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tomy romy
tomy romy

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SEO Didn't Die. Distribution Did.

SEO Didn't Die. Distribution Did.

After building multiple AI products, I kept hearing the same advice:

"Create more content."

"Publish more blogs."

"Work on your SEO."

So I did.

And something strange happened.

The content wasn't the problem.

Distribution was.

The Shift Nobody Talks About

For years, the internet worked like this:

Content → Search → Clicks → Customers

If you created useful content and optimized it well, people could eventually find you.

Today that model is changing.

Users ask ChatGPT.

They ask Perplexity.

They ask Google AI.

And increasingly, they get answers without visiting websites.

The click is disappearing.

The Real Problem

Most founders think they have a traffic problem.

Many actually have a discoverability problem.

A project can be:

  • Useful
  • Legitimate
  • Well designed
  • Solving a real problem

And still remain invisible.

Not because it lacks quality.

Because it lacks structure.

AI systems cannot recommend what they cannot understand.

What I Learned Building My Own Projects

While working on several products, I noticed something interesting.

The websites existed.

The information existed.

But the information was scattered.

No clear identity.

No structured evidence.

No defined audience.

No standardized outcomes.

No machine-readable trust signals.

To an AI system, many projects look almost identical.

A Different Question

Instead of asking:

"How do I rank higher?"

I started asking:

"How do I become understandable?"

That question changed everything.

The Idea Behind CitableHub

CitableHub started as an experiment.

What if every project could have a structured profile designed not only for humans, but also for AI systems?

A profile that clearly defines:

  • What the product does
  • Who it serves
  • What outcome it creates
  • Where it fits
  • When it should be recommended
  • When it should not

Not another directory.

A discoverability layer.

Building for AI

We began implementing:

  • Structured data
  • JSON-LD
  • AI crawler support
  • llms.txt
  • RSS feeds
  • Entity classification
  • Discoverability scoring
  • IndexNow integration

Not because users care about those things.

Because AI systems do.

What Happens Next?

I don't believe SEO is dead.

I believe discoverability is changing.

Ranking pages is no longer enough.

Being understood matters more.

The winners of the next decade may not be the loudest companies.

They may be the easiest to understand.

The Experiment

Today we are testing a simple idea:

Can structured entities outperform traditional visibility tactics in an AI-first world?

Instead of chasing attention, we are focusing on clarity.

Instead of publishing more noise, we are focusing on better signals.

Instead of asking how to rank, we are asking how to become understandable.

Final Thought

If traditional SEO was about ranking pages,

AI discoverability is about building entities.

That's the experiment I'm running right now.

If you're building something valuable and wondering why nobody can find it, maybe the problem isn't your content.

Maybe it's your discoverability.

What do you think?

Are AI systems changing how new products get discovered?

I'm documenting the experiment publicly as we continue building CitableHub.

https://citablehub.com

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