

No Hacks: Web Strategy for the AI Age
Slobodan "Sani" Manić
No Hacks is the weekly podcast about website optimisation, SEO, and web strategy in the age of AI search. If you work on websites and want to understand how AI agents, LLMs, and AI-powered search are changing everything, this is your show.Your next million website visitors won't be human. And most websites are completely unprepared. AI agents can't navigate them. LLMs don't cite them. Search engines no longer rank them the same way.Each week we dig into what's breaking, what's working, and what to do about it, covering AI SEO, AI Overviews, agent experience optimisation (AXO), CRO, structured data, and the future of organic search and discovery.Built for SEO professionals, web strategists, developers, and CRO specialists who'd rather adapt early than scramble later.Hosted by Slobodan Manic, consultant and speaker on Agent Experience Optimisation and AI-ready web strategy.New episodes weekly. Subscribe to the companion newsletter at nohacks.co/subscribe
Episodes
Mentioned books

Jun 5, 2025 • 33min
202: Behavioral Design Secrets from YouTube, Google, and Duolingo with Katie Dove
Why don’t users do what they say they’ll do? Why does great UX still fail sometimes? And what do the world’s top companies know about behavior that most of us miss?In this episode, Sani sits down with Katie Dove, behavioral designer at Irrational Labs, to break down the Three B Framework, a powerful behavioral design tool used by teams at Google, YouTube, and Duolingo. They unpack how context shapes decisions, why psychological friction is often invisible, and what it really takes to drive engagement through design.If you work in UX, CRO, product, or marketing, this episode will change how you think about user behavior forever.🔍 What we cover:Why values don’t always predict behavior (and why that’s okay)The Three B Framework: Behavior, Barriers, BenefitsThe difference between logistical and psychological frictionReal-world case studies: Google AdWords, ClassPass, Duolingo, top banksHow to identify the right behavior to optimizeThe psychology of mental models, defaults, and motivationWhy asking users what they want often leads you astrayRapid-fire insights on irrationality, app design, and moreGuest: Katie DoveBehavioral designer and partner at Irrational Labs Katie leads behavioral design projects for companies like Google, YouTube, and leading financial institutions. At Irrational Labs, she helps teams apply behavioral science to real-world digital products and services.🔗 IrrationalLabs.com 🔗 Follow Katie on LinkedInNo Hacks is a podcast about web performance, technical SEO, and the agentic web. Hosted by Slobodan "Sani" Manic.

5 snips
May 29, 2025 • 41min
201: Know Your Customer, Grow Your Brand: Email Marketing Masterclass with Omar Lovert
Omar Lovert, an email marketing expert known for his customer-centric strategies, shares insights on transforming email campaigns through a deep understanding of customers. He highlights the importance of real customer insights over AI-generated content and discusses RFM segmentation to identify valuable users. Listeners learn how to craft tailored marketing messages and enhance retention by focusing on customer behavior. Omar emphasizes human connection in marketing, advocating for personalization in an increasingly automated world.

May 8, 2025 • 13min
200: Magician vs. Conductor: How to Build (and Fix) Products with AI in 2025
Heads-up: I use some salty language. Nothing hateful, just passionate about this topic. Skip if that’s not your vibe.It’s 2 AM, your side-project just went viral, and the signup flow is on fire. Do you keep “vibe-coding” blind prompts, or step up as the conductor who actually knows the score? In this first-ever solo episode, I unpack why “anyone can code with AI” is 2025’s biggest myth and show you how to turn large language models into the ultimate co-pilot instead of a ticking time-bomb.Key TakeawaysIllusions break at scale. Vibe-coding can get you an MVP, but you’ll pay interest when production fires start.Your new super-power isn’t “no knowledge,” it’s “faster knowledge.” LLMs shrink the gap between “I don’t know” and “I can ship.”Learning beats prompting. Prompting is great, prompt-and-probe is better. Use back-and-forth to understand, not just generate.Career moat = curiosity. The people who thrive next year aren’t the ones with the fanciest prompts; they’re the ones who ask better questions and close their gaps daily.7-Day Knowledge-Gap ChallengePick one concept you avoid (CSS Flexbox? Indexing in Postgres?).Spend 15 min/day grilling an LLM: “Explain it like I’m 7… now show real-world code… now debug this snippet…”Log what surprised you, then share your aha momentsCall to ActionTry the challenge. Tag me with your progress by next week.Rate & Review. If this episode saved you from a 2 AM meltdown, drop a ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ on your favorite app.Share. Forward the LinkedIn post or the episode link to one builder who still thinks vibe-coding is a strategy.No Hacks is a podcast about web performance, technical SEO, and the agentic web. Hosted by Slobodan "Sani" Manic.

