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BRANDING

How OpenAI Rewrote the Rules: A Brand Story

Dr. Peter J. Meyers

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Dr. Peter J. Meyers

How OpenAI Rewrote the Rules: A Brand Story

If you hadn’t heard of OpenAI before November, you probably have now. Their story has just about everything — corporate intrigue, betrayal (probably), killer robots (potentially), and even ninjas (allegedly) (at least that’s what some people are saying) (mostly me).

Although OpenAI was founded at the end of 2015, they were a relatively unknown company until the launch of their flagship product, ChatGPT, in December 2022 (just 11 months ago):

Graph of OpenAI searches from Google Trends showing spike in December 2022.

Interest in the search term 'OpenAI' displayed via Google Trends

This meteoric rise is also reflected in our Brand AuthorityTM score for openai.com:

Image showing Brand Authority score for openai.com

Brand Authority score for openai.com, available in the Domain Overview tool in Moz Pro

Big brands can take a long time to build (and occasionally moments to derail, in the case of X), and these numbers upend the way we think about brand-building. A Brand Authority of 92 puts OpenAI in the enviable neighborhood of much longer-lived brands like Bank of America, ESPN, and even the United States Postal Service.

However you feel about OpenAI’s recent drama, I believe their story challenges the way we think about the interplay of brand and SEO and how keywords — especially so-called “head” keywords — drive traffic.

Playing by the SEO rules

Brand Authority reflects real search traffic, so how did OpenAI capture that traffic? From a traditional keyword research perspective, we might start by looking at broad keywords relevant to OpenAI’s business, like “ai chatbot,” “chatbot,” or even “chat.”

The naive assumption is that these keywords are likely to drive the most traffic. So, let’s take a look at these three “head” keywords (leaving some space for a bit of a surprise):

Ranking non-brand keywords, by volume, including 'chat' and 'chatbot'.

This is an oversimplification, of course, and we’d ideally explore a wide range of keywords ( including long-tail keywords). The bar and number represent the potential traffic for each of these keywords, which is solid, but let’s take a look at the Google results for “chat”:

Screenshot of Google ranking for 'chat', including Knowledge Panel.

While OpenAI is ranking 2nd in my browser, you can see that the results are a bit ambiguous, including links to Google Chat, Google Play, and a generic Knowledge Panel for “online chat.” It’s hard to say what someone searching for “chat” really wants. While the potential search volume is attractive, this may be little more than a vanity ranking.

Rewriting the rule book

Let’s fill in the blanks on that chart above. The remaining four keywords are all brand/product keywords, and their volume relative to the “head” terms may surprise you:

Ranking brand and non-brand keywords, by volume. Brand keywords eclipse non-brand.

Brand terms like “openai” and “dall-e” command respectable traffic, on par with broad terms like “chatbot.” Both common spellings of “chatgpt” obliterate the numbers for searches for “chat” alone, commanding almost 15 Million total potential searches per month!

What’s more, let’s take a look at the Google results page for “chatgpt”:

Screenshot of Google ranking for 'chatgpt', which expanded sitelinks and Brand Panel.

OpenAI captures the top two organic results (due to a subdomain), has sitelinks in the 1st position, captures a branded Knowledge Panel as a known entity, and a “People also ask” box pushes the 3rd organic result below the screen-cut. This is a result where OpenAI/ChatGPT essentially owns page one and captures a massive share of clicks.

The fact that “chat” is a shorter version of either “chatgpt” or “chat gpt” means nothing. As search engines get more sophisticated and people are more willing to use natural language, we can’t naively assume that shorter phrases drive more traffic. People are specifically looking for ChatGPT because they know what they want, and that has a double-edged impact on both search volume and clicks/engagement.

brand authority metric quote from Dr Pete

Making clicks out of nothing at all

What’s even more remarkable is that these two terms driving 15 Million in potential monthly traffic didn’t even exist a year ago. OpenAI didn’t embark on an SEO journey to capture traffic from a competitor — they created this traffic out of thin air and immediately owned it.

I’m not trying to suggest that OpenAI is a typical case, but the extreme brand tilt of their SEO demonstrates that the keywords we think of as being the most attractive may leave out a lot of potential. Millions of people were looking for a product that didn’t exist prior to ChatGPT, and when that need was satisfied, it created an entirely new SEO opportunity.

That’s the power of brand. Search doesn’t start with the algorithm’s response to words in a box or even with the words themselves — it starts with an idea in the searcher’s mind. Strong brands resonate in people’s minds and drive their search demand, intercepting the process in a way that subverts traditional SEO and the competition.

Drive traffic with Brand Authority webinar

In case you missed it, here is the full length webinar available where I run through the importance of Brand Authority in SEO, analyze how brands, like Apple, turn up in the search results, and strategies you can use to build Brand Authority to drive more traffic.

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