Digital PR, Paid Traffic & Conversion
Manufacture demand and consensus off-site, earn or buy attention, and make sure the traffic converts.
On this page
The 2026 event made one thing clear across very different talks: ranking a page is no longer the finish line. Speakers from earned-media, paid-traffic, and direct-response backgrounds all argued that visibility now comes from manufacturing demand and consensus off-site (in the press, in AI answers, in the feed), and that the win is only real if the traffic converts. Dawood Bukhari framed it as winning AI consensus through earned media, Brian Kato as forcing your brand into every answer, Dan Kurtz as buying ultra-cheap attention and squeezing it through forced-conversion pages, Chris Morrow as matching message to the customer's awareness level, and Chase Buckner as the speed-and-systems layer that turns captured leads into closed revenue. This theme stitches those into one demand-and-conversion picture: where attention comes from, how to earn or buy it, and what has to be true for it to pay.
The through-line
The ideas multiple speakers independently converged on:
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AI ranks entities and consensus, not pages, so off-site signal is the game. Dawood Bukhari made this explicit (Google ranks pages: URLs, keyword match, backlinks; AI ranks entities and builds consensus from what the web repeatedly says). Brian Kato said the same from the paid/guerrilla side ("there is no number one ranking anymore"; search "assembles answers" and you "get selected," not ranked). Brian Winum's whole "Brand. Authority. Data." thesis runs on the same belief that earned authority signals, not on-page work alone, drive AI inclusion.
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Earned media and digital PR are the engine of AI visibility. Bukhari put a number on it (85% of AI brand mentions come from earned media, not brand-owned content; the two strongest tactics are data-led PR and HARO-style expert commentary). The unidentified premium-PR operator in the Kato/Kurtz session argued the same from the supply side: cheap budget PR gets you links and citations but not AI inclusion, because the sites are not authoritative enough. Winum likewise leans on listicles, roundups, advertorials, research reports, and press releases as his off-page authority manufacturing.
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Volume, spread, and repetition beat one strong asset. Bukhari's three levers (more mentions than competitors, spread across many unique domains, authority distribution) match Kato's Pillar 4 almost word for word: "1 page = weak, 50 mentions = signal, 500 = dominance." Winum's "spam the shit out of" listicles and PBN/multisite syndication is the gray-hat version of the same volume logic.
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Consistent entity definition: who you are, who you serve, what you solve. Bukhari's three defining questions, Kato's Pillar 1 (entity lock-in: same name, services, descriptors everywhere), and Winum's custom-header "AI elevator pitch" (who you are, what you do, where you do it) are the same instruction. All three credited or echoed prior speakers on the elevator-pitch framing (Winum credits "Maria"; Kato credits "Marlena"; surnames not given in these notes).
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Co-occurrence: bind your brand to the problem it solves. Bukhari's C in NARC (brand must coexist with the problem it solves, alongside industry entities) is Kato's Pillar 3 (co-occurrence engineering, forcing entity associations). Bukhari's HARO framing ("you're not building links, you're injecting narrative") is the same move at the mention level.
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Traffic is worthless without conversion, and conversion is a discipline. Chris Morrow built his whole talk on it (marketing is "joining the conversation already happening in the customer's head"; match copy to awareness level). Dan Kurtz monetizes cheap clicks only by routing them through forced-conversion advertorial pages (lift from ~1 to 3 percent direct to ~10 to 13 percent). Chase Buckner's flywheel exists because "agencies that sell only traffic are replaceable"; the value is in nurture/close speed. Even Bukhari noted AI traffic is high-intent and converts because the user has already decided.
Tactics & playbook
Concrete, do-this items pulled from the talks:
Earn the mentions (Dawood Bukhari):
- Score every PR story idea on the ten-point Viral Readiness Scorecard (Emotion, Sharing, Novelty, Credibility, Hook, Timing, Visuals, Remix, Journalist Ease, Snowball) before research, design, or outreach; require a minimum of 8 passes and no more than 1 fail.
