Adam Sam

341 posts

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Adam Sam

Adam Sam

@adsa

𝗖𝗘𝗢 at https://t.co/OhAs2k26KN (@monok_com), https://t.co/CiHA2RV3GU Follow for tech updates from our research. https://t.co/RpHxbN5lPQ

NYC, San Francisco & Stockholm شامل ہوئے Temmuz 2008
224 فالونگ118 فالوورز
پن کیا گیا ٹویٹ
Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
Essentially a refactor of our existing UX. Since we're also delivering embeds beyond just twitter and reddit, like instagram, spotify and other cool widgets, I wanted that reflected in the ux as well.
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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
This is a misrepresentation. Cloudflare prevents crawling but can circumvent their own block, robot.txt is just a permission list. You can allow any site in robot.txt and it would still fail to cheaply scrape, unless you're Cloudflare i suppose.
kathyl@kathyyliao

@blackbxdev @CloudflareDev we leave the decision of whether you want your site to be crawled or not up to the site owner. /crawl identifies as a bot and follows robot.txt #robotstxt-and-bot-protection" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">developers.cloudflare.com/browser-render…

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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
Right, except OpenAI uses BING not Google.
Matt Diggity@mattdiggityseo

Your site could be #1 on Google and completely invisible to ChatGPT. That's exactly what happened to one of our clients. So we spent 6 months testing every AI SEO tactic we could find. Here's what actually worked: First, some context. This client had a quality brand. Think BMW-level product. But they didn't show up in a single AI search result. Not Google AI Overviews, not ChatGPT, nothing. Competitors with websites that looked like they were built in 1997 were dominating every AI result in the niche. Here are the 12 tactics that changed that:

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Serg
Serg@serglotz·
@illyism Built on OpenClaw
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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
@searchmartin Sure thing mate! Connected with you on LinkedIn so you can see who I am too. Albeit your previous comment does tell me a lot about who you are. Cheers!
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Martin MacDonald
Martin MacDonald@searchmartin·
@adsa Before you argue though, click the link in my bio, or look me up on LinkedIn. 👍
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Martin MacDonald
Martin MacDonald@searchmartin·
Not a SINGLE "SEO on Autopilot" tool in history, has ever worked long term. The entire fucking ethos is contrary to implementing solid SEO best practices and long term growth. It just is. I've seen hundreds of them come and go over the last 25 years, but good SEO persists.
Alex 💪@awpthorp

Sadly had to part ways with @outrank_so - A simple case of 'it worked until it didn't' Major Google changes in December really hit this site hard in January. My understanding is it was simply too much volume over quality. i.e a blog called creative-brief was doing amazing but Outrank did successive blogs (because it ran out of ideas) like creative-brief-2 and Google just said nono, enough of that. Good for new sites I think, for maybe a maximum of 3-6 months, but after that it just churns out the same content over and over. Some feedback for the creators, It would have been better and more proactive if the core Google update was addressed and what Outrank were doing about it.

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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
@SEOKeval It is a set-it-and-forget if the company you hand content production to, has humans producing the content and tracks your progress for you. it's what agencies do, and it's available as self-service with us at monok.com
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Keval Shah
Keval Shah@SEOKeval·
The main reason automated SEO doesn't work is because SEO is not a set-it-and-forget-it strategy. You can automate parts of the SEO process. But you can't automate the strategy itself. SEO requires iteration and constant adjustments. What happens if a blog post goes out a date and needs a refresh? What happens if the intent of a keyword you're targeting changes? Piling on more and more blog content and allowing the quality of your site to go to sh*t isn't the answer. Not the mention, what about link building? How do you expect to rank for difficult keywords that actually drive an ROI without link building? Every automated SEO campaign I've ever seen creates a nice looking graph for a few months, but then inevitably tanks. And its never surprised me.
Alex 💪@awpthorp

Sadly had to part ways with @outrank_so - A simple case of 'it worked until it didn't' Major Google changes in December really hit this site hard in January. My understanding is it was simply too much volume over quality. i.e a blog called creative-brief was doing amazing but Outrank did successive blogs (because it ran out of ideas) like creative-brief-2 and Google just said nono, enough of that. Good for new sites I think, for maybe a maximum of 3-6 months, but after that it just churns out the same content over and over. Some feedback for the creators, It would have been better and more proactive if the core Google update was addressed and what Outrank were doing about it.

