# SEO won't die... but SEO experts might not survive AI! February 21, 2026 — Alessandro Caprai --- ## For years, SEO experts have held sway over websites, but now things are about to change... There's a question quietly circulating in the corridors of digital agencies, in marketing professionals' chats, among those who build websites and those who help them get found: *how long before Google optimizes everything on its own, with a single click?* This isn't a rhetorical question. It's one of the most concrete questions the web world should be asking itself today. ### The moment when everything changes We're living through a transitional phase that, like all major transitions, is difficult to recognize from the inside. Those who were in the market when the first CMSs arrived remember well how the "webmasters" of that time looked skeptically at the tools that would automate their work. They didn't believe they would lose relevance. They were wrong. Today history is repeating itself, but faster, more radical, and with a much more powerful protagonist: artificial intelligence. AI has already transformed how we write content, generate images, build code. Now it's raising its sights toward one of the most technical and lucrative corners of digital marketing: Search Engine Optimization. ### What "one-click SEO" means Imagine opening Google Search Console, or a future Google product that doesn't exist yet but could technically already exist, and finding a button. A button that, when pressed, analyzes your site, identifies semantic gaps, rewrites meta tags, suggests content structure, optimizes structured data, re-evaluates keywords based on the latest search trends, and updates everything automatically. Science fiction? Perhaps. But only for a short while. Google already has all the ingredients: indexing data from billions of pages, the world's most advanced language models (Gemini), the infrastructure to analyze and rewrite content in real-time, and, above all, the commercial interest in ensuring that sites appearing in its results are increasingly relevant and well-built. Automated SEO isn't a utopia. It's a product Google could launch tomorrow morning. And that morning would change everything. ### SEO won't die, but it will change its skin Here it's important to make a distinction that many tend to confuse. **SEO as a discipline won't disappear.** Search engine optimization is, in its essence, the attempt to match a site's content with users' search intent. As long as search engines and the users who use them exist, this need will remain. The problem isn't the concept. It's who executes it. **The SEO expert figure, as we know it today, is at risk.** We're talking about a profession that has built itself around very specific skills: keyword analysis, on-page optimization, link building, technical audits, position monitoring. All activities that require time, method, and, until yesterday, human intelligence. Today, tools like Semrush, Ahrefs, and Screaming Frog have already automated much of the analysis. Generative AI is automating content production. The next steps will automate strategy, planning, and continuous optimization. At that point, what's left for the SEO expert to do? ### The parallel with other digital professions This isn't the first time the digital world has experienced this type of shake-up. Web designers from the 2000s saw WordPress emerge and then Webflow. Copywriters saw ChatGPT arrive. Data analysts saw increasingly automated BI tools grow. In all these cases, the profession didn't disappear, but was radically transformed. Those who knew how to evolve gained ground. Those who continued doing the same things in the same way lost relevance, client after client, project after project. The same thing will happen with SEO. The market will no longer need professionals who *execute* mechanical optimizations. It will need people who *understand* the logic behind them, who know how to dialogue with AI tools, who can build content strategies with a comprehensive vision, who understand user behavior even before algorithm behavior. ### AI doesn't think like a user, yet There's an aspect often underestimated in this discussion: AI, however sophisticated, optimizes based on patterns. And patterns from the past don't always anticipate future needs. An experienced SEO professional doesn't just look at keyword search volumes. They understand cultural context, anticipate trends, intercept micro-moments in the customer journey, know the client's sector, and understand what truly drives users' purchasing decisions. These are deeply human skills, difficult to replicate by a system that optimizes statistically. But, and this is a huge "but," these skills are useless if they're isolated. They must be integrated with the ability to guide and correct AI tools, not ignore them. Those who know SEO but don't know how to use AI are, already today, less competitive than those who can use both. ### What SEO experts should do now The answer is uncomfortable but necessary: stop defending the perimeter of your craft and start redefining it. It means learning to use AI as an analysis and production tool, not as a threat. It means shifting from the operational dimension to the strategic one. It means becoming experts not only in ranking, but in how users interact with content in the era of conversational search, AI-generated results, and Google's SGE (Search Generative Experience). The future of SEO is closer to product thinking than to a technical checklist. And those who understand this in advance won't lose relevance, they'll gain it.