Apr 27, 2025 • 44min
199: Data Minimalism, Experimentation, and Ethical AI with Matt Gershoff
Matt Gershoff, CEO and Co-founder of Conductrics, dives into the realm of privacy-first experimentation. He shares a quirky story about his journey, including a summer school featuring donkeys in pajamas! The discussion touches on the drawbacks of data hoarding and the necessity of data minimalism. Gershoff emphasizes intentional experimentation and the ethical implications of data practices, urging businesses to focus on meaningful data collection. He also explores the challenges of managing data in the age of AI, promoting thoughtful decision-making.

Apr 22, 2025 • 10min
198: Google Doesn’t Need Your Blog Posts Anymore, Here’s What to Do Instead with Jono Alderson
Join digital strategist Jono Alderson, known for his sharp insights on search and content strategy, as he tackles the future of SEO and content marketing. Jono argues that much of the old content is obsolete, citing Google's evolution towards 'solved query spaces' and zero-click answers. He emphasizes the importance of trust, branding, and human connection in marketing, revealing why unique, expert-driven content is crucial. Surprisingly, he even suggests local radio as a powerful medium to boost your brand in an AI-driven world.

Apr 15, 2025 • 10min
197: Is the Internet Dead? The Rise of Bot-to-Bot Web & the Decline of Human Content with Anne Berlin
In this episode of No Hacks, host Sani is joined by technical SEO strategist Anne Berlin to explore one of the most disturbing and fascinating topics on the web today: the Dead Internet Theory. Is most of what we see online actually created by bots, for bots? What happens when the web becomes a wasteland of AI-generated slop and abandoned digital ruins? Anne draws on her extensive experience analyzing crawl logs, server stats, and digital infrastructure to reveal how bot traffic is outpacing real users, and what that means for the future of human-centric content.If you’ve ever wondered why the web feels “off” these days, this one’s for you.👤 About the Guest: Anne BerlinAnne Berlin is a Lead Product Strategist and Senior Technical SEO at Lumar, with over a decade of experience in digital strategy, enterprise SEO, and content performance optimization. Anne specializes in high-scale technical audits, crawl budget efficiency, and structured data for large websites, including e-commerce and news publishing giants. She’s a passionate advocate for reclaiming the human web and brings a cross-disciplinary lens to digital decay, combining SEO, DevOps, and sustainability insights.She's previously led digital strategy for organizations like Kaplan and the Lupus Foundation of America and holds a Master’s from Georgetown University.⏱️ Timestamps00:00 – What is the Dead Internet Theory?00:24 – The rise of bots: from content creation to consumption01:04 – How bots degrade user experience01:44 – Why most web pages are unread by humans02:25 – From Geocities to AI slop: the lost human web03:06 – Budget cuts and digital burnout04:01 – The hidden energy cost of web inefficiencies05:37 – Cross-functional SEO: solving crawl waste06:33 – One endpoint, a transatlantic flight's worth of carbon07:25 – 60% of web traffic is non-human08:01 – Are we too late to save the web?09:42 – Join the crusade: building a human-led internet✅ Key TakeawaysDead Internet Theory suggests that bots, not humans, dominate the web today—both as content creators and consumers.Anne estimates 60% of web traffic is bot-based, with only 40% appearing human.Many web pages are published without ever being seen by a human, often as part of programmatic SEO.Neglected code and crawl bloat have energy and environmental costs, with one exposed endpoint equating to a transatlantic flight in carbon emissions.The solution lies in cross-training and collaboration across SEO, DevOps, infrastructure, and security to reduce digital inefficiencies and prioritize meaningful content.Anne advocates for a return to a human-first web, where real people matter more than algorithms.No Hacks is a podcast about web performance, technical SEO, and the agentic web. Hosted by Slobodan "Sani" Manic.

Apr 3, 2025 • 37min
196: Growing Smarter, Not Louder: The 1-1-1 Framework for Early-Stage Startups with Ward van Gasteren
Growth doesn’t have to mean being everywhere at once or chasing every shiny new tactic.In this episode of No Hacks, I talk with Ward van Gasteren — one of Europe’s first growth hackers — about how to grow smarter, not louder. Ward shares his go-to method for helping early-stage startups: the 1-1-1 Framework — one audience, one channel, one message.We dig into how founders and product teams can stop spreading themselves too thin, avoid early-stage overwhelm, and finally find traction through focus. Ward explains the difference between growth and traditional marketing, how to approach experimentation, and why most companies waste time on strategies that don’t serve their stage.Whether you’re building a company, a product, or even a podcast — this conversation will help you cut through the noise and grow with clarity.Topics Covered:How to stop doing too much and focus on what worksThe 1-1-1 Framework for early-stage clarityWhy founders waste time on channels that aren’t readyThe role of experimentation beyond A/B testingChoosing the right growth metrics and north starWhy organic social is rarely a growth engineBuilding scalable systems after early tractionAI’s impact on speed (but not necessarily quality)How podcast growth follows the same principles as startup growthAbout the Guest:Ward van Gasteren is a growth consultant and one of Europe’s first professional growth hackers. Through his platform Grow with Ward, he helps early-stage startups create growth strategies that actually work — without burning out in the process.Ward has worked with companies across industries to simplify how they think about growth, run smarter experiments, and scale what’s already working. His 1-1-1 Framework has helped founders build real traction by focusing on the right things — not everything.Timestamps:00:00:00 – What does a growth consultant really do?00:06:07 – Breaking down the 1-1-1 Framework: one audience, one channel, one message00:10:27 – Brand-building vs. selling: when organic social actually helps00:15:30 – Ward’s favorite growth tool (and why he’d ditch GA4)00:20:07 – Growth vs. Marketing: different teams, different goals00:25:08 – How AI tools help with speed, but not necessarily with strategy00:30:24 – Getting honest customer feedback and applying “The Mom Test”00:35:16 – Ward’s growth program and where to follow his workConnect with Ward: → Website: https://growwithward.com → LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/wardvangasteren/No Hacks is a podcast about web performance, technical SEO, and the agentic web. Hosted by Slobodan "Sani" Manic.

