The Special Marcoting Live Podcast
Most entrepreneurs have heard the same tired line: nobody reads anymore. Short-form video is king. Blogs are dead. It sounds convincing until you realise that Google still dominates over eighty percent of online search, and it still relies heavily on blog content to serve up answers. Blogging in 2026 isn’t just alive — it’s one of the most underrated growth tools a solopreneur or startup founder can have. That’s the central argument Alison Ver Halen, founder of AV Writing Services [https://avwritingservices.com/], made on a recent episode of The Special Marcoting Live Show. Alison writes the words that go on websites — blogs, landing pages, sales pages, bios — and she’s seen firsthand how consistent, high-quality blogging drives real business results. Not vanity metrics. Actual leads, trust, and sales calls that don’t feel like pulling teeth. What followed was a sharp, no-fluff conversation about why blogging still matters, how to structure content for both humans and robots, the role of AI in content creation, and why trying to game the system with stolen content will eventually blow up in your face. Google Isn’t Dead — And Neither Is Blogging Let’s get this out of the way: Google is not dead. It’s losing some market share in the online search space, sure, but it still commands over eighty percent of search. And Google loves blogs. It uses blog content to determine relevance, authority, and freshness. The newer the publication date on your content, the more likely you are to show up — not just on Google, but in AI-powered tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity as well. But SEO visibility is only half the story. Alison made a point that too many business owners overlook: once someone actually lands on your website, they’re not going to just take your word for it. They’re going to explore. Especially in B2B or professional services, visitors want proof that you actually know what you’re talking about. And where do they go? Straight to the blog. According to Alison, most people consume five to seven pieces of content before making a buying decision, before even reaching out for a consultation. That’s not a stat you can afford to ignore. Your blog isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s the engine that builds trust before the sales call even happens. The Breadcrumb Strategy: Stop Expecting One Blog Post to Close the Deal Here’s where a lot of businesses go wrong. They write a solid informational blog post, stick a “Schedule a Consultation” button at the bottom, and wonder why nobody clicks it. The problem? That reader isn’t ready for a sales call. They just found out they might have a problem. They’re dipping their toes in. Asking them to book a call at that stage is like proposing on a first date. Alison calls it the breadcrumb approach — and it’s the most underused content strategy out there. The idea is simple: don’t try to do everything with one piece of content. Instead, create a trail. A short-form video catches attention on social media. That video links to a deeper blog post. The blog post offers a newsletter sign-up. The newsletter keeps you top of mind, week after week, educating your audience until they’re ready to buy. By the time that person reaches out, they already trust you. They’ve read your stuff. They understand your approach. They’re not going to hop on a call and try to tell you how to do your job. They’re coming to you as the expert — and that makes the entire sales process smoother and more profitable. Disqualifying the Wrong Clients Through Content There’s a flip side to this that most marketers won’t talk about openly. Your content should also repel the wrong people. If you make it clear how you work, what you believe, and what your tone is, the people who aren’t a good fit will self-select out. And that’s a gift, not a loss. Alison brought up a brilliant point about language as a tribal signal. Humans are tribal creatures — our brains haven’t evolved past that. We look for cues that tell us whether someone is “our people.” Word choice, tone, even whether you swear in your content — these all signal tribe. If your ideal clients are the kind of people who appreciate a well-placed F-bomb, put it in your content. The right people will lean in. The wrong ones will bounce. Either way, you win. Long Content Works — If You Format It for Real Humans One of the most persistent myths in web design is that people won’t read long text on a website. They’ll run away screaming. So the advice becomes: less text, more photos, more flashy effects. Alison disagrees, and the data backs her up. People who are genuinely interested will read every word — but only if you make it easy. The trick isn’t to write less. It’s to format better. Short paragraphs. Short sentences. Even one-sentence paragraphs, if that’s what it takes to give the reader’s brain a break. White space is your friend. Subheadings every few hundred words help readers scan to the section that interests them. And those same subheadings help search engine bots understand