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Beyond the Sprint: Why Your SEO Strategy Needs a Marathon Mindset

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SEO Strategy: The old race is over. Here’s how to win the new one.

In the world of digital marketing, it’s easy to get caught up in the chase. A competitor launches a new campaign, and we sprint to catch up. A new keyword trend emerges, and we sprint to capture it. This constant sprinting is exhausting, and worse, it’s a losing strategy. It treats SEO as a series of short-term reactions rather than what it truly is: a long-term strategic asset.

To succeed today, we must reframe our entire approach to success. I often use a metaphor that gets to the heart of how modern SEO truly functions:

"SEO is a marathon. The search engine is the ever-changing course. We, the businesses and SEOs, are the athletes. And the leading platforms? They are the scorekeepers, running the race right alongside us."

— Momenul Ahmad, Founder, SEOSiri

This isn’t just a clever saying; it’s a strategic framework for survival and dominance in the current landscape. Let’s break down what it means for your business, incorporating the seismic shifts we're seeing, like those in the June 2025 Core Update.

seo metaphor by seosiri founder, momenul ahmad










1. The Course: The Terrain Just Got More Demanding

In a marathon, you don’t just run; you adapt. There are hills, sharp turns, and changing weather conditions. In SEO, our course is the search engine, and with recent updates, it has introduced a challenging new terrain defined by one crucial factor: authenticity.

The biggest change to the course is Google’s intensified focus on E-E-A-T, with a heavy emphasis on that first "E": Experience. Google no longer wants content written by someone who simply researched a topic; it demands content from someone who has lived it.

  • The Sprinter’s Mistake: The sprinter sees this new terrain and looks for a shortcut. They use AI to generate articles that appear to have experience, incorporating phrases like "As a user..." without providing any real backing. They create content that is a mile wide and an inch deep, and it fails spectacularly because it lacks genuine insight. It’s the definition of unhelpful content.

  • The Marathoner’s Strategy: The marathoner respects the new terrain and trains for it. They understand that demonstrating first-hand experience is non-negotiable. This means:

    • Showcasing Real-World Use: Creating content with original images, videos, and case studies of your product or service in action.

    • Authoritative Authorship: Ensuring every article has a clear author bio linking to a real person with credible social profiles and a history in the industry.

    • Deep, Nuanced Answers: Moving beyond surface-level keywords to address the deep, specific questions your audience has—the kind of questions only a true expert could answer.

The Takeaway: The SEO "course" now actively penalizes generic, unhelpful content. Stop trying to fake expertise and start building a content strategy around the genuine experience that already exists within your organization.

2. The Athletes: Your Training Regimen Must Evolve

As the course changes, so must the athletes. Being a top performer in this new race requires a fundamentally different training regimen. Your strength is no longer measured by the volume of content you produce, but by its verifiable authenticity.

  • The Sprinter’s Mistake: The sprinter remains focused on old metrics of speed and volume. They churn out dozens of blog posts, optimize for keywords, and build links from anywhere they can. They are running hard, but they are running in the wrong direction, building a digital footprint that lacks depth and trust.

  • The Marathoner’s Strategy: The marathoner adjusts their training to build the specific muscles Google is now rewarding.

    • They Prioritize “Helpful Content” Over Keywords: They obsess over user satisfaction. Does the user leave your page with their problem solved? Is your content the most comprehensive, useful resource on the topic? This is the core of the Helpful Content System (HCS), which is now a dominant ranking signal.

    • They Build a Defensible Brand: They understand that a strong brand reputation is a protective moat. Positive reviews, a clean backlink profile from authoritative sites, and consistent brand mentions all signal to Google that you are a legitimate, trusted entity.

    • They Audit and Update Relentlessly: They don't just publish and forget. They consistently review old content, updating it with new insights, fresh data, and more first-hand experience to keep it relevant and valuable.

The Takeaway: Your new training regimen is one of quality over quantity. Every piece of content, every backlink, and every page on your site should be an exercise in building genuine trust with both users and search engines.

3. The Scorekeepers: The Metrics That Matter Have Changed

The platforms we use—our scorekeepers—are essential. They provide the data we need to manage our race: our pace, our position, and the condition of the course. But in this new era, we must be careful about which scores we are watching.

  • The Sprinter’s Mistake: The sprinter is still obsessed with one number: keyword rank. They see a drop from #3 to #5 for a trophy keyword and immediately panic, making rash changes without understanding the "why" behind the shift.

