The complete guide to high-impact educational video content

The complete guide to high-impact educational video content

Educational videos are among the top 10 most-consumed video content formats globally, according to Statista

Most popular video content type

And it makes sense. Video is one of the fastest, most engaging ways to teach, demonstrate, and connect. 

But for creators and businesses alike, making a video that actually works (as in: educates, retains, or converts) requires more than hitting “record.”

I’ve been creating online content for years, so I know what works and what doesn’t. 

  • Our online SEO training has helped thousands of marketers level up their skills through self-paced modules, monthly live Q&A webinars, and on-demand videos. 
  • Our “Ask Us Anything” video series and SEO agency commercials are produced with the help of our award-winning video producer.
  • Our YouTube channel continues to serve as a central hub for sharing educational content.

Whether you’re creating onboarding tutorials, educational content for your audience, or a course you plan to sell, below are tips I’ve seen succeed across every stage of the video creation process, from concept to camera to clicks.

1. Define the purpose and audience through a clear strategy

Every great educational video starts with a clear strategy. 

Before you pick up the camera or open your editing software, you must know who you’re creating for and what you’re trying to achieve. 

Clarify the purpose

Just like SEO, intent is everything in video production, so clarify the purpose upfront.

Are you aiming to solely educate or train, or will your video have an element of conversion? Maybe your education video is meant to retain your existing audience instead.

Whatever the purpose, the objective shapes the video’s content, tone, and structure. 

For instance, an SEO training module will differ significantly from an educational demo intended to convert prospects.​

Understand your audience

Understanding your audience is equally important. Consider their goals, challenges, skill levels, and preferred learning styles. 

Are they beginners looking for foundational knowledge or advanced users looking for in-depth insights? 

Tailoring your content to meet their needs will make your video more effective.​

Free or paid?

Consider whether your content will be free or paid. 

Free videos can build brand awareness and provide value to a broad audience, while paid content often offers in-depth training or exclusive insights. 

Knowing the role of videos within your broader content strategy, SEO initiatives, and customer journey will help you incorporate free and paid content where it makes the most sense.

2. Craft content around in-demand topics and the type of video

Whether you’re creating a one-off tutorial or a full training series, the key is to start with a clear plan of attack for the content.

Coming up with video topics

Your videos should align with either audience intent (what they’re searching for) or a structured curriculum (what they need to learn over time).

Here are some ways to generate topic ideas:

  • If your videos support a product or service, look at keyword intent and customer FAQs to generate topics. What questions are coming up in comments, sales calls or support tickets?
  • If you’re building an online course or internal training program, outline a logical progression. 
  • You can also use keyword tools, YouTube’s autocomplete, or even generative AI to help brainstorm ideas around a theme.
  • For more inspiration, you can spy on competitors’ educational videos. 
  • If you already have blog content or written guides, repurposing those into educational videos is another easy place to start.

Define the video format

Choosing the video format dictates the rest of the video creation process. 

For example, how-to videos are great educational formats that provide step-by-step guidance. 

Plus, you can increase your chances of showing up in the search results for target “how to” queries with YouTube videos. 

In 2023, more than 30% of Google desktop SERPs in the U.S. featured a video carousel, video result or featured video, according to Semrush.

People watch more of a how-to video than any other type of video, per Wistia’s “2025 State of Video Report.”

Average engagement rates by video content type

Another thing to consider is how you’ll deliver the content in the video. 

Some companies prefer talking head videos, which add a personal touch and are a great way to build a brand when internal folks serve as educators on camera. 

Others prefer animations, which can help simplify abstract concepts. 

Webinars ​are another great way to help educate your audience. 

The majority of businesses (60%) use webinars for training or coaching sessions, followed by thought leadership events (50%), per Wistia. 

We’ve seen great success with a monthly live Q&A webinar on my SEO training membership site. 

In fact, many of our students become our clients after spending time with our training videos. 

Structure each video 

Most high-performing videos follow a similar structure: 

  • Hook.
  • Introduction.
  • Main content.
  • Recap.
  • A call-to-action (CTA).

This is true whether you’re publishing on YouTube or delivering a paid course. You’ll need to adjust the pacing for training modules versus a marketing video. 

The hook is especially important. We’ve found the most success when you can capture interest within the first five seconds of the video.

This could be done through a surprising fact, a visual teaser, or a question the viewer wants answered.

From there, keep the pacing tight. Avoid over-explaining and cut the fluff where possible. 

Even long-form training videos should feel intentional and well-paced.

Length matters

Not all videos perform equally – and much of it comes down to how long they are. 

Based on Wistia’s analysis of over 100 million videos (linked earlier), viewer engagement varies significantly by duration.

Average engagement rate by video length

Under one minute

Short videos work – especially on social or as top-of-funnel content – but they need to get to the point fast. 

Wistia found that videos under one minute had the highest average engagement rate at 50%. Short videos can be ideal for quick social snippets or teasers for longer video content. . 

One to five minutes

Videos in this range also held attention fairly well.

  • One to three minutes: 46% average engagement.
  • Three to five minutes: 45% average engagement.

Wistia notes that how-to videos under five minutes were especially strong performers, with viewers watching more than two-thirds of the way through, on average.

Five to 30 minutes

Once videos pass the five-minute mark, engagement starts to dip. 

Wistia’s data shows:

  • Five to 30 minutes: 38% average engagement.
  • 30 to 60 minutes: 25%.
  • 60+ minutes: Just 17%.

That doesn’t mean you should avoid longer videos entirely – just be intentional. 

We have found that shorter videos (like reels) tend to get more views because they’re something somebody can watch quickly. 

But long-form videos tend to have higher conversion rates because they demonstrate more knowledge and authority on a topic.

What about course modules?

The most profitable online courses are typically between 10 to 25 hours in total length, per Thinkific’s data from 40,000 course creators. 

The data suggests that five- to 10-hour courses are about 75% as profitable, and longer courses – 25 to 100 hours – are slightly less profitable than those.

Regardless, the advice is that the ideal course length is the shortest time required to achieve the learning objectives.

Courses that drive the most revenue

Sequence for learning

If you’re creating educational content, sequencing matters. 

Build with progression in mind, with lessons getting slightly more advanced over time.

Use reinforcement techniques like callbacks, visual repetition, or simple recap slides to help learners retain key points. 

The flow should feel intuitive and purposeful.

3. Script and storyboard to ensure clarity of the message

Scripting and storyboarding help you organize your message and plan how it will appear on screen. 

Start with a script

Whether you’re creating a tutorial or building an online course, scripting keeps your message focused and easy to follow.

If the video is structured – like a course module or product walkthrough – a full script is ideal. It helps you stay on track and hit all the key points without rambling.

But not every video needs a word-for-word script. 

If you’re podcasting, recording a founder Q&A, or filming a talking-head update, a loose outline with bullet points works better. 

You still need to know where the conversation is going, but it should feel natural, not rehearsed.

Visual planning

Once you have your script or outline, translate it into a visual plan. This is where storyboarding comes in. 

A storyboard helps you map out what will appear on screen and when. 

It’s helpful if your video includes product walkthroughs, charts, or training steps that build on one another.

This part doesn’t have to be complicated. You’re simply matching the visuals with your message to make the content easier to understand. 

Add visual cues that stick

Visual cues matter more than most people realize. 

