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  • How do Citation Labs links impact sales, not just rankings?
    2026/03/01

    QUESTION:

    How do Citation Labs links impact sales, not just rankings?

    ANSWER:

    Citation Labs' goal isn’t to increase the DR/DA of your website. We also don’t usually target content pages for backlinks.

    Instead, Citation Labs analyzes your website against competitors to determine which pages need backlinks to increase their visibility and how many links they need. From there, we prioritize pages based on budget and business goals.

    These are links to sales pages. They increase the visibility of your key offerings in search and in LLM tools, making it more likely that prospective customers will find your solutions on their buyer’s journey.


    Find and listen to more Citation Labs Podcast episodes.

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    1 分
  • How does Citation Labs ensure the links we build remain valuable over time?
    2026/02/25

    QUESTION:
    How does Citation Labs ensure the links we build remain valuable over time?

    ANSWER:
    Google exists to help get people the best information in the fastest possible way. The way they do this is by finding and sharing the most relevant, comprehensive answers to questions based on real experience and data.

    Over the years, search has evolved. But this core tenant remains the same.

    Knowing this, Citation Labs creates contextually relevant, expert content with publishers that showcase your brand and solution. By earning links this way, we future-proof our links against algorithm updates and evolving ranking factors.

    Citation Labs retention rates for links are, 94% after 12 months, and at least 85% after 24 months.


    Find and listen to other great Citation Labs Podcast episodes.

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    1 分
  • FAQs vs FUQs: Frequently Asked Questions vs Frequently Unasked Questions
    2026/02/21

    FAQs vs FUQs: Frequently Asked Questions vs Frequently Unasked Questions

    In this insightful clip, Garrett French, founder of Citation Labs and co-author of the Ultimate Guide to Link Building, breaks down the crucial difference between FAQs (Frequently Asked Questions) and FUQs (Frequently Unasked Questions).

    FAQs: Maintain Systems
    1 - Rooted in known audience pain points
    2 - Answerable with existing institutional knowledge
    3 - Expectedly findable (reduce known trasitional frictions)

    FUQs: Future Proof System
    1 - Rooted in unspoken cognitive/emtional/systemoc gaps
    2 - Require systems thinking: stakeholder mapping, outcomine dependence analysis
    3 - Label, organize and display anticipatory pathways (e.g., pre-emptive checklists for new students).

    While FAQs help users solve known problems, FUQs reveal the hidden, often unspoken challenges your audience doesn’t even realize they have—but that critically impact their success.

    Garrett French explains how FUQs are rooted in systems thinking, stakeholder dynamics, and anticipatory design. Discover how focusing on FUQs can future-proof your content, build deeper trust, and create more useful digital experiences for both humans and AI.

    Listen to more Citation Labs Podcast episodes for more on information architecture, SEO strategy, and user-centered content design.

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    4 分
  • What if our leadership team doesn’t fully understand link building’s impact?
    2026/02/17

    QUESTION:
    What if our leadership team doesn’t fully understand link building’s impact?

    ANSWER:
    Most executives expect PPC style reporting where results are immediate and quantifiable. However, link-building contributes to SEO growth over months, not days. And it’s not always clear and easy to illustrate this.

    Citation Labs has built a custom reporting tool that provides clear, revenue-tied reports to help you communicate impact to leadership. These comprehensive reports can be easily shared or cut up into smaller overviews for your leadership team.


    Find and listen to more Citation Labs Podcast episodes.

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    1 分
  • What are the link-building KPIs my CFO will want to see?
    2026/02/12

    QUESTION:

    What are link-building KPIs my CFO will want to see?

    ANSWER:

    CFOs are concerned with financial impact rather than SEO performance metrics. Instead of discussing domain authority, an SEO strategy should be evaluated based on:

    • Cost efficiency: the return on investment for link-building efforts
    • Revenue impact: how links drive qualified traffic and conversions
    • Organic growth trends: improvements in rankings for high-value search terms
    • Competitive positioning: whether the company is outperforming competitors in search

    By presenting link-building as a revenue-generating initiative rather than a marketing expense, it is easier to secure long-term investment in SEO.


    Find and listen to more Citation Labs Podcast episodes.

