Measured

Logan Wood

Measured is a marketing and data driven podcast hosted by Logan Wood. The show explores real world projects, industry trends, and performance insights to help businesses make smarter, more informed decisions.

  1. 2일 전

    Measured: Shopify Is the Default for Small Business Ecommerce, Here Is When to Look Elsewhere

    Shopify holds about 30% of the US ecommerce platform market by active stores. It processed $378 billion in gross merchandise value in 2025, and Q1 2026 alone hit $100.7 billion. 90% of Shopify stores are small businesses. In this episode of Measured, we break down how Shopify became the default for small business ecommerce, why it earned the position, what the tradeoffs actually are, and when to look elsewhere. The dominance is not accidental. Shopify's onboarding is the best in the category. Pricing starts around $29 to $39 per month with clear tiers. The app ecosystem tops 13,000 apps. Shop Pay's checkout delivers measurably higher conversion rates. Offline GMV grew 33% in Q1 2026, meaning it is a real option for brick-and-mortar businesses too. The tradeoffs are real. Transaction fees add 2% if you do not use Shopify Payments. The average growing store spends $100 to $300 per month on apps for features that are baked in on other platforms. URL structure is locked. Real B2B tools require the Plus plan at $2,300 per month. Shopify is right for most small businesses that want the fastest path to launch and access to the biggest app ecosystem. WooCommerce is a better fit for content-first businesses on WordPress. BigCommerce is stronger for wholesale and B2B. Wix or Squarespace fit very small storefronts. Square Online makes sense if Square is already your POS. We also cover the apps that are actually worth installing. Klaviyo for email and SMS. Judge.me for reviews. Smile.io for loyalty. Gorgias for customer support. PageFly for landing pages. In this episode: The scale of Shopify's dominance and what the numbers actually show Why Shopify earned the default position The tradeoffs most owners do not see When Shopify is right and when another platform is the better choice The apps worth actually installing Customer question: How often should I email my customer list? Featured project: Dave's Guide Service https://fishokobojiwithdave.com/

    32분
  2. 6월 29일

    Measured: Video Is Showing Up in More Search Results, Most Small Businesses Are Missing It

    Video is showing up in search results more often than it used to. Not just on YouTube. Facebook videos, Instagram clips, LinkedIn posts, and videos embedded on websites are all getting surfaced when Google thinks they answer the query. SE Ranking's 2025 SERP analysis found that videos appear on 78% of US Google search results pages. That does not mean video dominates the page. It means video is present somewhere on it. The shift is incremental but consistent. YouTube is the single most-cited domain in Google AI Overviews at a 29.5% citation share, per BrightEdge. That is the biggest single source AI is pulling from. In this episode of Measured, we break down what the data actually shows, why your video might be showing up in search, what AI is citing, and what to do about it. One 2026 study of YouTube citations in AI search found something most businesses would not predict. Popularity did not predict citations. 41% of the YouTube videos cited had fewer than 1,000 views. What predicted citations was structure. 94% of citations went to long-form videos rather than Shorts, and timestamped, chaptered videos were cited multiple times across different chapters. If the study holds up across more analysis, AI is picking the most legible video on a topic, not the most popular one. A small business with a handful of well-structured videos can show up in AI citations even without a large audience. In this episode: What the SERP data actually shows and what it does not Why a Facebook video can show up in Google search What AI search is citing and why structure beats popularity How small businesses can compete in video search without a huge audience Customer question: Does my website's load time really matter? Featured project: Platinum Innovation Homes https://platinuminnovationhomes.com/

    34분
  3. 6월 22일

    Measured: Meta Just Passed Google in Ad Revenue for the First Time, What That Means for You