On-screen text, callouts, arrows, annotations, and simple scene transitions help guide the viewer’s attention and reinforce key points. 

For most educational videos (excluding longer formats like podcasts or webinars), aim to change the visual every five to 10 seconds. 

That could mean:

  • Switching camera angles.
  • Zooming in slightly at the same angle.
  • Cutting to a supporting visual. 

It might feel like a lot, but those subtle shifts keep viewers engaged. 

Also, this may be obvious, but if you’re including a screen recording with a voice-over, make sure what’s happening on-screen matches what’s being said. 

Use tools to perfect the process

There are plenty of tools out there to help you organize and visualize your ideas before you record.

Tools like Boords and Storyboarder are great for visualizing a scene-by-scene breakdown. 

Even Canva can work well for rough storyboarding if you’re already using it for design.

You don’t need anything fancy, just something that lets you sketch things out before you press record.

And when you’re ready to record, you can use teleprompter apps to help you deliver your message smoothly. 

4. Select the right tech stack for your needs

Whether you’re recording a quick tutorial or producing a full online course, choosing the right gear, software, and hosting platform will save time, improve quality, and keep your process sustainable.

Match the tools to your goals

You don’t need the most expensive gear to make great video content. 

What matters most is choosing tools that match the type of content you’re creating and the audience you’re serving.

  • If you’re a solo course creator, a smartphone camera, lapel mic and natural lighting can go a long way. 
  • For internal training, you can level up with a mirrorless camera and external mic. 
  • For a higher-end effect, invest in a more expensive camera, lighting, audio, and nice backgrounds to create a polished brand experience.

Regardless of the setup, don’t skip a test shoot. 

Check your resolution, depth of field, and lighting to ensure the final result looks the way you intend.

Tools for recording your screen

If you’re doing tutorials or walkthroughs, screen recording software is a must.

  • QuickTime is what we use – it’s quick, easy and does everything we need.
  • Loom is a fast, no-fuss option for quick recordings.
  • Camtasia gives you more robust editing tools for polished content.
  • ScreenFlow is a solid choice for Mac users who want both recording and editing features in one place.

Edit smarter, not harder

Editing doesn’t have to be intimidating. Some tools are built to make this part easier, especially for solo creators.

  • Descript is great if you want to edit your video like a document.
  • Final Cut Pro and Adobe Premiere Pro give you more creative control but come with a steeper learning curve.
  • You can also hire a video editor, especially if you need a high-end result or just want to save time.

Hosting your videos

YouTube is the most widely used video platform globally, making it ideal for reach and search visibility on educational content. 

It’s also the second-most popular social network worldwide, which means a lot of exposure for your brand. 

YouTube videos can be an essential part of an SEO program when targeting certain keywords (like educational and how-to searches). 

But remember, only verified accounts can upload videos longer than 15 minutes. 

Then there are LMS platforms like Thinkific, Teachable, and Kajabi, which are built for structured learning. 

If you’re building a course, these platforms offer features like chaptering, progress tracking, and quizzes to support the full student experience.

Finally, Vimeo and Wistia give you more control over branding, privacy, and analytics. 

They’re especially useful for customer training, B2B product onboarding, or gated video content.

Using AI

AI is quickly changing the video production space. 

About 41% of companies are already using it for video, per Wistia’s most recent data (linked earlier), and another 19% will start using it soon. 

Using AI to create videos

Using AI can be particularly beneficial for short-form content, where speed and efficiency are key. 

Tools like OpusClip use AI to automatically generate short clips from longer videos, optimizing them for platforms such as TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and Instagram Reels. 

But AI is also expanding creative possibilities. 

For instance, we’ve successfully used AI to modify our SEO training course online. 

Because SEO is a rapidly changing industry, SEO training can quickly become stale. 

Instead of reshooting whole sections of our training course, we used an AI avatar of me to deliver updated talking points – and it looks surprisingly like me.

However, it’s important to use AI cautiously. 

Love it or hate it, AI is a controversial tool, and some people may be turned off by it. 

That said, overreliance on AI-generated content can lead to videos that feel impersonal or lack authenticity. 

While AI can assist in scripting, editing, and even avatars and visuals, the human touch remains essential to ensure content resonates with viewers.​ 

Stay on top of your video performance with analytics and use your intuition to decide whether AI-generated videos resonate. 

The right balance ensures your videos remain trustworthy.​

Get the newsletter search marketers rely on.



5. Focus on production fundamentals for effective videos

You don’t need a full production crew to make professional-looking videos, but you do need to get the fundamentals right.

Prioritize audio quality

If you’re going to invest in one part of your production setup, start with sound.

Viewers are much more likely to tolerate a slightly grainy video than audio that’s hard to hear.

Multiple studies have found that poor audio quality influences whether people trust what they hear and how they perceive you overall. 

A lav mic or USB condenser mic is an easy and worthwhile upgrade.

Get the basics right

You don’t need a studio setup to get a clear shot. 

Just focus on even lighting (natural light works great), a camera angle that’s eye level or slightly above and a clutter-free background.

If you’re doing a screen recording, make sure the visuals are crisp and readable. 

Zoom in on sections when needed, and don’t clutter the screen with too much at once.

Batch and template your process

The more videos you make, the more it pays to streamline. 

Batching – filming multiple videos in one sitting – helps you stay in flow and save time.

Templating your intros, outros, transitions and even lower-thirds (the graphic overlays that typically appear in the lower third of the screen) can make your content consistent and reduce the decisions you have to make for every single video.

Make it accessible

This isn’t just a “nice to have.” 

Captions help viewers who are deaf or hard of hearing, support people watching in a sound-off environment, and can even boost comprehension for non-native speakers. 

Most video tools now make it easier to autogenerate and edit captions. 

These are key in formal learning environments or when you’re serving global audiences.

Think about the viewer experience

Pacing, tone, and delivery matter. 

What works for an internal training video isn’t the same as a how-to on YouTube.

For instance, in training content, give your viewers time to absorb the information – use pauses, reinforce key points, and keep instructions easy to follow. 

Know when to call backup

Sure, you can technically do everything yourself, but that doesn’t mean you should. 

Even the most experienced video producers hire out when it makes sense. 

Whether you need a motion designer for intro graphics, a video editor to clean up pacing and polish transitions, or a script consultant to help shape the story, know your weaknesses (or resource constraints) and make the call.

6. Optimize for search when visibility is a priority

Up to 82% of marketers say video has helped them increase web traffic

Not every video needs to be optimized for search – but when visibility is the goal, it’s worth the effort.

When SEO makes sense

If you’re publishing on YouTube or embedding tutorials on your site, optimization can help your content get discovered. 

Moz data once showed that YouTube videos make up over 94% of all video results in Google

If your audience is searching for answers, YouTube is a strong place to meet them.

When it’s not a priority

If your content lives behind a login or paywall – like course modules or internal training – SEO doesn’t need to be part of your workflow. 

In those cases, focus instead on the learning experience and making the video content clear, helpful and well-paced.

Start with keyword research

Google’s Gary Illyes has stated that if you see video results for a keyword, that’s your cue to consider making a video for it. 

Start by targeting topics that already bring up video results in Google or YouTube.

Tools like YouTube’s search predictions, AnswerThePublic, and other keyword tools on the market can help surface what people are actually searching for.

