-preview-256x300.png 256w" sizes="(max-width: 594px) 100vw, 594px" /></p><h2>Search Engine Optimised Page Content</h2><p>The elements above are all things that are within the page code or appear in the search engine results pages. Next we need to use our keyword within the content the user will see on the page itself, within the:</p><ul><li>page copy</li><li>h1 heading and h2 sub-headings</li><li>image alternative text (Alt text)</li></ul><p>Your page copy needs to contain at least 300 words, with your keyword and synonyms used throughout. But there is a balance needed between a page written for ranking alone and one written for the end user. Google&#8217;s algorithms know when a page has been over optimised and the Yoast plugin does a good job of telling you if the keyword density of a page is too great, so don&#8217;t over do it!</p><p>When creating your page the software you use will employ a theme to style how it looks and should, if setup correctly, use the appropriate headings for your page title, an h1 heading, and allow you to add h2 headings throughout your page.</p><p>When adding an image to the page you should have the option to add Alternative Text (Alt text) to your image, as per the screen grab below. This text is used by screen readers, for blind or partially sighted users, and search engines, to describe the image to the user.</p><p><img
decoding="async" class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-889" src="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/alt-text.png" alt="alt text" width="288" height="317" srcset="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/alt-text.png 288w, https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/04/alt-text-273x300.png 273w" sizes="(max-width: 288px) 100vw, 288px" /></p><p>You can review your page code by going to <em>View &gt; Developer &gt; View Source</em> within Chrome to check all of the above are in place correctly.</p><p>All our <a
href="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/services/website-design-cheltenham/#pricing">website packages</a> come with basic SEO and advanced SEO is available at a set monthly fee. Do <a
href="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/contact/">contact us</a> if your website requires Search Engine Optimisation.</p><p>The post <a
href="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk/blog/search-engine-optimisation-seo-basics/">Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) Basics</a> appeared first on <a
href="https://www.creativesketch.co.uk">Creative Sketch</a>.</p>
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