SEOIntel Weekly News Round-up (Third Week of September 2025)

We’re now three weeks into the August 2025 Spam Update, and its effects are still rippling through SEO and site performance. Across forums, tracking tools, and Search Console, SEOs are reporting volatility: ranking swings, traffic drops, indexing delays, and strange shifts in impression and average position metrics. With Google limiting the “results per page” setting, […]
Marie Aquino
September 19, 2025

We’re now three weeks into the August 2025 Spam Update, and its effects are still rippling through SEO and site performance. Across forums, tracking tools, and Search Console, SEOs are reporting volatility: ranking swings, traffic drops, indexing delays, and strange shifts in impression and average position metrics. With Google limiting the “results per page” setting, launching new tools like the Store Widget, and Delivering AI enhancements in Chrome and Discover, it’s clear the landscape is changing fast.

This week we’ll unpack how these updates affect reporting, browsing, location visibility, and search strategy more broadly.

Google Limits Search Results: Rank Tracking and Reporting Disrupted

Google is currently testing the removal of the “100 results per page” option, and the long-used &num=100 parameter no longer works. Instead, search results are capped at the default 10 (sometimes 20), which has created ripple effects across SEO reporting. Rank-tracking platforms that relied on pulling the top 100 results in one go are showing data gaps, incomplete rankings, and higher costs as they scramble to issue multiple smaller queries. Some tools are even defaulting to only reporting top 10–20 results, reducing visibility into long-tail rankings and deeper SERPs.

Search Console has also been affected. Many SEOs are reporting drops in impressions, shifts in average position, and volatile charts—changes that don’t necessarily reflect true ranking losses, but rather reporting inconsistencies caused by this test. While Google hasn’t confirmed if the change will be permanent, it fits into its broader push to simplify Search results for users, even if it disrupts the workflows of SEOs.

For now, the best move is to re-baseline your metrics, update dashboards, and focus on page-one visibility while monitoring Google’s next steps.

Read our in-depth article on the issue here – Rank Tracking and Reporting Impacted by Google’s Search Results Limit


Google Confirms It No Longer Supports Showing 100 Results Per Page

Google officially stated the &num=100 parameter—long used to load 100 search results per page—is no longer supported. Google clarified that this was not a bug but an intentional change. A Google spokesperson released a statement to Barry Schwartz of SERoundtable /Search Engine Land saying “The use of this URL parameter is not something that we formally support”.

For years, many SEOs and tools relied on this parameter to capture a broader view of rankings, but as of September 2025, it no longer works.

What SEO Tools and Sites Are Observing

Following the change, rank-tracking platforms that depended on &num=100 have begun showing broken or incomplete data, forcing providers to adjust how they fetch results. Search Console data is showing sharp drops in desktop impressions and shifts in average position metrics. Importantly, these changes don’t necessarily reflect ranking losses; instead, they suggest that data collection methods tied to the old parameter were inflating certain metrics.

Key Impacts & Likely Causes

  • Rank tracking disruption: Tools are being forced to issue multiple smaller queries, increasing workload and costs, while reducing the ability to monitor long-tail rankings.
  • Search Console volatility: Many SEOs are noticing impression drops and average position changes, but these are tied to reporting shifts—not actual traffic declines.
  • Inflated impressions theory: Some SEOs believe impressions were previously being inflated by bots or automated tools fetching 100 results at once, which explains the sudden dip.

What SEOs Should Do Now

  • Audit your tools: Check with your rank-tracking provider to see how they’re adapting and whether they’ve implemented workarounds.
  • Rebaseline your metrics: Treat September data as a new baseline for impressions and average positions.
  • Educate stakeholders: Make sure clients or teams understand that impression drops are tied to reporting, not real ranking losses.
  • Prioritize page-one performance: With deeper SERP visibility harder to monitor, page-one rankings matter more than ever.

Bottom Line

Google’s confirmation that the &num=100 parameter is no longer supported has created ripple effects across the SEO industry. Rank-tracking tools are disrupted, Search Console metrics look unstable, and long-tail tracking has become less reliable. This is an intentional shift by Google—and SEOs should adapt by updating tools, resetting expectations, and focusing on what can be measured accurately today.


OpenAI Refines ChatGPT Search: Better Accuracy, Smarter Shopping & Cleaner Formats

OpenAI recently rolled out significant improvements to ChatGPT Search that focus on three core areas: factuality, shopping intent detection, and formatting clarity. The goal is to reduce hallucinations (false or misleading responses), make product-related queries more precise, and present answers in cleaner, easier-to-digest formats. These updates were officially listed in the ChatGPT release notes.

In the shopping domain, ChatGPT is now better at recognizing when a user is looking to buy something—not just searchINFO—and surfaces relevant product options with visually rich carousels, added product details, and links to external sites where users can follow through. These product suggestions are not ads; they’re generated based on intent detection and product metadata.

Formatting enhancements mean that answers are delivered in more readable structures—shorter paragraphs, formatting that emphasizes clarity, clean visual layout, less clutter—all helping users understand responses quickly without sacrificing depth.