When in doubt, do a search. 

If there’s already a cluster of how-to videos, you’ve got a green light.

Optimize for search

SEO for videos doesn’t have to be complicated. 

However, the approach varies depending on where your video is hosted. Here’s where to focus.

For YouTube-hosted videos

Metadata: Google states that the title, thumbnail, and description are the more important pieces of metadata for video discovery. 

  • Title
    • Write a clear, engaging title that tells viewers exactly what they’ll get. 
    • Include your main keyword near the beginning, and keep it under 60 characters so it doesn’t get cut off in search. 
    • Make sure it reflects the actual content. Clickbait might get the click, but it won’t earn trust. 
    • Use things like all caps or emojis sparingly to highlight the right words. 
  • Thumbnails
    • Design custom thumbnails that are visually appealing and accurately represent the content. 
    • YouTube now has a feature to test your thumbnails
  • Description
    • Write a clear, keyword-rich description that tells viewers and YouTube what your video is about. (You have up to 5,000 characters here!) 
    • Include relevant keywords naturally. 
    • Link out to your website, social channels, or other videos when it makes sense. 
    • Use line breaks or bullet points to make it easy to scan.

Dig deeper: The DESCRIBE framework for effective YouTube descriptions

User engagement signals: While metadata is foundational for YouTube SEO, the platform’s algorithm places a lot of emphasis on user engagement and satisfaction. 

YouTube values the following:

  • Click-through rate (CTR): This is where the thumbnail comes into play once again. 
  • Watch time and retention: Videos that hold attention tend to get promoted more.
  • Engagement: Likes, comments, shares and subscribers all tell YouTube your content is valuable.
  • Viewer satisfaction: YouTube looks at behavior after the video ends – like whether someone bounces or keeps watching.
  • Personalization: The algorithm tailors results based on viewer behavior, so understand your audience and create for them.

More optimization tips: Here are additional tips that help optimize videos for YouTube:

  • Timestamps: Break up your video into clear, clickable sections. This is especially helpful in long-form or educational content.
  • Captions: Add closed captions for accessibility and extra context. 
  • End screens and cards: Help people take the next step. Recommend another video, playlist, or even a site link.
  • Group content into playlists: This improves watch time and helps viewers binge your content.
  • Consistent branding: Keep your intros, tone and visual style cohesive so viewers start to recognize your content instantly.
  • Engage in the comments: Respond, ask questions, start conversations. YouTube notices when a video sparks interaction.

For videos hosted on your website

When hosting videos on your own platform, the SEO focus shifts a bit. 

First, understand that self-hosted videos can appear in several key areas on search engines like Google and Bing:​

  • Video search tabs: Both Google and Bing have dedicated “videos” tabs that filter results to show only video content.​ This is a key place to show up.
  • Main search results: Your video might show up as a rich snippet alongside standard web results, complete with a thumbnail, title and description.​
  • Featured video results: For certain queries, Google may highlight a video prominently at the top of the search results.
Google SERPs - Video tab

Key optimization strategies include:​

  • Dedicated video pages: Create individual pages for each video, ensuring that the video is the main content on the page. This allows for more precise optimization.
  • Page title and meta description: Ensure the webpage hosting the video has a clear, keyword-rich title and meta description. This helps search engines understand the page’s content.​
  • Video metadata. This includes things like the video title, description, duration, and thumbnail URL.
  • Structured data: Implement video schema to provide search engines and people with detailed information about your video. You can highlight key moments, live broadcasts, educational content and more. This can enhance your video’s appearance in search results.​ 
  • Transcripts and captions: Including a transcript and/or captions on the page improves accessibility and provides additional content for search engines to index.​
  • Contextual content: On the same note, surround your video with relevant text content on the page to give search engines more context about the video’s subject matter.​
  • Stable video URLs: If your video files or thumbnail URLs change frequently or expire, Google may not be able to index them reliably. So stick with permanent, clean URLs and double-check that they’re not blocked by robots.txt or other restrictions. This is one of those technical details that’s easy to overlook. 
  • Videos above the fold. Put your video front and center on the page – ideally above the fold – so both users and search engines recognize it as the main content. But don’t sacrifice speed to do it. Use lazy loading where possible, and consider lighter formats like WebM to keep load times fast.
  • Video sitemaps: If you’re hosting multiple videos, consider creating a video sitemap. This helps search engines discover and index your video content more efficiently.

Dig deeper: 7 video optimization tips to boost your organic reach in 2025

7. Publish, promote, and measure success to track performance

Creating the video is only half the job. 

To get the most out of it, you need to publish, promote, and pay attention to what happens next.

Publishing and promoting

Whether you are promoting free or paid educational content, don’t just post it and hope for the best.

Publishing with a strategy makes a big difference in who sees your content and how it performs.

Start with your owned channels

Start by embedding videos on your website where it makes sense – on a course landing page, a sales page, or a relevant blog post.

If you have an email list, use it. Email is still one of the most effective ways to get in front of warm leads. 

You can build a short email sequence around a course launch, for instance, or simply drop the video into a newsletter with a clear call to action.

Share where your audience is

Social media can help your video gain traction, especially if your audience already follows you there. 

Don’t just post once – share the video in different formats over time: full video, short clips or even just a quote or takeaway. 

Each platform has its own rhythm and opportunities:

  • Instagram/Facebook: Reels, stories, and carousels can help you showcase educational content in bite-sized ways.
  • LinkedIn: Great for professional or B2B-focused courses. 
  • YouTube: If it’s not your main platform, consider uploading the video as unlisted and embedding it on your course page – or using YouTube Shorts to drive awareness.

Paid promotion

Sometimes organic reach isn’t enough. 

Paid promotion can help you get in front of more of the right people, faster.

YouTube ads, social media boosts, and even Google Ads can support your educational videos. 

Just make sure your landing page is clear, relevant, and compelling when someone clicks.

Tap into your network

If you have relationships with influencers, industry experts, or others in your space, see if they’d be open to collaborating or promoting your educational content in exchange for a commission or cross-promotion.

Look for partnerships that make sense; not just anyone with a following, but people your ideal audience already trusts.

Host live events to build momentum

Webinars, live Q&A sessions, or even a quick Instagram Live can help build buzz around your content. 

These live formats give people a taste of your teaching style and give you a chance to answer objections or highlight what’s inside your paid video content in a more personal way.

For example, we regularly post video content from inside our SEO training membership site to our YouTube channel to give viewers a sneak peek.

Repurpose strategically

Repurposing lets you extend the life of your content without starting from scratch.

Turn long-form videos into short clips for social or YouTube. 

YouTube Shorts has the highest engagement rate across all short video platforms at 5.91% while TikTok was second in line, Statista reports

You can also pull out quotes or visuals for blog posts or emails to promote your educational videos. 

Define what success looks like

Before you hit publish, know what you’re aiming for. 

Is it views? Engagement? Course completions? Conversions?

And if the video performs well in one area – even if it’s not the metric you were focused on – that’s still a win. 

For example, maybe conversions were low, but views were through the roof. 

That tells you something’s working, and it might be worth doubling down on similar content.

There’s no shortage of video content online. If something you create breaks through in any way, take that as a signal.

Track performance (and do it often)

Analytics will tell you what’s resonating and what’s not.