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    1 分
  • Architecture of the Unknown: Predicting, Testing and Answering Frequently Unasked Questions
    2026/02/09

    Garrett French - Founder of Citation Labs and co-author of the Ultimate Guide to Link Building - at World IA Day (https://www.worldiaday.org/people/garrett-french) for a deep dive into “frequently unasked questions” (FUQs) and how AI/LLMs are transforming the way we architect information.

    In this talk, you’ll learn to:

    Define and label FUQs

    Harness AI-driven insights to surface hidden queries

    Design more findable, useful content for both humans and machines

    Apply these principles to real-world scenarios, including mid-career education decisions

    Whether you’re an information architect, content strategist, or SEO professional, discover a framework for anticipating your audience’s unspoken needs—and stay ahead in an AI-powered landscape.

    1. Introduction and Overview
    Garrett opens by thanking his family, Citation Labs, and World IA Day for the opportunity to tackle a deceptively simple question: what are the “frequently unasked questions” that everyone overlooks? He defines FUQs as the latent queries that live beneath the surface of standard FAQs—questions that, if left unexplored, can undermine both user experience and SEO performance. By framing FUQs up front, he sets the stage for a 45-minute journey through labeling, findability, and application.

    2. The Impact of LLMs on Website Traffic and Data Collection
    Next, Garrett reveals how AI agents—ChatGPT among them—are crawling live sites hundreds of times per day, effectively turning the web into a dynamic cache of data. He illustrates this with a client whose product pages see daily visits from LLMs, demonstrating that AI isn’t just a front-end chatbot but an ongoing data-collector. This paradigm shift demands a new approach: if machines are your audience, you must architect content for both human and algorithmic consumption.

    3. Unasked Questions and the Iceberg Analogy
    Garrett likens traditional FAQs to the visible tip of an iceberg—what everyone already knows to ask. Beneath the waterline lie unseen questions that carry the real risk of friction or drop-off. The Iceberg Analogy crystallizes the difference between “avoiding what you see” and “navigating what you don’t yet know,” challenging information architects to map and surface those submerged queries.

    4. Identifying Information Gaps and Unasked Questions
    Using a vivid “hidden dinosaurs in a room” story, Garrett shows how providers can miss critical data simply because they don’t know what to look for. He calls for a systematic study—surveys, interviews, data analysis—to uncover the questions nobody’s asking. By applying this lens, you transform blind spots into opportunities for content that anticipates needs instead of reacts to them.

    5. Frequently Asked Questions Regarding Mid-Career Education
    As a running example, Garrett examines prospective mid-career students: they ask about cost, curriculum, and career outcomes—but rarely about caregiving burdens, baseline competencies, or renegotiating work-life support. By comparing these common FAQs with the hidden FUQs, he highlights how educational sites can better serve—and convert—their audiences by addressing both the seen and the unseen.

    Watch now to learn how to design “transition-proximal” experiences that guide users—and LLMs—through every phase of their journey.


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    38 分
  • How do I pitch Citation Labs link-building campaigns to my CMO?
    2026/02/05

    QUESTION:
    How do I pitch Citation Labs link-building campaigns to my CMO?

    ANSWER:
    A CMO focuses on revenue and growth rather than SEO-specific terminology. When pitching a Citation Labs link-building campaign, the conversation should center on:

    Competitive advantage: “Competitors outrank us because they have stronger backlinks.”
    Revenue impact: “More links to high-intent pages lead to higher rankings and more sales.”
    Risk mitigation: “Google prioritizes authoritative backlinks—if we don’t invest, we fall behind.”

    Citation Labs provides reporting that translates SEO metrics into business outcomes, making it easier to secure buy-in from executive leadership.


    Listen to more Citation Labs Podcast episodes.

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    1 分
  • What should I do if my leadership doesn’t believe in link-building?
    2026/01/13

    QUESTION:

    What should I do if my leadership doesn’t believe in link-building?

    ANSWER:

    Some executives may not see link-building as a priority or may have had poor experiences in the past. After nearly 20 years in the space, we get it. SEO can feel like a black box and backlinking even more so.

    This is why Citation Labs has built custom tools and reports to connect our efforts to key sales metrics, using controls in our reporting to provide additional clarity.

    Citation Labs will also work very closely with our internal champions, providing them with the data, case studies, and arguments needed to justify backlink campaigns to key decision makers.

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    1 分