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Monday, January 20, 2025

‘The SEO Lady’ Urges Businesses to Use YouTube Shorts

For more than 15 years, Nina Payne, best known as ‘The SEO Lady,’ has been a trailblazer in video SEO.

She is now calling on businesses to adopt a fresh perspective and harness the power of YouTube Shorts. Nina believes that search engine algorithms, which she compares to an octopus with countless tentacles, have made it more important than ever for businesses to showcase their human side.

Nina remarks: “I’ve identified a problem you didn’t think existed, and that’s your face.

“Hear me out – your face isn’t the problem; it’s the solution. Consumers don’t connect with logos; they connect with people. They want to see and hear the humans behind the brand.”

Alphabet Inc owns YouTube, Google and Gemini LLM. Drawing parallels between YouTube and Google, Nina highlights their shared focus on Video SEO engagement metrics. “YouTube, founded in 2005 and acquired by Google in 2006, has been the second most popular search engine since 2008.
“When viewers leave a video after just a few seconds, it’s a negative signal. But when they watch all 30 seconds of a Short, the algorithm learns that the content is valuable. It’s the same with Google: dwell time on a blog sends positive signals to RankBrain.”

The Business Case for YouTube Shorts
According to the YouTube 2024 UK topics report, the instant benefits of YouTube are clear. “When viewers last the full video length, it’s one of the strongest engagement metrics in YouTube’s algorithm. You can spend hours perfecting a 20-minute video only to get a dozen views and no conversions. Shorts, on the other hand, strike better in seconds.”

She believes Shorts also offer businesses a unique opportunity to pre-segment their audience. “Marking your videos as ‘Not Made For Kids’ targets paying adults and filters out irrelevant viewers,” Nina explains.

Nina outlines key use cases for businesses. She adds: “For online stores, you can demo your product solving a specific need. SaaS businesses can highlight their USP and show why their tool is essential. Local businesses can showcase how their service solves real customer problems.
“If you’re an unsigned band, tease a snippet of your latest track to drive purchases.”

Personalisation: The Power of the Human Touch
“Consumer studies prove that personalisation is king,” Nina says. “Even a 20-30 second teaser filmed on a smartphone can achieve 70-80% dwell time. That’s huge even for sole traders and start-up freelancers trying to connect with their Ideal Customer Profile (ICP).”
However, Nina cautions that shorter videos aren’t a silver bullet. “Productions under 90 seconds often retain only 50% of viewers until the end.

“But personalised videos – where viewers see and hear the people behind the brand – achieve significantly higher engagement, with click-to-open rates up to 16 times higher than non-personalised videos.”

The Evolution of Selling: From AIDA to AIGen
Reflecting on the history of sales frameworks, Nina draws a line from the AIDA Model of 1898 to the modern digital landscape. “AIDA outlined the stages of customer awareness: Attention, Interest, Desire, and Action. Then, in the 20th century, we saw the rise of the 4 Pillars: Attract, Qualify, Present, and Close,” she explains.
“This concept streamlines the traditional 4 Pillars into a single digital action – a tap on a mobile. If YouTube introduced blue clickable titles, we could compress the conversion process into a seamless one-click experience.”

Nina breaks the Video Marketing Quadrant into four actionable steps:
  1. Media Prospecting: “Hook customers with GIFs, banners, and Shorts.”
  2. Audience Segmentation: “Focus on key demographics to maximise ROI.”
  3. Presenting: “Deliver value with engaging longer-form videos.”
  4. Closing: “Seal the deal with personalised content and direct calls-to-action.”
But before the hook, she believes you need eyes on your MP4. The four pillars of selling could merge to create a new, fingertip entity: Video SEO and clickable YouTube titles.

The Future of Digital Marketing
Nina’s predictions for 2030 include the potential demise of barcodes and an acceleration of online selling. “Whether you’re a 1970s Yellow Pages user or a Gen Z AI enthusiast, the pace of digital innovation is staggering,” she says.

She highlights Google’s use of advanced tools like Hummingbird, RankBrain, and BERT to refine search intent and engagement metrics. “Video SEO now integrates AI-powered ranking signals into logical networks of entities. It’s all about mapping content into targeted knowledge graphs for optimal ICP visibility.”

For those looking to stay ahead, Nina offers a parting piece of advice: “Hire a seasoned expert who understands how to work these algorithms to your advantage.”

For more information on how YouTube Shorts could shake up your SEO, visit www.seolady.co.uk.
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