You should be checking your analytics regularly – ideally, every day. 

Make sure to use:

  • YouTube Analytics for engagement trends. 
  • Google Search Console to see how your video shows up in search. 
  • LMS analytics for course modules. 
  • Google Analytics 4 for how videos impact user behavior on your site. 

Learn from viewer behavior

Watch for drop-off points. If people keep bailing at the same timestamp, something’s off. 

And check your comments. If people are asking for a follow-up or mentioning another topic they want covered, that’s a content idea handed to you on a silver platter.

If your “How to Make Pizza” video gets many requests for spaghetti, it might be time to make a spaghetti video.

Making videos that teach – and stick

Educational videos work best when they’re built with intention. 

You don’t need a perfect setup or a massive production team, but you need to:

  • Understand your audience.
  • Have a clear message.
  • Stay consistent in how you create your content. 

Whether you’re launching a full course or building out one helpful video at a time, the strategies outlined here are meant to give you a process to start. 

Because when your videos are thoughtful, useful, and well-executed, people notice – and that’s where the real traction starts.

Read more at Read More

How to use YouTube Shorts to drive sustained growth, engagement

How to use YouTube Shorts to drive sustained growth and engagement

With YouTube Shorts now reaching 2 billion monthly users and generating approximately 70 billion daily views, this rapidly growing format represents an untapped opportunity for many brands.

When used effectively, Shorts unlock multiple benefits that other platforms can’t match:

  • Faster channel growth.
  • Higher engagement rates.
  • New monetization streams.
  • A massive established user base of over 122 million daily viewers.
  • Powerful cross-promotion between short and long-form content.
YouTube Shorts - Avg daily views and YoY growth

Plus, YouTube’s established reputation provides a level of stability that newer platforms like TikTok can’t guarantee.

But despite all this potential, many marketers fail with YouTube Shorts.

Why?

Because they struggle to adapt their budgets and strategies to YouTube’s evolving ad products – especially when it comes to:

  • Reallocating TikTok spend.
  • Implementing product feeds.
  • Choosing between Shorts Select and auction.
  • Leveraging YouTube’s new multi-format ad system.

This article will explain why you need to implement Shorts ASAP and the tangible strategies you can use to get started today.

Why YouTube Shorts?

Take this for example: 

One organic Short generated 2 million views, 90,000 likes, and 2,900 comments – with a 4.5% like rate, delivering an earned media value of around $6,000. 

This is the kind of growth YouTube Shorts can drive for your brand.

Why does this matter? 

Because Shorts isn’t just another video format. 

It’s an accelerator for rapid channel growth, offering benefits traditional video can’t match. 

Creators are seeing massive reach through Shorts content, and brands are already seeing results.

Here are five key reasons why you need to jump on the Shorts bandwagon now.

Unique audience

Shorts tap into YouTube’s 122 million daily user base, reaching beyond TikTok’s primarily Gen Z audience. 

YouTube’s established reputation means less regulatory risk than TikTok.

Fast growth 

Shorts drives rapid channel growth, with reach volume taking off via Shorts.

High engagement

Shorts are easily shareable and often earn higher engagement, feeding viewers into full-length videos.

YouTube Select Shorts ads are viewed 90% longer than ads on other platforms. 

Influencer-led Shorts ads have seen view-through rates as high as 15.9%.

Monetization and ads 

New monetization (YouTube Partner Program for Shorts, Super Thanks) encourages creators. 

For brands, Shorts now integrates into ad products like Demand Gen and YouTube Select lineups.

Cross-promotion

Shorts can funnel viewers to a brand’s long-form videos or other channels, creating multi-platform touchpoints. 

One platform houses both short and long content, boosting subscriber growth and retention.

Take a look at Mr. Beast.

He has mastered the art of repackaging long-form content into 60-second Shorts that generate millions of views, creating a seamless funnel from short to long content. 

Even the Voice produces Shorts featuring judges in playful Q&As to promote season premieres, driving measurable increases in fan engagement and viewership.

A few more big names who are jumping on shorts:

  • Graza shares quick recipe Shorts featuring their olive oil, combining valuable content with product awareness in a natural, non-intrusive way.
  • ESPN keeps younger fans engaged between games through quick sports highlights and player updates in Shorts format.
  • Satori Graphics uses animated Shorts to teach design principles in a visually compelling, highly shareable format.

Big brands are embracing Shorts because they deliver results.

YouTube itself has stated

  • “As the creator community continues to invest in Shorts, this will only grow.”

But here’s the big mistake I see a lot of brands making.

Dig deeper: 3 YouTube Ad formats you need to reach and engage viewers in 2025

Shorts vs. TikTok vs. Instagram Reels

They go wrong by treating all short-form video platforms identically. 

They miss the fundamental differences in content purpose and audience behavior across platforms. To fix this, you need to understand how these platforms work:

TikTok and Instagram

  • Thrives on viral challenges and trending skits.
  • Their algorithm is interest graph-based and great for broad virality.
  • Instagram Reels often mirror TikTok trends and influencer content.

YouTube

  • Shorts often serve as teasers, driving traffic to longer YouTube content.
  • YouTube’s algorithm also favors engaging Shorts, but when combined with Google’s targeting data, it offers better precision to reach specific audiences when combined with paid media.
  • The platform also uniquely positions Shorts prominently in-app (high visibility, even on TV apps).

YouTube subscribers are incredibly valuable. 

Any new video (short or long) reaches 100% of subscribers’ feeds, whereas TikTok/IG only shows content to a fraction of followers. 

This means repeat engagement (and remarketing) is stronger on YouTube.

Product feeds can now be integrated into Shorts for dynamic product ads. 

While Shorts Select reservation buys are primarily for major budgets, most advertisers should focus on auction-based campaigns with targeted audience parameters. 

YouTube’s 2024-25 multi-format ad system now enables simultaneous deployment across Skippable In-Stream, In-Feed, and Shorts formats to align with specific marketing objectives (massive win for media buyers).

Dig deeper: YouTube’s triple threat: Mastering Feed, Shorts and Skippable ads

Get the newsletter search marketers rely on.



Now that you understand the why behind YouTube Shorts and the fundamental differences between similar social platforms, let’s dive into short strategies you can start using right away.

Content strategy for Shorts

High-level overview: Use shorts for entertainment.

This continues to prove itself as one of the highest performing categories when it comes to the Shorts placement. 

I like to focus on these six creative aspects when building Shorts to entertain audiences.

Nail the first 5 seconds

Use lots of motion, a bold statement, or an intriguing question. Short-form viewers love to scroll fast.

Nothing fancy

Avoid high-polish “TV commercial” looks, and use styles common to UGC. 

Selfie camera monologues, everyday people in real settings.

Leverage popular audio

Sound is a huge part of the Shorts experience. 

Using trending music or audio clips can boost engagement. Just ensure you have rights via YouTube’s library or licensed tracks.

Keep it fun

Short-form content skews toward humor and entertainment. 

Ads that are positive, high-energy, or witty tend to perform better. 

Even if you have a serious message, find a creative angle to deliver it in an engaging, light way. 

Quick cuts, visual effects, or text overlays help maintain a dynamic feel.

Use a clear CTA

Stick to one key message or product per Short ad. 

Too many points can overwhelm the user. 

While Shorts ads themselves may have limited click options, you can prompt viewers to visit your channel or search your brand.

