Is Zero-Click Search Killing Your Website Traffic? Here’s the Real Answer
She refreshed the analytics dashboard one more time, hoping the numbers had changed. They hadn’t. Website sessions were down 31% year over year. The phone wasn’t ringing less. Leads were actually up. But her web traffic looked like it was falling off a cliff, and she couldn’t explain it to her business partner without sounding like something had gone terribly wrong.
Nothing had gone terribly wrong. Something had changed, and she didn’t have a name for it yet.
What she was watching was zero-click search playing out in real time. And if you’ve noticed your traffic trending down while your business seems otherwise healthy, there’s a good chance you’re watching the same thing.
What “Zero-Click Search” Actually Means
For most of the internet’s history, Google operated on a simple premise: you search, Google shows you a list of websites, you click one. Traffic flows to whoever earns the top spots. The whole SEO game was built around that click.
That model is breaking down.
Google now answers an increasing number of searches directly on the results page, through AI-generated summaries, knowledge panels, local map packs, and featured snippet boxes. The user gets what they need, types their next search, and never visits anyone’s website. That’s a zero-click search. No visit. No session counted in your analytics.
The scale of this is larger than most business owners realize. By mid-2025, roughly 60% of all Google searches ended without a single click to an outside website. On mobile, where most local searches happen, that number climbs to 77%. When you’re looking at a dashboard showing organic traffic decline, this is usually the culprit.
Here’s the part that matters, though: the story is more complicated than the headlines suggest.
The Traffic That’s Disappearing vs. the Traffic That Isn’t
Not all traffic is vanishing equally. Google is strategic about where it deploys AI-generated answers, and understanding that distinction changes how you respond.
When someone asks a broad informational question, “how much does a roof replacement cost” or “what is schema markup,” Google surfaces an AI summary at the top of the page. The user gets their answer, the click never happens. For websites built around that kind of top-of-funnel informational content, traffic declines of 20-50% have become common as AI Overviews expanded throughout 2025.

But when someone searches “roofing contractor Manchester NH” or “sign shop near me,” the picture looks completely different. For transactional and local searches, the traditional map pack with three business listings still dominates. These are the searches that matter most to small and mid-size businesses. The people who are ready to call or walk in are still finding businesses the way they always have.
This is the nuance that gets buried in the zero-click conversation. Informational traffic is declining. Conversion-oriented local traffic is largely holding. Those are two very different problems, and treating them like the same problem leads to the wrong response.
Why Your Analytics Might Be Lying to You
Here’s something worth knowing if you’ve been staring at a confusing dashboard: there’s a specific phenomenon researchers have started calling “The Great Decoupling.”
What they’re describing is this. Google Search Console tracks both impressions, how many times your site appeared in results, and clicks, how many times someone actually visited. For years those two numbers moved together. When impressions went up, clicks followed.
That relationship has inverted for many sites. Impressions are up. Clicks are down. The reason: when Google’s AI cites your website in an AI Overview summary, it counts as an impression. But because the AI answered the question before the user needed to click, the visit never happens. You’re appearing more than ever. You’re getting visited less. That’s not a failure of your SEO. It’s the mechanics of how generative search works.
The other wrinkle is that overall search volume is actually growing. Total Google searches increased by roughly 21% between 2023 and 2024. People are searching more, not less. They’re just arriving at outside websites less often.
What’s Actually Happening When Your Business Shows Up in an AI Summary
Being cited in an AI Overview isn’t purely bad news. It’s a different kind of visibility, and in some ways a better one.
Businesses that appear in AI-generated answers receive about 35% more organic clicks than competitors on the same page who don’t get cited. Being named by Google’s AI carries a trust signal that a mid-page organic link doesn’t. Users who do click through after seeing your name in an AI summary tend to arrive with a higher level of intent. They’ve already been introduced to you. They’re not browsing; they’re checking you out with purpose.

The catch is that inclusion isn’t automatic. Google’s AI draws from businesses with strong, structured, consistently maintained online presences. The signals that matter most:
- A complete and active Google Business Profile
- Service pages that clearly answer the questions customers actually ask
- Reviews that are current, responded to, and cover multiple aspects of the experience
- Schema markup that tells search systems exactly what your business does and where you do it
The businesses showing up in AI Overviews aren’t lucky. They built the right foundation.
The Honest Picture for NH and New England Businesses
If your business depends on local customers finding you, here’s what the data actually says about your situation.
Traditional Google search isn’t going anywhere. Despite all the AI coverage, 95% of Americans still use Google each month. The local map pack appears in the vast majority of location-based commercial searches. AI answers and traditional search results are currently coexisting, not replacing each other.
At the same time, competition for the visible slots is getting tighter. AI-powered local results show fewer businesses than traditional three-packs. An incomplete profile, thin service page content, or a neglected review presence, which would have cost minor ground two years ago, may now cost you a featured position entirely.
The businesses losing ground are the ones that built visibility around broad informational content without adjusting as search behavior shifted. The businesses maintaining visibility are doing these things consistently:
- Keeping their Google Business Profile current with photos, posts, and responses to every review
- Building clear, specific service pages that answer the exact questions customers type into search
- Showing up consistently across trusted local directories and review platforms
- Making sure their website communicates what they do, where they do it, and who they serve in language both people and AI systems can quickly parse

This Is a Visibility Problem, Not a Marketing Death Sentence
The business owner staring at that traffic decline had a choice in how she read the data. She could chase sessions back up and spend months trying to recapture informational traffic that AI now handles. Or she could look at her actual leads, notice they were holding, and ask a sharper question: are the people who do visit my website showing up ready to act?
That’s the real shift zero-click search has created. Fewer casual browsers. More people arriving with intent already established, because something, a Google summary, a map result, an AI recommendation, already introduced them before they got to you.
What this moment calls for isn’t panic. It’s a visibility strategy built for how search actually works now:
- Your Google Business Profile as a living, updated presence
- Your website as a structured resource that AI can understand and reference
- Your reviews as an ongoing record of your reputation
- Your content as a body of work that signals real expertise in what you do and where you do it
Traffic metrics will keep changing as search evolves. Building a business that shows up where customers are looking, in whatever form that takes, is the goal that doesn’t change.
If you’re not sure where you stand on any of this, that’s a good place to start. Brandit works with businesses across New Hampshire and Greater Boston to assess current visibility, identify the gaps, and build strategies that hold up as search keeps shifting. Reach out or call us at 603.645.2500.
- What "Zero-Click Search" Actually Means
- The Traffic That's Disappearing vs. the Traffic That Isn't
- Why Your Analytics Might Be Lying to You
- What's Actually Happening When Your Business Shows Up in an AI Summary
- The Honest Picture for NH and New England Businesses
- This Is a Visibility Problem, Not a Marketing Death Sentence
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