Performance SEO Unpacked

ResultFirst

Welcome to Performance SEO Unpacked, the podcast for enterprise businesses looking to master SEO and achieve real, measurable growth. Supported by ResultFirst, leaders in pay-for-performance SEO, we simplify the complexities of managing large-scale SEO. Each episode provides expert insights, actionable strategies, and real-world advice to help you stay ahead of trends, prove ROI, and scale your efforts with confidence. Subscribe now and unlock the full potential of enterprise SEO. Visit resultfirst.com for more.

  1. 1天前

    From Layoffs to Leads: Building a Thriving SEO Consulting Practice Today | Ep. 32

    Market turbulence, SEO layoffs, budgets being slashed, brands tightening up—yet some consultants are building a thriving practice right in the middle of it. On Performance SEO Unpacked, host Ruchi Pardal sits down with Emanuel (Alexandru) Petrescu to ask why this might actually be the best time to plant the tree and bet on yourself as an SEO consultant. ㅤ Emanuel shares how two decades of experience—from running his own business in Romania to agency, in-house and enterprise roles in North America—shaped his move into solo consulting. He talks about reaching out to people, putting information out there, volunteering his expertise, being present in communities and turning conversations into long-term business. ㅤ The discussion moves through social media, LinkedIn as a “necessary evil,” WhatsApp and Meta’s AI, introverts stepping into visibility, structuring consulting around education and transparency, handling algorithm shifts, and dealing with imposter syndrome while still saying yes to pressure and no to the wrong clients. ㅤ 👤 Guest BioEmanuel (Alexandru) Petrescu is a Toronto-based digital marketing and SEO consultant originally from Romania. Around 20 years ago he ran his own business, learning how to build a website, show up at the top of search results, create a press list and maintain relationships with key stakeholders. For the past 10 years he has worked exclusively in SEO and digital marketing for the North American market, across in-house roles, small and niche agencies, big agencies and enterprise as a digital marketing manager. Today he runs his own agency and leads How About Some Marketing as a hub for marketers and business owners who want to get better at their marketing. ㅤ 📌 What We CoverWhy “market turbulence is a default” in SEO and how AI and LLMs like ChatGPT and Perplexity are changing the job market everywhere, not just in digital marketing.Emanuel’s path from his own business in Romania to 10 years in North America across in-house, small agency, niche agency, big agency, enterprise and digital marketing manager roles.The early consulting moves that mattered: reaching out to people, putting information out there, sharing on social platforms, volunteering to help, and being part of a community that still sends business years later.Emanuel’s go-to approach to networking: being present online, accepting the “influencers paradigm,” and why nothing beats real-life events, conferences and in-person conversations with speakers, attendees and organizers.How introverts can still speak, write, appear on podcasts, host shows and webinars when they are in the right environment and on topics where they have real experience.LinkedIn as “at least as toxic as Instagram,” why Emanuel still uses it daily, and how different audiences might actually live on YouTube, TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, WhatsApp or other platforms outside North America.Why WhatsApp is an “integrative part” of his approach, especially in places like Eastern Europe, and how Meta lead generation, messaging and the rise of Meta’s AI could change advertising and conversations over the next 6–12 months.How Emanuel structures consulting around education and trust, explaining the difference between organic and paid, aligning on KPIs, and staying transparent when algorithms change or tools stop reporting key data.Turning a network into paid work: regularly sharing relevant articles,...

    34 分钟
  2. 12月3日

    From Vanity to Value: Rethinking Digital Performance Metrics in a GenAI World with Scott Lux | Ep. 31