  • The Marathoner’s Strategy: The marathoner looks at a more sophisticated dashboard. They know that raw rankings are a symptom, not the cause. The metrics they prioritize now include:

    • User Engagement Signals: Are users spending time on the page? Are they clicking through to other resources? Is the bounce rate low? These are direct indicators of content helpfulness.

    • Brand vs. Non-Brand Traffic: Is your brand authority growing? An increase in users searching for you by name is a powerful signal of trust.

    • Conversion Rates: Ultimately, the goal is not traffic, but business results. Are your pages turning visitors into leads and customers? This is the true measure of a successful strategy.

The Takeaway: Use the platforms to get deeper insights into user behavior and brand authority, not just as a vanity scoreboard. The ultimate finish line isn't a #1 ranking; it's a measurable impact on your business's bottom line.

Building an Unbeatable Brand

When you adopt the marathon mindset, you stop asking, "How can we get a quick traffic boost?" and start asking, "How can we become the most trusted, authoritative, and helpful resource in our industry for the next decade?"

You move from a reactive state of panic to a proactive state of building a powerful, defensible brand. You invest in the durable assets—authentic content, proven expertise, and unwavering user trust—that generate compounding returns long after the sprinters have dropped out.

The race for digital relevance is long. The course is more challenging than ever. But for those willing to train correctly, the rewards have never been greater.

The Marathon Framework: A Quick Recap

Before we cross the finish line, let’s quickly and clearly define the key players in this SEO marathon. Understanding who is who—and their specific role—is the key to crafting a winning strategy.

  • The Course is Google.
    It is the ever-changing terrain—the rules, the algorithm (like the recent E-E-A-T and Helpful Content updates), and the landscape—upon which the entire race is run. Google defines the challenges and sets the standards for success. Your job is not to fight the course, but to master it.

  • The Athletes are You (Businesses & SEOs).
    You are the competitor. Your role is to build fundamental strength (brand authority), maintain a consistent pace (content creation), and strategically navigate the course Google provides. Your tactics, your content quality, and your brand's reputation are all part of your training and race-day performance.

  • The Scorekeepers are the Platforms.
    Tools like Ahrefs, Moz, SEMrush, and others provide the critical data—the lap times, competitor positions, and performance analytics. They are indispensable for measuring progress and informing your strategy.

However, they are not the judges at the finish line; your actual business goals are. Use their data for insight, not as the end goal itself.
  • And Your Coach is Your Strategic Partner (That's Us).
    In this complex race, a coach is the one who has studied the course, understands the athlete’s unique strengths, and builds the training plan for victory. At SEOSiri (Clutch), our role is to provide that expert strategy, ensuring you not only compete but build the endurance to win.


Ready to stop sprinting and start building a marathon strategy that wins? Contact SEOSiri to learn how we help B2B brands build sustainable, long-term growth in the new age of SEO.

Best,

Momenul Ahmad

digital strategist in bangladesh

Founder of SEOSiriMomenul is a digital strategist specializing in audience-first SEO, semantic copywriting, and cross-channel marketing psychology. He helps brands win relevance over reach.

Google June 2025 Core Update: A No-Panic Guide for Website Owners

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Google has officially announced that the June 2025 Core Update is rolling out. Across the digital marketing world, website owners are holding their breath, watching their analytics dashboards. If you're one of them, take a moment to pause.

Before you react to any ranking shifts, it's crucial to understand what a Core Update is, what it isn't, and how to navigate it strategically. This guide will walk you through everything you need to know, based directly on Google's own official documentation.

(Source: Google Search Central's Guidance on Core Updates)

Image: status.search.google.com;

google core update june 2025






What Is a Google Core Update? The 'Why' Behind the Shake-up

First and foremost, a Core Update is not a penalty.

Think of it as Google performing a significant "recalibration" of its ranking systems. The goal is to improve how it assesses content quality on a massive scale, aiming to better reward pages that deliver an excellent user experience.

Google uses a brilliant analogy to explain this: Imagine you made a list of the top 100 movies in 2021. If you refreshed that list today, in 2025, you'd add some fantastic new movies. As a result, some films from the original list—which are still great—would get pushed down or fall off entirely.

This is what happens during a Core Update. If your site's rankings drop, it doesn’t mean your content has suddenly become "bad." It often means Google’s refined systems have found other pages that they now consider more relevant, authoritative, or helpful for users.

The Unchanging North Star: E-E-A-T and People-First Content

The underlying principle of every Core Update is Google's push to better identify and reward content that demonstrates high levels of E-E-A-T:

  • Experience: The content is created by someone with real, first-hand life experience on the topic.

  • Expertise: The creator has the necessary skills and knowledge in the field.

