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Japmandeep Ahluwalia Explains Why SEO Is Dead in 2025

by Businessup2date
October 16, 2025
in Business
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SEO Is Dead: Why LLM Optimisation Will Shape the Future of Digital Visibility

By Japmandeep Ahluwalia
#JapmandeepAhluwalia

For nearly three decades, Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) has been the foundation of online visibility. Businesses poured billions into claiming spots on Google’s coveted first page—knowing that slipping to the second page often meant disappearing from the digital landscape.

But that era is coming to an end.

A profound transformation is underway. Consumers are no longer searching in the traditional sense—they are asking. And the answers they receive aren’t coming from search engines but from Artificial Intelligence. In this new landscape, Large Language Model (LLM) Optimisation—not SEO—will determine which businesses, products, and ideas are discovered, trusted, and recommended.

The Decline of Search

According to Statista, more than 1.8 billion people now use AI-powered chatbots and digital assistants in their daily lives. Instead of typing “best mortgage rates in the UK” into Google, users are now asking Alexa or ChatGPT, “Which mortgage is best for me?”

The implications are stark. Google’s long-standing monopoly on discovery is weakening. Ranking high in search results is no longer enough—what truly matters now is whether a brand exists within the memory and processing pathways of AI models.

From Keywords to Knowledge Fabric

Unlike traditional search engines that present ranked lists of links, LLMs generate direct, contextual answers drawn from vast datasets on which they’re trained. This evolution requires businesses to completely rethink what visibility means in the age of AI.

To stay discoverable, information must now live inside AI’s knowledge fabric through:

  • Structured Data: Content must be machine-readable to surface in AI responses.
  • Knowledge Graphs: Inclusion in trusted sources such as Wikidata, Crunchbase, or scientific databases is now critical.
  • Conversational Integration: Brands should embed themselves within chatbots, APIs, and voice assistants.
  • Reputation & Ethics: AI systems are designed to prioritize reliable and unbiased sources—brands lacking credibility may vanish from responses.

“The winners of tomorrow will not be those who chase Google’s algorithm,” says Japmandeep Ahluwalia, Founder of Luxyn Robotics. “They will be those who engineer visibility within AI’s knowledge fabric.”

India: A Digital Democratisation Moment

Nowhere is this shift more significant than in India, where small and medium enterprises (SMEs) contribute nearly 30% of the nation’s GDP (Ministry of MSME, India).

Many of these businesses have struggled to gain visibility through traditional SEO. Yet, LLM Optimisation offers them a once-in-a-generation opportunity to bypass those barriers.

Imagine a Jaipur-based skincare startup competing with global beauty giants for Google rankings—an almost impossible task. However, if that same brand’s information is integrated into AI knowledge systems, it could still be recommended to a consumer in California asking for “affordable ayurvedic skincare.”

“This is a democratising moment for India,” notes Japmandeep Ahluwalia. “By embracing LLM Optimisation, SMEs can take ‘Made in India’ products global—without relying on legacy digital hierarchies.”

The UK: Ahead, But Under Pressure

In contrast, the United Kingdom faces a different challenge—rapid adoption. A PwC report projects that AI could contribute £232 billion to the UK economy by 2030, primarily through productivity gains in sectors like finance, healthcare, law, and education.

Here’s how LLM Optimisation is already reshaping these industries:

  • Finance: Banks and fintech companies are embedding conversational AI into customer journeys. Visibility now depends on what Alexa or ChatGPT recommends, not what Google ranks.
  • Healthcare: NHS pilots use AI to triage patient queries. Private healthcare providers optimised for AI could soon become the first points of contact.
  • Law: Forward-thinking law firms are making their databases accessible to AI. Those who do will dominate when models are asked, “Which are the top arbitration firms in London?”

The UK government’s AI Safety Summit at Bletchley Park (2023) underscored Britain’s ambition to lead global AI governance—but it also highlighted the stakes. British businesses must evolve faster than their international counterparts to stay competitive.

A Redistribution of Global Value

A McKinsey & Company study (2024) estimated that generative AI could add $4.4 trillion annually to the global economy. Yet that value won’t be evenly distributed—it will disproportionately flow to the countries and companies that integrate themselves earliest into the data architectures of AI systems.

For this reason, experts agree: LLM Optimisation is no longer just a marketing strategy—it’s an economic imperative. It will decide which industries and nations capture the largest share of the AI dividend.

A Defining Inflection Point

History offers a clear warning. Companies that ignored the internet in the 1990s vanished. Those that dismissed mobile-first strategies in the 2010s lost entire markets.

The mid-2020s now present a similar crossroads. The shift from search to conversation isn’t on the horizon—it’s already here.

From SEO to LLM Optimisation, the rules of discovery are being rewritten.

“The message is simple,” concludes Japmandeep Ahluwalia. “SEO is dead. The age of LLM Optimisation has arrived.”

Tags: AI adoption in financeAI adoption in healthcareAI adoption in lawAI brand trustAI brand visibilityAI business strategyAI business transformationAI content integrationAI content optimizationAI democratisationAI digital hierarchyAI digital leadershipAI digital revolutionAI discoveryAI economic impactAI ethicsAI for businessAI for SMEsAI for startupsAI future of businessAI global competitivenessAI global trendsAI governanceAI in IndiaAI in marketingAI in UKAI innovationAI knowledge economyAI knowledge fabricAI knowledge integrationAI knowledge networksAI marketing futureAI marketing strategyAI online discoveryAI productivityAI recommendation systemsAI reputation managementAI search engineAI search evolutionAI search replacementAI tech adoptionAI tools for SMEsAI visibilityAI vs SEOAI-driven visibilityAI-powered discoveryAI-powered marketingAI-powered searchconversational AIDigital Marketing Trendsdigital visibility 2025future of SEOglobal AI adoptionJapmandeep Ahluwaliaknowledge graph SEOlarge language modelsLLM optimisationLLM strategySEO is deadstructured data AI
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