SEO in 2026: What Still Matters (for GEO…)
Since 2020, SEO has evolved significantly. Accelerated digitalization, the emergence of generative artificial intelligence (AI), and the integration of AI-assisted answers in search engines have transformed the competitive landscape.
However, despite these technological changes, the strategic pillars of SEO remain consistent. What has changed is the level of execution required and the need for stronger alignment between business strategy, search intent, and content organization.
In this article, we share the approach we follow at Republica to ensure sustainable organic growth.
1. SEO and GEO don’t start with keywords — they start with the business
An effective SEO strategy does not begin with a keyword research tool. It begins with a deep understanding of the business.
Before mapping search intentions, it is essential to clarify:
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Value proposition
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Competitive differentiation
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Priority target audience
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Decision cycle
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Common objections
Without this foundation, the risk is attracting undifferentiated organic traffic with little real impact on business metrics.
SEO should not be guided solely by search volume, but by intentions that represent real needs from the right audience.
2. Search intent strategy: the real center of content production
Not all searches are equally relevant to a business. Our methodology begins with identifying strategic intentions, for example:
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Informational intentions
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Comparative intentions
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Transactional intentions
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Validation intentions
The objective is not simply to generate visits, but to build a content ecosystem that supports the user throughout their decision journey.
Many projects focus exclusively on increasing traffic. However, traffic that is not aligned with the value proposition rarely converts.
3. Content organization and architecture
Producing content without structure compromises topical authority.
Each piece of content should serve a function within a strategic architecture:
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Core pages focused on conversion
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Supporting content for deeper topical coverage
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A coherent internal linking structure
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Clear topic hierarchy
This organization improves not only user navigation but also interpretation by search engines, including advanced systems such as those used by Google.
4. The new technical layer in GEO: Visibility for LLMs and search engines
Artificial intelligence is transforming search results, requiring companies to adopt a new level of optimization: not only for traditional search engines but also for advanced language models (LLMs), such as ChatGPT and Perplexity.
Tools developed by companies such as OpenAI have influenced how information is consumed and synthesized.
Today, beyond traditional rankings, it is necessary to consider:
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Clear information structuring
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Content oriented toward real user questions
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Implementation of relevant FAQs
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Proper use of structured data
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Clear definition of entities and context
It is worth noting that many of these best practices were already recommended before the popularization of AI. What has changed is the strategic importance of implementing them correctly.
5. Authority and consistency as structural factors
In an environment with a growing volume of automated content, authority signals have become even more relevant.
Authority is built through:
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Topical depth
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Editorial consistency
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Strategic coherence
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Long-term relevance
SEO remains a medium- to long-term channel. Sporadic strategies or intensive content production without continuity tend to generate unstable results.
6. Organic traffic vs. qualified traffic
One of the most common misconceptions is associating SEO success exclusively with traffic growth.
In practice, the focus should be on:
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Traffic quality
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Alignment with the target audience
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Impact on business metrics
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Contribution to the sales funnel
Sustainable growth results from the combination of visibility and strategic relevance.
Frequently asked questions about SEO in the AI era
Has SEO changed with artificial intelligence?
Yes, mainly at the technical level. The integration of AI into search engines has created the need for clearer and more question-oriented content structuring. However, the strategic pillars remain unchanged.
Is it still worth investing in SEO in 2026?
Yes. Despite changes in search interfaces, organic search remains a fundamental channel for qualified acquisition.
What is more important: traffic or search intent?
Search intent. Traffic that is not aligned with the business value proposition rarely generates meaningful commercial impact.
How should content be prepared for LLMs?
Through clear structure, thematic organization, strategic use of FAQs, structured data, and a focus on directly answering real user questions.
Despite the technological transformations since 2020, the fundamentals of SEO remain consistent:
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Deep understanding of the business
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Strategic mapping of search intentions
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Structured content organization
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Authority built through consistency
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Alignment between visibility and value proposition
Artificial intelligence has introduced new technical challenges, particularly in how response engines interpret content. However, it has not replaced the structural principles that support long-term organic results.
SEO in 2026 requires more rigor, more organization, and stronger strategic integration — not shortcuts.