Are SEO Metrics Still Enough? How Outset Media Index Helps PR Teams Compare Search and AI Discoverability

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SEO metrics are still important for PR planning, but they are no longer enough on their own. A media placement can support search visibility, referral traffic, backlinks, and domain strength, but PR teams also need to know whether an outlet appears in AI-assisted discovery paths, holds reader attention, and helps stories travel beyond the original publication.

This is where the planning problem has changed. A strong outlet is not only a site with a high domain score. It may also be a publication that receives AI-tool referrals, gets referenced across the web, produces reprints, or keeps readers engaged long enough for the message to land.

Outset Media Index (OMI) is a media intelligence platform that analyzes outlet performance through structured, standardized metrics across nearly 340 media outlets. 

For PR teams, OMI helps compare how different publications support both search visibility and AI-era discoverability.

Are SEO Metrics Still Important in PR Planning?

SEO metrics still matter because media coverage can support how a brand appears in search, how credible a publication looks to search engines, and whether a placement creates useful referral paths.

For PR teams, this is especially relevant when the campaign involves:

  • category education

  • evergreen explainers

  • product pages

  • founder positioning

  • research reports

  • market commentary

  • reputation support

A placement in a publication with stronger search authority may help a brand appear in relevant search environments. Referral traffic can also show whether other websites mention, cite, or link to the outlet.

The issue is that SEO metrics do not explain the full value of a placement. They may show domain strength or web referral behaviour, but they do not always show whether readers engage with the article, whether the story spreads through reprints, or whether the outlet is visible in AI-assisted research.

That is why SEO should be treated as one planning layer, not the whole media decision.

Why AIO Metrics Now Belong in PR Planning

AIO, or AI optimization, matters because more users now discover information through AI tools and answer engines. This changes how PR teams should think about outlet selection.

A publication may not only influence readers directly. It may also influence what AI tools surface, cite, summarize, or use as part of broader research paths. 

For crypto, fintech, and technology brands, this matters because investors, analysts, journalists, partners, customers, and developers often research companies through AI-supported workflows.

In this environment, a placement can have value after the publication date if the outlet contributes to future discovery. That value is difficult to understand through traditional SEO metrics alone.

A PR team should therefore ask two questions:

  1. Can this outlet support search visibility?

  2. Can this outlet support AI-assisted discovery?

The strongest media shortlist usually needs both answers.

Which SEO and AIO Metrics Should PR Teams Track?

OMI gives teams a way to review SEO and AIO signals together. The platform tracks a selected set of 37 metrics across 340+ outlets, using a normalized framework so teams can compare publications more consistently.

Several metrics are especially useful when planning for search and AI discoverability.

LLM Referral Share

LLM Referral Share shows the portion of traffic that comes from AI tools such as ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, Jasper, and others.

For PR teams, this metric helps indicate whether an outlet is already receiving traffic from AI-assisted research paths. A higher LLM Referral Share may suggest that users are arriving after interacting with AI tools, which can matter for campaigns that depend on future discoverability.

This is useful for thought leadership, technical explainers, market education, founder visibility, and category positioning.

Referral Traffic

Referral Traffic shows the share of visitors arriving through links on other websites. A higher number can suggest that a publication is being mentioned, cited, or referenced across the web.

This matters because PR value often extends beyond the article itself. If a publication attracts referral traffic, it may be part of a broader web citation pattern.

Referral Traffic is useful for partnership announcements, research reports, analysis pieces, and campaigns that need wider digital circulation.

DA: Domain Authority

DA, or Domain Authority, shows how trustworthy and influential a website appears to search engines. It is scored from 1 to 100.

DA remains useful because it helps PR teams understand the search-strength layer of a publication. For SEO-supporting campaigns, a higher domain authority may make a placement more valuable as a reference point.

However, DA should not be used alone. A high-DA outlet may still have weak reader engagement, limited reprints, or low AI referral activity.

Reprints

Reprints show the minimum and maximum number of republications from the main news section. This helps measure how far a publication’s news stories travel beyond the original site.

For PR teams, Reprints are important because one placement can create secondary visibility. This can make a campaign more efficient, especially when the goal is to increase reach without placing the same story across many outlets manually.

Reprints also connect SEO and AIO planning. The more a story travels, the more surfaces may exist for search engines, AI tools, and readers to encounter it.