and index your content, sometimes sending people directly to a specific section. The Table of Contents Trick For longer, in-depth posts, Alison recommends putting a table of contents at the top. It lets readers see at a glance what’s covered and click straight to the part they care about. This is especially powerful for pillar content — those comprehensive posts that cover a broad topic under one umbrella. Think of it like a Netflix series. You have an overarching narrative, but each section (or episode) can stand on its own. You can link related blog posts together, creating a web of content that keeps people moving through your site. Each click is another breadcrumb. Each breadcrumb is another step toward conversion. Evergreen Content and the Republishing Strategy Marco described himself as an “evergreen content lover,” and Alison is right there with him — with an important nuance. Evergreen content is the backbone of your blog, especially when you’re starting out. It establishes you as a thought leader and gives you a library to fall back on during slow periods. But evergreen doesn’t mean “publish and forget.” Alison shared a specific republishing tactic that most people get wrong. The process isn’t just tweaking a few words and hitting save. You need to unpublish the post entirely, update it — check that all links still work, make sure the information is current — and then republish it with a brand new publication date. This signals to search engine bots that it’s fresh content, and they’ll treat it accordingly. Alison has one post on her website that she’s republished four times because it keeps driving traffic. On days when she doesn’t have time to write something new, she goes back to that high-performer and gives it new life. The key is to pick the pieces that are already getting traction. Don’t waste the republishing strategy on posts nobody cared about the first time. The SEO Myths That Won’t Die: Ranking Number One and Overnight Success Every SEO professional has heard it: “I want to be number one on Google.” Usually for some impossibly competitive keyword. A realtor in Chicago wants to rank for “realtor Chicago.” A financial planner wants to rank for “financial planner.” Alison’s advice? Get specific. She shared the example of a Chicago-based financial planner who specifically helps women going through divorce. They weren’t trying to rank for “financial planner Chicago.” They ranked for “Chicago financial planner divorce” — and they got a flood of highly targeted traffic because the keyword matched exactly what their ideal client was searching for. The other myth is speed. There is no overnight success in SEO. It takes at least a couple of months for bots to even scan, digest, and cache your content. And then it takes time to earn their trust — just like earning the trust of any audience. You have to show up consistently, not just in terms of schedule, but in quality, voice, tone, and topical focus. Google is watching to see if you’re serious or if you’re going to write three posts and disappear. What Has Always Worked (And Always Will) Google changes its algorithm constantly, but the goal has never changed: help users find the best answer to their questions. Every algorithm update is designed to get better at identifying high-quality content. Keyword stuffing used to work. Hidden text in the same colour as the background used to work. None of that works anymore because Google got smarter. What has worked for ten years and will work for the next ten? Consistently creating high-quality content that’s tailored to your audience, answers the questions they’re asking, and uses the language they’re using. That’s it. No hacks. No tricks. Just showing up and being genuinely useful. AI Is a Tool, Not a Shortcut — And Stolen Content Will Catch Up With You The conversation took a sharp turn when Marco brought up something he’d seen on LinkedIn: a post advising people to grab a well-performing YouTube video (someone else’s video), feed it to an AI, generate a carousel, and post it on LinkedIn to “add value to the community.” The problems here are obvious and layered. First, there’s no mention of crediting the original creator. Second, and more damaging for the person doing it: what happens when someone reaches out for your services based on that carousel, and you can’t actually deliver because the expertise was never yours? Alison was clear on where AI fits in the content process — and where it doesn’t. AI is great for repurposing your own content. You record a video, feed the transcript to an LLM, and have it break that into blog posts, social media snippets, and email content. That works because the expertise, the language, and the unique perspective are yours. AI is just reformatting it. AI is also useful for ideation — brainstorming blog topics, for instance. Alison shared how she dumped a client’s blog link into Claude and asked for five new topic ideas that hadn’t already been covered. It worked well, but she still ran every suggestion through her keyword research tool (SERPstat) to make sure there was