  • Authoritativeness: The creator or the website is known as a go-to source in the industry.

  • Trust: The page is accurate, secure, and provides reliable information.

The best way to "optimize" for any Core Update is to create people-first content that aligns with these principles.

What to Do If Your Rankings Have Dropped: A 4-Step Action Plan

Seeing a traffic drop is stressful, but a reactive, panicked approach will do more harm than good. Here is a strategic plan to follow.

Step 1: Don't Panic, Diagnose Holistically

Resist the temptation to make small, frantic changes like tweaking title tags or rewriting a single paragraph. A Core Update is a broad signal about your site's overall quality. Your response should be equally holistic.

Step 2: Conduct an Honest Content & Quality Audit

Google provides a list of self-assessment questions that are your best guide. Gather your team and ask these tough questions about your content:

  • Content and Quality Questions:

    • Does our content provide original information, in-depth reporting, or insightful analysis?

    • Is our content more substantial and valuable than our competitors'?

    • Is the headline helpful and does it accurately reflect the content?

  • Expertise Questions:

    • Is this content written by an expert or enthusiast who genuinely knows the topic?

    • Is the content free from easily verified factual errors?

    • Would you trust this content for important decisions related to your money or your life (YMYL)?

  • Presentation and Production Questions:

    • Is the content well-produced, or does it appear sloppy?

    • Is the page designed to be easy to read and navigate on mobile devices?

    • Are there an excessive number of ads that interfere with the main content?

Step 3: Focus on Significant, Tangible Improvements

Minor tweaks are not enough. Recovery requires making substantial improvements to the quality of your content, user experience, and demonstration of E-E-A-T. This could mean updating articles with new data, adding author bios to demonstrate expertise, or improving your site's mobile layout.

Step 4: Be Patient

Google notes that improvements made after a Core Update don't guarantee immediate recovery. Often, the positive effects of your changes may not be seen until the next broad Core Update is released. SEO is a long-term strategy, and this is a perfect example of that principle in action.

A Deeper Dive: The Core Principles of People-First Content

To truly understand how to improve, it's best to go directly to the source. Google's own guidance encourages creators to self-assess their content against a set of core principles. These questions are the single best roadmap for building a resilient, high-quality website.

When you review your content, focus on these key areas, which are directly aligned with Google's human-first and ethical focus:

  • Content & Value: Does your content provide original insights and substantial value, or does it merely rehash what other sources have already said?
  • Expertise & Trust (E-A-T): Does your content demonstrate first-hand expertise and cite credible sources? Is there clear information about the author to build trust with your audience?
  • Presentation & User Experience: Is the content professionally produced and easy to read on all devices? Is it free from excessive, intrusive ads that get in the way of the user's goal?
  • Purpose & User Satisfaction: Does your page fulfill the promise of its headline and actually satisfy the user's reason for clicking on it from the search results?

We highly recommend you read and bookmark Google's official list of self-assessment questions. Aligning your content strategy with these principles is the most sustainable path to long-term success.

What NOT to Do: Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • DON'T make isolated SEO changes and expect a quick fix.

  • DON'T hastily remove large amounts of content unless you are certain it is low-quality and offers no value.

  • DON'T blame a single element. A Core Update is a "big picture" assessment.

Core Update June 25, Suport Video by Google Product Team:

Recommended Read:

The Proactive Playbook: Future-Proofing Your SEO (view from 2019)

This guide is for building a long-term, resilient strategy. It focuses on the core principles that will keep you ahead of the curve, no matter what algorithm changes come next.

  • Focus: Foundational best practices, forward-looking trends, and building a sustainable SEO framework.

  • Best For: Annual strategy planning, new website builds, and future-proofing your online presence.

Read the Guide: The SEO Prediction & Strategy Checklist

Our Philosophy at SEOSiri

At SEOSiri, our approach has always been to build websites and content strategies that are resilient by design. We focus on creating high-quality, people-first content that establishes our clients as trusted authorities. By prioritizing what users want, we align with Google's long-term goals, making these updates opportunities for growth rather than moments of fear.

If you're trying to navigate the impact of the June 2025 Core Update, our team is here to help. We can provide a comprehensive site quality audit to identify areas for meaningful improvement.

Contact us today to ensure your website isn't just surviving these updates—it's thriving through them.

Momenul Ahmad

digital strategist in bangladesh

Founder of SEOSiri
Momenul is a digital strategist specializing in audience-first SEO, semantic copywriting, and cross-channel marketing psychology. He helps brands win relevance over reach.

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Updated: 01/07/2025