If you’ve been following digital marketing discussions lately, you’ve probably noticed the same question popping up everywhere: is blogging still worth it in 2026? The answer, as with most things in the web development world, is more nuanced than a simple yes or no.
For years, we’ve told our clients at Design Web Louisville that content is the best long-term investment. Write regularly. Use your natural voice. Talk about subjects that matter to your business and your customers. Answer specific questions that help people solve real problems. Target those long-tail keywords that bring qualified traffic to your site.
That advice still holds true, but the landscape has shifted significantly. Here’s what we’re seeing in 2026 and what we have been reading in the SEO forums. Now, keep in mind some of the sources are anecdotal, but that has always been the forefront of understanding how SEO works. When working in a black box, we have to learn to trust our intuition and then verify. So, if this feels like we are taking lobbing shotgun shells from the hip, it is because we are, and that method has kept our teeny tiny no advertising model of website design sales ahead of all the big agencies in town, so, you know, don’t knock it and enjoy the ride.
The AI Impact: Large language models and Traffic
Let’s address the elephant in the room. Large language models like ChatGPT are fundamentally changing how people discover information. One experienced SEO professional on Reddit put it bluntly: “LLMs feed on your content and then show it at the top of Google search. After working hard, you will feel that there is no credibility for your hard work.” But is that the case really? Maybe, but it depends on what kind of content you create. Here is what we have seen.
While AI tools are effecting traditional blog traffic, 95% of ChatGPT users still use Google for search and half of them prefer to click through to the source if it promises quality content including, and this is the kicker, great visuals. Why, well because while Ai may be using your content to answer a simple question, it now adds your pages feature image as part of the citation. That is new and it is a game changer.
Historically the only way to get an image on the homepage is to pay to be placed in the ad slot, but now, if you are used in citation, you get a sweet free slot right next to the Ai summary, and stats tell us, if your image is well designed, your page title targeted and your excerpt refined, people will click through. More interestingly, the results for the Ai source at the time of this article are not location bound! (Holy national-reach Batman!) You can see in my example picture below the results for “who is the best personal injury lawyer in louisville ky” pulls from a law firm in… California!? Ok, so I am sure that Google will work this bug out in the very near future, but for those of you who have been dutifully writing great content and including excellent page feature images, you now have a free seat on the seo train to every city in the english speaking world. Even after Ai learns to narrow down to locally limited learned content this is still a boon to those of us who have been doing it right the whole time.
Search engines remain essential, and more importantly, they’re not going anywhere. The key difference is that generic, informational content that simply rehashes what’s already available online is essentially dead. AI can spit that out instantly. What AI can’t replicate (yet) is authentic experience, original data, and genuine expertise with excellent images. So keep doing that.
What’s Actually Working in 2026
Based on our work with clients and feedback from business owners across various industries, here’s what still generates results:
First-hand experience matters more than ever. An example we saw this week, an estate agent on a Wix platform wrote a handful of well-crafted articles that barely get views on Google, but ChatGPT picked them up. Result? Three new clients in a few months who specifically mentioned finding the agency through ChatGPT recommendations. Those three clients covered the company’s annual expenses. Not bad for a few hours of writing, and while it may not be traffic volume, it’s precise traffic quality. We have seen the exact same thing, our national reach has actually increased significantly in the last few months. Yes, itty bitty Design Web Louisville hauls in quite a bit of national clients. Never underestimate the little guy.
Niche expertise still wins. A food blogger with seven years of experience noted that while traffic has dropped from 1 million monthly page views during peak COVID times to 100-300K now, that they are still generating solid revenue. The difference? Authentic content in a specific niche, not generic advice anyone could write. Again, we are seeing more and more surgeon-like precision in traffic. The value has not dropped of, just the volume, and that is good. It means the people who were just contributing to your bounce rate are getting what they need from Ai, with no bounce contributed to your content. The ones you need to dig deep, are still finding you. Now, we don’t take on clients who do low quality high volume content or if we are being honest click bait spam, so we have not seen much drop off. What we have seen in the periphery, lots of junk drawer sites (Looking at you, recipe site that makes us dig to find the actual recipe) getting dunked, going from a fire hose of traffic to nothing. Is it devastating to people who have dedicated their lives to writing a novel for every recipe they stole out of some book? Yes. Is it better for the rest of us? 100%. If you got hit by the Ai traffic diversion, well, maybe it was time for you to take a real look at the way you market to people.
Community and trust building. Several people mentioned that blogging works when it’s about building trust and proving expertise rather than just chasing traffic numbers. One commenter noted that sharing real “first attempts” or even failures gets more traction than perfect guides. The new noise is LLM content getting cranked out rapidly, and the one thing it can’t do, is muddle through the very real process of trial and error in an authentic way. Now Ai is great, don’t get me wrong. I am going to Ai this mess of an article before I post it, but the key is, the mess. The funny thoughts, the little references and easter eggs that come with real authentic content. It’s the gold standard, always has been always will be.
