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Houston-Based Digital Agency Jeremy McGilvrey Receives 2025 Manifest Award for SEO Excellence

Houston-Based Digital Agency Jeremy McGilvrey Receives 2025 Manifest Award for SEO Excellence

Globe and Mail15-05-2025
Houston, Texas--(Newsfile Corp. - May 15, 2025) - Jeremy McGilvrey, a Houston-based digital marketing agency specializing in conversion-focused strategy and behavioral SEO, has been recognized by The Manifest as a 2025 awardee for outstanding performance in search engine optimization. The Manifest Awards honor the most recommended B2B service providers across the world, based on verified client reviews, long-term performance, and demonstrated market expertise.
This recognition places the Jeremy McGilvrey agency among the top-performing SEO providers globally, not just for technical execution, but for delivering ethical, strategy-first SEO that helps businesses align traffic with trust and long-term results.
"There's no shortcut to sustainable SEO," said Jeremy McGilvrey, founder and CEO of the agency. "This award reflects our commitment to doing it the right way, no tricks, no fluff. Just structure, psychology, and consistent execution that clients can actually measure."
What the Manifest Award Represents
The Manifest, a business data platform owned by Clutch, evaluates SEO firms based on:
Verified, phone-based client testimonials
Measurable results achieved over time
Depth of specialization and quality of execution
Long-term delivery consistency
Overall client experience and service integrity
The agency's inclusion on the 2025 list reflects not just keyword rankings or traffic spikes, but how that traffic turns into business outcomes, leads, sales, and brand equity.
A Behavioral Approach to SEO That Builds Trust-Not Just Traffic
Unlike SEO agencies focused on short-term visibility, Jeremy McGilvrey's team builds systems rooted in digital trust. The agency treats SEO as a long-term engine for growth, built around user behavior, intent, and clarity, not manipulation or algorithm gaming.
Core components of the agency's approach include:
Psychology-based keyword research aligned with real buyer intent
On-page content structured for trust, skimmability, and cognitive flow
Fast-loading, mobile-optimized site architecture that meets Core Web Vitals
Authority content designed to rank and convert simultaneously
White-hat link acquisition through press coverage and content assets
Technical audits to ensure full compliance and page performance
"High traffic doesn't mean high trust," added McGilvrey. "If your SEO doesn't lead to qualified action, it's noise. We build systems that earn both clicks and credibility."
Serving Businesses That Expect More Than Rankings
The agency's SEO clients include SaaS firms, consultants, service providers, and e-commerce companies that value transparency, strategic alignment, and long-term positioning over shortcuts and vanity metrics.
About Jeremy McGilvrey
Jeremy McGilvrey is a Houston-based SEO and digital strategy agency known for its behavior-first approach to search, sales funnel optimization, and conversion-focused design. The agency has served thousands of clients across 30+ industries and has been recognized by Clutch, The Manifest, Forbes, Entrepreneur, and NBC. CEO Jeremy McGilvrey is a Harvard-educated strategist and multiple Two Comma Club Award recipient.
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Prediction: This Unstoppable Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Will Join Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, and Alphabet in the $2 Trillion Club by Year's End
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Prediction: This Unstoppable Artificial Intelligence (AI) Stock Will Join Nvidia, Microsoft, Apple, Amazon, and Alphabet in the $2 Trillion Club by Year's End

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U.S.-EU deal sets a 15% tariff on most goods and averts the threat of a trade war with a global shock
U.S.-EU deal sets a 15% tariff on most goods and averts the threat of a trade war with a global shock

CTV News

time18 minutes ago

  • CTV News

U.S.-EU deal sets a 15% tariff on most goods and averts the threat of a trade war with a global shock

U.S. President Donald Trump and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen shake hands after reaching a trade deal at the Trump Turnberry golf course in Turnberry, Scotland Sunday, July 27, 2025. (AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin) EDINBURGH, Scotland — The United States and the European Union agreed on Sunday to a trade framework setting a 15% tariff on most goods, staving off -- at least for now -- far higher imports on both sides that might have sent shockwaves through economies around the globe. The sweeping announcement came after President Donald Trump and European Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen met briefly at Trump's Turnberry golf course in Scotland. Their private sit-down culminated months of bargaining, with the White House deadline Friday nearing for imposing punishing tariffs on the EU's 27-member countries. 'It was a very interesting negotiation. I think it's going to be great for both parties,' Trump said. 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Financial crime loopholes in U.S. stablecoin law offer a cautionary tale for Canada
Financial crime loopholes in U.S. stablecoin law offer a cautionary tale for Canada