How OMI Helps Combine SEO, AIO, and Engagement Signals

OMI should not be treated as only an SEO tool. It is broader than that.

The platform helps PR teams compare outlet value through multiple dimensions: SEO and AIO signals, engagement behaviour, audience scale, editorial factors, GEO fit, syndication, and overall outlet strength. It also includes 2 scoring frameworks, General Rating and Convenience Rating, to support different planning questions.

This matters because one metric can mislead when used alone.

For example:

  • An outlet may have strong DA but weak Reading Behaviour.

  • Another may have moderate DA but stronger LLM Referral Share.

  • A third may have good Referral Traffic but limited Reprints.

  • Another may support AI discoverability but not reach the right GEO.

OMI helps teams compare these trade-offs in one system. The goal is not to find one universal “best” outlet. The goal is to understand what each outlet can realistically do for the campaign.

When SEO Metrics Should Carry More Weight

SEO metrics should carry more weight when the campaign needs long-term search support.

This may include evergreen articles, educational content, founder profiles, product explainers, market reports, or category pages. In these cases, DA, Referral Traffic, and Reprints can help show whether a placement may support ongoing visibility.

SEO also matters when a brand wants media coverage to support sales, investor research, partner due diligence, or reputation management. If people search the company or category later, strong media references can help shape what they find.

When AIO Metrics Should Carry More Weight

AIO metrics should carry more weight when the campaign needs to be discoverable through AI-supported research.

This is especially relevant for technical, analytical, or category-building campaigns. A crypto infrastructure company, a fintech compliance platform, or a Web3 data provider may need to appear in research paths used by analysts, journalists, investors, and enterprise teams.

In these cases, LLM Referral Share, Reprints, Referral Traffic, and Reading Behaviour may be more useful together than DA alone.

A placement should not only exist. It should be readable, referenceable, and discoverable.

Example: Comparing Three Outlets Before a Campaign

A crypto infrastructure startup is choosing between three publications.

Outlet A has strong DA, but weak Reading Behaviour. It may support SEO value, but it may not be the strongest choice for a complex technical message.

Outlet B has moderate DA, stronger LLM Referral Share, and solid Reprints. It may be better for AI discoverability and category education.

Outlet C has good Referral Traffic but weaker GEO fit. It may support web circulation, but only if the audience market matches the campaign.

The right choice depends on the campaign goal. If the goal is backlink strength, Outlet A may matter. If the goal is AI discoverability, Outlet B may be stronger. If the goal is wider web circulation, Outlet C may be useful, but only with the right audience fit.

This is why PR planning needs a multi-metric view.

Final Take

SEO metrics are still useful, but they no longer explain the full value of a media outlet. PR teams now need to understand how a publication performs across search visibility, AI discoverability, referral activity, reprints, and reader engagement.

OMI helps teams make that comparison with structured metrics such as LLM Referral Share, Referral Traffic, DA, Reprints, Reading Behaviour, and broader outlet scores. In the AI search era, the strongest media plans will not depend on one number. They will match each outlet to the specific visibility outcome the campaign needs.

FAQ

Are SEO metrics still important for PR planning?

Yes. SEO metrics still help PR teams understand domain strength, referral value, and search visibility. They are most useful when combined with AIO, engagement, and distribution metrics.

What is the difference between SEO and AIO in PR?

SEO focuses on search visibility and website authority. AIO focuses on how content may appear in AI-assisted discovery paths, including traffic from tools such as ChatGPT, Gemini, Claude, and others.

What does the LLM Referral Share show?

LLM Referral Share shows the portion of traffic that comes from AI tools. It helps PR teams understand whether an outlet is connected to AI-assisted research behaviour.

Why are Reprints important for PR planning?

Reprints show how far a publication’s stories travel beyond the original site. They can increase distribution, support search visibility, and create more surfaces for discovery.

How does OMI help with SEO and AIO planning?

OMI helps teams compare outlets through structured metrics covering SEO, AIO, engagement, audience, editorial, and distribution signals. This helps teams choose outlets based on campaign goals, not one metric alone.

 

 

 

Disclaimer: This article is provided for informational purposes only. It is not offered or intended to be used as legal, tax, investment, financial, or other advice.

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