Apr 1, 2025 • 9min
195: Winning Buy-In: How to Build a Support Network for Digital Experimentation with Sam Barber
In this discussion, Sam Barber, a senior experimentation specialist, shares insights on driving change through digital experimentation. He emphasizes the importance of building a support network within organizations to win over skeptics. Barber explains effective communication strategies to showcase the value of experimentation beyond mere test results. He introduces the 'force field' method for mapping influence and stresses the significance of aligning with other teams’ goals. His key advice? 'If you don’t shout, they won’t know you exist!'

Mar 27, 2025 • 51min
194: What Go-to-Market Really Means — Early Traction, Smart Systems, and AI with Maja Voje
You’ve probably heard “go-to-market” thrown around like it’s just a product launch. But it’s way more than that — and today’s guest breaks it all down with clarity, energy, and zero fluff.In this episode, I sit down with Maja Voje, an internationally recognized go-to-market strategist who’s worked with over 750 companies, including global giants like Google, Bayer, and Rocket Internet. We unpack what makes GTM actually work, why focus beats scale, how to find your earliest adopters, and how AI is changing everything — fast.Whether you’re building something from scratch or scaling a proven product, this episode will reshape how you think about launching, growing, and repeating success.About the GuestMaja Voje is a globally sought-after go-to-market strategist, best-selling author of GTM Strategist, and founder of Growth Lab. With over a decade of hands-on experience, she’s helped 750+ companies — from early-stage startups to Fortune 500 firms — build repeatable, scalable growth systems.She co-teaches one of the most popular online growth courses (used by teams at Tesla, IBM, and Booking.com), and her GTM templates and playbooks have helped thousands of businesses get to product-market fit faster. Maja is also a keynote speaker and was named Female Role Model of the Year in 2018.Key TakeawaysGo-to-market isn’t just launch day — it’s an ongoing, strategic system.Focus > Scale: Narrow, repeatable systems beat brute force and ad spend.Understand the difference between early customer profile (ECP) and ideal customer profile (ICP).Why AI is a superpower for research, messaging, and GTM — if you use it right.Common GTM mistakes that waste time, money, and team morale.How to avoid "shiny object syndrome" and stay focused on what actually moves the needle.Chapters & Timestamps[00:00:00] Welcome & Episode Start[00:00:15] Maja’s origin story in marketing and startups[00:03:06] The accidental path to growth hacking[00:04:53] What go-to-market actually means[00:08:29] Why GTM is not just a launch[00:10:19] How fast-moving markets force constant GTM updates[00:12:57] First mover advantage vs. fast follower strategy[00:19:39] Why companies resist GTM adaptability[00:25:10] Rapid-fire GTM questions[00:31:25] The role of early adopters and how to find them[00:35:17] Beachhead segment strategy (and WWII analogies)[00:39:23] AI’s impact on go-to-market — good and bad[00:48:04] Creativity, content, and where AI falls short[00:50:43] Where to find more from Maja & closing thoughtsLinks & ResourcesMaja’s Go-To-Market Power Hour TemplateSign up for her newsletterConnect with Maja on LinkedInNo Hacks is a podcast about web performance, technical SEO, and the agentic web. Hosted by Slobodan "Sani" Manic.

Mar 25, 2025 • 9min
193: What Google Analytics Can’t Tell You (But Your Users Will) with Daniël Granja Baltazar
Daniël Granja Baltazar, a qualitative research expert from Vodafone Business, discusses how to uncover the 'why' behind user actions that Google Analytics can't provide. He shares fascinating insights on using user interviews and mini surveys to enhance customer experiences and improve conversion rates. Daniël emphasizes the need for collaboration between sales and marketing teams to leverage qualitative data effectively. With real-life examples, he advocates for proactive research as a means to drive ongoing optimization and better understand user behavior.


