Mindset marketing for SEO. Why how people think changes what they click

SEO is no longer just about keywords. Mindset marketing helps you shape content around how people think, and why that changes what they click.

Megan Rudd
8 MIN|April 22, 2025
AI for marketing and product innovation is driving business growth

SEO is changing. Not just because of AI, but because of what AI reveals. As generative search grows, content that used to win clicks now gets summarised, rewritten, or skipped entirely. Keyword match still matters but intent, sentiment, and behaviour matter more. That’s where mindset marketing comes in.

It’s not about demographics or firmographics. It’s about psychographics, how your audience sees the world, what motivates them, what kind of message moves them.

Most SEO strategies still treat everyone like they think the same way. Same keyword, same copy, same CTA. But that’s not how people work. Some want guarantees. Some want growth. Some are afraid of change. Others run toward it. Within a search landscape being reshaped by AI, mindset marketing helps you stay aligned with how people actually think.

In this blog, we’ll look at:

  • the shift from keywords to mindset

  • how fixed vs growth mindsets show up in search behaviour

  • how to spot psychographic patterns in your audience

  • how we’re using this approach at Fifty Five and Five, inside our Real-time SEO service

Because ranking is one thing. Getting chosen is something else entirely.

(If this post has got your engagement bells swaying, you can read more of our thoughts on the future of SEO: Is AI Killing Search?)

 man in bar with silhouette of AI behind him.


SEO used to be about keywords. Now it’s about beliefs

For most of the last decade, SEO success followed a formula. Find the right keyword. Match the search intent. Write a solid page. Optimise the technical basics. Rank.

But that’s not how it works anymore. AI is changing how people interact with search. It’s not just that tools like Google’s AI Overviews are answering questions directly in the SERP. It’s that the underlying model is reshaping which content gets surfaced in the first place.

LLMs work on pattern recognition. They’re trained to reflect not just language but language that feels right to the person searching. That includes sentiment, tone, and emotional alignment — not just clean metadata and matching terms.

So what does that mean for SEO?

It means that writing a helpful page isn’t enough. You need to write a page that feels right for the mindset of the person searching. A page that reflects what they believe, how they see themselves, and what kind of action they’re ready to take.

This is where mindset marketing connects with modern SEO.

We’re not just optimising for queries. We’re optimising for belief systems. Because when an AI model is deciding whether to feature your content — or skip it — those subtle psychological signals matter more than ever.

And this doesn’t just help with visibility. It helps with relevance. When your tone, structure, and message match how the reader sees the world, they’re more likely to read, engage, click, and convert.

This shift isn’t abstract. It’s measurable. We’ve seen it in the content we optimise using Compass SEO. Posts that align with user mindset — cautious vs ambitious, control-seeking vs exploratory — perform better. They get better time on page, stronger click-through rates, and fewer bounces.

Because in a search landscape shaped by AI, the biggest differentiator isn’t your tools. It’s how well you understand the person on the other side of the screen.


Fixed vs growth mindset and how it shows up in content

Psychologists have been talking about fixed and growth mindsets for years. In simple terms: people with a fixed mindset see their abilities as static. People with a growth mindset believe they can develop over time.

That difference shows up in how people read content — and how they respond to your SEO.

Someone with a fixed mindset might search:
“Best CRM for small teams”
They want clarity. They want social proof. They want the safest choice, already validated by others.

Someone with a growth mindset might search:
“How to scale customer success with automation”
They’re looking for possibility. They want to experiment. They’re open to new frameworks, new tools, new ways of working.

Same product. Very different content needs.

This matters more now because AI is shaping which content shows up. If your page is built to match the query but ignores the mindset, you risk falling into a grey zone — too generic to win the click, too cold to hold the reader.

It’s also about tone. Fixed mindset readers tend to respond better to:

  • Clear step-by-step structures

  • Guarantees and comparisons

  • Testimonials that reduce risk

Whereas growth mindset readers connect with:

  • Language about exploration, testing, innovation

  • Examples that show progression or development

  • Strategic frameworks that invite action

And once again, this isn’t just about writing better. It’s about teaching AI systems that your content matches the reader. AI rewards pages that seem to “get” the intent beneath the search. That’s often psychological, not technical.

We’ve started mapping mindset cues to search queries inside Compass SEO — identifying not just what people are asking but how they’re likely to see the world. It’s a work in progress, but early results are promising.

You don’t have to rewrite everything. But if you can tweak a headline, restructure a page, or anchor a message in the right mindset, it could mean the difference between skimmed and clicked.


How to identify psychographic patterns in your ICPs

Most companies build personas around roles. Job title. Industry. Company size. Maybe some pain points. It’s useful, but it doesn’t tell you how someone thinks. It tells you where they sit in the org chart.

Psychographics aim at something else. They look at beliefs, motivations, risk tolerance. Are they trying to avoid mistakes, or chase growth? Are they looking for clear answers, or open to exploring new ideas?

That difference shapes how they search — and how AI interprets their intent.

