Content strategy: answer your customers’ FAQs, not Google’s

Time to read: 4 minutes

You’ve always heard the secret to good SEO content is answering Google’s questions.

Finding the questions that appear in Google’s People Also Ask or the queries that gain Featured Snippets (and now AI Overviews), and reverse-engineering your content to answer them.

It always worked and it still does to some extent. But as marketing evolves, the channels (like SEO, paid ads, and organic social) all start merging and intertwining, and how you earn authority on Google has changed.

Unique, thoughtful content is more important than ever. Let’s get into it.

The problem with answering Google's questions

And look, it’s not reeeeally a problem, it’s just not going to get you ahead like it used to. The thing is that every one of your competitors can do it too. And AI can do it better and faster.

When your content strategy is built around questions Google surfaces, you’re competing in the most crowded lane possible.

Google (and people) love unique content and the more rich, unique, and in-depth your content is, the more likely it is to show up on Google, connect with your audience, and help you develop topical authority (so your more important pages — like services or products — rank, too).

It can feel a bit disconnected, but ultimately, unique content like this can actually make a huge impact on your bottom line.

Why Google actually cares about this

Google has been trying to solve this problem for years, and if you look at every major core update over the last few years, there’s a pretty consistent theme: stop rewarding content that just rehashes what everyone else has already said.

The concept behind a lot of this is E-E-A-T: Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. It’s Google’s framework for evaluating whether content is actually worth surfacing. Experience is the most relevant one here. Google wants to know that the person writing the content has actually lived it. That they’re not just summarising a Wikipedia article or rephrasing the top three results.

That’s a difficult thing to fake, and increasingly, it’s a difficult thing to do with AI alone.

When you answer the questions only you can answer, based on your client conversations, your industry experience, or your specific way of solving a problem, you’re naturally creating content that ticks the E-E-A-T boxes. Not because you’ve engineered it to, but because it’s genuinely coming from a place of experience and expertise.

Google’s algorithm updates are, at their core, always trying to do the same thing: separate content that actually helps people from content that exists to game the ranking.

It’s why we’re constantly telling everyone to stop publishing the same content as everyone else.

What are your customers asking you?

These are the questions your clients ask on discovery calls, in onboarding, in your inbox. The things your team answers ten times a week. The objections that come up before someone signs.

These are the sort of questions that you don’t really think about anymore. You get so used to answering them that you’re almost on autopilot when they’re asked. Try and tune in and pay attention to them, because these are the questions that are going to spark some of the most interesting content.

Some of these questions might not be Googled at all, some might be, but always with different phrasing — because they’re such unique questions.

But answering them in your content is a surefire way to create a unique content piece.

This is content that’s harder to replicate

It comes from experience, not research. It reflects your specific point of view, methodology, or way of working. And better yet, it showcases a deep, specialist knowledge base.

This is the content that builds genuine topical authority and earns AI citations, because it’s the only place where the answer exists.

How you can find it

Talk to your sales and account management team:

Mine your onboarding calls, support tickets, client emails, even your Google reviews. These are all amazing spots to find those deeper questions.

Obviously, don’t throw out SEO fundamentals, but keep searching for unique content ideas. Keyword relevance still matters for discoverability. But lead with the insight, not the keyword.

Write the answer your client needs, then make sure it’s findable. Not the other way around.

Need a hand creating content? We love creating content. Chat to us 👋

AUTHOR

Laura English

Head of Digital Marketing Delivery

Laura English is the Head of Digital Marketing Delivery at Excite Media. She has worked in the SEO and communications industries since 2015 across copywriting, content marketing, SEO, public relations, and journalism. She holds a Bachelor of Journalism, minoring in Creative Writing. Laura is a big fan of the written word and loves combining creative writing with the persuasive.

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