How to Use AI for SEO optimisation

AI is changing the way small businesses show up online. Here’s how to use it honestly, effectively, and in a way that actually earns trust — from your customers and from Google.

If you’ve spent time trying to grow a business online you’ll know that SEO (search engine optimisation) can feel overwhelming and complex. One that seems to change the rules every six months.

The good news is that AI tools have made SEO more accessible. The bad news is that AI, used incorrectly, can do as much damage to your brand as it does good. Particularly for a business built on authenticity.

So let’s talk about how to use AI for SEO optimisation in a way that feels right: practical, grounded, and genuinely useful for the people you’re trying to reach.

First: What Does SEO Actually Mean in 2026?

SEO is the practice of helping your website appear higher in search engine results — primarily Google — when someone searches for something relevant to your business. It hasn’t changed but now people are searching in Chatgpt.

Google stills wants content that is genuinely useful, trustworthy, and well-written.

Its systems are now sophisticated enough to distinguish between content written for readers and content written to game an algorithm. The former is rewarded. The latter is increasingly penalised.

This is actually good news for ethical businesses. Integrity, it turns out, is excellent SEO strategy.

Worth Knowing

Google’s E-E-A-T framework (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) is central to how pages are ranked. These are qualities that can’t be faked at scale — they have to be earned. Businesses with genuine values and real expertise have a natural advantage here.

Where AI Can Genuinely Help with SEO

AI can be used to save time by creating your own SEO tool — not a replacement for your voice or your judgment. Here some areas that will add real value.

1. Keyword Research & Intent Mapping

AI can help you understand what your potential customers are actually searching for — and why. This goes beyond finding popular search terms. It’s about understanding the intent behind those searches: are people looking for information, for a product, for inspiration?

You might ask an AI tool: “What questions would someone ask before buying an ethically made t-shirt in the UK?” The responses can reveal content focus and keywords you’d never have thought of alone.

  • PAsk AI to generate long-tail keyword ideas (phrases of 3–5 words that are specific and less competitive)
  • PIdentify questions your audience might be asking on Google, forums, or Reddit
  • PUse it to cluster related keywords into content themes
  • PResearch it some more with free tools like Google Search Console, Ubersuggest, or AnswerThePublic

2. Writing & Refining Meta Descriptions

The meta description is the short paragraph of text that appears below your page title in Google’s search results. It doesn’t directly influence your ranking, but it has an enormous influence on whether someone actually clicks through to your site. Think of it as your shop window on the internet.

A good meta description is:

  • PBetween 150–160 characters (Google truncates anything longer)
  • PClear about what the page offers
  • PWritten for the reader, not the algorithm
  • PNaturally includes your primary keyword
  • PHas a quiet invitation — a reason to click

You can use AI to draft and iterating meta descriptions quickly. You give it the page content and your target keyword; it gives you five options; you choose and refine the one that sounds most like you. This is the kind of repetitive, structured task where AI saves hours.

Example

For this article, a strong meta description might be: “Discover how to use AI for SEO optimisation — honestly and effectively. Practical strategies to improve your Google rankings while staying true to your brand values.” It contains the target keyword, explains the content, and hints at the brand’s perspective — all within 160 characters.

3. Content Briefs & Blog Planning

Writing blogs is one of the most time consuming tasks of running a website but good planning is essential. Deciding what to write about, structuring an article for SEO, knowing which headings to include and why. AI can take a rough topic idea and produce a structured content brief in minutes: headings, subheadings, keyword placement recommendations, and even suggested internal links.

AI is used to create the brief outline and help with structure but it must be in your own voice.

AI is used to build the content but you must edit the text to gain genuine expertise and voice. The structure becomes SEO-smart; the words remain authentically yours.

4. Title Tag Optimisation

Your title tag is the clickable headline that appears in search results. It’s one of the most important on-page SEO elements you have. It should include your primary keyword naturally, be under 60 characters, and give a clear sense of what the page is about. AI can rapidly generate multiple title options for a single page, helping you find the one that balances search intent with your brand tone.