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Vikash Rathee
Vikash Rathee@vikashrathee·
@tibo_maker @awpthorp @outrank_so I also sent the similar feedback and canceled @outrank_so last month. The 30 article per month for one product is too much, so the subscription should be multi products to better utilises it across products. Or may be 10 articles plan.
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Alex 💪
Alex 💪@awpthorp·
Sadly had to part ways with @outrank_so - A simple case of 'it worked until it didn't' Major Google changes in December really hit this site hard in January. My understanding is it was simply too much volume over quality. i.e a blog called creative-brief was doing amazing but Outrank did successive blogs (because it ran out of ideas) like creative-brief-2 and Google just said nono, enough of that. Good for new sites I think, for maybe a maximum of 3-6 months, but after that it just churns out the same content over and over. Some feedback for the creators, It would have been better and more proactive if the core Google update was addressed and what Outrank were doing about it.
Alex 💪 tweet media
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Greg Lewis
Greg Lewis@Greg_Lewis7·
@awpthorp Interesting, so what's the solution?.. custom openclaw seo agents?
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Darius Gai
Darius Gai@darius_gai·
Hey folks! Adding some context here: We made this change because large metafield values negatively impact storefront performance. Splitting data into multiple metafields or using metaobjects provides more flexibility in how and when fields are accessed. To minimize disruption, the 16KB limit only applies to writes in version 2026-04 and later. Calls to older API versions will respect previous limits. We've updated the changelog to clarify this. We're also reaching out to all affected apps to understand use cases requiring >16KB that can't be solved with alternative approaches. We have options to provide greater limits in specific cases where needed.
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Patrick Jakubik
Patrick Jakubik@patjakubik·
Shopify sets new metafield limit to 16 KB (previously 2 MB for JSON and 64 KB for others) and no one is talking about it? This is really bad.
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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
Redesign of our onboard step
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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
Est 2016.
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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
Showcasing integrations on our new landing page
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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
Nativized text and images. English & Italian.
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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
More from our new landing page
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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
Painfully wrong. OpenAI just invested in creating massive amounts of pages and articles and hired SEO experts to handle their visibility. Furthermore anyone trying to land serious customers that don't churn the next minute, needs to target clients with a longer attention span.
Felix Haas@felixhhaas

𝗣𝗿𝗲𝗱𝗶𝗰𝘁𝗶𝗼𝗻: 𝗪𝗲𝗯𝘀𝗶𝘁𝗲𝘀 𝗮𝗿𝗲 𝗱𝗶𝘀𝗮𝗽𝗽𝗲𝗮𝗿𝗶𝗻𝗴 🔥 I see a lot of founders still building websites the same way they did ten years ago. But if they don't adapt, they'll loose customers. Here's why: The best converting websites in the age of AI aren't websites at all. They're the product. Historically, websites were marketing billboards. Hero sections, feature lists, testimonials, pricing tables. You'd scroll for minutes just to understand what a product does. That made sense when attention was cheap and patience was abundant. But in the age of AI, that's no longer good enough. People are crazy impatient these days. If they don't see value in the first five seconds, they're gone. They don't want to read about what your product can do, they want to experience it. That's the new default. And it has massive implications for how we design landing pages and conversion flows. Take most SaaS websites as an example. Landing on a typical site today means reading walls of text, watching explainer videos, filling out demo request forms. A lot of friction... Now, imagine an AI-native flow: You land on the page with a specific problem. The product is right there, live and interactive. You start using it immediately and see real value in seconds. Sure, you still need to sign up to save your work, but everything else just happens. I'm pretty sure the traditional marketing website is becoming obsolete. Once people expect instant interaction, they won't tolerate passive content. Letting users explore your product immediately builds infinitely more trust than any hero section ever could. And once they've experienced the value, upselling becomes so much easier. People are no longer buying a promise but something they've already used. I think one of the early growth factors for Lovable was exactly this. We doubled down on the "instant value" approach. You land on the site and just start building. The product teaches you how to use it by using it. And most AI companies are doing it this way now btw: Midjourney, ChatGPT, Google. Even ElevenLabs does it. Shows instant value by demonstrating the product. My prediction is that every company will eventually transform their website into an "agent hub." You'll land on a page with a specific problem. An AI agent greets you and asks what you need. The agent starts working immediately, generating your design, analyzing your data, writing your content. You see real results in seconds. Then, to save or export, you sign up. If I were to start a company today and design a new website, here's what I would do: I'd think about the single biggest pain point and why users are coming to me. Then, I wouldn't try to sell them a solution, but show them one. Let them interact with one. Make them fall in love with it. The best websites won't explain what they do. They'll just do it. What's your take on this?

