How Google’s Core Updates Quietly Protect Ad Revenue — At the Expense of Small Websites
By
Lloyd
A critical look at Google’s evolving SEO strategy and its business-driven motives. Views expressed are solely the author’s and not directed at any specific company. For concerns or removals, please get in touch.
903 words, 5 minutes read time.
Introduction: What the Updates Say — and What They Don’t
Google’s official explanations for its core algorithm updates often focus on noble goals: improve content quality, reward helpfulness, and deliver the best experience for users. Yet beneath this narrative lies a much more pragmatic truth—these updates frequently double as business strategies to preserve Google’s dominance and safeguard ad revenue.
While E-E-A-T and zero-click improvements sound user-centric, they also have a very real and measurable outcome: they keep users on Google longer, reduce outbound clicks to publishers, and shift visibility away from long-tail, independent websites.
Let’s unpack the deeper business logic of this evolution.
1. Zero-Click, Zero Revenue—for You
According to Sparktoro and SimilarWeb, over 57% of Google searches now end without a click. That number has risen sharply with the introduction of:
Featured snippets
“People also ask” modules
AI Overviews
Local pack interactions
Maps, flights, and hotel widgets
These tools do provide faster information—but also neutralize organic click opportunities, especially for niche publishers, blogs, and local business sites.
2. AI Overviews: The Ultimate Ad-Adjacent Distraction
The Ads and AI Overview occupied the sight, preventing people from scrolling down to the organic search result
The 2025 rollout of AI Overviews pushed this further. These summaries often:
Pull in information from multiple sources without attribution above the fold
Feature YouTube results or Google-owned properties more prominently
Sit between ads and organic links, delaying user scroll-through behavior
In short, Google created a massive new content layer that cannibalizes organic results while increasing the visual prominence of ads.
And advertisers love it. Users linger longer. Engagement signals improve. Meanwhile, smaller players lose visibility—even when their content helped power the AI answer.
3. The E-E-A-T Filter: Raising the Bar or Just Raising the Moat?
Google says it promotes content that reflects Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. This principle is sound in theory. In practice?
Government, institutional, and giant corporate sites are inherently advantaged
High-E-E-A-T content requires resources that most small sites don’t have
The algorithm increasingly prefers brands, not blogs
This creates a reinforcing cycle: big sites stay big, and the threshold for newer voices grows steeper every quarter.
And as visibility shrinks, many small businesses are left with no choice but to spend on Google Ads—if they want to stay in the game.
With each update, Google’s “organic real estate” gets squeezed:
AI answers take the top
Ads take the top and bottom
Local packs dominate local intent queries
Image and video carousels (often YouTube) fill screen space
The organic results for many search terms now begin below the fold, particularly on mobile.
And where is Google’s revenue derived? Ads. The less real estate for unpaid clicks, the more competitive—and expensive—the paid visibility becomes.
5. Algorithm Changes as Strategic Levers
If we view algorithm updates not just as search improvements, but as levers of user behavior and economic optimization, many recent changes make perfect sense:
Update
Stated Goal
Likely Business Outcome
Core Update (Jul 2025)
Reward content quality
Increase dependence on authoritative sites (reducing spam + ad inefficiency)
AI Overview Rollout
Improve speed of answers
Retain users on Google longer, increasing ad exposure
March 2024 Update
Penalize low-E-E-A-T sites
Reduce click-through to non-brand sites, concentrate visibility
Product Review Updates
Prioritize firsthand reviews
Suppress affiliate-heavy SEO content competing with Google Shopping
This pattern isn’t new—it’s just more transparent now.
6. Small Sites Get Filtered First
When Google experiments with new content models, they don’t test them on Amazon or WebMD—they test them against small sites.
The July 2025 update saw many local businesses and long-tail bloggers wiped off page one of previously stable rankings. Not because they committed “SEO sins”—but because Google’s system needed to make room for new modules (AIO, platforms, or partner content).
As this continues, small site owners are forced into a cycle:
Spend more to build content Google likes
Lose traffic anyway
Start Google Ads
Compete against themselves in paid auctions
7. A Better Internet or a More Profitable One?
Is Google trying to improve the web? Possibly. Is it trying to keep up with OpenAI, Perplexity, and other AI search challengers? Definitely. Is it also reinforcing its ad moat, quietly and effectively? Absolutely.
