SEO and storytelling once occupied separate corners of the marketing conversation. SEO was the analytical side: keywords, rankings, optimization. Storytelling was the creative side: voice, narrative, emotional resonance. Each had its champions, and content often reflected that divide.
The way people search, discover, and evaluate content has shifted, though. AI is changing how results get surfaced, and buyer behavior has grown more layered. The brands seeing traction are treating SEO and storytelling not as competing priorities, but as a unified strategy.
Here’s what that means for planning, creating and structuring content. Watch the replay of our presentation on LinkedIn Live or read on for insights.
SEO offers something most marketers underutilize: a glimpse into what your audience cares about most. Not what you think they care about, but what they are actively expressing through their searches, in their own words, in real time.
Consider queries like these:
Behind each search is a person navigating real pressure: the need to protect revenue, close a performance gap, reduce risk or find a more sustainable path forward.
Search terms can reflect a question, a frustration or a desire. Content influenced by real signals connects on an emotional level in a way that assumed insights simply cannot.
When it comes to identifying target keywords, group long-tail queries into themes. When you cluster variations together, the bigger business issue behind them tends to come into focus.
Then pressure-test what you see against internal signals. When the language in search matches what your sales and product teams are already hearing in conversations, you’re onto something worth building content around.
In B2B, decisions carry significant weight. Buyers need context, evidence and a narrative they can see themselves inside.
Consider how this plays out around a search query shared above: “How Predictive Maintenance Software Reduces Equipment Failures.”
A strong story begins with the operational reality: the cost of unplanned downtime, the strain of reactive maintenance cycles, hidden inefficiencies that quietly limit performance. From there, the narrative traces a transformation from emergency repairs and uncertainty to advanced planning and stability.
That story gains credibility through substance, drawing on elements like:
Search engines, AI and humans all need that context. Data tells them what happened. Real voices show them why it happened, and why it matters.
Equally important is the way your content is structured.
AI systems are built to parse content quickly and pull answers from it. When the structure is unclear or the logic is difficult to follow, that process breaks down. When it is clean and well-organized, AI platforms are far more likely to surface your perspective as the answer.
Here’s a format that tends to work well: use a clear question as a header, deliver a direct answer right away, then support it with data, quotes or examples.
Other structural elements that help readers and AI tools alike are:
Buyers do not move in straight lines. They research, revisit, and compare across multiple touchpoints before taking action.
A well-structured content strategy maps to each stage of the buyer journey, with formats that do double duty: supporting buyers wherever they are in the process, while also resonating well with AI search environments.
Each asset serves a distinct purpose, and together they create momentum. The goal is a connected system where each piece earns attention and guides the buyer naturally toward the next conversation.
As brands expand across more channels and incorporate AI tools into their content development process, a natural tension emerges around consistency. Voice can shift, positioning can drift and messaging that once felt cohesive can start to fragment.
The foundation that holds everything together is a shared messaging framework: a documented source of truth that should clearly define:
When that framework is clear and accessible, it can guide both human writers and AI tools, so every piece of content reflects the same story regardless of where or how it was created.
One framework. One consistent story. That is how brands scale content without losing the voice that makes them recognizable.
Content has the power to rank and resonate. It just requires the right research, the right structure, and a clear point of view that carries through every asset you create.
At Kuno Creative, our SEO and content marketing teams work closely together to make that happen. Search strategy informs what we create, and content strategy shapes how it gets built and distributed. The result is content that gains visibility across traditional and AI search environments and connects with your audience in a meaningful way that drives them to act.
If you are looking for a strategic partner to help you bring SEO and storytelling together more intentionally, we’d love to connect.
This post was inspired and informed by insights from a Kuno Creative webinar hosted by Senior Content Strategist Bridget Cunningham and SEO and AI Search Strategist Dee Salvador.