There is a pervasive narrative doing the rounds in the publishing industry called “Google Zero.” This narrative, embraced by many industry leaders, poses that traffic from Google – Search and Discover – will decline and eventually become negligible.

This Google Zero narrative is entirely false, and extremely dangerous. And I’m going to explain why.

When the concept of “Google Zero” first began to emerge, I thought it could be a useful way to frame the strategic approaches publishers should consider when optimizing for Google. But it’s taken on an entirely different meaning, one that is actively dangerous and downright false.

It’s true, gaining traffic from Google hasn’t gotten easier. Websites need to work harder to grow their share of Google visits, both in Search and Discover. This is not a new development – the writing has been on the wall for nearly two decades.

Google started enriching its search results with all kinds of different elements in 2007, intended to provide exactly the kind of information Google’s users are looking for. The clean list of 10 blue links has long been forgotten.

Since Google began introducing new elements into its search results, every new feature has diverted clicks away from websites. Often, these clicks were channeled toward Google’s own properties like YouTube, Google Maps, or the image search vertical. And increasingly, searches didn’t result in any clicks at all when the right information was shown to the user directly on the results page.

This trend continued with every new feature Google introduced into its results. Many websites were affected. Lawsuits were launched – some of which are still ongoing.

News publishers didn’t really feel the pain, however. On the contrary, the introduction of news carousels on Google’s results increased the traffic Google sent to publishers.

And then AI Overviews arrived, and everybody panicked.

Apparently, The Verge’s Nilay Patel was the first to coin “Google Zero” as a phrase, though I suspect he was more than a little inspired by Sparktoro’s Amanda Natividad and Rand Fishkin, who have been talking about “Zero-Click Marketing” for years.

I understand why Nilay is worried about Google. According to Similarweb, Google traffic to The Verge has been steadily declining since late 2023, predating the launch of AI Overviews.

Similarweb data showing The Verge losing Google traffic
Image Credit: Barry Adams

Interestingly, this graph shows that Google is still the largest organic channel for The Verge, surpassed only by direct visits (which, by the way, are also declining). And you’ll also be interested to know that the periods of strongest Google traffic decreases on The Verge correlate with Google core algorithm updates and Site Reputation Abuse penalties.

I find it funny that The Verge seems to have an existential issue with the SEO industry as a whole. That, too, might contribute to their less-than-stellar performance in Search in recent years. Not to mention the fact that every channel is sending less traffic to The Verge in recent years.

Perhaps it’s not entirely Google’s fault that The Verge is experiencing a decline.

One website’s editor complaining about Google traffic doesn’t make for a narrative. Yet somehow, the Google Zero story has become embedded in the publishing industry, with very little critical analysis.

A few weeks ago, I was at a news-focused conference where one of the speakers presented a slide showing data from Chartbeat. This data indicated a huge decline in Google traffic to many of Chartbeat’s customers.

Chartbeat graph showing 33% Google traffic decline
Image Credit: Barry Adams

The data was published on the Reuters Institute’s website as part of their 2026 predictions, and seems to have been accepted as gospel by many in the industry.

The speaker who presented this slide works for one of my clients. I have access to this client’s Google Search Console data for dozens of their websites across Europe. I know exactly how much Google traffic they’ve lost in the last few years.

They haven’t lost any.

In fact, the speaker’s employer is showing growth in Google traffic across many of their websites. Yet the speaker presented the Chartbeat graph as fact, without any caveat, despite having access to a wealth of data that contradicts it.

It’s not just my clients – Press Gazette recently did a deeper dive into the Google Zero panic, speaking with many UK publishers. A clear consensus emerged: Google traffic isn’t actually declining all that much.

This is supported by data from Similarweb, published by Graphite, showing the actual decline of Google traffic to the top websites on the global web is … drumroll … 2.5%.

Image Credit: Barry AdamsSo, why does the Chartbeat data show such a strong decline, and other sources do not? I have theories. One is that Chartbeat’s data is skewed by several of their largest clients, who may have suffered from Google’s core algorithm updates and Site Reputation Abuse penalties.

The Chartbeat data appears to be a simple aggregate, not taking individual sites’ comparative sizes into account. So when a few big sites experienced strong losses, it would skew the data heavily towards a decline, even when dozens of smaller sites don’t see any meaningful decreases.

When we look at Similarweb’s data on global web traffic, Google is still by far the most-visited website in the world, accounting for nearly 20% of all web visits. This hasn’t changed in any meaningful way in the last few years.

Similarweb data showing Google as the most sivited website in the world
Image Credit: Barry Adams

Despite an abundance of contradicting data, the Google Zero panic has permeated the publishing industry. Not a week goes by without some C-level leader at a publisher declaring a shift away from Google towards other channels for audience growth.

I’m all for diversifying traffic sources. Publishers need to be less reliant on Google for their traffic, and have alternative sources of visitors that can sustain their business model. I’ve been on record saying exactly that for years.

But traffic diversification should not come at the expense of SEO. When you take your eye off the Google ball, you’re making a colossal mistake.

No matter how you interpret the data, Google is still by far the single largest source of visitors for websites. There is literally no other channel that comes close (keeping in mind that direct traffic isn’t a channel – it’s all traffic where there is no referral string associated with the visit).

Yes, it’s gotten harder to win in Google. I’ve outlined some of the underlying reasons in my AI Survival Strategies article.

But when things get harder, the dumbest course of action is to give up.

If you lower your investment in SEO, guess what happens? You lose more Google traffic. This will then reinforce your preconceived notion of Google Zero, so you invest even less in SEO, and down the spiral goes until you’re dead in the water.

Your Google Zero prophecy has come true because you’ve made it come true.

In the meantime, competing websites that continued to invest in SEO will happily scoop up the clicks you’ve abandoned.

There is literally no sign that Google is in danger of losing its position as the largest source of traffic to the web. There is no other channel rising to take Google’s place. Choosing to abandon Google is a potentially catastrophic strategic error.

Consider yourselves warned.

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This post was originally published on SEO For Google News.


Featured Image: Anton Vierietin/Shutterstock



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By Rose Milev

I always want to learn something new. SEO is my passion.

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