SEO in 2025: How I'd Learn it if I Were Starting Over

Ahrefs| 00:07:26|Mar 25, 2026
Chapters8
Introduces the idea that SEO has changed due to AI and mass-produced content, signaling a need to rethink traditional playbooks.

If I were starting over in 2025, I’d master fundamentals, embrace AI as a tool, and diversify beyond Google to stay resilient.

Summary

Ahrefs' video author walks through why the old SEO playbook no longer guarantees results in the AI era. He emphasizes that fundamentals—keywords, topics, indexing, and backlinks—still matter, but the approach must evolve. Instead of crafting content to game algorithms, he advocates a user-obsessed mindset: understand searcher intent deeply, map content to real questions, and deliver genuinely useful, well-structured material. He also argues for embracing AI as an assistant to augment — not replace — human judgment, citing examples of how top SEOs use AI for research and execution. The creator warns about the volatility of traffic and the temptation to rely on a single search engine, urging diversification across platforms like YouTube, Pinterest, Reddit, and Quora. The takeaway is clear: learn the fundamentals, apply them with intention, harness AI wisely, and prepare for a multi-platform future. He even points to Ahrefs’ free SEO course for beginners as a starting point. Finally, he reminds viewers that ranking is about connecting searchers with the best results, not about chasing surface-level optimization tricks.

Key Takeaways

  • Fundamentals still matter, but the strategy must shift from keyword stuffing to understanding user intent and producing genuinely useful content.
  • AI is a powerful accelerator for research and writing, but its output quality hinges on human guidance and SEO expertise.
  • Diversify traffic sources beyond Google (YouTube, Pinterest, Reddit, Quora, etc.) to protect against algorithmic volatility and secure sustainable growth.
  • Use AI as an assistant to enhance, not replace, critical thinking and strategy in SEO workflows.
  • Always prepare for traffic to fluctuate and build resilience by maintaining a multi-channel presence and solid back-link foundations.

Who Is This For?

Essential viewing for aspiring SEOs and content strategists who want to succeed in 2025, especially those starting from scratch or rethinking how to use AI in SEO. It’s a practical guide to blending fundamentals with AI-enabled workflows.

Notable Quotes

""AI has flooded Google with cheap, mass-produced content. And in response, Google has cracked down harder than ever, erasing perfectly legitimate websites from search results.""
Sets up the tension between AI-created content and Google's evolving ranking signals.
""Search engines don't buy from you, people do.""
Emphasizes the shift from mechanical optimization to user-centered value.
""AI tools are faster and better than most of us at brainstorming, writing, and analyzing data. But the quality of its output is only as good as the guidance it receives.""
Highlights how people should guide AI with SEO expertise.
""If I were learning SEO today, I'd ignore many of the outdated mechanical approaches to writing for search engines and instead focus on creating genuinely useful content with a user obsessed mindset.""
Core recommendation to adapt to AI era.
""Bottom line, use AI as an assistant, not a replacement.""
Summarizes the practical stance on AI usage in SEO.

