
Most websites are bleeding traffic before visitors even see the page… and Google Analytics can't tell you it's happening.
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A
What is something that no one's talking about that's like silently killing growth? These brands are coming to you. They've got all these websites and things happening, and you're seeing a trend that, you know, most companies just aren't realizing right now.
B
You know, I think there's, there's a lot of discourse right now about how AI and LLMs are changing search as a, as a source. So I don't really. We'll get into that later. That's not really all that unknown. I think though, the thing that we see in our data is just how vital it is to deliver that high quality initial experience. Because the number of clicks you get into your property, like the web, is the place where you get to show up and you actually own the experience for the visitor, the number of clicks is definitely getting harder because the paid channels are always shifting around with what they can deliver, and organic is definitely changing. But the other piece of this is that when those clicks come in, if you're not able to quickly deliver the experience that a visitor wants, the baseline for this is now set. Because more and more traffic is coming off of mobile devices. People don't really think of the fact that they're visiting a website as anything different from they tapped on their phone and they loaded an app. That's the baseline of experience that people expect. And one of the things that we can observe in our data is the number of clicks that don't even wait for a page to fully load, where people, they tap, they get even slightly bored and they just swipe left and move away. That's all of us. I do it too. The thing is, you can literally see it in the data because we sit in the middle of the click stream for everyone. So we can see stuff that even Google Analytics can't. We haven't productized that yet, which I really think we should, but we've done studies on it. You can just see there's a very clear signal of when the initial request comes in, saying, hey, I'd like to see this website. But none of the other things attached to that page load. And that means someone requested the website but then didn't actually load it. They swiped away.
A
Okay, so what is that magic number where it's like, if you're over this, you're done. You'll get swiped on.
B
Yeah, I think the done. You're done at like two seconds. And good is under one second. That's a change. It used to be people would say like, one second is like best in class. And if you're over 5 then people and I think there's expectations are changing. A lot of those stats that are out there were made in an era when most people were sitting in front of a computer or in front of a laptop. And I don't know, they're just more patient in that mode or deep in their brain. Their expectations are different. And on a phone people just, they expect it to move faster and there's no reason it can't. That's the really important thing to note for people. If you're doing it right, you can totally meet these expectations. But doing it right isn't a given. And so we like to help people make sure they get there.
A
Yep. Okay, so speed still matters. What other data do you have that like you said maybe you could productize but what do you have that maybe people who are running all the Google Analytics and all the software is showing them how their website's doing. Like what do you see that you know they probably can't get right now? Along with the speed piece, the other
B
thing that is really interesting and this gets to that question of how LLMs and AI is changing search. But I mean there's a lot of disk around what that means from a user experience standpoint. People are still trying to figure out what it means from what your website is expected to deliver to this new non human audience. And the truth is we've been optimizing our website for robots for a long time because search engine optimization is just that. But this is a totally new iteration on that practice. And one of the things that it's really interesting to see is just how much consumption of your website is driven by the crawling from the major model makers because they all are. We have a customer that I think I can reference this customer UFC.com, the Ultimate Fighting Championship and the speed and intensity with which all the crawlers come in on fight night because they're all racing to being able to answer the question of who won is it's almost like a denial of service attack. They like swarm that website and they try to crush it beyond it's actually there's more intense activity from those sources than there is from casual visitors browsing to the website to try to see it at that point in time. It's really interesting to see those patterns of and you can see the ebbs and flows and surges of this agent driven. It's not from people asking the agent, it's from them trying to pre crawl so they can answer the question 90 seconds later.
A
It's A very interesting visual thinking about like all of them flooding a website and a website being like, wow, how do I handle this? I mean, that's a very different era we're in now and we're just jumping right into the AI piece because now we're going there as well. But like, how should we be thinking about building knowing this is a new level of complexity that, you know, maybe websites have not been built for this level of aggression coming at them all at once to find answers.
B
Yeah, you know, that's. It's a really interesting thing, especially for anybody who thinks about having websites that break news or deliver deliver time sensitive information. I can't talk about any brands in this regard, but I have worked on projects where they're releasing market moving material information like investor relations and stuff like that. That's always been something people were cognizant of. But again, to this point the intensity of it has gone up. And I think the truth is that there's not really something you need to do differently to build your website to specifically withstand being swarmed by AI crawlers versus being able to withstand having something go crazy viral on social media. And at the end of the day it's a lot of people wanting to or a lot of things wanting to read or consume the content off of your site in a pretty short amount of time. And the patterns for being able to have a website that stands up to that are pretty well established. And again, that's just when I talk about we wanted to build this stuff into our platform that we learned as consultants. That's one of the key things that we help people with. But I think there's a lot that's beyond that that goes into how do you even structure the information on your website so that it can meet the needs of a direct visitor, but also meet the needs of thinking of the LLM. Almost like a research assistant. Right. Someone's going to think about it this way. Someone's going to send their intern to your website to figure out the answer to a question. How do you target the way everything is structured so that it's very easy for that research assistant type of Persona if you want to personify the LLM to learn what they need to learn. And we're still in the early days of figuring this out. And to be honest, the other thing that's true about this is that what's happening with the models is constantly evolving. Something someone said to me really recently, which I thought was a little bit wise, is it's probably risky to try to chase every micro trend that's occurring in AI right now because they move and cycle so quickly. You don't know whether there's going to be longevity in this. But there are underlying things that are definitely true that you probably should have been doing all along. Like people are going to have questions about you. You should acknowledge that and have answers to their questions readily available directly in that format on your website. That's something that humans like when they encounter it. And it's also something that the models can pick up and more easily digest, for instance.
