Tea Time SEO: Ultimate Guide to Content Strategy - Jason Barnard as Speaker, with Hugo Whittaker and Dan Saunders
The Tea Time SEO session from the Ultimate SEO Guide series brought together three experienced practitioners - Hugo Whittaker, Jason Barnard, and Dan Saunders - for a focused, online discussion on one of the most persistently misunderstood areas of search marketing: content strategy.
Hosted by SEO Jo Blogs in collaboration with Carrie Shepherd (Authoritas), the webinar was conducted entirely online and designed as a practical, experience-led conversation rather than a theoretical lecture. Across ecommerce, blogging, and local SEO, the speakers collectively repositioned content strategy not as a publishing activity, but as a coordinated system aligned with user intent, business outcomes, and real-world constraints.
Ecommerce Content Strategy in a Changing Landscape - Hugo Whittaker
Hugo Whittaker opened the session by grounding content strategy in the evolving realities of ecommerce. As online shopping replaces in-store experiences, content must now perform the role of salesperson, demonstrator, and reassurance mechanism all at once.
Whittaker highlighted image SEO as a consistently undervalued growth lever. With Google Images representing a significant portion of the search ecosystem, well-optimised imagery can deliver high-intent traffic that many competitors overlook. However, optimisation goes beyond technical basics such as file names and alt text. Lifestyle imagery, multiple product angles, and video content increasingly function as critical user experience elements that support trust and conversion.
He positioned category pages as the true backbone of ecommerce SEO. These pages target high-value commercial queries and require a careful balance: enough depth to signal relevance and authority, without becoming bloated or blog-like. Using large retailer examples, Whittaker demonstrated how removing or weakening category content can directly harm visibility, while well-structured content placed both above and below the fold supports users and search engines simultaneously.
To close, he addressed the misconception that blogs no longer matter for ecommerce. Data from a fashion retail study showed that sites with active blogs consistently outperformed those without. While blog traffic may not convert immediately, it plays a vital role in brand awareness, authority building, and long-term demand generation.
Rethinking the Blog as a Strategy Engine - Jason Barnard
Jason Barnard reframed blogging entirely, arguing that most content strategies fail because they start with topics rather than audiences.
Barnard challenged the instinct-driven approach to content creation, emphasizing that content should never be written simply because a brand wants to say something. Instead, it should be designed around who the content is for, what problem it solves, and what outcome it supports.
He proposed organising content around real user questions, drawn from sources such as Google Search Console, keyword data, customer support conversations, and sales interactions. Even when a piece of content is not explicitly framed as a question, Barnard stressed that effective content always answers one - mirroring how search engines themselves function.
One of his most distinctive contributions was the idea of distribution before publication. Rather than treating the blog as the starting point, Barnard argued that primary content should be created where the audience already exists - on YouTube, LinkedIn, podcasts, forums, or external publications. That content is then structured and consolidated on the website as a central hub.
In this model, the blog becomes a repository of proven, externally validated content, rather than an isolated publishing channel. This approach strengthens internal structure, supports richer SERP features, and naturally attracts links and engagement.
Local Content as a Revenue Driver - Dan Saunders
Dan Saunders brought a performance-focused perspective, centring the discussion on local content and measurable business impact.
He proposed a pragmatic rule: assess how much revenue comes from a defined local radius, then invest content effort proportionally. For some businesses, local visibility drives nearly all revenue; for others, it represents a smaller but still valuable opportunity. Content investment, he argued, should reflect that reality.
Saunders stressed that local content only works when rooted in research before writing. Understanding why customers choose one business over another, what questions they ask, and what problems they need solved is essential. While traditional offline research has become more difficult, analytics, paid search data, customer feedback, and existing interactions provide reliable insight.
At the hyper-local level, competition is often thinner, making optimisation more achievable when executed correctly. By targeting neighbourhoods, districts, or postcodes, businesses can generate high conversion rates despite lower search volumes. Saunders emphasized the importance of unique, locally relevant content that reflects how customers actually think and search.
He also highlighted Google Business Profiles and social platforms as essential extensions of local content strategy. Used intentionally, these channels reinforce credibility, surface user-generated content, and signal real-world presence to both users and search engines.
Content as a System
Across ecommerce, blogging, and local SEO, the Tea Time SEO session reinforced a single unifying principle: content strategy succeeds when treated as a system rather than a publishing schedule.
The speakers collectively demonstrated that effective content is built on real user needs, aligned with business objectives, and designed to function across platforms. When structured intentionally, content becomes a long-term asset that supports visibility, trust, and revenue - rather than a series of disconnected articles chasing short-term rankings.
Event type: Online webinar
Series: Tea Time SEO (Ultimate SEO Guide)
Host: SEO Joe Blogs, with Carrie Shepherd (Authoritas)
Speakers: Hugo Whittaker, Jason Barnard, Dan Saunders