    Retail has been in the family, from a lighting store in Dallas, Texas, to Birmingham, Alabama, to fashion retail brands in New York. On Performance SEO Unpacked, Ruchi Pardal and Scott Lux connect that soft spot for retail with digital, agency work, and e-commerce in a world where everything’s changing every day and feels completely upside down right now. ㅤ They walk through the shift from chasing impressions, traffic, and easy, accountable metrics to chasing outcomes and customer behavior. Instead of a simple math exercise around traffic, conversion, average order value, and units per transaction, the conversation keeps going back to product, sell-through, and whether the audience can really support that growth. ㅤ The discussion stays on fundamentals and foundation: a clear brand definition, a content strategy that ladders up to that, end-to-end customer journeys, and platform-based, behavior-based KPIs. TikTok, Instagram, specialty retail, wholesale, physical retail, email, SMS, agents, assisted shopping, AI, and content all tie back to new customers, retention, frequency, revenue, and the health of the business. ㅤ 👤 Guest BioScott Lux is the EVP of technology and e-commerce for Esprit, with experience across fashion retail brands in New York ranging from Diesel, John Varvatos, Intermix under the Gap umbrella, Alice and Olivia, Theory, and Esprit. He started his career on the agency side at a small digital agency in Seattle, Washington called Za, which ultimately became part of VML, cutting his teeth in the digital world on creative, user experience, data, analytics, and marketing. Scott has also been an adjunct professor at FIT in the SUNY system in New York and at Columbia Business School on the Upper West Side. ㅤ 📌 What We CoverRetail in the family, lighting stores in Dallas, Texas and Birmingham, Alabama, a soft spot for retail, and how agency world, creative, user experience, data, analytics, and marketing shaped Scott’s digital point of view.How brands ended up with a simple math exercise around traffic, conversion, average order value, units per transaction, and paid media, chasing 40 or 50% online revenue without really focusing on customer or whether that growth was realistic.Why “stop chasing impressions, start chasing outcomes” means reconnecting product, selling, and customer, and re-looking at conversion and traffic across TikTok, Instagram, .com, physical retail, specialty retail, and wholesale.Rethinking attribution models: mapping an end-to-end journey, knowing the profile or persona, setting platform-based and behavior-based KPIs, and defining touch points, milestones, and behaviors like email signup, visiting specialty retail partners, or walking into a physical store.Getting fundamentals and foundation correct: top line revenue targets, profitability, product goals, sell through, key categories, where you placed your bets in product, and tracking turn and sell through week by week to understand the health of the business.Metrics that actually help in a fragmented user journey: new customers, customer acquisition, channels, recency and frequency, preventing churn, membership or loyalty, and smaller signals like saves, comments, forwards, email, SMS, and purchase behavior.Content performance in the age of zero clicks, AI answers, and chat: comments, saving a TikTok video, forwarding it, scrolling and watching, brand performance, brand lift, and how content across TikTok, Instagram, email, site, and even...

    30 分钟
  3. 11月19日

    When AI Eats the Middle: Rethinking Local SEO as the Buyer Journey Goes Conversational | Ep. 30

    Performance SEO Unpacked brings together host Ruchi Pardal and Fred Shramovich, who has been in the SEO industry for over 15 years and now manages four different retail brands across fast-moving apparel and lingerie. The conversation starts with how people find and choose stores today when AI assistants are creeping into the buyer journey and long, very specific local questions are becoming normal. Instead of simple “near me” searches, Fred is tracking prompts like “long black dress at a boutique” or gifts under a certain price and watching how AI answers those. ㅤ Fred shares how a lean team, strong partners, and flexible third-party store pages let him move fast with local content, Google My Business, reviews, and store-level information. He spends a lot of time in Google Search Console, social media comments, and reviews to understand what people actually ask, from busy moms to price-point holiday gifting. The episode walks through ongoing testing, collaboration with merchandise and website teams, Reddit and social listening, and deeper, more specific reviews as signals to stay visible in an AI first, locally focused journey. ㅤ 👤 Guest BioFred Shramovich has been in the SEO industry for over 15 years, with experience on both the agency side and the enterprise side. He is currently managing four different retail brands, including a mix of apparel and a lingerie brand, and works with a very lean team supported by a local SEO provider that builds and manages store pages. Outside the office, Fred sells car detailing products and helps small businesses maneuver the SEO journey with large focused content strategies. He is also blessed with a family with two kids and a wife. ㅤ 📌 What We CoverHow AI assistance is changing local behavior from “pizza restaurant near me” to very, very long questions about specific products, brands, hours, distance, and competitors.Why Fred tracks prompts with tools dedicated to the AI space and constantly tests different content formats for categories like bras, dresses, sweaters, and jeans across multiple stores.How deeper research in Google Search Console, reviews, and social media comments reveals frequently asked questions that are not being answered yet on Google My Business posts, local pages, or site content.Using Facebook, Instagram, YouTube comments and even competitor social channels to spot concerns and themes, then answering those better and treating improvements like “little grains of sand in an hourglass.”Navigating multi-attribute local journeys where people ask for a red mini dress for a hundred dollars or gifts under $50, and coordinating with merchandise and website teams instead of going rogue.Why Fred still treats Google My Business, citations, and Apple’s business center as important, but pushes harder into sentiment, review depth, and specific details like services installed or products purchased.How review management systems, daily monitoring, and habitual negative sentiment at a single location can trigger real store-level fixes and brand-level learning.Personalizing local content for different markets like Florida versus New York, using store pages, FAQs, and service content to reflect local nuance while AI and Google results keep getting smarter.The importance of regular meetings, open communication, and letting data show traffic, revenue, and year-over-year growth so teams trust experiments and remove blockers for local SEO. ㅤ 🔗 Resources...

