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From BGE to “Launch to $10K”, Enfroy’s strategic shift signals the end of SEO-first blogging

ByJohn Dawson Updated onNovember 9, 2025
Reading Time: 4 minutes

This article started as a review of Adam Enfroy’s Blog Growth Engine (BGE). It reflected my scepticism about influencer courses that still followed a pre-AI web strategy: long-form, keyword-targeted posts and aggressive link building to raise authority.

Fast forward a few months: BGE has effectively been retired and rebranded as AI Income Blueprint. The BGE domain now functions as an 80-minute free masterclass lead magnet. AI Income Blueprint likewise leads with a free masterclass opt-in, with an enrol page deeper in the site. Meanwhile, Enfroy’s homepage pushes a Free Income Launch Plan that funnels to Launch to $10K.

Launch to $10K reuses BGE’s language and testimonials, but leaves behind the blog-first, affiliate model. Instead, it steers beginners towards selling packaged content services to local businesses.

This format looks short lived. “A calm, quiet path to $10k per month”, as is advertised, is a strong promise in a crowded, fast-moving market. Once the same prompts and templates flood the market, prices will slide and the path to $10k will fade.

Screenshot of Adam Enfroy's BGE video on the BGE homepage.

BlogGrowthEngine.com homepage (accessed August 2025). Detail showing the presentation video.


Enfroy’s take on the 2025 blogging landscape

In recent content, Enfroy acknowledged the impact of Google’s March 2024 core and spam updates, and the wider shift in search behaviour with AI Overviews. He suggested:

  • Narrowing your niche to avoid giant competitors.
  • Paying for backlinks as guest posting gets harder and more commercialised.
  • Diversifying traffic beyond SEO into email, social ads, and multiple platforms (Adam now explicitly advises incorporating social media ads alongside organic traffic and email marketing to reduce reliance on Google).
  • Accepting it could take several years to monetise without major investment

In other words, running a commercial website today is indistinguishable from running any other business: you need real distribution, partnerships, budget, compliance, and profit discipline, not just posts and links.

Is link-building still an effective path to generate traffic?

Adam’s preferred route for faster results involved structured outreach, partnerships, and sometimes significant paid link investment. But link-building as an SEO lever is now weaker, riskier, and more expensive than it used to be:

  • Google has explicitly de-emphasised links in documentation and guidance, and spam/paid patterns are more likely to be ignored or penalised.
  • AI Overviews and rising zero-click behavior mean fewer users click through from informational queries, so the ROI of ranking-by-links alone is lower.
  • Compliance risk is high if money, link swaps, or scaled schemes are involved. Google’s 2024–2025 spam updates target manipulative patterns more aggressively.

AI estimates: the probability of success for a new/low-authority blog in 12 months purely via link-driven SEO is ~10–20% if you have real PR stories and a proactive, strategic role. But only single digits if it’s mostly paid links or swaps. If executed as genuine PR that earns coverage and sends referrals, traffic success rises to ~25–40% because you’re not relying on Google alone.

And content-building?

Content-building alone is slower and, in a world of AI Overviews and zero-click search, delivers less Google traffic per ranking than before. As with link-building, it can still work but only when it creates real demand and referral traffic beyond Google.

Ranking power still matters, but each ranking is worth less traffic on many queries. Without distribution or an existing audience, it now takes even longer to get any traffic.

AI estimates: probability of success for a new blog via content alone aimed at Google in 12 months, is about ~5–15% to reach meaningful organic traffic. If you pair content with distribution (social, newsletters, communities) and treat Google as just one input, success odds can improve to ~25–40%.


Final thoughts

Commercial blogging is rarely a standalone model anymore. Treat blogging as the media arm of a real business. Start with a clear offer and a specific customer, then use content to support sales and proof. Build distribution you own. Links are a by-product of relevance and relationships, not a target. Rankings help, but value is created in conversations and delivery.

Influencer courses do not confer a special edge. Evaluate them like any other marketing product: buy only if a specific module helps you execute your plan faster or better, and ignore the rest.


🎧

Prefer to listen? This topic is also explored in one of my podcast episodes:


Sources:

  • GrowthEngine.blog: Blog Growth Engine Review 2025
    Breakdown of the 13-phase curriculum, including updates like AI modules and bonuses.
  • Blog Growth Engine (Official Site): Testimonials Page
    Collection of student success stories, including case studies of bloggers scaling from zero to $10K+ months.
  • Community feedback (Reddit, etc.)

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