Google owns the open web. If your website isn’t Googleable or doesn’t work in Chrome, it doesn’t exist.
Search has fueled discovery, traffic, and revenue growth for just about every online company of the last 25 years.
So what happens when Google rewrites the rules?
In this week’s episode, we unpack “Google Zero,” the moment Google stops sending traffic to websites. The term, coined by Nilay Patel at The Verge, describes a future where traditional search collapses under the weight of AI agents and instant answers.
Consider this: one analysis found nearly 60% of Google searches end without a click. And as LLMs like ChatGPT and Perplexity become the go-to for complex queries, the web itself risks being reduced to a training set.
This shift is existential for digital media. If your product is information—and AI is doing the reading for your users—you’ve been written out of the loop. No clicks, no impressions, no subscriptions.
We break down:
How LLMs have rewired our own search habits
Why Google is shoving Gemini into search (despite how bad it is)
The rise and decline of Business Insider as a case study
Whether the newsroom of the future is just an API
What this means for marketers, founders, and anyone who thought SEO was a moat
How have your own search habits changed? Let us know in the comments. And please like this video if you like this video.
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