Test and iterate

Use YouTube Analytics to see completion rate, likes, shares, and click-through. 

If one Short ad outperforms, ask why. Was it the hook, music, or topic? 

Produce more variants around that formula. Then repurpose a winning creative across formats (Stories, Reels, TikTok) to refine its performance.

Track how your Shorts support subscriber growth and discover their long-tail discovery potential via YouTube search. 

Unlike TikTok or Reels content that may generate quick virality but lack staying power, YouTube Shorts benefit from the platform’s built-in advantages for continued discovery and engagement.

It’s a more sustainable investment in your brand’s digital presence.

The Anatomy of a Viral Short per Adobe

Dig deeper: Short-form, big impact: What creators can teach performance marketers

TL;DR: You can win with Shorts

YouTube Shorts offers unique advantages over other short-form video platforms, including:

  • Unmatched reach and stability: Tap into YouTube’s massive user base and established platform.
  • Superior engagement: Shorts viewers watch ads 90% longer than on other platforms.
  • Growth engine: Drive rapid channel growth and subscriber acquisition.
  • Cross-promotion power: Create a seamless funnel between short and long-form content.
  • Monetization opportunities: Access YouTube’s partner program and ad integration.

For success, focus on entertaining content with strong hooks, authentic style, trending audio, and clear CTAs. 

Implement promotion strategies including optimized metadata, cross-platform sharing, audience engagement, creator collaborations, and consistent posting.

Unlike TikTok or Instagram trends that quickly fade, YouTube Shorts benefit from long-term discoverability through YouTube’s search functionality, making your ads and audience stay for the long run. 

Read more at Read More

Google Ads to show ads in the top ads position, also in the bottom ads position

GoogleAds_1920

Google will now allow relevant Search ads from advertisers who showed amongst top ads to also participate in the bottom ads auction. As a reminder, the definition of top ads changed about a year ago, as Google began mixing ads in various organic positions throughout the search results.

With this change, Google also reminded us that it updated its unfair ads policy (i.e. double serving) to say this is not double serving. Google added the words, “in a single ad location,” as an exception to the policy last March after Google was caught double serving ads under its old definition.

What Google said. Google wrote:

Today, we’re sharing more about a recent change we made to deliver more relevant Search ads at the bottom of the search results page. When someone searches on Google, we run different auctions for each ad location where we show Search ads—for example top ads are selected by a different Search ad auction from ads that show in other ad locations. Until now, Search ads from a given advertiser were generally restricted to a single ad location on a given page.

Recently, we started looking deeply at the user experience with ads lower down the page and observed something interesting. Often, users would scroll past the top results to review content lower down the page, but then scroll back up if they found top results more relevant relative to content further below.

To help reduce this friction and improve ad relevance lower down the page, we will now allow relevant Search ads from advertisers who showed amongst top ads to also participate in the bottom ads auction. This means a user scrolling lower down the page might see a highly relevant ad from the same advertiser, but not necessarily the exact same content they saw earlier.

We tested this for several months and found that allowing advertisers who showed amongst top ads to also compete in the bottom auction increased rates of highly relevant ads by about 10%1 and increased bottom ad conversions by about 14%2, improving both the user experience and advertiser value lower down the page.

Google’s FAQ. Google also posted a Q&A on these changes:

1. Is Google Ads changing its policy around double serving for Search Ads?

No. The unfair advantage policy for Search ads applies to ads that compete with each other to show in a single ad location and we recently updated our language to make this clearer. With this change, we are allowing advertisers who show up in the top ad location to also be eligible for ad locations further down the page. However, within a single ad location (either top or bottom), we will continue to apply and enforce the existing policy. 

2. How will this change affect the Search ads auction?

With this change, we will now allow relevant Search ads from advertisers who showed amongst top ads to also participate in the bottom ads auction. There are no changes to the auction that we run for top ads. Advertisers will continue to never bid against themselves with this change either in the top or bottom auction.

3. Will the same ad always appear at both the top and bottom of the search results?

No. We show the most relevant Search ad for each specific placement on the Search results page, whether it’s at the top or the bottom. The specific ad content shown to the user may be similar or different from the top to best suit the context of the bottom placement. 

4. Does this change loosen query matching or ad load constraints?

No, our query matching systems and controls remain the same, as do our guidelines around the number of top ads we show on the page. This change is solely focused on the bottom of the page.

5. How can I understand the impact of this change?

This change, which will provide more opportunities for relevant Search ads at the bottom of the page, may impact your overall metrics. To understand the impact on your campaigns, we recommend that you segment your metrics by “Top vs. other” if you’re interested in understanding performance for different ad locations. The search terms report will continue to show query-level clicks, whether your ads are clicked on in top or bottom locations.  

6. How do I best prepare for this change?

Since this update provides more opportunities for relevant Search ads to be seen, ensure your keywords, ad copy, and landing pages are well-themed with what users are searching for. As more opportunities become available at the bottom of the page, you will likely see higher conversion volume at your current targets. We recommend using bid simulator tools to explore potential performance changes and adjust your bids or targets strategically. 

Why we care. Google has been testing various changes to ad positions within its search results for the past couple of years. Google has been happy with the results of those tests and thus continues to allow the same or similar ad, from the same advertiser, in multiple ad locations throughout the search results.

I believe many advertisers are happy about this new policy but some may not be. Either way, you need to be aware of these newish Google Ads rules.

Read more at Read More

DOJ unveils plan to end Google’s illegal search monopoly

The U.S. Department of Justice and a coalition of states unveiled their proposed remedies today aimed at dismantling Google’s illegal monopoly in search and search advertising. These include breaking off Chrome and banning default search payments.

The remedies. They break down into five categories meant to enable and increase competition:

  • Distribution remedies. This would mean ending payments that “freeze the ecosystem in place,” including Google’s multi-billion-dollar payments to Apple and Android device makers.
  • Chrome divestiture. This would separate Chrome from Google – organizationally and financially. Chrome accounts for 35% of all Google search queries and drives “billions in Search revenue” (the actual number is redacted). The DOJ also pointed out that Google “underinvests” in Chrome.
  • Data remedies. This would require Google to share user-side data, search index coverage, and ad performance data – essential tools that help competitors train models, improve search results, and better compete.
  • Advertising remedies. This would increase transparency and control for advertisers, while helping rival ad platforms compete more effectively. Specifically, Google would be forced to:
    • Provide more information to advertisers in search query reports.
    • Let advertisers opt out of broad and automated keyword matching.
  • Anticircumvention provisions. This would establish a technical committee to monitor Google’s compliance.
    • This section includes a “contingent Android divestiture.” If competition hasn’t improved within five years, Google could be forced to spin off Android.

Why we care. If these remedies move forward, it could profoundly reshape how people access Google, how advertisers spend, and how competitors evolve in the search and generative AI markets.

Catch up quick. U.S. vs. Google antitrust trial: Everything you need to know

The opening slides. United States & Co-Plaintiff States v. Google LLC (redacted public version) (PDF).

What Google is saying. As you’d expect, Google called the DOJ’s proposed remedies “unnecessary and harmful” in a blog post.

Read more at Read More

New data: Google AI Overviews are hurting click-through rates

Two new studies agree: Google’s AI Overviews steal clicks from organic search results.