    26 分钟
  4. 10月29日

    Inside TechTarget’s Massive SEO Cleanup: The Case Study You’ve Never Heard (with Jenny Waggenheim) | Ep. 29

    Performance SEO Unpacked with Ruchi Pardal brings a real-world case study: a previously successful search program collapses overnight—a 25% drop with 90% of traffic from organic. No splashy trend report—the playbook is patience and the messy work most SEOs avoid. Guest Jenny Waggenheim walks through late 2019 when a massive site with 50-something subdomains and thousands of index pages hit a wall. Signals pointed to old content, page speed, and a registration process—fixed to second click so Google always saw content the way users did. The team cut about 80% of the content (hundreds of thousands of pages), cleaned up index pages, and consolidated subdomains to sub-folders—site by site over 18 months. Hidden wins included topical authority, better crawl bandwidth, pillars that brought in millions of organic page views and thousands of new members, and finally 200% growth year over year, the highest traffic ever. The takeaway: slow down, do a full audit, seek outside help, and build a better site. ㅤ 👤 Guest BioJenny Waggenheim is a seasonal SEO and content strategist with over 19 years of experience, working at Tech Target—built the SEO function from scratch and rose to vice president of SEO. She led strategy of B2B tech sites driving 205% year on year growth, from AI-powered platforms like ChatGPT and Perplexity and securing visibility in 180K+ Google AI Overviews. Jenny spearheaded multi-domain migrations, evergreen pillar frameworks, and AI-assisted content workflows. Now channeling her expertise into consulting, she helps B2B brands future proof their SEO strategies. ㅤ 📌 What We CoverThe moment everything changed: a 25% drop overnight with no core update, six weeks after quality rater guidelines changed.Three key areas: registration (moved to second click), page speed (testing tools/code), and site architecture & content.Index bloat cleanup: thousands of index pages across 50-something sites, pagination, and “so many ways” to the same place—narrow it down.Content rules: start with older than five years, zero page views in a year, then 30 page views a month—unpublish, redirect to something more current, or 404 when irrelevant.Crawl bandwidth reality: Google wasn’t seeing the new really valuable content because it was caught up in old content.Editorial partnership & buy-in: why writers don’t want content to go...

    38 分钟
  5. 10月8日

    Scaling SEO Through Team Transitions: How Collaboration Fuels Long-Term Search Growth With Natalia Matos | Ep. 28