Globe and Mail

time3 hours ago

  • Globe and Mail

Financial crime loopholes in U.S. stablecoin law offer a cautionary tale for Canada

Hoopla over America's new stablecoin law is fuelling fears that Canada is missing out on the latest cryptocurrency boom. The Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act, or the Genius Act, was signed into law by President Donald Trump last week, creating a regulatory framework for stablecoins pegged to the U.S. dollar. (Stablecoins are cryptocurrencies that have values tied to another form of currency or financial asset to maintain steady prices.) A related bill, the Digital Asset Market Clarity Act, advanced to the U.S. Senate. The Clarity Act for short, it proposes to divvy up regulatory oversight for virtual assets between the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The crypto irony: Trump's new laws for stablecoins will only reinforce U.S. dollar dominance At first blush, the U.S. government's 'crypto week' was a resounding success because those two pieces of legislation are helping digital assets go mainstream south of the border. But anti-corruption groups, including Transparency International U.S., are warning the Genius Act and the Clarity Act include loopholes for money laundering and sanctions evasion, a forewarning for other countries, including Canada, as they vie for leadership in the US$5.7-billion global digital asset economy. 'To other countries, I would encourage lawmakers to actually take a risk-based approach and take into consideration that we have a global economy,' said Gary Kalman, executive director of Transparency International U.S., in an interview on Thursday. As Mr. Kalman points out, crypto is not a typical brick-and-mortar business and it carries a higher risk for illicit finance. That's because it is relatively easy to set up offshore crypto-issuing companies that sell into other countries without having a physical presence in those jurisdictions, he said. 'That is the type of risk analysis we would urge other countries to consider when moving forward with legislation,' he added. Transparency International U.S., the Free Russia Foundation, the Financial Accountability and Corporate Transparency Coalition and the Hudson Institute's Kleptocracy Initiative offer a sobering analysis of America's signature stablecoin legislation. 'The risks are real and urgent. Iran, North Korea and Russia have turned to cryptocurrency and stablecoins to bypass international sanctions and move illicit funds,' the anti-corruption groups state in a joint letter to top U.S. congressional leaders, including the Speaker of the House of Representatives Mike Johnson. 'If the U.S. does not close the loopholes that can be exploited by these actors, the financial architecture advanced in GENIUS and CLARITY will further accelerate the growth of opaque and lawless financial networks.' Specifically, the groups outlined four key problems with the two pieces of legislation. The first involves the Genius Act's differential treatment of stablecoin issuers registered in the United States versus those based in foreign or offshore jurisdictions. Under the law, foreign stablecoin issuers, such as Tether, the world's largest stablecoin, are able to participate in U.S. markets via decentralized exchanges and peer-to-peer transfers even if they don't register, the groups say. The U.S. Treasury, meanwhile, has the latitude to provide exemptions to foreign issuers, allowing them to participate in centralized exchanges after the expiration of a three-year grace period. As a result, foreign issuers will not receive proper regulatory oversight. A second problem involves the Genius Act's failure to impose anti-money-laundering (AML) and anti-terrorist-financing obligations on secondary-market participants, including digital asset exchanges, custodians and brokers. 'The result is a bill that affirms the status quo while ignoring how kleptocrats, terrorists and other criminal actors access and move digital assets,' states the letter. 'Further, GENIUS weakens compliance by stating that issuers must follow AML rules, only 'as applicable' – a vague and unenforceable standard.' A third weakness involves glaring gaps in sanctions enforcement. Notably, the Genius Act does not apply to anonymizing technologies, such as mixers, and other intermediaries that obscure funding sources, the groups say. The Clarity Act, meanwhile, overlooks sanctions evasion entirely even though digital assets have become a favoured tool of criminals to sidestep economic restrictions. Lastly, exemptions for decentralized services and platforms under the Genius Act, coupled with the Clarity Act's failure to require ownership disclosures from all market participants, will frustrate enforcement of those laws, according to the groups. We won't let Americans buy our biggest bank. Why let them buy our biggest crypto firm? Canada, meanwhile, is facing mounting calls to create its own comprehensive national strategy for crypto, including stablecoins. 'Stablecoins are reshaping global finance, but Canada is still on the sidelines,' states a new report by Western University's Ivey Business School. 'While other countries use them to strengthen payments and attract investment, Canada lacks a homegrown alternative tied to its currency.' 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