Why These Changes Matter

These updates represent a maturing of ChatGPT’s search interface from casual Q&A toward a more reliable assistant that can handle shopping, research, and comparisons more competently. For SEOs, e-commerce brands, and content creators, this raises the bar: vague or loosely structured product content or generic overview content will increasingly be less visible or less trusted by the model.

Cleaner formatting and better shopping intent detection mean that how you present content (product specs, pricing, reviews, images) matters more now than ever. If metadata is missing or vague, or if your product pages are poorly organized, ChatGPT may skip over them or surface them lower in relevance.

Better factuality reduces the opportunity for content with shallow claims or weak sourcing; the model appears to be smarter at filtering out hallucinations. That aligns strongly with Google’s ongoing emphasis (in updates like the Quality Rater Guidelines) on trust, authority, and verifiable content.

What to Do Now

  • Audit product content on your site—ensure clean, well-structured metadata (price, availability, images, specs).
  • Optimize for clarity and focus: use headings, bullet points, and logical formatting that maps well to how AI extracts info.
  • Ensure correctness and sourcing: verify product info, update outdated data, rebuild trust through credible reviews or third-party validation.
  • Monitor ChatGPT traffic and behavior: watch for changes in how often your content is surfaced via ChatGPT, especially for shop-related queries.
  • Stay updated with OpenAI’s changelog so you notice when new features roll out or existing ones adjust.

Bottom Line

The recent update to ChatGPT Search isn’t just about more visual polish—it’s a shift toward precision, relevance, and trust. Brands that lean into structured data, clear formatting, accurate product info, and genuine value will benefit most. For everyone else, there’s a risk of slipping visibility as AI tools for search become smarter and stricter.


Google Launches Store Widget to Highlight Local Availability in Search

Google has introduced a new feature called the Store Widget in Search, designed to help businesses display store information directly in search results—things like hours, location(s), whether an item is in stock—and connect shoppers more quickly to their nearest physical store or local availability. It’s part of Google’s push to make search results more useful and actionable for shoppers.

How It Works & Where It Shows Up

  • The Store Widget appears in search results when Google determines there’s a strong local shopping intent. Users searching for specific products or local stores can see store-front info as part of their results.
  • It draws from existing business data—Merchant Center, Google Business Profiles (or Google My Business), store inventory info, and structured data markup. Accuracy in those sources is essential for participation.
  • For users, it provides direct cues—like “available today at this store”, store hours, photos, or address—helping reduce friction between search and purchase. It’s meant to improve confidence and speed in decision-making, especially for local-aware shoppers.

Why Google Introduced It

Google’s motivations seem two-fold: enhance the shopper experience and reward businesses that maintain accurate local inventory and store info. The Store Widget helps Google surface local options more readily, which aligns with broader trends like local search, “near me” queries, and hybrid commerce (online + offline). It also fits with Google’s strategy of providing more interactive, actionable search result elements without sending users away from the SERP.

What SEOs & Site Owners Should Do

  • Ensure business info is accurate: Double check that your Google Business Profile (GBP), Merchant Center feed, store inventory feed, and store hours are up-to-date. Errors or outdated stock info could lead to poor user experience.
  • Add or improve structured data: Use relevant schema markup (like LocalBusiness, Product, Offer) to help Google understand your store locations, product availability, and inventory.
  • Optimize for local shopping intent: Pages for specific products or storefronts should include local signals—address, inventory, store pickup options—so that Google can trigger the Store Widget.
  • Monitor search visibility and user behavior: Track queries that imply local intent (e.g. product + city name, “near me”, etc.) and monitor changes in impressions, clicks, or conversions once the widget is live in regions important to you.
  • Provide helpful user content: For storefronts, ensure clear information about pickup, return policies, photos, and contact info. The clearer and more reliable the information, the more likely Google will trust you to show in these enhanced SERP features.

Bottom Line

The Store Widget is another signal that Google is elevating local store presence in search results—making it easier for shoppers to see if a product is available nearby and bridge the online-offline gap. It rewards businesses with accurate local inventory and well-maintained business listings. For SEOs, this is a chance: ensuring local accuracy and optimizing for store visibility can make a real difference in conversions and visibility for searches with local or shopping intent.


AI Comes to Chrome: What Google’s Update Means for Browsing and SEO

Google has announced they are adding several AI-powered features directly into Chrome, including embedding Gemini—its generative AI assistant—into the browser, and expanding AI Mode in the Omnibox (Chrome’s address/search bar). Users will be able to ask more complex questions, get contextual search suggestions, and receive AI Overviews of content on the page they’re viewing.

Some of these AI tools will also help with everyday tasks—like blocking scams, managing passwords, surfacing past tabs, summarizing webpages, and finding information across multiple open tabs. The goal is to make browsing more intelligent, helpful, and safer.

The rollout starts in the U.S. for desktop users in English, with mobile support (Android, iOS) and additional languages & countries coming soon. This aligns with Google’s broader strategy to bring AI deeper into core user experiences rather than keeping it experimental.

