The Death of Google Search?
Dramatic title, isn’t it? It may look a bit clickbait-y, but there’s no denying that Google Search hasn’t looked healthy for a few years now. ‘Death’ is a strong word; it’s probably not going anywhere in the next few years, but its ivory tower could start to crumble within the next decade.
All good things must come to an end, right?
Is Google Search getting Worse?
Google is a huge part of our lives. It’s the go-to for
information, shopping, social media, reviews, or even something as simple as
checking a recipe before we make dinner.
It earned this reputation too, since its inception in 1997
it has been providing us with all the info we need, helped us find our jobs, and
is often considered the best tour guide in the digital world.
However, Google Search nowadays isn’t the bastion of
reliable information we need. Search for anything and you’ll have to scroll
past multiple paid ads (whose deep pockets are the only reason they’re there)
and even the newly introduced AI Overview, which still is fraught with outdated
or misleading information.
It’s even worse if you are looking for a product. A line of
images from various suppliers looks great, and can help you find what you need,
but this doesn’t guarantee quality. If you prefer to support smaller
businesses, instead of Amazon, Temu, and the other retail giants, it’s almost
impossible to find them unless you dig deep.
If you have to scroll down half the page to find what you’re
looking for, that’s not a very good search engine. And the results you do find
may still be biased or have tricked Google into promoting them (more about that
later).
Why is Google Search Bad?
So what happened? Google still is the no.1 search engine by
a huge margin – and the most-visited website in the world – so why is their
product worse than it used to be?
Well, the phrase ‘too big to fail’ springs to mind. We see
this a lot, especially in tech. If you’re THE company, dominating the stock
market and stomping out any rivals, there’s a lot less pressure to provide the
best product. Apple, Amazon, Temu, and more rely on brand recognition,
convenience, and advertising, not the quality of their products.
In the early days of Google Search, they almost operated at
a loss. Any income they had was being reinvested back into the company, making
the product they were selling as good as it could be.
Now, everyone goes to Google, no matter how much better Bing
or its other rivals may be. They’re at the top of the food chain, with no
desire to innovate unless they need something to show off to shareholders. They
no longer care about the product; they just want profit margins to increase.
The way they’re doing this is by prioritizing companies that
directly pay them money. That’s how sponsored ads came to be. If you have the
capital, you simply pay Google a fee and they’ll make you no.1 whenever you
want to be. SEO is irrelevant; their website can be a blank page, and it would
make no difference.
We see this a lot with products. Items that are being
reviewed terribly because of their poor quality are still being promoted,
simply because the company can afford it. But because it’s the first product
you see, people will continue to buy it, and so the cycle continues. Positive
reviews used to be a core element of SEO, now they’re only relevant if you want
to grow organically.
The Impact on SEO
We can’t deny that SEO has, in some ways, negatively
affected Google’s search results. With a few tricks or a savvy content
strategy, your business can appear higher than your rivals. These tricks are
harder to pull off now, SEO used to be a much easier thing to optimise for, but
it’s still not a level playing field.
This by no means you should stop using SEO. The game may be
rigged in some people’s favour, but that’s not a reason to cut your losses and
stop playing. We’ve shown dozens of times that a tiny company with a small
budget can outpace much bigger competitors. If you have a quality product to
sell, we’ll increase the traffic to your site so as many customers as possible
find it.
Thankfully, one thing Google’s algorithms continue to do is
promote quality content and websites that work well. This means that if your
website is better than others, it will appear higher on Google search. Organic
SEO takes time, but Google’s decline has not made success impossible if you
aren’t willing to pay their fees.
Google Gemini
This year, AI is by far the biggest topic in the tech world.
Compared to other big companies, Google was relatively late
to jump on the AI bandwagon, crafting their existing generative AI systems and
purchasing companies like Bard to create a rival to OpenAI’s infamous LLM
(Large Language Model): our old friend ChatGPT.
This was exciting for tech aficionados who wanted to see
what a company with infinite resources could bring to the table, to really test
what generative AI was capable of.
The result was disappointing at best, terrifying at worst.
Powered by Gemini, Google’s ‘AI Overview’ search results were packed with
misinformation and poor communication. It was immediately obvious that having
access to all the world’s information doesn’t guarantee a successful AI model.
Despite it’s incredible successes, Google has never been
particularly good at innovation. Since the turn of the century, we’ve seen
Google announce tonnes of new products, only for them to be quietly cancelled
soon after. Google Glass, Video, Talk, Bump, Trips, to name just a few.
Now, many argue that it’s hard for large companies to
innovate, and many of its failed products did lead to better ones in the
future. It has a few major successes too: Maps, Gmail, and of course Search,
are why it’s one of the world’s biggest companies.
Announcing a new product is a proven way to boost share
prices in the short term, keeping stakeholders and investors happy. Gemini, if
it isn’t improved soon, could be the next product that is quietly swept under
the rug if the AI bubble bursts.
How does this affect the success of Search? Well, the bad
press Gemini received upon launch made Google look vulnerable for the first
time in a long while. If it continues to only care about the money, its
competitors could start to coax users away from Google, especially if Search
continues to be frustrating or unreliable.
What’s Next for Google?
In a recent blog, we talked about how Bing, who has always
been stuck in almighty Google’s shadow, is starting to steal more of the pie.
It has a much better search engine – a product that it cares about improving.
We’d never suggest that a growing business takes its site
off Google and move to Bing. After all, the majority of traffic is still coming
from the juggernaut. But it’s important to keep in mind that Google isn’t ‘too
big to fail’, and a few more missteps could make it time for a change.
We’re not Google employees. As an SEO company, we optimise
sites for all search engines, and only focus on Google because that’s where the
searches happen. We care about transparency, explaining to our clients exactly
what SEO is, and how it should be done. So if the time comes when Google isn’t
the place to ply your trade, we’ll be sure to let you know.