
GEO integration into modern SEO

How generative responses change the user journey

What to do when Google Ads performance decreases
7 minutes
A few years ago, long texts were considered a risky format. Authors feared that no one would read them. For a long time, marketers worried that users wouldn’t have the attention span for more than a few short paragraphs. The logic seemed simple: shorter content always wins.
But the data — and algorithms — tell a different story. Today, 37% of bloggers publishing articles of 2,000+ words see strong results, while only 20% of those writing shorter pieces (1,000–1,500 words) achieve the same.
Well-structured long-form content has countless advantages. It ranks higher in search, gets bookmarked, attracts backlinks, and even shows up in AI-generated digests. In fact, it’s the dream asset for any content marketer: a piece that works at every stage of the funnel and adapts across multiple formats.
In this article, we’ll cover:
Traditionally, long-form has been defined as 1,500+ words. But since Google’s Helpful Content updates, length alone is no longer the decisive factor. Word count ≠ quality.
Modern long-form content isn’t just “a lot of text.” It’s a page that goes beyond surface-level answers, provides genuine value, and is enjoyable to read. It’s the kind of material that makes a reader stop scrolling and think: “This is exactly what I was looking for.”
Pro tip: When reviewing your draft, ask: “Would a user still need to Google more after reading this?” If yes, keep writing.
Short pieces (300-word blog posts, social media updates, newsletter blurbs) are quick to produce and useful for trends or fast updates. But they rarely solve complex problems.
Long-form, by contrast, is built for education, explanation, and influencing decisions. It provides context, supports more keywords, and creates stronger opportunities for ranking and conversion. This is where brands can demonstrate authority, compare approaches, and provide real-life examples.
Long content doesn’t just survive in the age of AI — it thrives. That’s because it aligns with what both search engines and users now expect: depth, clarity, and practical value.
The numbers back this up:
Don’t worry about “endless scrolling.” If your piece is genuinely useful, readers will stay with you until the end.
Google’s mission is simple: show the most complete, most helpful result. If your article answers all related questions and explores the topic from every angle, it becomes the #1 resource — for both the search engine and the reader.
So, what earns you Google’s “stamp of approval”?
Let’s say you’re writing a guide on How to Grow on TikTok. A long-form piece can include:
The result? Your reader doesn’t need 10 other tabs. Everything they need is in one place. That’s the kind of content people bookmark, revisit, and that Google recognizes as valuable.
The real strength of long-form content lies in its ability to take a user on a full journey — from “What is this?” to “How do I actually do it?”. This benefits both SEO and user experience.
For example, in an article about TikTok growth, you could cover:
Core questions:
Subtopics:
Additional queries:
Even the most valuable article can get lost without clear structure. Logical formatting with headings and smaller content blocks helps both readers and Google — especially with passage indexing, where individual sections of a long article can rank for different queries.
Use headings strategically:
This improves navigation, boosts readability, and increases the chance of ranking for featured snippets or AI Overviews.
At the end of a long-form article, include a short FAQ block. This helps readers quickly find specific answers and also increases visibility in search results.
For instance, in a piece on “How to Build a Welcome Email Series”, you could include:
These short, direct answers not only improve usability but also create extra opportunities to capture snippets.
Pro tip: Use tools like Semrush Keyword Magic Tool or AnswerThePublic to uncover real user questions worth addressing.
One of the biggest SEO advantages of long-form is its ability to rank for dozens of related queries — not just a single primary keyword.
For example, an article on “How to Grow on TikTok” could also rank for:
That’s because comprehensive content signals topical relevance across a wide spectrum of search intents.
Long-form pieces also serve as the foundation for a strong internal linking structure.
For instance, a large guide on “How to Grow on TikTok” could link out to narrower supporting posts like:
This helps readers dive deeper while signaling to Google that your site is a true topical authority.
Long-form content reduces bounce rate, which is a key user behavior signal. If your article is well-structured and includes extras like examples, visuals, or embedded videos, users are more likely to:
These behaviors send strong signals to Google: “This page is truly valuable and deserves higher rankings.”
Long-form performs especially well in B2B and industries with long, high-stakes decision-making cycles. Here, users need more context, comparisons, and evidence before taking action.
Take SaaS, for example. An article on “How to Choose the Best Time-Tracking Software for Remote Teams” could include:
Such in-depth resources don’t just inform — they build trust and help decision-makers move forward confidently, often across multiple stakeholders.
This article available in Ukrainian.
Say hello to us!
A leading global agency in Clutch's top-15, we've been mastering the digital space since 2004. With 9000+ projects delivered in 65 countries, our expertise is unparalleled.
Let's conquer challenges together!
performance_marketing_engineers/
performance_marketing_engineers/
performance_marketing_engineers/
performance_marketing_engineers/
performance_marketing_engineers/
performance_marketing_engineers/
performance_marketing_engineers/
performance_marketing_engineers/