Artificial intelligence (AI) is creeping into every corner of our digital lives, and search is no exception. Google, Bing, and other search engines are now powered by sophisticated AI algorithms that understand our queries better than ever before.
But could this mean the end of traditional organic search results as we know them?
As AI gets better at understanding and fulfilling our search needs, here's just a few of the ways traditional organic results could take a backseat.
The short answer in my opinion is no, AI will not replace SEO or search engine results pages. However, let's explore and think about a few logical reasons why that is the case.
Searches aren't always about factual answers. Anybody who has worked in SEO will tell you that users are often seeking unique information like product comparisons, opinions, and testimonials. These are things AI will have trouble replicating since there is a subjective nature to them.
Additionally, some searchers enjoy the exploration element and looking at a variety of sources to form their own opinion. While AI is highly capable at generating summaries it won't always capture the nuanced information that can be found by looking at multiple websites. In other words, the streamlined nature of AI would actually be a negative for certain users.
AI relies on quality content across the web to train their models and return the best answers for a given query. Over time, if there were no new content produced, then the answers these AI models produce would become outdated, incorrect, or nonexistent - here's how:
If AI replaces SEO completely then companies and websites have no real incentive to continue producing content. In other words, search companies (Google, Microsoft, etc.) have a big incentive to keep SEO alive.
As AI becomes more sophisticated, the need for regulation and an ability to explain where answers came from will be necessary. Additionally, many users will want to know the sources an AI-generated answer is based on. Both of these will require a need for citations which is essentially just another form of ranking.
While the click through rate to the actual source or website may not be the same as what we see know, this sort of exposure will still incentive producing quality content and optimizing your site to be an authority on any number of subjects.
At its core, search engine optimization (SEO) is about producing high quality and valuable content for web users - plus organizing it in a way that search engines (robots/crawlers) can easily understand. AI is not replacing this practice.
However, AI will undoubtedly transform the tactics and strategies we use today. More likely, we see a future where the two coexist with listings further enhanced by AI or a completely new listing type all together presented with the current system of organic listings.