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Adam Sam
Adam Sam@adsa·
Another post about AI visibility without mentioning Bing... What fuels ChatGPT, Perplexity et al.
Alex Groberman@alexgroberman

ChatGPT just stole Netflix's SEO expert. Claude is offering $320,000/year for an SEO Lead. Why are all these AI companies desperately acquiring SEO talent? It's pretty simple actually. And it's the exact same reason SEO Stuff is coming off yet another record month (see my pinned tweet). seo-stuff.com Let's start with the ChatGPT hire. The person they brought on spent a decade at Netflix before getting scooped up. She joined OpenAI to focus on growth and acquisition for ChatGPT across web and search. It has only been a couple of months but the results are already starting to speak for themselves. 7+ figures in revenue added. Anthropic is now looking for an SEO Lead to work similar magic. In their job description, Anthropic says they want someone to: - Own technical SEO - Own organic strategy - Help define how they show up as “search gets reinvented by AI” There is a reason all these AI companies are specifically looking for SEOs all of a sudden. I mean, it's not like Anthropic doesn't already have massive brand awareness, built-in distribution and direct user demand. And yet, they’re explicitly investing in SEO. Why? Well, simply put, it's because AI systems still depend on the web to discover, validate and contextualize information. LLMs inherit trust from the same infrastructure SEO has always optimized. Don't get me wrong, visibility today happens across Google Search, Google AI Overviews, Gemini, ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, etc. No one is denying that the playing field has expanded. But all of those systems still rely at their core on crawlable pages, authority signals, structured content, freshness, clear entities and external corroboration. That’s SEO, just applied to slightly more surfaces. We used to all sort of get that if you don't rank well in Google, you don't get search traffic. Well, the same evolved version of that is still true. If AI systems don’t understand you, they don’t recommend you. And if Google doesn’t trust you, AI systems don’t see you in the first place. SEO Stuff (seo-stuff.com) works because it’s built around how both layers operate. It is all about making brands eligible to be surfaced using the same sound systems that helped businesses get traffic from Google. At this point, even AI-native companies like Anthropic and OpenAI know that Search is still the discovery layer and AI is just the interface. Everything we’ve learned over the last few months points to the same truth: AI visibility follows SEO fundamentals, structure, clarity and freshness. That’s exactly what SEO Stuff's plans are designed for. Let's start with the Gold Plan: seo-stuff.com/gold-plan-pack… - Authority-first setup - Easily-extractable content - Clean structure - DR50+ backlinks from sites getting real traffic and already appearing in AI search - Built for Google + AI simultaneously Then there's the SEO Stuff Premium Content Bundle. seo-stuff.com/premium-conten… - Deep topical coverage - Question-based structure - Comparison and buyer-intent content - Designed for AI reuse Together, they turn your site into something AI systems can actually use. When the company building one of the world’s most advanced AI models is hiring an SEO Lead, the message is clear: SEO is foundational. Ditto for OpenAI stealing Netflix's SEO expert. The winners going forward will be the clearest, most trusted and most structurally sound brands. And that’s exactly what SEO Stuff was built to deliver. If you want to understand how to stay visible across Google, ChatGPT and whatever comes next just follow + RT + reply with "AI SEO" and I'll DM you some cheat codes.

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