Google Search Console is reportedly testing an AI search performance report that separates AI Overview exposure data from traditional search metrics. The move gives generative engine optimization, or GEO, a clearer measurement baseline. If broadly launched, it could help content, SEO, and marketing teams evaluate how their pages appear in AI-powered search experiences instead of relying mainly on manual checks and assumptions.
TechCrunch’s Equity podcast discusses how Google I/O made AI-generated answers central to search. For brands that built strategies around the classic list of blue links, the rules of visibility are changing. The key concern is that many companies have little insight into how AI systems describe them to customers, making brand monitoring and SEO strategy more uncertain.
As AI search engines directly answer user queries, traditional SEO is facing a major shift. SEO consultant Frank Chiu explains that GEO (Generative Engine Optimization) will be essential over the next 3 to 5 years. However, the inherent volatility and ambiguity of LLMs make tracking and optimizing for AI search highly unpredictable, presenting a "certain uncertainty" for marketers.