AI Visibility: GEO, AEO, AI Search & SEO

How AI Search Is Changing B2B SEO | RiseOpp

• RiseOpp • Season 2 • Episode 60

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 4:34

Full Transcript: The Ultimate Guide to B2B SEO

B2B SEO works best when it is built around buyer intent, revenue impact, and complex decision-making journeys.

This episode breaks down how B2B SEO connects full-funnel content, technical site health, thought leadership, account-based targeting, topic clusters, and AI-driven search visibility.

Marketers, founders, SEO professionals, and growth leaders will learn how to align search strategy with sales, pipeline, and measurable business outcomes.

👉 Read the full guide:

https://riseopp.com/blog/the-ultimate-guide-to-b2b-seo

SPEAKER_00

Welcome to today's deep dive. We are jumping into the heavy SEO playbook for B2B pipeline growth. And uh the mission today is figuring out why so many B2B search strategies just completely fail.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah. And it usually comes down to treating these complex corporate buyers like they're just, you know, casual online choppers.

SPEAKER_00

Right. Okay. Let's unpack this. Think about it like planning a massive corporate banquet for a committee of really picky eaters, but you're treating the whole thing like a vending machine.

SPEAKER_01

I love that analogy because you know what's fascinating here is the contrast the playbook points out. A B2C query is like best noise canceling headphones. It takes maybe five minutes to buy.

SPEAKER_00

Exactly. You just want the snack.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, show the snack, get the click. But a B2B query, someone searching for like enterprise endpoint protection software comparison PDF. I mean, that takes months.

SPEAKER_00

Right. You have to provide the menu, the chef's resume, the nutritional facts.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. And because that buying cycle takes so long, you really have to abandon vanity metrics. Stuff like general organic traffic is just a trap.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, totally. Like ranking number one for uh what is a firewall, it might bring a million college students to your site, but zero actual buyers.

SPEAKER_01

Right, which is why the focus has to shift entirely to pipeline revenue, marketing qualified leads, and sales qualified leads. You need the tiny fraction of people who actually have the budget to buy.

SPEAKER_00

Wait, uh let me push back on that though. If AI and generative search are just gobbling everything up and summarizing it at the top of the page anyway, why bother? Like, aren't we just writing essays for bots to steal?

SPEAKER_01

It's a really fair question. But the playbook says you don't fight the AI, you actually feed it.

SPEAKER_00

Feed it. How so?

SPEAKER_01

You structure your content with really short, declarative answers and bulleted lists right at the top. The goal is to get your brand quoted inside those AI overviews.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, I see. But what about the actual depth of the content?

SPEAKER_01

Well, that's where Google's EET framework comes in: experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trust. It's essentially an attack on AI fluff.

SPEAKER_00

Right, because an AI literally cannot generate lived experience. It doesn't have a resume.

SPEAKER_01

Exactly. The algorithm wants unique data sets, real case studies, and expert synthesis. Human experience actually wins here.

SPEAKER_00

Okay, but even the best expert content is totally useless if the bots can't even find it. Which, you know, brings us to the most annoying trap ever: gated content.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it's the worst. Hiding white papers entirely behind lead capture forms is basically SEO suicide.

SPEAKER_00

You, the listener, have definitely been there. You click a link, hoping to solve a massive headache at work, and boom, a giant form demanding your life story and your work email.

SPEAKER_01

And if a search engine bot hits that exact same form, it stops dead. It cannot fill it out.

SPEAKER_00

Meaning it can't read the white paper at all.

SPEAKER_01

Right. So you can't rank for any of those brilliant insights. The playbook's clever fix is to leave like 25 to 50% of the text totally ungated.

SPEAKER_00

Oh wow. So you give the algorithm enough text to index and then put the highly actionable stuff behind the gate.

SPEAKER_01

You got it. Give them the taste first, prove the value, and then ask for the email.

SPEAKER_00

So we ungate the content, the bots are reading it, but how do we get them to trust it? Because buying those generic backlinks on random blogs feels, I don't know, super outdated.

SPEAKER_01

Oh, it's worse than outdated. The algorithm actively ignores them. True B2B authority requires actual digital PR.

SPEAKER_00

Digital PR? Like what, publishing original survey data?

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, exactly. Imagine publishing data analyzing the biggest security threats in finance. If a major tech journalist cites it, the algorithm sees a high authority news domain vouching for you.

SPEAKER_00

Right. That acts as a massive multiplier for your trust score. Far better than paying some shady site 10 bucks for a hyperlink.

SPEAKER_01

Absolutely. That and getting listed in highly trusted partner vendor directories. It proves to the algorithm that real industries actually value your tool.

SPEAKER_00

So what does this all mean for you? Whether you run marketing for a massive software company or you just want your ideas noticed at work, success means solving specific problems for specific people, not just shouting into the void.

SPEAKER_01

Yeah, and it leaves us with a really fascinating question to ponder.

SPEAKER_00

Oh, lay it on us.

SPEAKER_01

Well, as generative AI ushers in this zero click frontier, what happens to B2B discovery when corporate buyers eventually stop visiting company websites entirely?

SPEAKER_00

Wow. Yeah. That's a scary thought.

SPEAKER_01

I mean, what happens to that corporate banquet when the picky eaters just ask their enterprise AI tools to recommend the best software and they never even look at your menu?