Is Google’s AI Killing Clicks or Forcing Smarter SEO?

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • megri
    Administrator

    • Mar 2004
    • 1131

    Is Google’s AI Killing Clicks or Forcing Smarter SEO?

    A new study shows Google’s AI Overviews are cutting CTRs by more than half across both organic and paid results. Being cited in these AI summaries now determines visibility.

    Discussion Prompts:
    • Have you seen a drop in traffic since AIOs launched?
    • How are you adapting your content for AI-driven visibility?
    • Do you think E-E-A-T optimization is the new “ranking factor”?
    • Could this shift make SEO more about authority than algorithms?

    Share your thoughts and data—how are you preparing for the AI-driven search era?

    Parveen K - Forum Administrator
    SEO India - TalkingCity Forum Rules - Webmaster Forum
    Please Do Not Spam Our Forum
  • SwatiSood
    Senior Member

    • Jul 2014
    • 305

    #2
    The impact of Google’s AI Overviews is becoming difficult to ignore. A significant drop in CTRs—across both organic and paid placements—shows that visibility is now tied less to traditional rankings and more to being referenced within AI-generated summaries. This shift is pushing publishers, brands, and agencies to rethink their entire content strategy.

    What seems increasingly clear is that SEO is moving toward an authority-first model. Strong E-E-A-T signals, deeper subject expertise, and highly trustworthy content appear far more influential than simple keyword optimisation. Instead of chasing algorithm shifts, the real challenge now is ensuring your brand becomes a verifiable source that AI systems feel confident citing. It’s a demanding transition, but it may also raise the overall quality standard of search. Those who prioritise depth, accuracy, and genuine expertise will likely benefit most in the AI-driven search landscape.

    Comment

    • Ethan Cole
      Senior Member

      • Aug 2025
      • 124

      #3
      I’ve been analysing this shift since the first wave of AI Overviews rolled out, and the new CTR data confirms what many of us have been seeing quietly in our analytics: Google isn’t just reshaping the SERP — it’s redefining how search distributes attention. AIOs are absolutely absorbing clicks, but they’re also rewarding publishers who approach SEO with a more mature, authority-driven mindset.

      1. Traffic Drops Are Real — but Not Universal
      Across several websites I manage, the impact varies m***ively by query type.
      Informational searches (‘how to’, definitions, broad advice) have seen the steepest declines because AIOs answer these instantly.
      Transactional and location-intent queries haven’t been hit as hard, especially where Google still needs human-authored depth or local signals.
      Brand-specific/unique insights continue to perform fairly steadily.

      So yes, traffic is down in places — sometimes sharply — but it’s not a blanket collapse.

      2. Content Strategy Needs a Hard Reset
      I’ve shifted from traditional keyword-first SEO to what I’d call AI-oriented information architecture. That means:
      • Creating content that answers questions AI cannot summarise fully (examples: data-rich guides, experience-based advice, experts’ commentary, proprietary research).
      • Strengthening topical clusters so AIOs treat my pages as credible contextual nodes.
      • Focusing on formats that AI tends to cite: structured FAQs, concise definitions, and tightly written topical summaries.

      The goal now is to be the source AIOs pull from, not the website users click afterwards.

      3. E-E-A-T Is No Longer Optional — It’s a Survival Layer
      If the old SEO era was about relevance and optimisation, the new one is about trust. Google’s AI systems are leaning heavily on signals tied to authenticity:
      • Verified author profiles
      • Clear sourcing
      • Demonstrated expertise
      • First-hand insights
      • Transparent references

      You can feel this in how often AIOs cite high-authority, experience-backed pages over generic content. E-E-A-T may not be a “ranking factor” in the cl***ic sense, but it is certainly a visibility factor for AI-driven search.

      4. Authority Over Algorithms — Yes, That’s Where We’re Heading
      For years we’ve treated authority as something you “grow” through backlinks, mentions, and topical content. The AI-driven search era changes the emphasis:
      Google seems to prefer established, expert sources because AIOs need reliable, fact-checked material. This elevates:
      • Recognised industry voices
      • Brands with real-world presence
      • Sites with editorial standards
      • Long-term niche publishers

      In other words, the shortcut SEO strategies — m*** content, thin answers, keyword piling — will fade because AIOs don’t reward them.

      5. Preparing for What’s Next
      Here’s what I’m focusing on across all projects:
      Depth over breadth: fewer shallow pages, more high-value guides.
      Experience-first content: personal insights, field data, case-based analysis.
      Optimising for citations: structured paragraphs, definitions, schema, summarised takeaways.
      Brand building: stronger author identity, consistent topical footprint.
      Diversifying traffic: email, socials, communities, direct loyalty — because depending solely on Google is no longer wise.

      The shift feels disruptive, yes, but it’s also pushing the industry toward better content — more human, more trustworthy, more useful.

      Comment

      • Russell
        Senior Member

        • Dec 2012
        • 244

        #4
        I’ve definitely noticed a shift since AI Overviews rolled out — not a complete traffic crash, but a clear dip in clicks on pages that used to perform steadily. For me, the biggest adaptation has been restructuring content to answer questions immediately, using tighter summaries, clearer takeaways, and stronger semantic depth. I do think E-E-A-T is becoming a much bigger deal, almost like the new currency of visibility. Google seems to be rewarding authority, trust signals, and expert-driven content more than ever. This AI-driven era feels less about gaming algorithms and more about proving real value.

        Comment

        • Hayden Kerr
          Senior Member

          • Sep 2025
          • 114

          #5
          Google’s AI isn’t killing clicks—it’s forcing smarter SEO
          Generic content may struggle, but high-quality, intent-driven, and experience-based content will still win. The focus is shifting toward deeper insights, strong branding, EEAT, and real value for users. SEO isn’t dead—it’s evolving, and those who adapt will stay ahead.

          Comment

          • Kathy Lawrence
            Junior Member
            • Sep 2025
            • 13

            #6
            I see Google’s AI less as a click killer and more as a push toward smarter SEO. Yes, quick answers reduce clicks for basic queries, but they also filter out low-intent traffic. Content with real insight, experience, and clear value still earns attention. This shift encourages stronger E-E-A-T, better alignment with user intent, and a focus on quality engagement rather than chasing raw traffic numbers.

            Comment

            Working...