5. Improving Existing Content

AI is particularly useful for auditing content you’ve already published. You can paste in an existing blog post and ask: “What SEO improvements could this page make? Where could it better answer the reader’s question? Does it have a clear focus keyword?” This kind of content refresh often delivers better results than writing new content from scratch.

A Step-by-Step Approach for Small Businesses

If you’re just beginning to use AI for your SEO, here’s a practical starting point.
  1. Define your content goals first.
    Before you open any AI tool, decide what you’re trying to achieve. More traffic? Better-quality traffic? Ranking for a specific term? Clarity here shapes everything that follows.
  2. Identify 3–5 priority topics.
    Think about the questions your customers ask, the problems your product solves, and the values your brand embodies. These become your content pillars.
  3. Use AI for keyword research.
    Ask your AI tool to generate keyword ideas around each pillar. Look for long-tail phrases with genuine search volume but lower competition.
  4. Create a content brief for each article.
    Use AI to structure the piece: primary keyword, secondary keywords, suggested headings, target word count, and the reader question each section should answer.
  5. Write the content yourself — or with AI support.
    If you use AI to draft any section, always rewrite it in your own voice. Your readers — and Google — can tell the difference between genuine expertise and generic filler.
  6. Write your meta description and title tag.
    Use AI to generate options, then choose and refine the one that best represents the page.
  7. Publish, monitor, and refine.
    Use Google Search Console (free) to see how pages perform over time. Return and update content based on what you learn.

The Ethical Dimension: What to Watch Out For

Because we are, after all, a brand built on integrity — a word about the darker side of AI and SEO.
    “The best SEO strategy is also the most ethical one: create content that genuinely serves the person reading it.”
    – Ethics by Nature
    There is a version of AI-assisted SEO that involves flooding the internet with low-quality, keyword-stuffed content generated at industrial scale. It works, briefly. Then Google gets wise to it, penalises the sites in question, and the businesses behind them find themselves worse off than before — with their reputation intact in inverse proportion to their search ranking.

    The principles that keep you on the right side of this:

    • Never publish AI content without genuinely editing it. If you wouldn’t be proud to put your name to it, don’t publish it.
    • Don’t stuff keywords. A keyword used twice naturally is worth far more than one used twelve times awkwardly. Your readers will notice. So will Google.
    • Accuracy matters. AI can confabulate — produce plausible-sounding facts that are simply wrong. Always verify any specific claims, statistics, or references before publishing.
    • Transparency is your friend. If you use AI in your content process, there’s no shame in that. Many businesses are open about it. What matters is that the thinking, the expertise, and the perspective are genuinely yours.
    • Write for people first. Every SEO decision should pass the simple test: does this make the page more useful or more readable for a human being? If the answer is no, it’s probably not worth doing.

    Useful AI Tools Worth Exploring

    The SEO gurus are always recommending new sites and solutions, but these categories and tools are consistently well-regarded for ethical, small-business use.

    • Claude (Anthropic) — excellent for content planning, drafting, meta description writing, and editorial editing with a thoughtful tone
    • ChatGPT (OpenAI) — versatile for keyword brainstorming and content briefs
    • Surfer SEO — combines AI with real-time Google data to optimise content structure
    • Google Search Console — free, essential, and the most honest view of how your site performs
    • AnswerThePublic — visualises real search questions around any topic
    • Ubersuggest — accessible keyword research for small businesses

    Conclusion

    SEO can feel tedious and complex but it doesnt have to be. The most sustainable approach is just building a genuinely useful, honest corner of the internet that earns its place in search results because it deserves to be there.

    AI can help you get there faster. It can sharpen your thinking, remove the repetitive work, and surface opportunities you’d otherwise miss. But it can’t provide the one thing that will ultimately determine whether your business earns lasting visibility online — which is the genuine expertise, perspective, and care that only you can bring.

    Use it as a tool. Stay in the driving seat. And as always: do the right thing.

    Contact me Today

    Call or message me to see if I can help you with your business.