Google is no longer just a search engine. It’s an experience layer—and the price of visibility is rising.
So What Can You Do?
If you’re a small business, local site, or SEO professional, this trend doesn’t mean you’re doomed. It just means you can’t play the same game you did in 2020. You must:
Invest in real authorship, reviews, and original content
Lloyd is the founder and CEO of Lloyd & Company, a Toronto-based digital marketing studio that blends nature-inspired design with data-driven strategies. With over 15 years of experience in web development, SEO, and digital advertising, he leads a curated network of local experts to deliver seamless, full-spectrum marketing solutions. Lloyd’s collaborative approach ensures clients receive tailored campaigns that drive sustainable growth—from brand identity and website builds to targeted ad placements. Outside of work, he’s an avid nature enthusiast who finds fresh inspiration for his innovative frameworks during weekend hikes and community gardening.
How Google’s Core Updates Quietly Protect Ad Revenue — At the Expense of Small Websites
903 words, 5 minutes read time.
Introduction: What the Updates Say — and What They Don’t
Google’s official explanations for its core algorithm updates often focus on noble goals: improve content quality, reward helpfulness, and deliver the best experience for users. Yet beneath this narrative lies a much more pragmatic truth—these updates frequently double as business strategies to preserve Google’s dominance and safeguard ad revenue.
While E-E-A-T and zero-click improvements sound user-centric, they also have a very real and measurable outcome: they keep users on Google longer, reduce outbound clicks to publishers, and shift visibility away from long-tail, independent websites.
Let’s unpack the deeper business logic of this evolution.
1. Zero-Click, Zero Revenue—for You
According to Sparktoro and SimilarWeb, over 57% of Google searches now end without a click. That number has risen sharply with the introduction of:
These tools do provide faster information—but also neutralize organic click opportunities, especially for niche publishers, blogs, and local business sites.
🔗 Read: What Are Zero-Click Searches?
2. AI Overviews: The Ultimate Ad-Adjacent Distraction
The 2025 rollout of AI Overviews pushed this further. These summaries often:
In short, Google created a massive new content layer that cannibalizes organic results while increasing the visual prominence of ads.
And advertisers love it. Users linger longer. Engagement signals improve. Meanwhile, smaller players lose visibility—even when their content helped power the AI answer.
3. The E-E-A-T Filter: Raising the Bar or Just Raising the Moat?
Google says it promotes content that reflects Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness. This principle is sound in theory. In practice?
This creates a reinforcing cycle: big sites stay big, and the threshold for newer voices grows steeper every quarter.
And as visibility shrinks, many small businesses are left with no choice but to spend on Google Ads—if they want to stay in the game.
🔗 Read: What is E-E-A-T and How to Improve It for Small Business Sites
4. Google’s Diminishing Organic Shelf Space
With each update, Google’s “organic real estate” gets squeezed:
The organic results for many search terms now begin below the fold, particularly on mobile.
And where is Google’s revenue derived? Ads.
The less real estate for unpaid clicks, the more competitive—and expensive—the paid visibility becomes.
5. Algorithm Changes as Strategic Levers
If we view algorithm updates not just as search improvements, but as levers of user behavior and economic optimization, many recent changes make perfect sense:
This pattern isn’t new—it’s just more transparent now.
6. Small Sites Get Filtered First
When Google experiments with new content models, they don’t test them on Amazon or WebMD—they test them against small sites.
The July 2025 update saw many local businesses and long-tail bloggers wiped off page one of previously stable rankings.
Not because they committed “SEO sins”—but because Google’s system needed to make room for new modules (AIO, platforms, or partner content).
As this continues, small site owners are forced into a cycle:
7. A Better Internet or a More Profitable One?
Is Google trying to improve the web? Possibly.
Is it trying to keep up with OpenAI, Perplexity, and other AI search challengers? Definitely.
Is it also reinforcing its ad moat, quietly and effectively? Absolutely.
So What Can You Do?
If you’re a small business, local site, or SEO professional, this trend doesn’t mean you’re doomed. It just means you can’t play the same game you did in 2020. You must:
And above all, recognize this:
📎 Other Suggested Readings
Sources:
Lloyd
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