Implications for SEOs & Site Owners

  • New visibility surfaces: With AI Mode in the Omnibox and AI Overviews appearing in-browser, there are more opportunities for content to be discovered without a traditional Google Search result. Pages that can be succinctly summarized or that provide strong, relevant content may gain visibility.
  • Importance of context & structure: Because AI will pull from content on pages you’re already browsing, how well your page is organized (clear headings, logical structure, clean markup) will likely influence whether or not your content is surfaced in AI Overviews.
  • Safe & trusted content becomes more crucial: Features like scam blocking, password management, and cross-tab summarization indicate that Google is increasingly tying in trust, safety, and user experience as foundational aspects of its AI integrations. Sites with clear credibility, transparency, and good UX are better positioned.
  • Tracking & analytics may blur lines: Traffic coming via AI-driven features (Omnibox suggestions, AI Overviews) may not always be clearly distinguished in Search Console or analytics tools. SEOs should pay attention to changes in impressions, click behavior, and examine traffic sources more carefully.

What You Should Do Now

  • Audit your content to ensure it’s easy to understand, well-structured, and provides value that can be captured in summaries.
  • Update metadata, schema, and page UI to make content context clues clear (titles/subheaders, images with alt text, succinct lists or summaries).
  • Ensure your site meets good security and trust-signal standards (HTTPS, reputable backlinks, clear authorship, etc.), since these are likely to be emphasized in AI features.
  • Monitor performance as these features roll out—look for new traffic patterns, changes in keyword relevance, and how users engage with AI-surfaced content.

Bottom Line

Chrome is stepping forward into a more AI-augmented browsing experience. Rather than separating search from browsing, Google is weaving AI into how people consume content in their browser. For content creators and SEOs, this means that high-quality, well-structured content, trustworthiness, and being understandable at a glance are more important than ever.


Google Discover Update Brings Follows, Previews, and More Content Types

Google has rolled out a set of updates to Discover that aim to make it easier for users to find, follow, and engage with content from their favorite creators and publishers. These changes expand the types of content that appear in the feed while also giving users more control over what they see.

One of the biggest updates is the ability to follow publishers or creators directly within Discover. Once a user follows a source, content from that creator is more likely to appear in their feed. Before hitting “follow,” users can also preview the types of content a creator shares—whether that’s articles, social posts, or videos—so they know what to expect.

Discover is also broadening the formats it supports. Alongside standard articles, the feed will now highlight social media posts from platforms like X and Instagram, as well as YouTube Shorts. The goal is to create a richer, more dynamic content mix that reflects the variety of media people engage with daily.

Why This Matters

  • These changes reflect Google’s move toward more personalized and creator-focused experiences. Rather than just surfacing general content based on algorithmic predictions, Discover is letting users signal their preferences more explicitly via follows, previews, and content selection. blog.google+1
  • For publishers and creators, this means greater opportunity: being followed in Discover could lead to more consistent visibility and traffic. Previously, appearing in Discover might have depended more heavily on algorithmic serendipity; now there’s more of a chance that content you regularly produce can build a steady audience in the feed.
  • For SEOs, this signals that content strategy needs to encompass more than just ranking content—creator identity, multi-platform content, and engagement across formats all look increasingly relevant. Emphasis on social posts, short videos, and cross-platform presence may help you gain more reach within Discover.

Best Practices for Publishers & SEOs

  • Make sure your brand/publisher identity is clear and consistent—name, profile, description—for followability and discoverability.
  • Diversify content formats: if you publish video, social posts, Shorts, etc., ensure those pieces are discoverable and aligned with your website content.
  • Monitor Discover traffic separately—keep an eye on how content from creators you follow performs, and how your content shows up in feeds for people who are following you vs those who aren’t.
  • Optimize metadata and previews: since users can preview content before following, your titles, descriptions, thumbnail images, and cross-platform content matter more than ever.
  • Keep up with content cadence and consistency: regular, high-quality posts across formats can help maintain visibility within a creator-focused Discover model.

Bottom Line

This September update shifts Discover closer to a socialized, creator-centric feed. Users get more control and variety, and publishers/creators stand to benefit from being followed. If your content strategy is still article-first and platform siloed, now is the time to rethink multi-format content, identity, and how you build an audience in Discover—not just chase rankings.


The disabling of the “100 results per page” setting and &num=100 parameter has caused a serious shake-up in rank tracking and reporting—data gaps, skewed metrics, and confusing shifts in Search Console have made visibility harder to measure than ever. That, combined with all the new changes we’ve covered this week—such as Chrome’s AI Mode, Discover updates, and OpenAI’s improved search formats—reminds us that we’re in a phase of acceleration, not stability. For SEOs and site owners, the only safe move is to adapt: rebaseline metrics, get your tools aligned, focus harder on fundamentals like page-one visibility, E-E-A-T, and well structured content. Expect more change ahead, and make readiness and adaptability your strategy.