- Build one national dataset, then split it into local angles (a top-10-states study becomes 10 state stories sent to journalists in each state); local angles get picked up most and even earn local TV video mentions. Target at least one video mention per ten links.
- Make the journalist's job take under fifteen minutes: ship the original dataset, clear methodology, three-plus quotable stats with specific numbers (not ranges), downloadable visuals (one map/graph that explains the story in ~5 seconds on mobile), and a pre-written narrative with two expert quotes.
- Use credible public data sources (he cited BLS, Bureau of Transportation Statistics, State Traffic Safety Information) so "trust friction disappears."
- Run HARO as narrative injection, but only answer questions in the client's relevant niches plus a few general categories; scattering answers across unrelated niches hurts AI visibility.
- Re-wave one dataset into new narratives (Most Unstable Job Markets, then Most Stable) instead of always collecting new data.
Manufacture the authority signals (Brian Winum):
- Over-invest in an llms.txt file stack (custom header "AI elevator pitch," validation footer, sub-directory files per service/location, plus separate FAQ, glossary, and review files) rather than one default file.
- Build off-page authority via listicles/awards, AI-written interviews, expert roundups, advertorials, research reports, and press releases; he is candid that much of this is published on his own PBNs and networks.
- Stake and defend authorship (DMCA badge, Wayback Machine API archiving into schema, blockchain timestamping) and measure AI training presence with Common Crawl (PageRank, harmonic centrality). Note: these tactics are deliberately gray-hat.
Saturate the SERP and AI answer (Brian Kato):
- Run a 48-hour distribution sprint: 5 PR placements, 20 social posts, 10 citations, 1 Reddit thread, 1 YouTube video, all reinforcing the same entity.
- Build links to your social profiles, not just your money site ("link fortification" = tiered link building; few people link to their own Twitter/YouTube). Note the friction here with Joy/Buckner below.
- Stand up a Claude "Board of Directors" of agent personas to mass-produce strategy decks and geo-grid keyword spreadsheets (he sells the decks for $2,500 to $3,000). Always keep a human in the loop.
Buy cheap attention and force the conversion (Dan Kurtz):
- Use In-Page Push ads (unblockable styled-HTML notifications) on networks like Roller Ads ($50 min deposit) and MyBid ($100 min), starting at $5/day; he reports clicks as cheap as half a cent.
- Never send cold push traffic direct to an offer; route through an advertorial "news" page hosted on GitHub/Cloudflare Pages on a matching purchased domain, with menu and footer disabled so only your offers are clickable.
- Newsjack Google Trends: export Trending Now (last 4 hours) as CSV, run through a Claude "Trend Brief Writer" agent to pick an angle, generate the landing page with ad slots pre-defined.
- Adapt to local lead gen (a state-specific storm/roof "preparedness" page with click-to-call or a name/email/phone opt-in wired to a CRM). Same method for AC, attorneys, dietitians.
- Cap clicks per zone (e.g., 100 per zone) so one publisher cluster does not drain budget; zone optimization is the biggest profit lever. Bid ladder: CPC, then Smart CPC, then CPA goal once you have conversions.
Make the click convert (Chris Morrow):
- Map the customer's awareness level (Gene Schwartz's five stages: unaware, problem aware, solution aware, product aware, most aware) and target only one or two levels at a time; copy cannot be relevant to all five at once.
- Feed AI extreme business context before expecting useful output; AI is "dumb" without it.
- For most Facebook ad creative, use a single static image with one to two lines of short text over UGC video; video multiplies "click depth" and usually raises cost per lead (his diagnosis predicted a drop from ~$700 to ~$30 per lead for one attendee).
- Reverse-engineer working funnels via Meta Ad Library and Google Ads Transparency Center, but build from research (avatar, pain, awareness, intent) because most competitor funnels do not actually work.