While Google told us that AI Overviews citations result in higher-quality clicks, the introduction of AI Overviews correlates with a measurable decline in organic visibility and clicks, particularly for top-ranking, non-branded keywords. That’s according to two new data studies from SEO tool provider Ahrefs and performance agency Amsive.

By the numbers. Here’s how AI Overviews have decreased click-through rate (CTR) for traditional organic listings, according to the two studies:

  • Ahrefs: A 34.5% drop in position 1 CTR when AI Overviews were present, based on an analysis of 300,000 keywords.
  • Amsive: An average 15.49% CTR drop, with much larger losses in specific cases (e.g., -37.04% when combined with featured snippets), based on an analysis of 700,000 keywords.

Non-branded keywords. AI Overviews are much more likely to trigger on non-branded queries, and these terms showed the largest CTR drops:

  • Amsive: -19.98% CTR decline on non-branded keywords.
  • Ahrefs: Focused exclusively on informational intent (99.2% overlap with AI Overviews).

Lower rankings = bigger CTR hits. Google’s AI Overviews push organic results further down, minimizing visibility even for solidly ranking pages.

  • There was a -27.04% CTR drop for keywords not in the Top 3 positions, according to Amsive:

AI Overviews benefit branded queries. Branded keywords are less likely to trigger AI Overviews (only 4.79%) – but when they do, they get a +18.68% CTR boost. This is possibly due to greater user intent and brand familiarity, according to Amsive.

Why we care. These two studies (as well as data from Seer Interactive, which we covered in Google organic and paid CTRs hit new lows: Report) call into question Google’s claim that AI Overviews get more clicks than traditional listings. Google’s claim may or may not be true, but these studies show that overall clicks have gone down – and many websites ranking well in Classic Search aren’t included in AI Overviews.

About the data:

  • Ahrefs: Used Ahrefs + Google Search Console (GSC) data to analyze CTR changes before (March 2024) and after (March 2025) the U.S. rollout of AI Overviews.
  • Amsive: Pulled data from 700,000 keywords across 10 websites and 5 industries to isolate patterns by keyword type, industry, and SERP feature overlap.

The studies. You can read them here:

Read more at Read More

Meta tags for SEO: What you need to know

Meta tags for SEO: What you need to know

Remember when meta keywords were all the rage? 

Fast forward to 2025, and while search engines have evolved dramatically, meta tags remain crucial building blocks of your SEO foundation, just not the ones you might remember.

You’re juggling countless priorities, so it’s tempting to view meta tags as “set it and forget it” HTML snippets.

But here’s the truth: properly optimized meta tags are still conversion-driving assets that both search engines and potential customers use to understand your content.

This guide cuts through the noise to spotlight the meta tags that actually move the needle – on rankings, click-through rates, and visibility.

Before we dive deep, here’s what you need to know:

  • Title tags and meta descriptions remain your most powerful meta elements in 2025.
  • With AI Overviews now prominent in search, robots meta tags have become crucial content governance tools.
  • Mobile optimization through viewport tags directly impacts your rankings.
  • Social meta tags drive significantly higher engagement when properly implemented.

What are meta tags?

You’ve heard about meta tags, but what exactly are they? 

Think of them as your website’s elevator pitch to search engines, invisible to visitors but critical for rankings.

These HTML snippets live in the <head> section of your code, quietly working behind the scenes to tell Google, Bing, and other search engines what your page is about, who should see it, and how it should appear in search results.

Meta tags remain one of the few direct communication channels between marketers and search engines. 

Despite all the algorithm changes we’ve seen, properly implemented meta tags still provide clear ranking signals.

Unlike the early 2000s when you could stuff keywords into meta tags and call it a day, today’s meta tags work as part of a sophisticated system that impacts not just rankings but also user behavior and conversion rates. 

They’ve become even more crucial with the widespread adoption of AI-driven search features like Google’s AI Overviews.

Meta tags every site must have

Title tag

If I could only optimize one meta element, it would be the title tag every single time. 

It’s the heavyweight champion of meta tags, appearing as the clickable headline in search results and significantly influencing both rankings and click-through rates.

Here’s what actually works in 2025:

  • Optimal format: Primary Keyword | Secondary Keyword | Brand Name
  • Character limit: 50-60 characters (Google typically displays about 600 pixels worth)
  • Psychology hack: Numbers and power words can entice clicks

I recently worked with a SaaS client who changed their homepage title tag from “Cloud-Based Project Management Software” to ” #1 Project Management Software for Remote Teams | Save 5hrs/Week”

The result? 

A 27% increase in click-through rate and a jump from Position 4 to Position 2 for their primary keyword. That’s the power of a well-crafted title tag.

But here’s what most marketers miss: your title tag doesn’t exist in isolation. 

It needs to work in harmony with your meta description to tell a compelling two-part story.

Meta descriptions

Think of meta descriptions as free advertising space. 

While they don’t directly impact rankings, they’re your best opportunity to convince searchers to click your result instead of the competition.

The most effective meta descriptions follow this proven formula:

  • Open with a benefit or promise that addresses search intent.
  • Include specific details that build credibility (numbers, stats, features).
  • End with a clear call-to-action that creates urgency.

For example, compare these two meta descriptions for the same article about email marketing:

❌ “This article discusses email marketing best practices for small businesses. Learn how to improve your email marketing strategy and get better results from your campaigns.”

✅ “Boost your open rates by 37% with these 7 proven email templates designed for small businesses. See how brands like yours are driving 2X conversions with our step-by-step approach.”

The second example is specific, benefit-focused, and creates urgency. 

Tip: Google now dynamically adjusts meta descriptions based on the search query, but don’t leave this to chance! Write compelling descriptions for your key pages, or Google might pull random text from your page that doesn’t convert.

Dig deeper: SEO for page titles and meta descriptions: How to win more clicks

Robots meta tag

The robots meta tag has evolved from a simple indexing control to a sophisticated governance tool for how your content appears in search, particularly in AI-generated results.

The most important directives you need to know:

  • index/noindex: Controls whether a page appears in search results at all.
  • follow/nofollow: Determines if Google should follow links on your page.
  • nosnippet: Prevents your content from appearing in featured snippets and from being used as input for AI Overviews.
  • max-snippet:[number]: Limits how much text can be used in snippets and AI Overviews.

This last point deserves special attention. 

With Google’s AI Overviews now answering many queries directly at the top of search results, you face a strategic decision: 

  • Do you want your content to be cited (potentially gaining visibility)?
  • Or do you want to drive direct traffic to your site?

For high-value content that answers specific questions, using max-snippet:50 can be a smart compromise.

You provide enough information to be cited in AI Overviews, but not enough for the AI to give a complete answer without the user clicking through.

Viewport meta tag 

With mobile-first indexing now the standard, the viewport meta tag is non-negotiable. 

This simple line of code ensures your site displays correctly on all devices:

<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">

This tag is so important because mobile usability is a direct ranking factor. 

Sites that force users to pinch and zoom on mobile can be impacted in search rankings, regardless of how valuable their content might be.

The strategy behind effective meta tags

Meta tags as the first impression

Your meta tags create the first impression in search results, before users reach your website. 

This first impression needs to accomplish three things:

  • Signal relevance: Clearly show that you’re answering the user’s query.
  • Build trust: Demonstrate expertise and credibility.
  • Create urgency: Give users a compelling reason to click now.