A
Okay, so this would be an interesting one to dive into and get like a best of list because I think you're uniquely positioned to answer this. I remember when we talked a while back, you were like, by the time people started talking about AI and LLMs are searching for answers, you're like, our customers had already been doing that for a long time. Like, we have customers that are really far ahead because they're more technical. They were already asking ChatGPT for the answers. They were already doing it in different places. So I think it's, you're in an interesting space that's kind of ahead of where other companies are. So if you were to say five things right now, like five things that you should be thinking about. One, putting questions on your website, you should have always been doing that still matters. Like, what are five evergreen things that marketers should be doing when it, when it comes to their website?
B
Yeah, yeah, exactly. So I think we, we, you know, speaking with my marketing hat on, you know, for Pantheon, because we are trying to reach this pretty technical audience. You know, you look at the demographic breakdowns of like, I think like, broadly speaking, it seems like people like to engage with chat as a way or ask as a way to discover content. But it's really clear that our target audience is all in on this and has been for a while. So we've been thinking about this deeply. So yes, making information available in question answer format if you aren't already doing it. And I won't go into the details of this, but the technical side of SEO, where you are labeling the content on your website in a way that defines. This is a map, this is an image, this is our address, these are our hours. There are commonly established formats for how to provide that meta information on the website that doesn't show up to a person. It's all in the code of the website. But it is currently used by Google to produce those rich overviews. But the LLMs know how to read it and it really matters. Because it gives them context. Another thing is to looking outside of your website in the same spirit of questions and answers. Obviously these LLMs are going crazy on Reddit, so you have to pay attention to how you're showing up on Reddit and be engaged there. But beyond Reddit, other reviews forum, question and answer websites, you just have to. You can't control what's going on there, but you need to really try to pay attention to it and influence it. Another piece would be thinking about the way that you show up, the way the language on your website shows up in different contexts, like the strength and clarity of the brand voice. That's something that can carry through or not in terms of how you're represented. And then honestly just making sure that more of your materials. The pendulum always swings back and forth on this in marketing. But how much do you make publicly available versus how much do you gate? Because you want to gate some things, because that's a way to signal deeper engagement with an audience and there's lead capture opportunities, obviously, but if it's gated, then it's not going to be available to be indexed. And you know what's funny about all these things is that none of these are like new. That's what I think is kind of the. There's a silver lining in all of this to me, which is if you do the fundamentals really well, then it's not like one weird trick to get the LLMs to rank you highly. It's actually, no, you have to do all the things, you need to do them at a high quality and you need to do them consistently. And that was always true. So it's just like, hey, marketing, let's do our job.
A
Yep, yep, there you go. Okay. Simple as that. Interview done. So, okay, you were saying that it's. You're cautious to bet on, you know, how fast these LLMs are changing. The rules are different. What's being pulled and crawled and what's not is different. But are like, is there anything right now that you're like, this might not work out, but I am betting on that because I still think you're a good person to place interesting bets. You've been doing it this whole time since creating Pantheon. Like, I'm sure you're placing bets right now.
B
Yeah, fair point. I think the question of how far you lean into any of these tactics is one for people to consider to the point where paying attention to how you show up on Reddit, people should do that. If your audience is on Reddit, which there's a lot of things on Reddit, so your audience is probably there to some degree. For us, we're not yet making the bet to treat that like a community the same way we treat our internal community forums, but we've talked about that. Like what if we tried to actually take more of what we're doing in community and actually push it out into these other third party external places? That's like more work. It requires a bigger investment of energy in some ways there's some risks associated with it because again, that's a forum you're not in control of. But I think that we're going to make some investments along those lines. Similarly, how much we do a lot with G2. They're a great vendor I'm sure many of your audience works with, but there's a plethora of others. And do we want to put on the radar, put in our budget and our plan for next year that we're going to try to actually run the board with all of these review sites and make sure that we're optimizing for all of them. And those are ones where I've not made the bet, but those are ones where I'm seriously considering because again, I think those are things that are good for the current environment where we are thinking about how we show up in ChatGPT, but they're also just good for the business. I'm reluctant to anytime someone comes to me with a thing that is only for it feels like it's artificial for chat, I have a little pause on that. Just in the same way that I don't love the idea of doing things that are only for SEO, like if it's not something that is authentically useful and valuable, I definitely want to think twice or thrice before doing that.
In this episode of Marketing Trends, Stephanie Postles sits down with a leading marketing technology executive to discuss the silent yet deadly factors undermining website growth. The conversation centers around the "2-second rule"—the critical importance of website load speed, especially in an era where both human and AI traffic define success. The guest provides actionable insights, data-backed trends, and evergreen best practices for marketers seeking to future-proof their websites as user expectations and technology platforms evolve.
“You can literally see it in the data...there's a very clear signal of when the initial request comes in...But none of the other things attached to that page load. And that means someone requested the website but then didn't actually load it. They swiped away.” (Guest, 01:31)
On User Patience:
“You’re done at like two seconds. And good is under one second.” (Guest, 02:09)
On The AI Swarm:
“It's almost like a denial of service attack...more intense activity from [AI crawlers] than from casual visitors.” (Guest, 03:49)
On Future-Proof Fundamentals:
“If you do the fundamentals really well...it's not like one weird trick to get the LLMs to rank you highly...That was always true.” (Guest, 11:33)
On Content Strategy:
“How much do you make publicly available versus how much do you gate? ...if it's gated, then it's not going to be available to be indexed.” (Guest, 10:55)
Overall Tone:
Candid, data-driven, and pragmatic—urging marketers to respond to silent but significant trends with well-grounded strategies, rather than getting swept up by hype.
For listeners:
If you care about website growth and relevance in the era of instant gratification and AI-driven search, this episode provides both a wake-up call and a grounding reminder: speedy, accessible, well-structured content isn’t just “nice to have”—it’s do-or-die.