Introduction to Building a Brand
“Build a brand” has become one of the most repeated phrases in SEO over the past year. It is offered as both diagnosis and cure. If traffic is declining, build a brand. If large language models are not citing you, build a brand. If organic performance is unstable, build a brand. The problem is not that this advice is wrong. The problem is that it is incomplete, and for many SEOs, it is not actionable.
Understanding the Challenge
A large proportion of people working in SEO today have developed in an environment that rewarded channel depth rather than marketing breadth. They understand crawling, indexing, content templates, internal linking, and ranking systems extremely well. What they have often not been trained in is how demand is created, how brands are formed in the mind, or how different marketing channels reinforce one another over time. So, when the instruction becomes “build a brand,” the obvious question follows. What does that actually mean in practice, and what happens after you say the words?
SEO’s Role in Demand Capture
Search has always been a demand capture channel rather than a demand creation channel. SEO does not usually make someone want something they did not already want. It places a brand in front of existing intent and attempts to win preference at the moment of consideration. What SEO can do very effectively is increase mental availability. By being visible across a wide range of non-branded queries, a website creates repeated brand touchpoints. Over time, those touchpoints can contribute to familiarity, preference, and eventually loyalty.
The Impact of AI on SEO
AI has introduced new technical and behavioral challenges, but it has also created urgency at the executive level. Boards and leadership teams see both risk and opportunity, and the result is pressure. Pressure to act quickly, to be visible in new surfaces, and to avoid being left behind. In reality, this is one of the most significant visibility opportunities since the mass adoption of social media. But like social media, it rewards those who understand distribution, reinforcement, and timing, not just production.
Content and Digital PR’s Role in Brand Building
Content and digital PR are often positioned as the vehicles for brand building in search. That framing is not wrong, but it is frequently too vague to be useful. Google has been clear, including in recent Search Central discussions, that strong technical foundations still matter. Good SEO is a prerequisite to performance, not a nice-to-have. Content and digital PR sit within that system because they create the signals that justify deeper crawling, more frequent discovery, and sustained visibility.
Building Visibility Through Content
Well-executed SEO content plays a critical role in brand building precisely because it operates at the point of repeated exposure. When a brand consistently appears for high-intent, non-branded queries, it earns familiarity before it ever earns loyalty. Visibility-led content does not need to be overtly promotional to do this work. In many cases, its impact is stronger when it is practical, authoritative, and clearly written for the user rather than for the brand. Over time, this consistency creates an association between the problem space and the brand itself.
The Importance of Thought Leadership
Thought leadership content has real value, but only under specific conditions. It needs an audience, a distribution strategy, and a feedback loop. One of the most common patterns seen over the years is organizations investing heavily in senior-led opinion pieces, vision statements, or industry commentary, and then assuming impact by default. When performance is examined properly, using analytics platforms or marketing automation data, it often becomes clear that very few people are actually reading the content.
Balancing Brand and Search Visibility
The current challenge for SEOs is not choosing between brand building and visibility building. It is learning how to balance the two without confusing them. Brand is the outcome of repeated, coherent experiences. Visibility is the mechanism that makes those experiences possible at scale. You cannot shortcut one with the other, and you cannot treat them as interchangeable.
Conclusion
Building a brand is not a simple task, but it is achievable with the right approach. By understanding the role of SEO in demand capture, the impact of AI on SEO, and the importance of content and digital PR in brand building, businesses can create a strong online presence. It is crucial to balance brand and search visibility, and to understand that thought leadership content requires an audience, distribution strategy, and feedback loop to be effective. With patience, persistence, and the right strategies, businesses can build a strong brand that resonates with their target audience and drives long-term success.

