Last year’s Ahrefs Evolve was about surviving Google’s updates. This year? We barely talked about algorithms. Instead, more than 500 marketers gathered and listened raptly as every conversation circled back to AI. Its meteoric impact on our industry cannot be overstated. Here are the four themes that defined Ahrefs Evolve 2025 for me. Pro Tip Want to experience Ahrefs Evolve 2026? Be the first to know when the tickets drop. Join the waitlist here. LLMs have become an alternative platform for search. Google themselves released AI Overviews and AI Mode, decimating clicks to websites. Slide from Patrick Stox Slide from Patrick Stox Even before that, TikTok was gradually becoming the go-to search engine for Gen Zs. Other searchers were turning directly to Reddit for authentic comments and reviews. Slide from Heather Physioc Search behavior has changed massively. We don’t just search in that one Google box anymore. Users are discovering content, ideas, places, and buying from all sorts of places: YouTube, TikTok, Reddit, Amazon, Instagram, Discord, and more. It’s time that SEOs recognized that. As Heather Physioc mapped it out in her presentation, the modern search journey looks more like this: Slide from Heather Physioc Search isn’t just Google anymore and SEO isn’t just search engine optimization. It’s now search everywhere optimization. You have to ask, “Where is our audience actually looking, and how do we show up there?” Slide from Eric Siu To do this, SEOs can’t work in silos anymore. The new SEO leaders have to work across different teams. I mean, just look at the strategies Patrick suggested that works for GEO: Slide from Patrick Stox They’re the job descriptions of different teams. SEOs can’t do them all. The only way is to have more teams and collaborate more often. Slide from Patrick Stox Or as Bryan Casey puts it, you want to reframe your job description and mindset from SEO to “General Manager of Inbound”: Slide from Bryan Casey If AI search is rewriting how people discover content, then the next question is: what and where exactly is AI pulling from? Unfortunately for all of us, the biggest ranking factor is probably not even our site anymore. According to a study by AirOps, when it comes to AI search visibility, brands are 6.5x more likely to be cited through third-party sources than their own domains. Google and other LLMs are trained on what the Internet says and therefore increasingly rely on offsite brand and category signals. As Carrie Rose puts it, “brand is the new SEO.” Slide from Carrie Rose Simply put: LLMs like popular brands. Slide from Kevin Indig Why? Because LLMs “cite” the brands they trust, and that trust is built the same way as human trust—via reputation. So, if you want to appear in LLMs, you have to build trust, authority, and brand awareness. Fortunately, our speakers had some great ideas on how to do that exactly. Carrie Rose thinks that brand salience is the most important ranking factor: “The best marketers are training people and the Internet to associate their brand with the category term.” Slide from Carrie Rose How do you build a brand? From Cyrus Shepard’s presentation, building a brand means appearing on podcasts, doing interviews, running digital PR, being on directories, and having strong author profiles: Slide from Cyrus Shephard Kevin Indig’s brilliant “authority stack” diagram shows how your site and brand can start building trust via a flywheel: Slide from Kevin Indig And the most common theme I saw was to be the only. As Peep Laja says, “you need to figure out your onlyness.” Slide from Peep Laja Not just for your positioning, but for everything you do. Especially your content. Cyrus says you should be the expert, not an expert. And Kevin says that you should be the only one with unique insights. Slide from Kevin Indig AI is no longer a shiny new distraction. It’s the minimum standard for staying competitive. What separates the winners now isn’t whether they use AI, but how deeply they’ve woven it into their systems, teams, and thinking. As John-Henry Scherck puts it, “AI adoption = business transformation.” However, it doesn’t mean you’re running off to “do AI for AI’s sake.” LLMs are not a human intern replacement. They’re AI and will work like AI. Slide from JH Scherck As Ryan Law, our Director of Content Marketing puts it, you want to use it to automate your checklist items and free yourself to do the important 20%: taste, judgement, and strategy. Slide from Ryan Law Slide from Sophie Brannon However, despite what you read on LinkedIn daily, you can’t just sit down and automate every single part of your work with AI. Even if it’s a checklist item. You still need humans to check and verify that you’re not producing slop, publishing hallucinations, and that everything is working as intended. If you skip the unglamorous parts of AI adoption, i.e. not verifying what LLMs are creating, all you’ll get are broken workflows, inflated compute bills, and entire campaigns derailed by a single typo replicated at scale. Slide from JH Scherck If you want to start integrating AI into your work and processes, here’s what JH suggests: In an era when AI can generate competent content on command, the only real advantage left for us is being unmistakably human. The world doesn’t need another brand to play it safe, make AI-generated slop, and create ads that are indistinguishable from a cow eating grass. Slide from Mark Schaefer To win in the age of machines is to take risks and be audacious. To have the courage to make something unignorable. How do you do that? Madhav Bhandari has systematized this into a framework: PIPE. Slide from Madhav Bhandari Mark Schaefer’s framework is simpler. You can disrupt the story, story medium, storyteller, or all three. Slide from Mark Schaefer Mark Schaefer insists that the storyteller should not be you. Which jives perfectly with Chris Cunningham’s sentiment that in the future, every company will need a creator. You’ll need someone who can tell stories, share opinions, and represent your brand publicly. If you’re lucky enough, you can find someone internally. Empower them to publish content and participate in communities. As Adam Steele of Loganix told me at the Evolve after-party, Ahrefs is a company that does this well—we have tons of known faces in the SEO community: our CMO Tim, our YouTube guru Sam Oh, our Director of Content Marketing Ryan Law, the SEO’s SEO Patrick, and SEO god Glen Allsopp. The rest of us are nipping at their heels too: Louise, Despina, Mateusz, and hopefully, myself. If you can’t find someone internally, then hire creators. Slide from Chris Cunningham As Chris says during his talk, you can play the moneyball game even in marketing. Find creators who are not big but have had some viral hits. Those are the people who understand the algorithm and know how to play the game. SEO is evolving. (Pun intended.) And as SEO changes, so do our opportunities. It’s not just about ranking first on Google anymore, but first in mind, first in conversation, and first in trust. The speakers at Ahrefs Evolve showed us that this shift isn’t something to fear. It’s a chance to do more creative work, build stronger brands, and connect with audiences in ways that actually matter. When everyone else is churning out AI content, being genuinely human becomes your superpower. When search happens everywhere, you get to be everywhere too. The best part? This is just the beginning. Ready to be part of the evolution? Ahrefs Evolve 2026 is returning to the United States. Join the waitlist and be among the first to know when tickets drop.


























Final thoughts
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5 months ago
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English (US) ·