The most successful meta tags address all three of these elements simultaneously. 

Aligning meta tags with search intent

One of the biggest shifts in meta tag optimization is focusing on search intent rather than just keywords. 

Today’s successful meta tags specifically address one of these four intent types:

Intent type What users want Meta tag approach Example
Informational Learn something Educational tone, promise of insights “What is Growth Marketing: 7 Essential Strategies Explained”
Navigational Find a specific site Brand-forward, direct “Netflix Official Site – Stream Movies & TV Shows”
Commercial Research before buying Comparison terms, benefits “Best Running Shoes 2025: Compare Top Brands & Features”
Transactional Make a purchase Action terms, urgency “Shop iPhone 16 – Free Shipping & Returns Until Friday”

The key is matching your meta tags to what users actually want at this moment in their journey. 

This alignment signals to both Google and users that your content is precisely what they’re looking for.

Advanced meta tag techniques for 2025

Social meta tags

Social meta tags (Open Graph and X card tags) control how your content appears when shared on social platforms. 

With social platforms driving significant traffic, these tags are essential for comprehensive visibility.

The minimum social tags you should implement on every page:

Canonical tags

The canonical tag might not be visible to users, but it’s crucial for preventing duplicate content issues and consolidating ranking signals:

<link rel="canonical" href="https://yourdomain.com/definitive-url">

This tag is particularly important for:

  • Ecommerce sites with product pages accessible through multiple category paths.
  • News sites that publish similar content across different sections.
  • Sites with both www and non-www versions (or HTTP and HTTPS variants).

Data-nosnippet

One of the newest and most valuable tools in your meta tag arsenal is the data-nosnippet attribute. 

This HTML attribute lets you mark specific sections of content that you don’t want included in either traditional snippets or AI Overviews:

<div data-nosnippet>This content won't appear in snippets or AI Overviews</div>

This offers control, allowing you to protect your most valuable content, like executive summaries, key conclusions, or proprietary data, while still allowing other parts of your page to appear in search results.

Get the newsletter search marketers rely on.



Measuring meta tag performance

How do you know if your meta tags are actually working? 

Here’s my three-step process for measuring and optimizing meta tag performance:

  • Track click-through rate (CTR): Use Google Search Console to identify pages with lower-than-expected CTR for their position. These are prime candidates for meta tag optimization.
  • A/B test critical pages: For high-value pages, create variations of your title and description tags to see which combinations drive the highest CTR. Even small wording changes can yield significant improvements.
  • Monitor impressions in AI Overviews: Track when your content is cited in AI Overviews and measure the impact on both direct traffic and brand awareness. This helps inform your robots tag strategy.

One test for a retail client of ours discovered that adding product prices directly in their title tags (“Men’s Leather Wallet – $49.99”) increased their CTR by 23% compared to titles without pricing information.

Common meta tag mistakes

Even seasoned marketers make these meta tag mistakes that can hurt visibility:

1. Duplicate meta descriptions across multiple pages

I recently audited a site where 62% of their product pages shared the same generic meta description. 

Google was forced to create its own snippets, resulting in inconsistent messaging and poor CTR.

The fix? Create unique, specific meta descriptions for each page, focusing on the unique value proposition of that particular content.

2. Keyword stuffing in title tags

It’s 2025, but I still see sites trying to cram every possible keyword variation into their title tags:

❌ “Best SEO Services, SEO Agency, SEO Company, Search Engine Optimization Services”

This approach looks spammy to users and triggers Google’s title rewriting algorithm, giving you even less control over your SERP appearance.

3. Missing or improper robots directives

With AI Overviews now prevalent, misconfigured robots directives can lead to either:

  • Valuable content being completely excluded from AI citations.
  • Proprietary information being fully exposed in AI summaries.

Review your robots directives quarterly to ensure they align with your current content strategy and business goals.

4. Ignoring mobile meta tag optimization

Title tags and meta descriptions appear differently on mobile devices, with even tighter character limits. 

Yet many marketers still optimize exclusively for desktop display.

Mobile optimization means:

  • Front-loading the most important information in titles and descriptions.
  • Keeping mobile meta descriptions under 120 characters.
  • Ensuring your viewport meta tag is properly implemented.

Meta tags and AI search: Preparing for what’s next

The rise of AI in search has fundamentally changed how we approach meta tags. 

Here’s how to position your content for success in this evolving landscape:

Strategic decisions about AI content usage

Every site now faces a critical decision: Do you want your content to appear in AI-generated summaries? 

There are valid arguments on both sides:

Allowing AI usage:

  • Gains visibility as a cited source in AI Overviews.
  • Positions your brand as an authority.
  • Creates multiple entry points to your content.

Restricting AI usage

  • Preserves direct traffic to your site.
  • Protects proprietary or premium content.
  • Maintains control over how your information is presented.

There’s no one-size-fits-all answer. Every brand should decide for themselves which aligns or take a hybrid approach.

Enhanced structured data integration

While not technically meta tags, structured data (schema.org markup) works alongside your meta tags to provide context to search engines. 

In 2025, implementing relevant schema markup is essential for:

  • Qualifying for rich results (ratings, FAQs, how-tos).
  • Providing clear entity signals to AI systems.
  • Enhancing the appearance of your content in both traditional and AI search results.

The sites seeing the most success in AI-driven search are those that provide both strong meta tag signals and comprehensive structured data.

Your 15-minute meta tag audit

Ready to put these insights into action? Here’s a quick audit process you can run right now:

  • Check your top 5 landing pages in Google Search Console for CTR outliers.
  • Verify that each page has a unique, compelling title and meta description.
  • Ensure your robots meta directives align with your AI content strategy.
  • Confirm proper canonical tags are in place, especially for similar content.
  • Validate that viewport and social meta tags are correctly implemented.

This simple process can help you identify quick wins to increase organic traffic within weeks, not months.

Smart meta tags power search performance

In 2025, meta tags are no longer just technical SEO elements; they’re strategic marketing assets that require thoughtful optimization.

The most successful marketers approach meta tags with three principles in mind:

  • User-first thinking: Write for humans first, algorithms second.
  • Strategic control: Make deliberate choices about how and where your content appears.
  • Continuous testing: Regularly measure performance and refine your approach.

As search continues to evolve with AI at the forefront, your meta tags will remain one of your most powerful tools for visibility, engagement, and control. 

The time you invest in optimizing them today will pay dividends in traffic and conversions tomorrow.

Read more at Read More

WordPress 6.8: The highlights you should know about

On April 15th, 2025, ​WordPress 6.8 was released. This release, named Cecil, is aimed at bringing more control when it comes to the design of your website. It also comes with features that improve performance and enhance security for users and developers. Let’s dive into a few of the highlights in this latest release.

The Style Book for Classic themes

The Style Book, previously exclusive to block-based themes, is now accessible for Classic themes that have editor-styles or a theme.json file. It also comes with a new look and a few new settings to play around with. You can find this feature, or see if you have access to this feature, by going to Appearance > Design > Styles in your vertical navigation bar on the left side.

The Style Book in WordPress 6.8
The Style Book shows the design elements of your site.

This tool gives you an overview of your site’s design elements, including colors, typography, and block styles. Just scroll down to have a look at all the design elements and whether you’re happy with everything design-wise.