    When leadership changes, everything changes—processes shift, priorities reset, and SEO teams are forced to prove their value all over again. In this episode of Performance SEO Unpacked, host Ruchi Pardal talks with Natalia Matos, SEO Manager at Quadient, about keeping performance steady when transitions hit hard. Natalia shares how she kept SEO moving through leadership changes by focusing on clarity, documentation, and momentum—because, as she puts it, “SEO does not pause because of reorganization.” She explains how aligning SEO with shared business goals turns teams into partners, not requesters, and why trust builds on quick wins and transparency. Together they unpack the mindset and systems that make SEO resilient—from search everything optimization and cross-team collaboration to testing, over-communication, and growth-driven processes that thrive through any change. 👤 Guest BioNatalia Matos is the SEO Manager at Quadient—a digital marketing leader blending strategy, creativity, and data to drive growth. She has led SEO and analytical initiatives, shaping global search strategy across teams and mentoring others on how AI and SEO are redefining digital visibility. 🔗 Connect with Natalia on LinkedIn 📌 What We CoverNavigating leadership transitions through clarity and documentation—keeping SEO momentum when direction shifts.Why SEO continuity depends on transparency and clear visibility of strategy, outcomes, and purpose.How to anchor collaboration in shared business goals—be an SEO partner, not just a requester.Frameworks for cross-functional alignment with content, product, and dev teams during high-growth phases.The rise of Search Everything Optimization—building trust through concise, intent-driven answers across every search surface.Trust through visibility and impact: quick wins like optimizing key pages, fixing internal links, and cleaning up canonicals.Turning transitions into momentum phases—reprioritize, change KPIs, test, and over-communicate.Building resilient SEO programs with systems over individuals: documentation, SharePoint-based knowledge sharing, modular workflows, and a growth mentality. ResourcesResultFirst: Visit for more SEO tips and strategies → resultfirst.com Connect with Ruchi Pardal on LinkedIn for a conversation about SEO If you enjoyed today's episode and found valuable insights for your business, be sure to subscribe to Performance SEO Unpacked for more expert discussions. Don’t forget to leave a review and share this episode with your team or fellow marketers! Let’s keep the conversation going—connect with us on LinkedIn and join the community of enterprise SEO enthusiasts.

    23 分钟
  6. 10月2日

    First AI Checkout: How eCommerce Brands Must Ready Themselves for Black Friday 2025 | Ep. 27

    Performance SEO Unpacked takes a sharp turn with host Ruchi Pardal as she explores a seismic shift in e-commerce: OpenAI’s Buy It integration inside ChatGPT. Instead of directing shoppers to websites, users can now browse, compare, and purchase products directly within AI interfaces. This episode unpacks what the update really means for retail and e-commerce brands, why blue-link thinking is outdated, and what technical and strategic moves are critical before Black Friday. Ruchi explains how to structure product feeds, fix rendering, sync pricing in real time, and rethink visibility inside AI-driven ecosystems. The message is clear: AI isn’t the future of shopping—it’s already here, and the brands that act now will own the advantage. 📌 What We CoverHow ChatGPT Buy It turns the platform into a shopping assistant plus marketplaceWhy AI-first shopping is already live—and why treating it as “futuristic” is a mistakeTechnical steps: setting up RSS/XML or JSON feeds with full product detailsThe importance of JSON-LD schemas, canonical tags, and location metadataWhy server-side rendering and edge caching are critical for AI visibilityReal-time feed syncing to prevent mismatched pricing during high-volume daysStrategic shifts: brand mentions in gift guides, product comparisons, and community threadsWhy not all products are equal—prioritizing high-margin, high-conversion itemsHow to test visibility inside ChatGPT by searching like a customerBlack Friday as the first true test of AI-first product visibility 🔗 Resources MentionedResultFirst: Visit for more SEO tips and strategiesConnect with Ruchi Pardal on LinkedIn: Ruchi Pardal If you enjoyed today’s episode and found valuable insights for your business, be sure to subscribe to Performance SEO Unpacked for more expert discussions. Don’t forget to leave a review and share this episode with your team or fellow marketers! Let’s keep the conversation going—connect with us on LinkedIn and join the community of enterprise SEO enthusiasts.