    For the first time in the 20-year history of digital advertising, Meta is about to pass Google in global ad revenue. eMarketer projects Meta will generate $243.46 billion in 2026, ahead of Google's projected $239.54 billion. In 2025, Google held a $17.89 billion lead. In 12 months, Meta closed it and passed. Meta is growing 24.1% year over year. Google is growing 11.9%. The gap is not narrowing, it is widening, with Meta now in the lead. In this episode of Measured, we break down what just happened, why Meta is winning, and what it means for your business. The forecast has clear drivers. Meta's Advantage+ AI automation often outperforms manual campaigns. New ad surfaces on WhatsApp and Threads opened up real inventory. AI-generated creative lowered the cost of producing video and image ads. Instagram Reels continues to capture attention. The driver that matters most for small business owners is harder to see in revenue reports. Meta is meaningfully easier to use without help. Google still rewards advertisers who understand keywords, match types, quality scores, and bid strategies. For a business owner without an agency, the platform that requires less expertise wins by default. A Google-first paid strategy was built on assumptions that no longer hold. If your default for paid advertising has been Google for the last decade, the data just told you to reconsider. In this episode: The milestone almost no one is talking about Why Meta is winning and the five drivers behind it Why a Google-first paid strategy was built on assumptions that no longer hold What to audit, test, and measure this quarter Customer question: Should I post my prices on my website? Featured project: Cotton Grave Farm Management & Realty https://www.cottongrave.com/

    17분
  4. 6월 15일

    Measured: Customers Can Now Buy From You Without Ever Visiting Your Website

    Customers can now buy from you without ever visiting your website. Google just launched Universal Cart, a new checkout system that lets customers complete a purchase directly inside Search, Gemini, and Maps. You make the sale, but you do not get the visit, the email, the analytics, or the chance to upsell. You just get the order. In this episode of Measured, we break down what just happened at Google Marketing Live 2026 and the three changes that actually matter for your business. On May 20, Google announced more than twenty changes to how paid advertising will work going forward. Most do not affect most small businesses. Three do. Universal Cart is the biggest. For ecommerce businesses, the transaction happens but the connection does not. AI Max is the second. Dynamic Search Ads will automatically upgrade to AI Max in September 2026, which means your ad spend is increasingly out of your hands. Ads in AI Mode are the third. Sponsored responses now appear inline when users have a conversation with Google's AI search. Both ChatGPT and Google AI Mode now sell ads. In this episode: What just happened at Google Marketing Live 2026 Universal Cart and the disappearing website visit AI Max and what the September migration means The new Ads in AI Mode placements What to do about all three before the changes hit your business Customer question: Should I have a logo refresh or a full rebrand? Featured project: The Great Hall of Royal https://www.greathallofroyal.com/

    25분
  5. 6월 8일

    Measured: AI Can Code Your Website, It Cannot Build One That Customers Actually Find

    AI website builders are everywhere. Tools like Lovable, Bolt, Replit, Cursor, and v0 let someone with no coding background describe what they want in plain English and watch a working site appear in minutes. The market hit $3.24 billion in 2026 and is projected to reach $17.43 billion by 2035. The shift to AI-built websites happened in less than two years. In this episode of Measured, we break down what these tools can and cannot do, where the line is for a real business, and what it actually takes to end up with a website that gets found. The case for AI builders is real. They cut the learning curve from 4 to 8 hours down to about 15 minutes. Hostinger reports that 93 to 95% of their users had no prior paid web presence. For a sole proprietor, a side project, or a one-page brochure that does not need to be found online, AI builders genuinely lower the barrier. The catch is that almost every real business needs more than that. On a recent episode of Google's Search Off The Record podcast, John Mueller and Martin Splitt from the Search Relations team warned that AI-built sites consistently miss SEO basics. Mueller's framing: building a website with AI is like working with a developer who does not specialize in search. The site will function. It just will not be found. The hidden problem goes deeper. The major AI site builders render content on the client side, which means the actual content of your page does not exist in the HTML when a search engine first loads it. Most AI search engines, including ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google's AI Overviews, only read the initial HTML. Your site loads. It looks great. But ChatGPT cannot read it. In this episode: What is happening in the AI website builder market The real case for AI builders and where they make sense What Google's search team is saying about AI-built sites The hidden rendering problem nobody is talking about What it takes to turn an AI-built site into one that gets found Customer question: Do I need to be on TikTok? Featured project: Arts on Grand https://www.artsongrand.org/

    28분
  6. 6월 1일

    Measured: A Billion-Dollar Publisher Is Planning for Zero Search Traffic, What It Means for You

