Increase Traffic, AI

Blogging in the Age of AI: What’s Changed and What Still Matters for Tourism Brands

Why Blogging Looks Different in 2025

For a long time, blogging worked a certain way: share a few listicles, include your keywords, and Google might reward your efforts with better visibility. That approach helped many small tourism businesses compete online.

But travellers don’t search like that anymore. They’re not typing “Sea Point guest house” into a search bar as often. They’re asking tools like ChatGPT or Google’s AI Overview questions like:

  • “Where should I stay in Cape Town with kids?”
  • “Is Sea Point safe for families?”
  • “Which area in Cape Town has the best views?”
  • “What’s the best lodge near Kruger for a first-time safari?”
  • “Which East African island is better for a honeymoon: Zanzibar or Mauritius?”

And here’s the important part: these tools don’t just look for keywords, they look for answers that sound confident, local, and trustworthy.

Why This Matters for You

This doesn’t mean blogging is dead. Far from it. It means blogging needs a shift in approach.

  • Old way: Write “Top 10 Things To Do in Cape Town” and hope to outrank TripAdvisor.
  • New way: Write “Why Sea Point is one of the best bases for families in Cape Town”, “Why Skukuza makes a great first stop in Kruger National Park”, or “Why Zanzibar is a more laid-back choice than Mauritius for couples”.

That’s the difference. It’s not about tricking search engines. It’s about helping travellers with real questions in plain language.

The Two Types of Blog Posts That Still Work

  1. Discovery blogs: Help people dream and plan. Think “Hidden beaches only locals know about in Cape Town”, “5 reasons to visit Kruger in the green season”, or “Local food to try on your first trip to Zanzibar”.
  2. Stay-intent blogs: Help people decide where to stay. Think “Where families should stay in Cape Town (and why Sea Point makes it easier)”, “Best safari camps for first-timers in Kruger”, or “Where honeymooners should stay in Mauritius vs Zanzibar.”

Both matter. One gets you into the conversation early. The other puts you right where bookings happen.

What About Linking Out?

For years, the advice was “don’t link out, you’ll lose visitors.” In the AI era, it’s different. Outbound links to credible sources (like Cape Town Tourism, SANParks, or official tourism boards in Mauritius or Zanzibar) make your content more trustworthy, both to travellers and to AI tools. Think of it less like sending someone away, and more like adding a footnote that says, “See? You can trust me.”

Springnest’s Guide to Getting Started

  1. Pick One Traveller Question to Answer
    Think of a real question your guests ask you (in emails, at check-in, or on the phone).Examples: “Is Sea Point safe for families?”, “What’s the easiest lodge to reach from Kruger airport?”, “Which East African island is better for diving?”
  2. Write a Blog Post Around That Question
    Use the question (or a natural variation of it) as your blog title. Start your post by answering directly in the first 2–3 sentences.
  3. Structure it Simply
    Break your content into short sections with clear headings.Use bullet points or FAQs if it helps.End with a gentle link to your rooms or offers (“This is why many families choose to stay at our guest house in Sea Point…” or “This is why our lodge is ideal for first-time safari guests in Kruger…”).
  4. Add Trust Signals
    If you reference something official (like a park, transport, or safety guideline), link to the official source. Keep outbound links limited and useful, think footnotes, not distractions.
  5. Cross-Share Your Content
    Repurpose your blog into a short Facebook post, Instagram caption, or email snippet. AI tools don’t only read your website, they sample content from across the web.

The Big Shift to Keep in Mind

Here’s the heart of it:

  • Old blogging = chasing Google with keywords.
  • AI-era blogging = answering travellers’ real questions with authority and personality.

If your content can do that, it has a chance to be pulled into AI search results, building trust and nudging travellers closer to booking with you.

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About Peter Fabricius

Co-Founder at Springnest. I'm a digital designer and online marketing consultant, with global experience in training and strategy development.
  • Cape Town, South Africa