I used to say authentic experience is king. I still do, but I used to, too.
The New Priorities for 2026
If you’re investing in content marketing right now, here’s where your energy should go:
1. Google My Business Is Essential
This might be the single most important digital asset for local businesses. Your Google My Business profile affects local search, Google Maps results, and even how AI tools discover and recommend your business. Keep it updated, respond to reviews, add photos regularly, and make sure all your information is accurate.
2. YouTube and Video Content
Multiple SEO professionals with decades of experience are pointing to the same conclusion: video content outperforms written content in 2026. YouTube isn’t just a platform; it’s the second-largest search engine. People searching for “how to fix a leaky faucet” or “best pizza in Louisville” are just as likely to watch a video as read an article.
3. Advertising on Google Maps
For local businesses, Google Maps advertising offers targeting that traditional search ads can’t match. You’re reaching people actively looking for services in your geographic area, often while they’re mobile and ready to make a decision.
4. Authentic, Experience-Based Content
If you’re going to blog, make it count. Write about:
- Your actual projects and what you learned
- Real customer problems you’ve solved
- Original research or data from your business
- Behind-the-scenes processes that demonstrate expertise
- Local insights that only someone in your community would know
- Real images, not stock junk. Use pictures that are meaningful or don’t use them at all.
Don’t write generic “5 Tips for Better SEO” posts. AI has that covered. Write “What We Learned After Managing SEO for 50 Louisville Businesses” with specific examples and real data.
What We Still Recommend
Our core advice hasn’t changed entirely. Good content is still a long-term investment. Regular updates still matter. Your authentic voice still resonates. But we’re adjusting our recommendations:
Write less, but write better. One exceptional piece of content that demonstrates real expertise is worth more than ten generic posts.
Don’t chase informational keywords. If the question can be answered by AI in two sentences, don’t waste your time writing a 2,000-word guide about it.
Support your content with other channels. Your blog shouldn’t stand alone. Use email newsletters, social media, and video to distribute and amplify your written content.
Focus on conversion, not just traffic. A blog post that brings 50 qualified leads is more valuable than one that brings 5,000 who bounce immediately.
Build topical authority. Instead of writing about everything, become the go-to resource for a specific area. Depth beats breadth. Don’t believe me, see the California law firm who got position zero for a Louisville question in my example above.
The Reality Check
Here’s the honest truth: if you’re thinking about starting a blog in 2026 purely to generate ad revenue from organic traffic, you’re probably too late. That ship has sailed, been to war with Ai, taken on water and is being towed back to shore. The “golden era” of SEO-optimized fluff content ranking easily is over.
But if you’re using a blog to:
- Demonstrate expertise in your field
- Support your products or services
- Build trust with potential customers
- Create a community around your brand
- Provide citations for AI tools to reference
- Establish thought leadership
Then yes, blogging is absolutely still worth it. Maybe we don’t even call it blogging anymore? Maybe it is evolving to a point where it’s something else entirely? Treat it more like a menu. Be concise. Be accurate and clear. If you are a dentist, yes you should have information about all the services and products and issues you can treat in your office, but do you need a ton of pages for fluff that every dentist has? No, Ai has that covered unless you have something new and meaningful to contribute, that might actually hurt you. For example, we recently rescued a Veterinary clinic from a website design service who included a full vet dictionary of terms and “vet blog” pages to their site as part of a “vet website package.” Oof what a mess! The bulk of the site was just junk drawer information about vet services, and they used the EXACT SAME JUNK on all of their clients’ websites hundreds of sites all with the same fluff competing for the same traffic. Yeah, it wasn’t pretty. We see this a lot, website designers who target a certain niche and churn out the same garbage for all of their clients. You would be better with no website than going with the dumpster fire that is niche website designers. But I digress, this is a major topic, and I might have to write about it in a whole other post, but that is enough for today.
Our Approach Moving Forward, shockingly not much has changed
At Design Web Louisville, we’re helping clients think about content differently. Instead of “we need to blog to get traffic,” we’re asking “what do we know that our customers need to know, and what’s the best way to share that?”
Sometimes that’s a blog post. Sometimes it’s a video. Sometimes it’s a Google My Business update or a well-crafted email newsletter. The medium matters less than the message and the authenticity behind it.
We still believe in the power of good content. We’ve just gotten smarter about what “good” means in 2026. Per the usual, if you are thinking about people and trying to help them or connect with them in a real way, you’re doing it the right way. Slow and steady wins the race. That is why our super small office has flourished without ads for over a decade.
The Bottom Line
Blogging isn’t dead, but it’s evolved. The strategies that worked in 2015 or even 2020 won’t work today. Generic content is worthless. Authentic expertise is priceless. Choose your battles wisely, invest in channels that actually reach your audience, and remember that content is just one piece of a larger digital strategy. Ai is not the enemy unless you are doing something shady. It pours light on SEO.
And whatever you do, don’t forget about your Google My Business profile.
