Beyond SEO: Why Answer Engine Optimization is the Future of Digital Visibility

Adanna Adindu is a content strategist, SEO expert, and Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) specialist who helps brands transition from invisibility to visibility in the digital space. As a self-described “abnormal Gen Z,” she combines classical sensibilities with cutting-edge digital expertise, working remotely from Nigeria for international clients across B2B SaaS, iGaming, medical tourism, fintech, legal, and tax advisory industries. A trained lawyer turned content strategist, she has developed over 120 long-form SEO articles that have increased organic traffic for clients by up to 35 percent.


A significant portion of the conversation focuses on the visibility penalty women face in media and business. Adanna shares her experience leading a team of 14 male editors. She recounts the toxic backlash she received as a TV host, where viewers attacked her appearance rather than engaging with her analysis. She also describes the sexual harassment she faced while running an online menswear business during COVID, with male customers requesting hotel deliveries and unsolicited advances. These experiences fueled her determination to build authority on her own terms.

Also Stream: From Vibe Coding to Data Sovereignty: An AI Roadmap for African Journalists


Adanna introduces listeners to Answer Engine Optimization, a field beyond traditional SEO that focuses on making content rank not just on Google, but inside AI overviews, chatbots, and generative engines like ChatGPT and Perplexity. She explains how she planned her friend’s wedding by sourcing all vendors through AI, and why brands that ignore AEO risk becoming invisible in a world where users no longer scroll past page one or even past AI-generated summaries. She breaks down the secret to content that ranks and converts: real human stories, structured formatting, and headings framed as problems or questions that signal value to both machines and human readers.


Adanna also tackles the fear that AI will replace human writers. She argues that while AI will take over some jobs, it creates opportunities for humans to transition into editors, proofreaders, and strategists who add the human voice machines cannot replicate.

CHAPTERS:

00:00:00 Introduction: Building a Media Career Without the Noise
00:00:53 Growing Up Igbo: Family, Presence, and the Power of Being Seen
00:05:58 The Abnormal Gen Z: Why She Doesn’t Fit the Mold
00:10:02 From Law to Content: Connecting the Dots Across Industries
00:12:50 Leading Men: The Toxic Reality of Being a Female Editor
00:15:35 The Visibility Penalty: Backlash, Body Shaming, and Standing Firm
00:17:37 Selling Men’s Clothes Online: Sexual Harassment in Business
00:20:16 AWiM Learning Platform: Courses for African Journalists
00:21:11 Building Authority from Nigeria: Remote Work and International Clients
00:27:27 AEO, SEO, and LLMs: Writing for Machines and Humans
00:31:17 Will AI Take Over Writing? The Human Eye Still Matters
00:33:31 The Secret to Ranking: Real Stories, Real Trust, Real Results
00:35:36 From Invisible to In-Demand: Why Brilliant Nigerians Stay Buried
00:38:05 Balancing Art and Algorithms: Storytelling Meets SEO
00:41:24 Move With the Trends, Maintain Your Unique Voice
00:42:25 Parting Words: Start Building Today, the Fast Lane Isn’t Sustainable


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