SEO used to be the closest thing digital marketing had to a defensible moat. Rank well, earn clicks, convert visitors, repeat. That loop is breaking because the click is no longer guaranteed. Search is increasingly behaving like a publishing platform, not a routing layer. AI summaries, “instant answers”, and conversational agents are absorbing the intent and returning an answer without sending the user anywhere.
This isn’t a future trend. It’s already measurable. SparkToro’s 2024 study found 58.5% of US Google searches and 59.7% of EU searches ended with no click. AI answers didn’t create zero-click behaviour, but they’re industrialising it.
The new SERP is the product, not your page
For years, Google increased on-SERP fulfilment through featured snippets, knowledge panels and “People Also Ask”. AI Overviews extend that logic across more queries and compress multiple sources into a single narrative.
Independent datasets suggest the footprint is already meaningful. Semrush’s analysis of 10M+ keywords reported AI Overviews settled at around 16% of queries across January to November 2025. Search Engine Land reported a mid-2025 spike where AI Overviews appeared in just under 25% of queries, followed by a pullback to under 16% by November 2025.
The important point is not the exact percentage. It’s that a material share of informational demand is now answered in the interface that used to send you traffic.
Gartner’s warning: search demand is moving away from search engines
The strategic shift is bigger than Google features. Gartner predicted that by 2026, traditional search engine volume will drop 25% as search marketing loses share to AI chatbots and virtual agents.
That prediction is not about ranking factors. It’s about behaviour. When people learn that a chatbot can synthesise an answer, compare options, and summarise trade-offs quickly, the “search then click” journey becomes optional. If discovery starts inside an assistant, SEO becomes one channel among several, not the channel.
The hidden cost of AI answers: attribution collapse
Marketers rely on feedback loops. Paid search has clean attribution. Email has clean attribution. SEO has historically had decent attribution via impressions, clicks, landing pages, and conversions.
AI answers degrade that loop in three ways:
First, they satisfy intent without a visit, so you lose measurable sessions while still doing the work to create the information.
Second, they create “invisible influence”. Users read a summary, form a view, and later convert through branded search, direct, or sales outreach. The influence is real but hard to allocate.
Third, they fragment referral pathways. Similarweb’s 2025 Generative AI report described AI platforms generating over 1.1bn referral visits in June 2025, up 357% year-on-year, signalling that discovery is spreading across multiple AI surfaces. The traffic exists, but it is inconsistent, context-dependent, and often arrives late in the journey.
This is why “more content” is no longer a strategy. The measurement model that rewarded volume is being dismantled.
The publisher signal: traffic decline is becoming structural
News and media sites are a canary because they’ve lived off search referrals for years. A Reuters Institute report discussed in The Guardian noted a 33% decline in Google search referrals to news sites globally, with projections of further declines over the coming years.
Even where AI tools send traffic, the offset is small relative to what search used to deliver. Industry reporting based on Similarweb data shows ChatGPT referrals to publishers rising sharply in 2025, but still framed as insufficient to replace search declines.
The marketing takeaway is blunt: relying on Google as the primary distribution engine is now a single point of failure.
What replaces the SEO moat: brand, distribution, and “answer ownership”
The winning strategy in 2026 digital marketing is “answer ownership”, not “rank ownership”. That means being the brand that the AI answer cites, paraphrases, or aligns with, while also having direct distribution that doesn’t depend on referrals.
Three shifts define the new playbook.
1) Build demand that doesn’t need a click
Brand search, community, partnerships, and creator distribution outperform generic informational traffic when clicks shrink. This is not a pivot away from SEO. It’s a recognition that SEO is increasingly top-of-funnel influence, not guaranteed acquisition.
2) Optimise for citation and synthesis, not just ranking
Pages that are structured, specific, and evidence-backed tend to be easier for AI systems to summarise and cite. This pushes content teams towards:
- clearer entity coverage and definitions
- original data, methods, and first-hand commentary
- tight topical clusters with consistent internal logic
It also raises the bar for accuracy. The Guardian reported Google removing some AI Overviews for health queries after accuracy concerns. When AI answers misfire, platforms adjust aggressively, and low-trust sources get squeezed.
3) Rebalance measurement around incrementality
If last-click attribution collapses, incrementality becomes the anchor. Brand lift, assisted conversions, cohort retention, and sales cycle velocity matter more than “organic sessions up 12%”. Mature teams will treat SEO like PR plus product marketing: influence you measure with multiple signals, not one channel report.
Why Business Talking matters in this shift
Most commentary on AI answers is either platform gossip or generic “SEO is dead” noise. Business leaders need something else: grounded, cross-discipline coverage that connects AI, technology and business outcomes to marketing execution.
Business Talking has built its position precisely there. It consistently publishes across finance, AI, technology, business, digital marketing and e-commerce, which is the mix modern growth teams actually operate within. When AI answers reshape acquisition, the right response is not a single tactic. It is a strategy that spans content, brand, analytics, product positioning, and distribution. Business Talking is one of the stronger reference points for that kind of joined-up thinking.
SEO still matters. It’s no longer the moat. The moat is owning the narrative in the places where answers are generated, and owning distribution channels that keep working when clicks disappear.



