- Size the VSL to the offer: a $10K package might need a 40-minute VSL; a re-engagement booking VSL is 3 to 5 minutes. Use a VSL gate to qualify before the click when you want quality over volume.
Close the loop fast (Chase Buckner):
- Beat the five-minute lead-response shot clock; the average human response across his platform is 3 hours 26 minutes, so use AI chatbots and voice AI to answer the ~53% of calls that go unanswered.
- Capture every lead into a CRM (not spreadsheets), add a trackable/textable number (use the Google Business Profile "Chat" field for a search-preview chat button), and a chat widget that redirects into SMS/WhatsApp.
- Run reactivation campaigns to the database with conversation-starters, not just promos; SMS open rate (~98%) far beats email (~20%).
- Systematize reviews and referrals (automated review requests, AI review replies seeded with keywords, explicit "do you know other owners" recommendation asks).
Tensions & disagreements
Where the speakers genuinely pull against each other:
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Cheap PR volume vs premium authority. Brian Winum's playbook leans on spamming listicles and self-owned PBN/press-release networks at scale. The unidentified premium-PR operator (name not given) in the Kato/Kurtz session argued the opposite: budget PBN news networks (releases at $20 to $100) get links and citations but not AI visibility, because the sites lack authority, and cheap services devalue a premium brand. Dawood Bukhari sits in the middle: he wants volume (more mentions than competitors) but insists on spread across high-quality domains and warns LLMs will soon weigh source quality.
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Quality vs quantity within digital PR. Bukhari himself holds both positions depending on the goal: his HR-software case study chased volume (140-plus placements), while his personal-injury case study chased quality (~30 placements, average DR ~78) because "LLMs weigh authority." So even within one speaker, the volume-vs-authority answer is "it depends on whether you already have AI citations."
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Where to point your links. Brian Kato pushes building links to your social profiles and many surfaces (link fortification, distribution over destination). Kato also references "Joy," who reportedly warned that GBP and organic can be at odds and that you should not "slam all links at your site." These are not fully reconciled in the room; Kato's surface-area-expansion instinct runs slightly against the caution about over-concentrating link signal.
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Build vs buy attention. Dawood Bukhari and Brian Winum invest months earning media and authority (Bukhari says client links go live within 3 months). Dan Kurtz buys attention for half a cent and monetizes a trend within hours. Both claim to drive demand; they disagree implicitly on time horizon, durability, and brand safety (Kurtz's forced-conversion pages and Winum's gray-hat networks are explicitly the opposite of premium brand-building).
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AI output: dumb tool vs autonomous board. Chris Morrow insists AI is "dumb" and near-useless without heavy human-supplied context; Brian Kato runs cascading parallel agent "boards" that debate to consensus and produce sellable strategy. Both add a human-in-the-loop caveat, but they weight how much to trust AI very differently.
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Sell traffic vs sell outcomes. Chase Buckner argues agencies that sell only traffic (classic SEO) are replaceable and should own the conversion/close flywheel. Several SEO-first speakers (Winum, Kato, Bukhari) are still fundamentally in the visibility-and-mentions business. The event did not resolve whether the SEO agency should expand into CRM/close or stay specialist.
Sources (conference sessions)
Conference session references, not pages on this site:
- Dawood Bukhari, Beyond Rankings: Building Brand Visibility in the Age of AI (Day 3)
- Brian Kato & Dan Kurtz, Square Peg SEO and In-Page Push Newsjacking (Day 2)
- Brian Winum, LLM Authority Hacking and Stacking with E-E-A-T (Day 1)
- Chris Morrow, Funnels, Ads, and Marketing Context (Day 3)
- Kyle Roof, Chris Martinez, Chase Buckner, AI-proof SEO, Selling Your Agency, and the Growth Flywheel (Day 1 Part 2)
Related Spearleaf system: getting cited by AI for the entity, E-E-A-T, and AI-citation systems this theme overlaps. Related briefs: AI search visibility, Off-Page links, and AI agents & automation.