By Alex Rivera, Founder of Growth Lab Marketing
As a digital marketer for over a decade, I thought I understood SEO. Then, a single algorithm change in September 2025 forced me to relearn everything. This is the story of how I went from 8,000 visitors a month to over 100,000—and how you can, too.
Last month, my blog had 8,000 monthly visitors. I was doing everything “right”—writing long-form, keyword-optimized content, building backlinks, and posting on social media. It was a slow, grinding process.
Yesterday, I checked my Google Search Console and saw this: 114,683 visitors in the last 30 days from Google Discover alone.
I didn’t spend a dollar on paid ads. I didn’t have a post go viral on TikTok. I simply found a crack in the Google Discover algorithm and created strategic content that the platform couldn’t ignore.
Here’s what changed on September 17, 2025—and the exact, step-by-step playbook I used to exploit it.
For years, Google Discover has been a mysterious, unreliable source of traffic for publishers. You’d see a random spike one day and a complete flatline the next, with no clear explanation.
That all changed on September 17, 2025. Google rolled out its biggest Discover update in years, and it fundamentally changed the game. If you’re still using a 2024 playbook, you are leaving 90% of your potential traffic on the table.
Here are the core changes:
Why this is a game-changer: This means your content strategy can no longer be siloed. My YouTube Shorts are now directly driving traffic to my blog posts via Discover because Google understands that I am the entity connecting them. A multi-platform strategy is no longer optional; it’s essential.
After analyzing dozens of my own articles that took off in Discover, as well as those from other major publishers, a clear pattern emerged. The algorithm rewards a very specific type of content.
High-Performing Discover Content Attributes:
| Element | What Works in Discover | What Fails in Discover | Why It Works |
|---|---|---|---|
| Headline | “How I Accidentally 10X’d My Traffic” (Personal, Outcome-Driven) | “Tips for Increasing Website Traffic” (Generic, Boring) | Emotion, specificity, and a clear “what’s in it for me” for the reader. |
| Images | High-resolution (1200px+) images showing human faces with clear emotion. | Small, low-quality stock photos or brand logos. | The human brain is hardwired to connect with faces. Google knows this and prioritizes it in a visual feed. |
| Topic | A trending topic combined with an evergreen, personal angle (e.g., “My 7-Day Test of the New AI Browser”). | Pure news (too short-lived) or pure evergreen (not timely enough). | The hybrid approach captures the initial trend-based interest and has a longer tail as an evergreen resource. |
| Length | 1,200-1,800 words. | Under 800 words (too thin) or over 3,000 words (too dense for mobile). | This seems to be the “Goldilocks zone”—long enough to be comprehensive but concise enough for a mobile user to skim. |
My Discover Content Recipe:
This is the exact, repeatable process I use for every article I want to push to Discover. For a deeper dive, check out our SEO content optimization guide.
Your content can be perfect, but if your technical setup is wrong, Google Discover will never show it. Here are the must-haves.
The Critical Technical Setup:
| Technical Element | Before My Changes | After My Changes | The Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Featured Image Size | 800px wide | 1600px wide | 3X increase in Discover impressions. Google wants high-res images for its feed. |
| Author Bio | No author box | Detailed author box with photo and credentials | 40% CTR boost. E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) is not just for search; it’s for Discover, too. |
| Meta Tag | Missing | <meta name="robots" content="max-image-preview:large"> | This is the most critical and most-missed tag. It explicitly tells Google it can use your large images in its preview, which is essential for getting clicks. |
On top of these, you must have:
Article or NewsArticle schema markup on your posts.You can’t just write about anything. I’ve found that all successful Discover content falls into one of these three pillars. My current strategy is a mix of all three. Learn more in my content marketing strategy guide.
Pillar 1: Trending Reactions (30% of my content)
Pillar 2: Personal Transformations (40% of my content)
Pillar 3: Controversy / Unpopular Opinions (30% of my content)
Google is very protective of the Discover user experience. Make one of these mistakes, and your site can be instantly and permanently disqualified.
You don’t have to guess what’s working. Google Search Console gives you all the data you need.
The Google Search Console Discover Tab:
In GSC, there’s a dedicated “Discover” performance report. The only metrics that matter are:
What I Track in a Weekly Spreadsheet:
My Scaling System:
The mystery is gone. Getting traffic from Google Discover is no longer a game of chance; it’s a game of strategy. It’s about understanding that Discover is not a search engine—it’s a personalized, mobile-first, visual content feed.
So, tomorrow morning, I want you to do this. This is the exact formula that took my blog from a ghost town to a thriving hub of activity.
That’s it. That is the formula. Stop chasing keywords and start creating content that resonates with people. Google will reward you for it.
This is not a warning about a future threat. This is a debrief of an…
Let's clear the air. The widespread fear that an army of intelligent robots is coming…
Reliance Industries has just announced it will build a colossal 1-gigawatt (GW) AI data centre…
Google has just fired the starting gun on the era of true marketing automation, announcing…
The world of SEO is at a pivotal, make-or-break moment. The comfortable, predictable era of…
Holiday shopping is about to change forever. Forget endless scrolling, comparing prices across a dozen…