How Has AI Changed the Way We Search for Information?

In a very short time, online search has changed dramatically. In the past, most of us thought of Google as the default gateway to information: we typed a keyword, got a list of links, and opened page after page.

Today, the landscape is entirely different.

AI hasn’t just changed the look of search results; it’s changing how people search and even how they think about finding information in the first place.

We’re living through a transition similar to the move from Yahoo and AltaVista to Google… except this time, the change is faster and much deeper.

From Search Engine… to Answer Engine

Search used to be built around links:

You’d type: “best restaurants in Dubai” → you’d see dozens of links → you’d open several pages → you’d piece together the answer yourself.

Today, with tools like:

  • ChatGPT
  • Perplexity AI
  • You.com
  • And Google’s AI Overviews

Search is increasingly built around answers, not links.

Instead of opening five different pages, the tool gives you a ready-made, structured answer with precisely what you need.

That’s why expressions like “from Search Engine to Answer Engine” are spreading, or what’s called Generative Search: a search experience that generates answers instead of just listing links.

Google itself has integrated AI directly into the results page: it now shows an AI-written summary at the top, pulling from multiple sources.

Numbers That Show the Scale of Change

Recent studies in 2025 indicate that:

  • More than half of users worldwide have tried using an AI tool at least once to look up information.
  • About a year ago, that number was only around 20%.

That means in just one year, the behaviour of millions of people has changed.

At the same time, reports show that click-through rates on Google results are dropping because many users are now satisfied with the summary at the top and don’t bother to open websites.

This shift is naturally worrying for:

  • Website owners
  • E-commerce store owners
  • Advertisers

But if we look from another angle, especially in the Arab world, there is also a huge opportunity.

The Arabic Content Gap… A Golden Opportunity

We have more than 400 million Arabic speakers.

Yet Arabic content on the internet is still a tiny fraction compared to other languages.

Here’s where AI comes in:

If you have reliable, clear, and well-structured Arabic content, there’s a strong chance your pages could become a primary reference within generative systems like ChatGPT and Perplexity.

In other words:

The current gap in Arabic content isn’t just a problem… It can be a golden opportunity for those who move early.

What Is AI Search?

We can summarise the difference between “old” and “new” search like this:

Traditional Search:

  • Relies on keywords
  • Shows you a list of links
  • You gather the information yourself.

AI Search:

  • Relies on understanding the question, meaning, and context
  • Gives you a direct answer in one or more paragraphs
  • Saves you the time of jumping between pages

Search is starting to feel like a conversation.

Instead of typing: “best time to visit Paris”, you might ask:

“What’s the best time to visit Paris if I want to avoid crowds and rain?”

The tool understands the intent, not just the words. This is what’s called Conversational Search.

The Challenges: It’s Not All Perfect

Despite all these advantages, AI-powered search comes with real challenges:

1. Reliability

Sometimes AI makes things up or gives incorrect information, which is known as hallucinations. That’s why it’s still critical to verify information, especially for sensitive topics.

2. Transparency

With many tools, we don’t clearly know:

  • Where did this information come from?
  • Which site? Which study? Which source?

3. Bias

Models learn from existing data.

If the data is biased, the answers can be biased as well.

So even when a tool answers confidently, we still need the habit of: “I’ll double-check; I don’t blindly trust everything.”

Changing User Preferences

Today’s user:

  • Knows more clearly what they want
  • Has less patience than before

They’re no longer willing to open 5–6 pages to find a simple fact.

They want a ready-made, concise, and clear answer.

That’s why conversational search usage is rising, and voice search is making a strong comeback: you ask with your voice and get a voice or text response.

With models like GPT-4o that handle voice, image, and text, the search experience is now closer to a real conversation with a human.

Does This Mean People Will Stop Visiting Websites?

The answer: not always, but visits will definitely decrease in some cases.

For simple, quick questions, many users will be satisfied with the AI summary.

But for more profound or more specialised topics, people still open websites, read, and dig in.

The key point:

  • Tools like Perplexity show their sources under each answer.
  • If your site is trustworthy and your content is straightforward, you can appear as a reference even if the number of clicks is not huge.

This is where the idea of Zero-Click comes in:

The user gets the answer directly on the results page or inside an AI tool,

Without actually visiting your site.

Even so, your website or brand name might still appear as a trusted reference.

Your perceived authority grows in the user’s mind, and that’s very important for your brand, even if raw traffic numbers go down.

What Does This Mean for Website and Business Owners?

In the past, we thought like this:

I want more visitors = I need a higher Google ranking.

Today, the equation is broader: yes, traffic matters, but visibility and mental availability matter just as much.

What really matters is:

  • People know your name
  • They remember you when they need something.
  • They trust you as a first choice.

Your website remains:

  • The base point from which your information spreads to classic search engines and AI tools
  • And the final stop, where purchases are made, or services are requested

Who’s Leading the AI Search Wave?

1) Google

Still the most significant player, but no longer the only one.

Since launching AI summaries in 2024, Google has been weaving AI into search results. Some users love the speed and ready-made summary. Others are skeptical about the accuracy or feel the answers are incomplete.

2) Perplexity AI

A generative search engine focused on:

  • Clear answers with sources explicitly shown underneath.

This has made it popular among:

  • Researchers
  • Journalists
  • Anyone who cares about knowing “Where did this information come from?”

3) You.com

A hybrid: a Google-style interface combined with a generative summary at the top.

4) ChatGPT with browsing

It has shifted from “just a chat tool” to a genuine research assistant:

  • You can ask about recent events
  • It browses the web
  • It gathers key points for you.
  • It gives you a clear summary in natural language.

On top of that, there are specialised search engines:

  • For academic research, like Elicit and Consensus
  • For coding and tech: like Phind

Every field can now have its own “smart search engine.”

How Will User Behaviour Evolve Further?

Search is becoming more personal.

AI learns your preferences and how you phrase your questions.

The interaction is becoming more natural:

  • You type your question the same way you’d say it in real life.

Expectations from the internet are higher:

  • Users now expect answers that are fast, clear, and adapted to their situation.

But with this growing personalisation, responsibilities also grow:

  • Protecting privacy
  • Reducing bias
  • Safeguarding information accuracy

Because when people lose trust in information, they’re effectively losing trust in the internet itself.

So… Is the Future a Threat or an Opportunity?

AI:

  • Yes, it is changing how we search
  • Yes, it is reducing some types of traffic
  • But it also opens up bigger opportunities for those who prepare

If we start now to create content that is:

  • Well-structured
  • Trustworthy
  • Clear
  • Genuinely useful for people

Then we’re not just optimising our sites for Google. We’re positioning ourselves firmly for the future of search, a future where:

  • The question is conversational
  • The answer is generative
  • And high-quality content is the strongest currency

If you feel this idea helped you, share it with your team or partners… because the way people search is changing, and with it, our thinking about content, SEO, and digital visibility has to change too.

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