Let’s say you sell marketing automation software. You’ve got two ICPs:

ICP 1: Olivia, the cautious ops lead

  • Spends hours in spreadsheets

  • Gets blamed when campaigns go wrong

  • Needs to prove ROI fast

ICP 2: Sam, the ambitious growth manager

  • Always testing something

  • Reads case studies for ideas

  • Wants scalable strategies, not templates

Both might search for “email marketing tools,” but they’ll respond to very different content.

The trick is spotting these patterns early. A few ways we do it:

1. Analyse search phrasing Look at how your audience frames queries. Are they asking “what’s the safest,” or “what’s the best way to scale”? Are they looking for top 10 lists, or frameworks and tactics?

2. Mine community language Places like Reddit, Slack groups, and LinkedIn comments are full of signals. See how people talk about your category. Look for verbs: are they testing, struggling, scaling, stuck?

3. Segment site behaviour Growth mindsets tend to click through to frameworks, how-to guides, and resource hubs. Fixed mindsets hover around product pages, pricing, and testimonials. Tools like Hotjar and GA4 help you track what paths different users follow.

4. Run a mindset litmus test Create two variants of the same landing page. One focused on safety, reliability, risk reduction. The other framed around growth, testing, opportunity. See who clicks what.

This isn’t replacing your ICPs. It’s sharpening them.

And it’s increasingly important as AI starts to infer intent not just from queries, but from what it “knows” about users, from behaviour, tone, device, and even time of day.

If your content is tuned to mindset, AI is more likely to flag it as relevant. That means better ranking, better click-through, and better engagement once they land.

A/B testing mindset-aligned copy

The usual A/B tests focus on button colour, headline phrasing, or CTA position. Those matter. But testing mindset alignment goes deeper. It tests what kind of thinking your copy speaks to.

Let’s say you’re writing a headline for a performance management platform. You could test:

Option A (fixed mindset)
“Stop making mistakes in performance reviews”

Option B (growth mindset)
“Start building a high-performance culture”

Same offer. Different framing.

Here’s how to structure these tests:

1. Pick a key page or landing flow
Don’t start on the homepage. Choose a page with clear intent — a product intro, demo signup, or solution page.

2. Map message variants to mindset
Frame version A to address fears, risk, stability. Frame version B to speak to ambition, scale, experimentation.

3. Keep everything else equal
Headlines, hero copy, CTAs — vary only the mindset framing. You want clean data on what drives engagement.

4. Measure real outcomes
Clicks are one thing. But what happens after? Do they read more? Convert? Come back?

5. Let AI do the heavy lifting
Use tools like Google Optimize, Mutiny, or even ChatGPT to generate quick copy variants or rewrite sections to match fixed vs growth perspectives. Faster iteration, faster insights.

Why this matters now

In an AI-first search world, relevance isn’t just about keywords. It’s about how well your content matches the reason behind the search.

AI models infer user intent from search history, device behaviour, location, and even sentiment. If your copy reflects the mindset behind the query, you’re more likely to rank — and more likely to convert.

We’re not saying every page needs two versions. But testing mindset alignment on key conversion paths gives you an edge — not just with readers, but with the machines ranking your content.


How we’re using mindset marketing inside Real-time SEO

At Fifty Five and Five, we’ve started bringing mindset cues into Real-time SEO, our expert-led service powered by Compass SEO, our internal AI platform.

The idea is simple: if people search differently based on mindset, then your content should adapt accordingly.

Here’s how we apply it:

We cluster keywords by psychological framing
Instead of just grouping by topic or intent, we look at phrasing. Queries like “avoid SEO mistakes” or “why am I losing traffic” point to a fixed mindset. Ones like “how to do SEO at scale” or “ways to grow organic traffic” reflect a growth mindset.

These clusters shape the tone and framing of the content that Real-time SEO recommends and updates, using Compass SEO behind the scenes.

We train Compass SEO on brand tone with mindset variants
Some clients lean into reassurance. Others want ambition and innovation. By tagging sample content by mindset type, we help Compass SEO write with the right psychological angle — not just the right keywords.

We prioritise updates based on mindset fit
If a key landing page is framed for stability but the audience is searching from a growth mindset, Real-time SEO flags it. And rewrites it if needed.

We test headlines across both mindsets
Real-time SEO doesn’t just fix technical SEO. It rotates headline variants, tests CTR, and learns which mindset framing gets more engagement, then adapts.

This isn’t theory. It’s part of how we keep our clients’ content aligned with how people think, not just how they search. Mindset-first SEO means we’re not just chasing traffic. We’re meeting intent at a deeper level.

If you’re interested improving your SEO abilities check out our full guide on SEO automation now.

Want SEO that understands what your audience really thinks?

Real-time SEO combines AI-driven optimisation with mindset-aware content strategy. It’s not just faster. It’s smarter. Because when your SEO speaks to how people think, it performs better.

Let’s talk about building a smarter search strategy.
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Content that understands your audience and keeps up with AI

SEO is no longer just about keywords. It’s about intent, behaviour, and mindset. Real-time SEO is our managed service that adapts to how people think and how AI interprets your content.

It’s psychographic-aware. AI-ready. Human at its core.

  • No generic rewrites
  • No surface-level fixes
  • No chasing algorithms

If your SEO strategy isn’t keeping up with the shift, let’s fix that.