Purposeful browsing: Does long form content still have a place in the era of generative AI?

Purposeful browsing: Does long form content still have a place in the era of generative AI?

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Early indications are generative AI tends to surface long form in-depth content; visitors from AI results browse with purpose and are more likely to convert

Long form content still has a place in the generative AI era. People are still reading long-form content – and it matters more than ever, wrote Ashley Hall, vice president of Strategic Partnerships for Seedtag, which provides advertising services.

Her ideas were published in a contribution to AdMonsters:

“Publishers are the backbone of digital media. Without them, there’s no audience to reach, no environment to advertise in and no meaningful context to connect with.”

I’d add there are no generative AI summaries or even a search index without publishers. The whole ecosystem of digital marketing is dependent on publishers because publishing fosters an audience.

Thoughtful content surfaced in generative AI leads to “purposeful browsing.” Purposeful browsing is the path towards intent:

“Audience intent is everything. People who click into a 1,500-word article from an AI-assisted search aren’t doing it by accident—they’re seeking substance. That behavior signals mindset.”

That makes sense given Ahrefs, a competitive developer of SEO software, says web visitors referred by AI convert at 23x “the rate of traditional organic traffic.” So, while there’s a lot of concern about lower click through rates (CTR), those that do come through generative AI signal genuine interest.

Marketing and communications often fiercely debate ‘this versus that’ comparisons; paid media versus earned media for example.

Some similar debates are emerging as generative AI adoption grows. Search Engine Land for example, pointed out, despite the buzz around AI, old fashioned Google still fields 210x more search queries than ChatGPT.

The author of the aforementioned piece, Ashley Hall, argues it’s the combination not comparison that counts the most:

“The real opportunity isn’t in choosing between AI and human creativity, it’s in using them together.”

That’s true for most of these marketing communications debates. Brand marketing plus demand marketing beats brand versus demand.

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Data supporting the case for long form

There’s some data supporting this perspective too.

The trade publication MarketingProfs recently reported on an annual survey of bloggers, which is now in its 12th year and polled 800 of them this year, found fewer bloggers are publishing long form content. Yet fewer is not the same as few. More than six in 10 (63%) published pieces are 1,000 words or longer.

Those bloggers that do publish long posts, are also more likely to report “strong results.” I’ve written about this study many times over the years and this finding is the same. The correlation between long posts and strong results is always high.

The weakness in this survey finding is defining what “strong results” mean. It could mean anything from a high number of organic visitors to closed deals – and there’s a whole range of metrics in between.

So, how long should a blog post be?

A good answer is as long as it takes to adequately convey an idea to the target audience. A long post that’s repetitive simply for the sake of being long isn’t likely to move the needle. A post that’s 200 words of garbage is as effective as one with 2,000 words of garbage.

Yet the evidence suggests there are occasions that sometimes require depth to your work. It’s an opportunity too if fewer bloggers, as this survey suggests, are putting the work in to produce long form content of high quality.

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Frequency is also key to strong results  

Length isn’t the only characteristic associated with strong results either. The same survey of bloggers found that frequency of publication also drives strong results.

Just under six in 10 (59%) of bloggers who publish weekly or more report strong results. The number tops 80% if the cohort that publishes “several per month” was included.

The more important theme here, which I believe the data tells us but not as explicitly, is consistency matters. A trustworthy and reliable blog publishes consistently.

I recommend choosing a publishing rhythm and sticking to it. It becomes a self-imposed but non-negotiable deadline t

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