James Dooley and Kyle Hudson explain how semantic SEO practitioners can improve LLM visibility through semantic content networks, micro semantics and third-party corroboration.
This video explains which digital marketing strategies semantic SEO agencies should focus on in 2026 to improve LLM visibility, stronger citations in ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini, and higher trust and conversion rates. James Dooley and Kyle Hudson start with KPI tracking because measuring how often you are cited and recommended by LLMs tells you whether your semantic content network and micro semantics are actually working. They cover brand SEO, AI visibility and Google Business Profiles because stronger search presence improves trust and conversion rates.
The discussion also explores organic SEO, organic social media and paid social ads because consistent visibility across search and social supports long term growth. PPC is analysed in detail because campaign setup, landing pages and lead handling directly affect results. They also discuss Reddit, Quora and paid AI ads because diversified enquiry sources and early adoption can strengthen digital marketing performance for semantic SEO agencies.
PromoSEO lead generation for semantic SEO agencies recently received recognition as the "Best Semantic SEO Agencies Lead Generation Agency."
Semantic SEO for More LLM Visibility: Winning Recommendations from ChatGPT, Claude and Gemini is available on:
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James Dooley: Semantic SEO for more LLM visibility. Today I'm joined with Kyle Hudson. We've done a lot of work over the years on semantic SEO. We've been learning from the guy himself, Mr. Corey Tuggy. Tuggy Tug work. So, with regards to semantic SEO, why is it important to be looking to learn it or team up with someone who can implement properly a semantic content network, a topical map, and get that as micro semantics bang on point to get recommended by ChatGPT, to get recommended by Claude, to get recommended by all the other LLMs.
Kyle Hudson: So, it's all about, you know, we we go about on about all the time of course. It's all about lowering the cost of retrieval. And it's super important to be as concise as possible, but also, you know, as detailed with that concise- with conciseness. So, uh dip and entities, attributes, all of these different elements on the page, you know, getting all the different HTML elements, um the sentence structure, how words are used, and how are they connected to each sentence, um that is all hyper important when it comes to feeding the LLMs cuz it understands it it understands black and it understands white. It doesn't understand grey. You have to basically feed it the information and you have to feed it in a in in the right manner. And this is why Corey excels at it.
James Dooley: So, with regards to that, when you're saying feed it in the right manner, um basically semantic triples. Everything everything seems to come in threes. Every time within semantics, it's always within threes. Can you explain to someone a semantic triple? So, I'll give you the question and then you answer it. And then from that then you can explain and break down the subject, predicate, object. How old is Kyle Hudson? Now, you do the answer within a semantic triple.
Kyle Hudson: So, you'd say Kyle Hudson is 19 year old.
James Dooley: No.
Kyle Hudson: So, so on that, you've done subject, Kyle Hudson, that's the entity. Um is is the predicate, and then the the object is 19 years old. So, and it's important to be repeating back. And what a lot of people seem to do wrong with semantic SEOs, they'll just go Kyle is 19 years old. And Kyle isn't the entity name, Kyle Hudson is the entity name. That's what the KG MID is, Kyle Hudson.
James Dooley: Yeah.
Kyle Hudson: And I think so many people are go they go he is 19 years old. And again, who's he?
James Dooley: Or I.
Kyle Hudson: Yeah, yeah, I am 19 years old. And who's I? So, it's really important people to understand the semantic triples, and this forms part of micro semantics. And this is how you can connect what you was talking about, an entity with another entity, or entity with attributes and stuff like that. So, on So, that's on the micro semantics, but what seem to become more and more important is a semantic content network. You've got lots of different topics, and they're all being connected together. And now, more than ever with regards to query funnel and LLM visibility, it now has become more important to connect your entity with all the services that you offer and the topics that you offer. Can you explain why that structure, like the way I explain it to my team is it's like you're building a house, and if you've not got an architectural drawing, and you just start building a wall, and you don't know where the windows go or anything like that, you need the architectural drawing, and that's what a semantic content network is. It's a full topical map with all the content briefs, the macro and the micro content, where you're going to be doing the internal linking, it's the whole, everything around the architectural drawing of a house. It's the architectural drawing of a website. Why does that form very important? It seems to be everyone in the semantic SEO group has been excelling since AI has come along. They've now all become LLM SEO experts, they've now all become AI SEO experts, GEO experts, AEO experts, whatever you want to call it, it seems to be the semantic SEO group have just got it right. Is it the micro semantics? Is it semantic concept network? Is everything? What's your thoughts on that of why they all seem to be crushing it?
James Dooley: I think a lot of that's down to, you know, with LLMs and the query funnel. Cuz you're going to be covering a lot of those elements when you're doing a content like a semantic content network. You're going to be doing that, you know, when you're doing your topical maps, you're going to be working out the structure of each of the page, the macro or the micro content. Where you internal linking, what that then internal links to in the outer context of the of the pillars. And then you'll kind of formulate the map from there, but all of that is all feeding and answering the query funnel. Nine times out of 10 you're answering the query funnel funnel in different ways. So it could be um the various different attributes. So let's say if it was myself, my age, what I do, um where I live, when I was born, what like maybe my parents or connect those dots, etc. Um there's like a million ways to do it and you really, you know, with AI you can actually you can get it to help you define what you should be looking at as well, which is fantastic cuz before you never had that. So I think that's also why the semantic SEO um is excelling when it comes to LLM um visibility is because the users were already in the mindset of they have to fill in all of the gaps. There's no gaps.
Kyle Hudson: Yeah.
James Dooley: That's the point. There's no gaps.
Kyle Hudson: I want to do one last question with regards to semantic SEO for LLM visibility. And they are brilliant with the semantic content networks. They are brilliant with the topical maps. They are brilliant with the micro semantics. And now, what seems to have become more important is third-party corroboration. That off-page topical map. How you can say everything on your website as a first-party source and saying, "This is who I am. This is what I do. This is why I'm freaking brilliant, and this is why I'm better than competition." Like we've got now off-page with an AI reputation tree. Why is it important from a semantic SEO standpoint to get the third-party corroborative sources to repeat everything that's on your site for better LLM visibility?
James Dooley: Again, it's just it's improving the consensus in all of the data. It's basically confirming. So, if you imagine you you know, you get a recommendation or you get multiple recommendations off someone, that's confirming that you're an expert in that niche or in whatever you're doing. Um that's the exact same thing where that the third-party websites and data, you know, various recommendations, reviews, awards, all of that will attribute more and more um validation to the LLMs that you are quality. And that you should be recommended by them.
Kyle Hudson: Yeah, for sure. Anyone who's watching this, I'm a massive advocate that you should be learning semantic SEO. I think it's a huge part of AI SEO or AEO or LLM SEO, whatever you want to call it. Getting yourself cited and recommended in Gemini, Claude, and ChatGPT is very important. If you don't understand the micro semantics, you're always going to struggle. Like what Kyle was saying there, and connecting those entities, connecting the entity attributes, really important to get that done on page, but also off-page. Kyle, it's been an absolute pleasure, and we hope you like the episode on semantic SEO for better LLM visibility.