Google is changing how search works. Instead of showing a list of links, the company wants to turn it into an AI-powered assistant. Google CEO Sundar Pichai announced that in 2025, search will not just find information but analyze it, summarize it, and provide direct answers.
How It Works
Google’s AI will browse websites, extract key points, and deliver them as a response—no need for users to click links. This shift started with AI-generated summaries in search results. Now, Google is pushing further, using technologies like Project Astra, an AI system that can process live video and give real-time answers, and Gemini Deep Research, which analyzes multiple sources at once.
Google is also testing Project Mariner, an AI that interacts with websites for users. Instead of manually navigating a site, people could simply ask Google to perform tasks for them. Pichai hinted that search might soon resemble a chatbot instead of the traditional results page.
What It Means for Businesses
Websites that depend on search traffic will feel the impact. If Google gives users answers directly, fewer people will visit websites. SEO strategies will have to shift from ranking in search to creating content that Google’s AI finds valuable enough to summarize.
Sergey Pankov, CEO of Serpzilla.com, on Google’s AI-Powered Search
“Google’s transformation of search is the biggest change the industry has seen in years. Websites that rely on organic traffic will need to adapt fast. If Google provides AI-generated answers instead of links, businesses must rethink how they attract and engage users.
At Serpzilla, we’ve helped companies navigate SEO changes for years, and this shift is a major one. The key now is not just ranking but becoming a source that Google’s AI trusts and cites. Businesses that invest in real expertise, deep research, and unique insights will stand out in this new search landscape.
Google’s AI-driven search is coming fast. The question is not whether the system will change, but how businesses will adjust to stay ahead.”