Search is changing faster than most people realize. Not in a "AI is the future" buzzword way. In a real, practical way that affects how your customers find you and whether they ever click through to your website at all.

Let me break down what's going on.

Google Just Admitted There's a Traffic Problem

Google's VP of Product for Search announced a redesign of how links appear inside AI Overviews and AI Mode. On desktop, links now show up in a pop-up when you hover. You see site names, favicons, short descriptions.

That's not a design refresh. That's Google responding to pressure from the SEO community about where the clicks are going.

When AI gives you the answer directly, you don't click anything. That's been the concern for two years now, and Google is finally building features to at least make links more visible inside those AI responses.

It's a step in the right direction. But it doesn't change the underlying shift.

Ads Are Eating Organic Click Share

Here's the part that really matters for businesses: text ads are gaining click share over organic results.

So not only is AI summarizing your content without sending traffic your way, but the clicks that remain are increasingly going to paid placements.

If you're a contractor running a lean marketing budget and your whole strategy has been "rank organically and let the leads come in," that strategy is under more pressure than ever. Not dead. Under pressure.

This is exactly why we talk to our clients about owning multiple touchpoints, not just chasing a single ranking.

ChatGPT Has a Language Problem (That Affects Your Visibility)

This one is interesting. A study analyzed over 10 million prompts and found that when people search in languages other than English, ChatGPT still runs a large share of its background queries in English.

Nearly 78% of non-English search sessions included at least one English-language fan-out query.

For most contractors reading this, that doesn't sound like your problem. Your customers are searching in English. But what this tells us about how these AI systems work matters a lot.

ChatGPT isn't just reading the question you asked. It's rewriting your question behind the scenes into multiple searches, then building an answer from what it finds. That process has bias built into it. Language bias today. Other biases that affect what content gets cited and what gets ignored.

If you want your business to show up in AI-generated answers, you have to understand that the rules aren't the same as traditional search. The AI decides what sources to trust before it even considers relevance signals.

Do You Still Need a Website?

Google's own Search Relations team was asked this directly on a recent episode of their Search Off the Record podcast. Gary Illyes and Martin Splitt spent about 30 minutes on the question and never gave a definitive yes. Give it a listen.

They acknowledged websites have real advantages: you control your data, your monetization, your content. But they didn't argue the open web is irreplaceable.

That should be a wake-up call.

But we have to be honest: a website alone isn't the whole answer anymore. You need visibility where people are actually searching, and increasingly that means AI tools and platforms, not just Google's blue links.

What to Actually Do About It

I'm not going to tell you to panic. The fundamentals of good SEO haven't been thrown out. Solid content, real expertise, a trustworthy site, local signals that matter for contractors... all of that still applies.

But a few things have changed that you need to pay attention to:

Being ranked isn't the same as being cited. AI pulls from sources it deems credible. Authority, consistency, and brand presence across the web matter more than they used to.

Thin content won't cut it. If your pages only answer the headline question, AI has every reason to go somewhere else when a user's search gets more specific.

Track where your leads are actually coming from. Not just Google Analytics. What platforms are sending people to you? Direct traffic you can't explain is often AI referral you're not measuring yet.

Spread your presence. Social profiles, review platforms, industry directories. The data shows that businesses with consistent presence across these platforms are more likely to get cited by AI tools.

The Bottom Line

Search is becoming a conversation, not a list of links. Google, ChatGPT, Perplexity... they're all moving in the same direction. The user asks a question, the AI synthesizes an answer, and maybe, if you've built enough credibility, your business gets mentioned.

For contractors, that means your digital marketing has to be about building a presence people and algorithms trust. Not just a website that ranks for a few keywords.

That's not a new concept. It's just more true now than it was two years ago.

We've been preaching this stuff for a long time. The difference is it's no longer theoretical. It's happening in real time.