If you’ve felt like Google hasn’t been sending as many people to your website lately, you’re not imagining it. Search has been changing fast — and AI Overviews are now sitting at the top of more and more results. In a lot of cases, Google is simply answering questions before anyone even gets the chance to click.
That can feel discouraging, but here’s the upside: once you understand how these new results work, you can adjust your strategy and still attract the right customers. You just have to show up in the places where AI Overviews pull information — and make sure your business looks like the obvious choice when people are ready to take action.
Let’s walk through the practical things you can do in 2026 to stay visible.
What exactly are AI Overviews? (Plain-English version)
AI Overviews are those boxes that show up at the very top of Google that give a quick summary of an answer. They pull details from websites, reviews, Google Business Profiles, and other trusted sources.
For small businesses, the big change is this:
People may not click as quickly as they used to — but they will click when they’re ready to take the next step.
Your job is to show up as the business worth clicking.
How AI Overviews actually affect small businesses
Here’s what we’re seeing across the board:
Generic searches get fewer clicks.
(“How often should I replace my roof?” “Best exercises for back pain.”)
Local, specific, service-based searches still drive action.
(“roofer near me,” “best gym in Swansboro,” “website designer Emerald Isle.”)
Google pulls heavily from Google Business Profiles, quality content, reviews, and consistent brand signals.
(“How often should I replace my roof?” “Best exercises for back pain.”)
If you focus on the areas that AI Overviews rely on, you position yourself to benefit instead of feeling buried.
What are "brand signals"?
Brand signals are the little clues Google looks for to confirm your business is real, trustworthy, and consistent. This includes things like using the same name, address, and phone number everywhere, matching colors and logos across platforms, having up-to-date hours, building out your social profiles, and keeping your website aligned with the same overall look and message. When everything matches, Google sees a stable, reliable brand.
Your 2026 Search Playbook
Here are the steps that matter most — simple, doable, and worth your time.
1. Strengthen your Google Business Profile
If you do nothing else, do this.
Fill out your entire profile with:
Accurate business info
Quality photos
Updated service descriptions
Hours
A real link to your site
If you focus on the areas that AI Overviews rely on, you position yourself to benefit instead of feeling buried.
2. Create content AI can't summarize
There’s no point writing bland, generic posts anymore. AI can spin those out by the dozen. Focus on things only a human can deliver:
Personal experience
Real examples
Local knowledge
Stories from your work
Step-by-step explanations based on your process
These are the things AI summaries will reference — but can’t replace.
3. Go after high-intent, local keywords
General topics are tough now. But specific, local searches still turn into phone calls, purchases, and leads.
Think:
“wedding photographer Atlantic Beach”
“best charter fishing Beaufort NC”
“small business website designer near me”
And create pages on your site that clearly match those searches.
4. Keep reviews flowing
Reviews are a huge part of what Google surfaces in AI results.
Ask regularly.
Make it easy.
Respond kindly and quickly.
Reviews are one of the most powerful signals you can control.
5. Build citations and backlinks that make you look credible
Google still checks to see if your business information is consistent across the web.
Make sure your business name, address, and phone number (NAP) match everywhere:
Local directories
Review sites
Industry associations
Social profiles
This helps Google understand you’re legitimate — which matters even more with AI pulling summary info.
6. Use AI tools wisely — but don’t let them write your website for you
AI is great for outlines, brainstorming, and research. But when it comes to your actual content, people want your voice.
And so does Google.
The more original and personal your site feels, the more likely it is to show up inside AI Overviews — or as the business users click on after seeing an AI Overview.
So what’s the bottom line?
Search isn’t dying — it’s just changing. Small businesses aren’t being pushed out, but the rules are changing. (As someone who’s been building websites since the late 90s, I can tell you that this has happened many times over the years for many reasons — with all new sets of rules each time!)
If you just stay focused on showing your expertise, updating your Google Business Profile, keeping your content genuinely helpful, and targeting the searches people use when they’re ready to act, you’ll stay ahead of most of your competitors.
And if you’d like help putting a plan in place for 2026, just send us a message at [email protected]. we’d be glad to walk you through it.

