A Moment of Clarity: Why Google's Latest Admission Validates Our "Trust-First" Philosophy

TL;DR: In a recent keynote, Google's search liaison, Danny Sullivan, made a statement that should be a profound moment of clarity for every business leader: "Good SEO is good GEO." This is a direct validation of the core principle we at Mercury have championed for years—that in the age of AI, the only sustainable path to visibility is a relentless focus on creating genuinely valuable, trustworthy, and expert-led content. This isn't about chasing new acronyms; it's about a return to the fundamentals of building real authority.

I am James, CEO of Mercury Technology Solutions.

For the past year, the digital marketing world has been caught in a whirlwind of new acronyms—GEO, AEO, LLM SEO—all attempting to define the new rules of AI-powered search. This has created a great deal of confusion and anxiety. However, in a recent keynote at WordCamp US, Google's own search liaison, Danny Sullivan, provided a powerful and clarifying statement that cuts through the noise.

His core message was simple: the foundational principles have not changed. The work of optimizing for generative AI experiences is the same core work that has always defined good SEO: creating unique, valuable content for people and providing a great page experience.

For us at Mercury, this was not a revelation; it was a validation.

The Core Principle We've Advocated For All Along

Sullivan's statement, "Good SEO is good GEO," is the public confirmation of a philosophy we have been embedding in our client strategies for years. When we talk about building a "Trust Layer" for your brand and engineering deep, authoritative "Answer Assets," we are talking about exactly what he described: creating content that is so genuinely helpful and trustworthy that it excels in any search environment, whether it's a traditional list of links or a sophisticated AI-generated answer.

We have always maintained that when your content is truly valuable—when it is built on a foundation of E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness)—then good SEO naturally becomes good GAIO (our term for Generative AI Optimization). As Sullivan put it:

"Are you saying write things in a clear way that people can understand? Cool. Like that’s just for people... Are you saying write about things that are unique or interesting? Cool. That’s good for people. And all we [Google] try to do is understand how our signals can align with things that are good for people.”

This is the very essence of our approach.

The Critical Nuance: It's Not "Business as Usual"

While Sullivan's message is a call to "not panic," it should not be misinterpreted as an excuse for complacency. This is not about continuing with "normal SEO" in the old, tactical sense of keyword stuffing and link manipulation. The game has become far more sophisticated.

The unspoken truth behind his statement is that the bar for what constitutes "good" has been permanently raised. In an AI-driven world, where millions of low-quality articles can be generated in an instant, the premium on genuine, human-led expertise has never been higher.

Addressing the Elephant in the Room: The "Great Decoupling" of Clicks

During the Q&A, a blogger raised the most pressing issue for many businesses: the "great decoupling" of search, where impressions are up, but organic click-through rates have plummeted since the launch of AI Overviews.

Sullivan's response was candid: Google is committed to supporting the open web, but there will be "bumps along the way," and the company is still "figuring out" the solution.

This is a critical acknowledgment. It confirms that a strategy focused solely on driving clicks is no longer a viable long-term plan. This is precisely why we developed our SEVO (Search Everywhere Optimization) and GAIO frameworks. Our focus is not just on winning the click, but on winning the citation, the mention, and the position of authority within the AI's answer itself. In a world of diminishing clicks, this brand-level influence is the new currency of success.

Conclusion: A Strategy Built for the New Reality

Google's public statements are a welcome dose of clarity. They confirm that the path to success is not through chasing fleeting acronyms or new technical tricks, but through a deep and unwavering commitment to quality and user value.

This is the strategy we have been architecting at Mercury all along. Our entire suite of services is designed to help our clients build that deep foundation of trust and authority. While Google is still "figuring out" the details, we have been building for this new reality from the start. We are not just preparing for the future of search; we are actively engineering it for our clients.

A Moment of Clarity: Why Google's Latest Admission Validates Our "Trust-First" Philosophy
James Huang September 5, 2025
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The Acronym Wars: A CEO's Plea for Clarity in the Age of AI Search