Increasing performance with speculative loading

WordPress 6.8 introduces speculative loading, a feature that leverages the Speculation Rules API to prefetch or prerender pages based on user interactions. When someone clicks on a link, this page can now be preloaded. This anticipatory loading results in faster page transitions and a smoother browsing experience.

Of course, WordPress will not load everything as this would compromise performance if it becomes too much. This feature aims to keep a balance between speed and efficiency in choosing which pages to load. Developers can customize this behavior by using a plugin or writing code if they want it to act differently. It’s also good to know that this feature only works in newer browsers.

This feature is part of a longer list of enhancements focused on performance and speed, for both editing and browsing. Without going into too much detail, this update comes with improvements to the block editor, query caching and shorter interactions thanks to the Interactivity API.

Improved design and editing tools

WordPress 6.8 brings a few new enhancements to the design and editing experience. We’ll go into a few of them, such as the improved global styles panel, the option to turn image blocks into featured images and new density settings in table layouts.​

Global styles panel

The Global Styles Panel in the full site editor has had an update, making it easier than ever to give your website a cohesive and polished look. Now, users can tweak typography, colors, and layout settings for their entire site — all from one convenient place. Whether you’re adjusting heading sizes, setting your brand colors, or fine-tuning spacing, this central hub helps you manage your site’s design without having to dive into custom CSS or theme files.

Set image blocks as featured images

One of the most welcome little updates in WordPress 6.8 is the ability to turn any image block directly into a featured image with a single click. No more uploading the same image twice — once in the content and once for the featured image. If you’ve already added a perfect image to your post, you can now designate it as the featured image straight from the block editor, which simplifies your workflow and saves time.

WordPress 6.8 feature: setting image block as featured image
Simply select any image in your post and click ‘Set as featured image’

Density options for your tables

WordPress 6.8 introduces new density settings for table-based layouts, particularly useful when you’re managing data-heavy content like tables in the admin or Data Views. With these new controls, you can choose how compact or spacious you want your table rows and cells to appear, depending on your personal preference or the type of content you’re handling. Whether you prefer a minimal, airy look or a dense, info-packed table, WordPress now gives you the flexibility to adjust it to suit your needs.

Under-the-hood improvements

Beyond the user-facing features, WordPress 6.8 includes a lot of enhancements under the hood. Let’s check out a few highlights.​

Higher security with bcrypt

Although less visible, this feature is one to get excited about as well. As it brings a significant boost to security. The system is moving away from the MD5-based system for password hashing and transitioning to bcrypt. This change improves overall password security and requires no action from you or your users. It’s automatically implemented and will make it a lot harder to crack passwords.

Efficient block type registration

The new release introduces a new function that makes registering multiple block types much easier for developers. Instead of writing separate code for each block, plugin and theme creators can now register a whole collection of blocks in one go. This not only reduces repetitive code but also helps keep projects organized and easier to maintain, making life simpler for developers and creating fewer opportunities for bugs.

Internationalization improvements

With WordPress powering sites across the globe, internationalization is always a priority. This release ensures that error messages generated by PHPMailer (WordPress’s email handling system) are properly localized, so users see helpful and understandable messages in their language. Additionally, any plugin update notifications sent via email will now respect the site administrator’s selected language, making routine updates more user-friendly for non-English speakers.

Accessibility enhancements

WordPress 6.8 continues the platform’s commitment to making websites more inclusive by improving accessibility across the board. One of the key changes in this release is the removal of redundant title attributes, which were often unnecessary and could cause confusion for users relying on screen readers.

This small but meaningful update helps streamline the browsing experience for people using assistive technology, ensuring that WordPress websites are more welcoming and accessible to all visitors. Other than that, there are over 100+ accessibility fixes and enhancements in this release.

Update your site to WordPress 6.8

Those are a few of the features that you’ll find in this latest release. There’s a lot of focus on enhancing the overall user experience and refining existing functionalities. Whether you’re a developer or website manager, this update is meant to make your life a bit easier and your website more secure and performant. Read the official WordPress release post for more information on this newest version of WordPress. Or, if you’re curious to see these features in action, update to the newest version and try them out yourself!

Read more: Learn how to use WordPress without touching any code »

The post WordPress 6.8: The highlights you should know about appeared first on Yoast.

Read more at Read More

Google Search Console: A simple guide for SEO beginners

Google Search Console is an essential SEO tool. Yet, some people find it a little bit scary and complicated at first sight. In this guide, we’ll cover all the…

The post Google Search Console: A simple guide for SEO beginners appeared first on Mangools.

Read more at Read More

Google sends personalized growth plans to advertisers, pushing AI-driven solutions

Google Ads logo on smartphone

Advertisers are receiving step-by-step guidance emails from Google Ads aimed at improving campaign performance over a three-month period.

The details. Google Ads is sending emails with the subject line “Personalised action plan for growth” to business advertisers, according to an X post from Govind Singh Panwar.

The email contains:

  • A three-month structured improvement plan delivered through weekly emails.
  • A progress tracker showing completed and pending actions.
  • Clear calls to action focused on ad strength improvements.
  • Claims that improving ad strength from “Poor” to “Excellent” results in an average 12% increase in conversions.

AI suggestions. The guidance pushes advertisers toward Google’s preferred strategies, including:

  • Enabling “personalized recommendations” (Google’s AI suggestions).
  • Adding broad-match keywords (which typically increase ad spend).
  • Creating Performance Max campaigns (Google’s black-box AI campaign type).

Why we care. The email campaign essentially represents Google’s effort to standardize advertiser behavior while framing it as personalized guidance. These “personalized” plans appear somewhat templated, potentially leading to more homogenized advertising approaches across competitors.

However, as more advertisers follow these guidelines, those who don’t may see performance impacts as Google’s algorithms increasingly favor accounts aligned with their recommended practices.

Bottom line. While positioned as personalized guidance, the recommendations follow Google’s standard playbook for increasing advertiser adoption of its automated solutions and broader targeting options, which typically require larger budgets.

Read more at Read More

Google Search to redirect its country level TLDs to Google.com

Google will begin redirecting its country code top-level domain names (ccTLD) versions of its Google domain to Google.com. That means if you frequent google.fr (in France), google.ng (in Nigeria) and so on, you will be redirected to Google.com.

Why the change. Google said, “Over the years, our ability to provide a local experience has improved. In 2017, we began providing the same experience with local results for everyone using Search, whether they were using google.com or their country’s ccTLD.” “Because of this improvement, country-level domains are no longer necessary,” Google added.

Google said, “we’ll begin redirecting traffic from these ccTLDs to google.com to streamline people’s experience on Search.”

The impact. For the most part, most searchers should not notice any difference. When you are redirected, there is a chance you may have to login to Google again and also reconfigure some of your search settings.

But overall, there won’t be any significant changes. Google wrote, “It’s important to note that while this update will change what people see in their browser address bar, it won’t affect the way Search works, nor will it change how we handle obligations under national laws.”

Timing. This change will begin today but “will be rolled out gradually over the coming months,” the company said.

Why we care. You may notice slightly different referral traffic from Google Search, related to this change.

This may also impact your signed in experience with Google.com in the short term.

But outside of that, there should be no other large changes with these ccTLD changes for Google Search.

Read more at Read More