Google Is Not Your Friend (And Never Was)

Google Is Not Your Friend (And Never Was)

First, they gave you rankings based on exact matches. You burnt bridges with writers and editors to shove keywords into every nook and cranny.

Then, they introduced featured snippets. You rewired your client’s content to fit their narrow demands.

Next, People Also Ask rolled out. So, you forced headings where they didn’t belong—turning everything into a “why,” “how,” or “what” question.

They dangled FAQ rich results. You know exactly what you did.

Finally, they flooded you with traffic. So, you poured your client’s money into chasing the cheese—publishing, updating, tweaking.

Now look at you. You’re in a?codependent relationship.

What is codependency?

An emotional and behavioral condition where you depend on someone (or something) to the detriment of your own well-being.

In plain terms:?relationship addiction.

Sound familiar?

If Google can yank your livelihood overnight, did you really have a business? Did you even have a strategy?

Here’s the irony.

You’ve told business owners,?“Build on your own land. Don’t rely on platforms.”

But the search results are?Google’s land, not yours.

The truth hurts.

Google is not your friend.

Google is a?profit-driven machine, designed to serve one master:?shareholders.

Sure, individuals work there. You might call them friends or colleagues. But?Google the entity? Its only goal is growth.

The real problem?

When you view marketing through an?SEO lens, you exclude the rest of the marketing mix.

That’s not marketing. That’s tunnel vision.

SEO isn’t “free traffic.”

Let me say it louder for the people in the back:

Everything has a cost.

  • Your time? A cost.
  • SEO headcount? A cost.
  • Content creation? A cost.
  • Website maintenance? A cost.

This lie—that SEO traffic is free—has cost businesses billions in wasted dollars.

Wake up.

Stop playing Google’s game. Start building a strategy that works for your business, not theirs.

The Path Forward: Reclaim Your Marketing Strategy

It’s time to step out of Google’s shadow and rejoin the full spectrum of Marketing.

SEO alone isn’t enough anymore—not for your clients, your employer, or your business.

Here’s what you need to do:

1. Get Skin in the Game Put your money where it matters:

  • Meta ads
  • TikTok
  • YouTube Shorts
  • Even X (formerly Twitter)

Open your eyes and see the forest for the trees. Diversify your efforts.

2. Go Back to First Principles Ask yourself:

  • What problem does your product, service, or non-profit solve?
  • Where does your audience spend their time online?
  • What sparks their curiosity?
  • How can you deliver entertainment or value that stays true to your brand?

3. Get Smart with Martech

  • Identify the tools needed to cookie and retarget your audience.
  • Build funnels that keep your brand top-of-mind at every touchpoint.

4. Master the Intent Journey

  • When does your audience need educational content?
  • How can you capture transactional intent and ensure you’re the first choice?

5. Plan for Results

  • How much will it cost to see material results?
  • How long will it take to scale your efforts and unlock more marketing spend?

Here’s the thing:

Google is just one tool. To truly serve your business, you need to look beyond SEO and embrace the broader marketing mix.

Want to stay ahead of the curve?

Subscribe to?Journal of an Enterprise SEO.

Every week, I share practical tips, strategies, and resources to help you:

  • Build a holistic marketing strategy.
  • Master SEO as part of a larger ecosystem.
  • Stop chasing the algorithm and start creating real, scalable results.

Subscribe now and start leveling up your marketing game.

Because the best marketers aren’t codependent—they’re unstoppable.

Onkar Dhuri

Helping Small Businesses Get Big Online | Your Business + My SEO = More Sales

2 个月

Nice article ??

Martin ?tvrtní?ek

Enterprise SEO ?? | Niche Websites | Growing businesses globally ?? | Ex-SaaS Product Owner | Passionate about online marketing & growth ????

3 个月

Reading your diaries is like listening to the voices I have in my head, but you are already in the phase you are saying those aloud. Anyway, 1) do you see yourself as an overall digital experience manager in the future? 2) Do you have any tools you use for identifying where your audience spends time? Recently, I was looking into Spartoro; however, maybe you already have some tips.

Erin Sparks

Founder of Site Strategics, an Indianapolis-based SEO, SEM, and Social Media Marketing Firm. Host of EDGE of the Web podcast

3 个月

Couldn’t agree more. Excellent post, Daniel.

Andrew Hart

Ethics-first Digital Generalist Consultant (Marketing, Transformation, WebOps) w/20+ yrs experience. Empowering social-good and ethical orgs to elevate their digital presence. Also, a climbing enthusiast!

3 个月

Awesome post, Daniel I've been saying this for years and I wrap it up with "don't chase the algorithym" Funnily enough this took over from a previous mantra of "stop designing for IE" which existed for similar reasons There are plenty of good practices from SEO that we need to continue ... but not in the name of Google, and not in the name of SEO

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