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When Google first introduced AI Overviews, there was no shortage of headlines predicting the end of SEO.
Fast forward to today, and the picture looks rather different.
Yes, AI Overviews are changing how people search. Users are increasingly getting answers directly within Google’s search results, often without clicking through to a website. Alongside this, Google’s AI Mode is making search more conversational, allowing users to ask follow-up questions and explore topics in greater depth.
But while the way people search is changing, the principles behind good SEO haven’t.
Businesses that invest in helpful, trustworthy content are still earning visibility. The difference is that generic content, written simply to rank for keywords, is becoming much easier to ignore.
Rather than asking whether SEO is dead, the better question is this: How should your SEO strategy adapt?
AI Overviews are Google’s AI-generated summaries that appear above traditional search results for selected queries. They’re designed to give users a quick answer while highlighting websites that provide further information.
Google has made it clear that its AI-powered search features are intended to help users discover high-quality content, not replace it.
Google still needs authoritative sources to generate AI Overviews. If anything, businesses that consistently publish accurate, well-researched content have more opportunities to build visibility across different search experiences.
The challenge isn’t whether your content can rank. It’s whether your content deserves to be referenced.
One of the biggest concerns surrounding AI Overviews is the impact on organic traffic. The latest research suggests those concerns are valid. Research from Ahrefs estimates that AI Overviews can reduce click-through rates to the top organic result by around 58%.
At first glance, that figure sounds worrying, but it doesn’t tell the whole story.
SEO has never been about generating traffic for the sake of it. It’s about attracting the right visitors.
If someone finds a quick definition through an AI Overview, they probably weren’t your ideal customer anyway. The people who do click through are often looking for more detailed information, comparisons or expert advice before making a decision.
That means marketers should start looking beyond sessions and rankings alone.
AI has made producing content quicker than ever.
Unfortunately, it’s also made average content easier to spot.
Many websites now publish articles that cover exactly the same points, using almost identical wording. They’re technically accurate but offer very little original insight.
Google has little reason to prioritise content that simply repeats information already available elsewhere.
Instead, ask yourself:
If the answer is no, it’s probably worth revisiting before publishing.
Publishing fewer, better articles is likely to deliver stronger long-term results than producing large volumes of content that adds little value.
One thing AI still can’t replicate is experience. It can summarise Google’s documentation.
It can explain what technical SEO is. What it can’t do is describe how your team managed a complex website migration, increased organic leads through content optimisation or overcame a challenging indexing issue for a client. Those experiences are unique. They’re also exactly the kind of insight that builds trust with readers.
Businesses should look for opportunities to include:
These insights don’t just help readers. They also make your content much harder to replicate.
With so much discussion focused on AI-generated content, it’s easy to overlook the technical foundations of SEO.
Search engines still need to crawl, understand and index your website. That’s why technical SEO remains just as important as ever.
A strong technical foundation includes:
These aren’t new recommendations, but they’re still essential for helping search engines understand your content and present it in the right search experiences.
One of the biggest shifts we’re seeing isn’t just in search behaviour. It’s in how businesses build trust.
Google’s AI systems draw information from sources they consider reliable and authoritative.
That means SEO can no longer operate in isolation.
PR, content marketing, social media, expert commentary and brand awareness all contribute towards how your business is perceived online.
The stronger your reputation becomes, the stronger your chances of appearing across Google’s AI-powered search experiences. In other words, building your brand isn’t separate from SEO. It’s becoming an increasingly important part of it.
If you’re reviewing your SEO strategy, here are five areas worth focusing on.
Review your website for pages that no longer provide value. Update outdated content, consolidate similar pages and remove anything that’s no longer relevant.
Instead of publishing more content, focus on creating articles that answer your audience’s questions in depth. Original insights, practical examples and expert commentary are far more valuable than generic advice.
AI can summarise information, but it can’t replicate your experience. Share lessons from client work, industry observations and real-world examples to help your content stand out.
A fast, well-structured website remains the foundation of strong organic performance. Regular technical audits can help identify issues before they affect visibility.
Rankings and traffic are useful indicators, but they don’t tell the whole story. Track enquiries, conversions, revenue and brand visibility to understand the real impact of your SEO strategy.
AI Overviews aren’t the end of SEO.
They’re changing how users discover information, but they’re also rewarding businesses that demonstrate genuine expertise and create content people actually find useful.
The days of publishing generic articles simply to target keywords are fading.
Instead, businesses that combine technical excellence with original thinking, practical advice and a strong brand presence are far more likely to earn visibility, whether that’s through AI Overviews, AI Mode or traditional organic search.
At Koozai, we see AI as an opportunity to improve how we work, not replace the expertise that sits behind great SEO. Technology can help speed up research and content creation, but experience, strategic thinking and understanding what your audience needs are still what make the difference.
SEO is changing. The businesses that continue putting people first will be the ones best placed to succeed.