×
80% of consumers use zero-click searches for 40% of queries, says study
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

The rise of zero-click searches is fundamentally disrupting digital marketing as AI-powered search results increasingly provide answers without requiring users to visit websites. According to Bain & Company, a global consulting firm, 80% of consumers rely on zero-click answers for at least 40% of their searches, forcing marketers to completely rethink strategies that have long depended on driving website traffic and capturing leads through traditional conversion funnels.

What you should know: Zero-click searches occur when users find the information they need directly on search engine results pages without clicking through to websites.

  • AI overviews, snippets, and info boxes now provide immediate answers to user queries, eliminating the need to visit individual websites.
  • Voice searches, in-app searches on social media platforms, shopping apps, and tools like Google Maps are expanding zero-click interactions beyond traditional search engines.
  • The shift affects everything from simple queries like business hours to complex purchasing decisions, where AI assistants can directly recommend and purchase products.

Why this matters: This transformation represents what some experts are calling a “traffic apocalypse” that threatens the foundational business model of internet publishing and digital marketing.

  • Traditional customer journeys are shortening dramatically, giving marketers a narrower window to influence purchasing decisions.
  • Search engine traffic and conversions are declining as AI tools resolve queries without brand interaction.
  • New York Magazine’s Intelligencer describes the shift as undermining “the whole premise of Internet publishing — that you could reach audiences far and wide.”

The marketing impact: Zero-click fundamentally rewires how customers find information and make buying decisions, creating new challenges for traditional marketing approaches.

  • SEO strategies need complete overhauls since high search engine rankings no longer guarantee clicks or traffic.
  • Attribution becomes more difficult as it’s harder to track where sales and leads originate.
  • Branded content risks being taken out of context when AI tools synthesize information from multiple sources, potentially causing reputational damage.
  • Email capture strategies lose effectiveness as fewer users visit websites where they can subscribe to newsletters.

How marketers can adapt: Early adoption of zero-click optimization strategies could prove as lucrative as being an early SEO adopter in the web’s early days.

  • Structure content with clear headings, body text, and organized data like charts or tables that algorithms can easily process into direct answers.
  • Focus on long-tail keywords rather than broad terms, as AI overviews appear more likely to favor specific queries like “best electric toothbrush under $100” over generic searches like “best toothbrush.”
  • Develop content that effectively answers user questions in formats that AI tools can easily synthesize and present.
  • Understanding the differences between traditional search algorithms and AI bot responses becomes critical for campaign success.
Elon Musk to introduce ads to X’s AI chatbot

Recent News

Psychotherapist: AI therapy feels like upgrade as human therapists abandon growth

Modern therapy has become "paid listening" that prioritizes validation over building resilience.

Amazon’s $100B AI bet stumbles as Alexa Plus disappoints users

Fifteen-second delays and hallucinations plague the smart assistant's basic functions.

Google DeepMind launches Gemini Robotics-ER 1.5 for smarter robot reasoning

Separating thinking from doing lets advanced AI work across diverse robot bodies.