What Google’s AI Mode Means for Search Traffic and Brands

Editor’s Note: Google launched “AI Mode,” a chatbot-style interface embedded into its apps, at its annual developers conference this week. The new feature stands to alter the search landscape even further, requiring brands to shift from optimizing for search to optimizing for audiences. Chief Marketer Network publication PRNEWS has the story; an excerpt is below.

This week at Google I/O, the annual Google developers’ conference, the tech giant made a bold statement: AI is no longer an experiment in search—it IS search.

Google leadership unveiled the general rollout of AI Mode, a chatbot-style interface now embedded into Google’s apps. AI Mode seeks to compete with ChatGPT search, and can handle complex, multi-part questions and provide answers through Google’s vast web index, location data and even live feeds like weather or stock prices.

According to Fast Company, the rollout will begin this summer, and AI Mode will also gain agent capabilities, including search and tasks for booking reservations or buying concert tickets.

As Google’s Head of Search Liz Reid explained, this isn’t a side project—it’s a preview of Google search’s future.

How Brands Will Need to Pivot

This is big news for brands that depend on search traffic, as AI results pick only a few sites to reference when providing answers. Those answers show up at the top of search results, leaving web pages below—and leaving them behind. Codeword’s VP and Head of Strategy, Jordan Leschinsky, has been counseling clients on the value of SEO in the age of AI search. She’s advising how to win with the “AI Visibility Triangle: Content, Comms, and Community.”

“People spent years just saying “Google it” to mean search it,” Leschinsky says. “With the AI mode just announced at I/O, “Google it” means… so much more. It can mean find it, source it, research it, answer it, create it, do it, brainstorm it, track it and more.”

She says search is no longer just an index for a brand’s web pages, it’s a brand awareness and engagement platform.

“In a world where Google Search has thrown out the rule book, [traditional] SEO rules no longer apply,” she states. “Marketers need to stop optimizing for search, and start optimizing for audiences if they want to avoid being left in the dark (p)ages.”

To read the full story, head to PRNEWS.