    7 分钟
  7. 9月10日

    The Hidden Leaks in SEO Budgets: What Your CMS and CDN Aren’t Telling You | Ep. 26

    Many SEO teams believe their budgets are airtight, yet silent leaks are draining performance in ways that don’t show up on a spreadsheet or monthly report. On Performance SEO Unpacked, host Ruchi Pardal exposes the hidden culprits: CMS limitations, CDN misconfigurations, and bloated tech stacks that quietly hold visibility hostage. Instead of pointing fingers at content or backlinks, Ruchi shows how infrastructure flaws masquerade as strategy failures—leading to wasted spend, flat results, and endless frustration when asking for new budgets. From server logs to cache headers, she shares a mental checklist used with enterprise clients to uncover issues that almost no one is flagging. These fixes often cost nothing, but the payoff is faster indexing, stronger rankings, cleaner reporting, and peace of mind for both SEO teams and CFOs. 📌 What We CoverWhy CMS and CDN setups silently bleed SEO budgetsThe importance of auditing server logs to catch crawl wasteRendering checkpoints and the dangers of slow JavaScript deliveryHow stale CDN cache headers block Google from seeing updatesJavaScript hydration delays that hide critical content from crawlersAnalytics attribution gaps that distort ROI and reportingWhy most SEO failures are infrastructure issues, not strategy flawsA practical checklist for spotting leaks before slashing budgets 🔗 ResourcesGoogle’s Mobile-Friendly TestLumarConnect with Ruchi Pardal on LinkedIn — DM “leak” to get the full SEO budget leak checklistResultFirst: Visit for more SEO tips and strategies. If you enjoyed today's episode and found valuable insights for your business, be sure to subscribe to Performance SEO Unpacked for more expert discussions. Don't forget to leave a review and share this episode with your team or fellow marketers! Let's keep the conversation going—connect with us on LinkedIn and join the community of enterprise SEO enthusiasts.

    6 分钟
  8. 9月5日

    7 Hard SEO Questions CMOs Are Finally Asking — And What to Do About Them | Ep. 25

    On this solo episode of Performance SEO Unpacked, host Ruchi Pardal takes on seven of the toughest SEO questions she hears every week from CMOs, VPs, and growth leaders across SaaS, e-commerce, and multi-location businesses. With no fluff and all tactics, Ruchi lays out why flat traffic with falling conversions signals an intent mismatch, what really determines visibility in AI overviews, and how multi-location SEO can quickly turn chaotic without a hub-and-spoke approach. She makes a strong case for bringing SEO into product roadmap conversations early, reframing reporting around revenue impact, and using AI as a multiplier — not a miracle. The thread running through all seven answers: moving from keywords to concepts and making your expertise unavoidable in both search engines and AI systems. 📌 What We CoverWhy flat traffic plus falling conversions is a red flag, and how to fix intent-page mismatches with CRO elements and micro conversionsHow authority signals and third-party mentions determine visibility in AI overviews, not just keyword countsThe hub-and-spoke model for multi-location SEO, dynamic templates, and consistent NAP managementWhere AI content adds value — long-tail terms, refreshing outdated articles, and structured templates with human reviewWhy SEO should sit in product roadmap meetings before launch, with landing pages and schema ready in advanceHow leadership wants to see SEO reporting framed around pipeline, revenue, and the V.O.L.T. model (Visibility, Outcomes, Leads, Transactions)The shift from keywords to entities — building topical clusters, schema markup, and authoritative brand mentions 🔗 ResourcesResultFirstConnect with Ruchi Pardal on LinkedIn If you enjoyed today's episode and found valuable insights for your business, be sure to subscribe to Performance SEO Unpacked for more expert discussions. Don't forget to leave a review and share this episode with your team or fellow marketers! Let's keep the conversation going—connect with us on LinkedIn and join the community of enterprise SEO enthusiasts.

    8 分钟

关于

Welcome to Performance SEO Unpacked, the podcast for enterprise businesses looking to master SEO and achieve real, measurable growth. Supported by ResultFirst, leaders in pay-for-performance SEO, we simplify the complexities of managing large-scale SEO. Each episode provides expert insights, actionable strategies, and real-world advice to help you stay ahead of trends, prove ROI, and scale your efforts with confidence. Subscribe now and unlock the full potential of enterprise SEO. Visit resultfirst.com for more.