    The publisher behind Vogue, Wired, GQ, and The New Yorker is telling its teams to plan their businesses as if Google search traffic will be zero. Not declining. Not softening. Zero. In this episode of Measured, we step back from the news of the week and name the bigger shift happening underneath all of it. The web is moving from a traffic model to an answer model. Three stories from the last two weeks make the shift impossible to ignore. Condé Nast CEO Roger Lynch said he told his teams to budget as if search traffic were zero after three years of forecasts that came in worse than predicted. At Google I/O, Google redesigned its search box and called it the biggest upgrade in over 25 years, with information agents coming this summer that monitor the web for you so you never have to leave to get your answer. And Google quietly added AI assistant traffic as a visible source in Google Analytics 4, so for the first time you can see how many people are arriving from ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini instead of guessing. We also cover why this hits publishers much harder than your business. Most search falls into three buckets. Informational, transactional, and local. AI is eating the first kind. Publishers live on informational. Most small businesses live on transactional and local, which is far more durable. In this episode: Why the web is shifting from a traffic model to an answer model What Condé Nast just said and the data behind it What Google rebuilt at I/O and why it matters How to find AI traffic inside Google Analytics 4 Why publishers are hit hardest and your business is more protected The three types of search and which ones are actually dying What to do about it before the shift reaches your channel Customer question: Is my website ever really done? Featured project: Tiger Sports Academy https://tigersportsacademy.com/

    27분
  7. 5월 25일

    Measured: 90% of Brands Are Invisible in AI Search, How to Be in the 10% That Show Up

    90% of brands studied had zero presence in AI search. Zero mentions. Zero citations. Nothing. In this episode of Measured, we break down what the data actually says, why most businesses are invisible to ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Mode, and what to do about it. The data comes from the Q1 2026 Quarterly Search Report by Victorious. They analyzed 177 brands across healthcare, SaaS, financial services, ecommerce and retail, and legal services. Only 18 of 177 brands had any measurable AI presence at all. The finding that surprised even experienced SEO people: domain authority, the number SEOs have been chasing for a decade, has essentially zero correlation with AI search visibility. A big brand with a high-authority site can be completely invisible. A smaller brand with a lower-authority site can show up everywhere. Same internet, two different systems. The brands that do show up have one thing in common. They exist beyond their own website. Third-party mentions, editorial coverage, review platforms, and consistent information across the web are doing the work that domain authority used to do. We also cover what this looks like for a local business, where the signals are Google Business Profile, local reviews, mentions in local news, and industry directories. In this episode: Why 90% of brands have zero AI search presence The difference between mentions and citations Why domain authority does not correlate with AI visibility What the visible 10% are doing differently What AI search visibility looks like for a local business The four queries to run right now to check your baseline Customer question: Is direct mail still worth it? Featured project: Rise Overhead Door https://riseoverheaddoor.com/

    29분
  8. 5월 18일

    Measured: ChatGPT Just Became an Ad Platform, Should Your Business Be Running Ads on It?

    ChatGPT just became an ad platform. Not in theory. Not in a pilot. As of this month, any US business can sign up, set a budget, and run ads inside ChatGPT. Google Ads launched in 2002. Facebook Ads launched in 2007. New ad platforms are at their cheapest and least competitive in their earliest months. ChatGPT ads sit at that same inflection point right now. In this episode of Measured, we break down what just changed, how ChatGPT ads actually work, who should try them, and who should wait. OpenAI started running ChatGPT ads as a small pilot late last year, limited to major brands spending at least $50,000. This month they flipped the switch. The self-serve Ads Manager opened to all US businesses, the minimum spend was removed entirely, and tracking tools were added so advertisers can measure what happens after the click. But this is not the right fit for every business yet. ChatGPT ads only target at the country level right now. No state, city, or radius targeting. No audience segmentation. No third-party verification. If you serve one small area or depend on precise targeting, this may be a wait-and-see. If you sell something people research before buying and your customers use ChatGPT regularly, it is worth a look. We also walk through what to actually do this quarter without wasting money. In this episode: What just changed with ChatGPT ads this month How ChatGPT ads actually work and where they appear Why this is different from Google and Meta Who should try ChatGPT ads and who should wait What a real test budget looks like What to do this quarter Customer question: Should I respond to bad reviews? Featured project: Keene Outdoors https://keeneoutdoors.com/

    22분

소개

Measured is a marketing and data driven podcast hosted by Logan Wood. The show explores real world projects, industry trends, and performance insights to help businesses make smarter, more informed decisions.