actual demand and that the topic hadn’t been covered to death. The Real Opportunity in the Age of AI Slop Here’s the counterintuitive upside of all the low-quality AI content flooding the internet: it’s actually getting easier to stand out. People are tired of the polished, generic, obviously-AI-generated content. They want real. They want the uhs and ums and the dog yanking on the leash during a live video. They want to work with people they know, like, and trust — and you can’t build that with content that sounds like it was written by a committee of robots. Alison hesitated to use the word “authentic” — it’s been co-opted by people who are anything but. Still, the principle holds. If you show up as your actual self, with your real voice and your real perspective, people will notice. And in a sea of AI slop, that’s not just a differentiator. It’s a competitive advantage. Distribution Is the Game Most Creators Are Losing One of the biggest mistakes content creators make — and I freely admit to being guilty of this — is spending far more time producing content than distributing it. You can write the most brilliant blog post in your industry, but if you don’t actively get it in front of people, it might as well not exist. Alison laid out the distribution essentials: social media (tailored to where your audience actually hangs out), email marketing (get people on your list so you’re reaching them directly), and partnerships (getting other websites to link to yours). For B2B professionals, LinkedIn is the obvious play. For visual brands, Instagram and Facebook. And YouTube gets a special mention because it’s owned by Google — which means Google naturally favours its own platform in search results. Instagram also got a significant SEO boost towards the end of last year when it announced a deeper integration with Google search. So if you’ve been sleeping on Instagram for SEO purposes, it’s time to wake up. The bottom line: create once, distribute everywhere. And spend at least as much time on distribution as you do on creation. Key Takeaways Blogging in 2026 remains one of the most effective ways to build trust, generate qualified leads, and rank in both traditional search engines and AI-powered tools. The fundamentals haven’t changed: create high-quality, audience-focused content consistently, format it for scanability, use specific long-tail keywords, and distribute it aggressively across the channels where your audience actually spends time. AI is a powerful ally for repurposing and ideation — but only when you’re feeding it your own expertise, not someone else’s. Alison’s Favourites 📚 Book: Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen 🎬 Film: Sinners (wished it had won Best Film at the Oscars) 📺 TV Show: Severance 🛠️ Tool: SERPstat [https://serpstat.com/] — for keyword research, audits, and domain analysis 🔁 Habit: Morning stretching with good music before walking the dog Find More About Alison https://avwritingservices.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/alison-ver-halen/ You Might Also Like Want to boost your content? These are the tools I use and love! 😉 Some links are affiliate links (I earn a commission at no extra cost to you): 🎥 StreamYard: Professional live streaming directly from your browser ➡ https://streamyard.com/?fpr=mfcnovo 🌟 Magai: Your new best productivity friend! Join thousands who have already transformed their workflow ➡ https://magai.co/?via=marco 〽️Metricool. Manage and measure your social media performance: https://f.mtr.cool/UQGBYC [https://f.mtr.cool/UQGBYC] 👉 What if your livestream could also be your store? 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Start exploring here:https://try.estreamly.com/videocommerce-marco-novo [https://try.estreamly.com/videocommerce-marco-novo] 📜 Castmagic: Transform audios into ready-made content | Code “marcoting20” = 20% off ➡ https://get.castmagic.io/ozhbxxx1bv3n 🤳 Be Relatable: Authentic content that works ➡ https://berelatable.pro/?fpr=mfcnovo 💰 Streann: Monetize your videos ➡ https://fas.st/t/tFgYFdcY 🎞️ Opus Pro: Viral short videos from your long content | 30% off ➡ https://www.opus.pro/marco30 🤖 Short.ai: Automatic faceless videos with AI ➡ https://www.short.ai/?ref=MARCOTING 📢 Stampede Social: Automatic reach | Code “MARCO20” = 20% off ➡ https://app.stampede.social/svc/onboard?aff=1FjTihKpsAns 📦 Equipment (affiliate links): • My equipment: https://amzn.to/4ahWJVD • For beginners: https://amzn.to/40wQf1L • For outdoor: https://amzn.to/40mytNg 📲 Connect with me on social media: 🔵 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mfcnovo 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mfcnovo/ 💼 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mfcnovo/ 🐦 X (Twitter): https://x.com/mfcnovo 🎵 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@mfcnovo 📝 Substack: https://mfcnovo.substack.com/ Get full access to Marcoting Live at mfcnovo.substack.com/subscribe [https://mfcnovo.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]
24 episodios
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