Questions This Video Answers

  • How has AI changed SEO strategies in 2025 and beyond?
  • What are the best ways to map search intent for SEO content in 2025?
  • Why should I diversify traffic sources beyond Google for SEO success?
  • How can I use AI tools responsibly to improve SEO results without producing low-quality content?
  • What is the Ahrefs free SEO course for beginners and how can it help me start over in SEO?
SEO 2025AI in SEOGoogle SEO fundamentalsUser intentContent quality vs. AI contentSearch intent mappingBacklinksTechnical SEOYouTube SEOCross-platform SEO
Full Transcript
Since 2009, I've generated hundreds of millions of visitors from Google search. But for the first time in 17 years, I'm questioning everything I know about SEO. SEO used to be simple. You'd find a keyword, post, optimize content, get back links, and boom, huge traffic, huge income. But that playbook is dead. Why? Mostly because of AI. AI has flooded Google with cheap, mass-produced content. And in response, Google has cracked down harder than ever, erasing perfectly legitimate websites from search results. But that doesn't mean SEO is dead. Google still gets 5 trillion searches a year. That's roughly 100 times more conversations than Chat GPT is expected to have this year. SEO has just evolved. And if you don't evolve with it, you're going to waste months or years on strategies that don't work anymore. So, in this video, I'm going to share exactly what I'd do if I was learning SEO from scratch in today's AI era. Now, despite all the changes AI has brought to SEO, fundamentals haven't gone anywhere. People still search using keywords and topics. You still need to create content that search engines can find, index, and understand. And backlinks, they still help pages rank high in Google. So, the first thing I do to learn SEO in this new AI era is to learn the fundamentals of search engine optimization because they haven't changed. Now, learning the fundamentals and getting good at executing them used to be enough to drive tons of free search traffic before AI tools, but they're no longer enough to stay competitive. And the reason comes down to a mental shift most people, even pro SEOs, haven't figured out yet. Before AI content tools became mainstream, ranking on Google was easy. People would copy the top ranking page, add a few extra points to make it feel original. Sprinkle in some keywords and cover subtopics, get a few backlinks to the page, and first page rankings would come fast. And because it worked, everyone did it. SEO copywriting became so mechanical that writing for SEO became an industry phrase. But here's the flaw. Search engines don't buy from you, people do. Now that AI can mass-produce this kind of content, it doesn't seem like Google wants to reward writing for algorithms the way it once did. Instead, it seems like Google is doubling down on what it's always wanted to deliver the most relevant and useful result for any given search query. And are they getting it right all the time? Not even close, but they're trying. So, if I were learning SEO today, I'd ignore many of the outdated mechanical approaches to writing for search engines and instead focus on creating genuinely useful content with a user obsessed mindset. What does that mean? Well, let's say you wanted to rank for the query, how to start a YouTube channel. Instead of asking, how do I rank for this keyword? What do I have to cover? Start by getting obsessed with what the searcher actually wants to know. Are they a total beginner? Do they need gear recommendations? Are they struggling to find a niche or something else? Then dig deeper. Why do they want to start a YouTube channel? Is it a creative outlet or a way to make money? How do they want the information? Would a checklist, step-by-step tutorial, or interactive guide help most? If you don't understand the searcher's intent, you'll end up creating content that doesn't actually help the people you're trying to serve. But if you nail what they're really looking for, you won't just rank higher. You'll keep people engaged, build trust, and convert more visitors into customers. Now, that doesn't mean you should ignore AI tools. In fact, I think that every SEO, new and experienced, should be embracing AI tools rather than resisting them. The problem with generic robotic AI content isn't the tools, it's how people are using them. AI tools are faster and better than most of us at brainstorming, writing, and analyzing data. But the quality of its output is only as good as the guidance it receives. Take Joe Schmo, a guy who knows nothing about SEO. He can't guide AI to produce good content or to optimize his site for better performance because he doesn't understand SEO himself. So, what happens? AI ends up guiding him. But take Sam Edward O, a dude that's helped millions of people learn SEO and get traffic to their site. He'll probably do keyword research on his own, do some audience research, and collect clues about that audience from Google search results. Then he'll take what he's found, feed it to a tool like Chat GBT, and guide it to help him execute on his SEO strategy. And I actually shared the exact tactics and processes in a video when I used Chat GPT to rank number one in Google in 1 hour. AI isn't going anywhere. It's one of the most revolutionary technologies since the internet itself. So instead of avoiding it, learn how to use it properly. And SEO goes way beyond just content creation. So the use cases are truly endless. Bottom line, use AI as an assistant, not a replacement. train yourself to be the operator and you get those operating skills through strong SEO fundamentals and firsthand experience. All of which you can learn for free in our free SEO course for beginners. Now, learning SEO shouldn't just be about learning what to do. It's also about knowing what to prepare for because once the traffic starts rolling in, it's going to feel like free money. And that's when things get dangerous. Google's going to keep sending you free and consistent traffic that doesn't fade over time because that's SEO by design. The harsh reality is that that traffic can vanish overnight. It's happened to hundreds of creators and we've actually heard their stories and shared them on our YouTube channel. It's real. It hurts and it's unpredictable. So, if I were learning SEO from scratch today, I would be preparing myself to diversify beyond just Google. I know that sounds counterintuitive in a video about learning SEO, but SEO isn't just about Google. The skills you'll build while learning and doing SEO, like keyword research, understanding search intent, link building, and technical SEO, will apply to nearly every searchdriven platform in some way, shape, or form. For example, when I first started with YouTube SEO, I knew nothing about it. But I applied my Google SEO skills to YouTube and we're now consistently getting over a million views from YouTube search alone that are important to our business. I've done the same with Pinterest, Reddit, eBay, Quora, and the list goes on. From my experience, any platform that sorts and surfaces content based on user queries follows similar core principles. But if you can master Google SEO, you'll be way ahead of the curve when optimizing for other search engines. At its core, SEO is still about one thing, connecting searchers with the best search results. But in a world where AI can turn out endless mediocre content, copying what already exists isn't enough. And honestly, it shouldn't be enough. You need to be worth finding. So, if you want to learn SEO and actually succeed in the AI era, check out our free SEO course for beginners and then apply the rest of what I've shared with you today.

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