SEOIntel Weekly News Round-up (First Week of November 2025)

This week’s news updates highlight how AI-driven search is reshaping the fundamentals of visibility. Google’s latest discussions shed light on how AI Mode now evaluates and recommends businesses, shifting discovery from simple keyword matching toward multi-step reasoning and contextual understanding. Meanwhile, Google is retiring certain lesser-used features and structured data types, signaling a continued move […]
Marie Aquino
November 7, 2025

This week’s news updates highlight how AI-driven search is reshaping the fundamentals of visibility.

Google’s latest discussions shed light on how AI Mode now evaluates and recommends businesses, shifting discovery from simple keyword matching toward multi-step reasoning and contextual understanding.

Meanwhile, Google is retiring certain lesser-used features and structured data types, signaling a continued move toward simplification and standardization in the search results.

New data from SEMrush also shows how brand visibility in AI search behaves very differently from traditional rankings, and Google issued a reminder for sites using cloud-hosted assets to ensure proper Search Console verification.

Inside Google’s AI Mode: How Search Now Finds, Ranks, and Recommends

In a recent interview on the Silicon Valley Girl podcast, Robby Stein, Google’s VP of Product for Search, explained how Google’s new AI Mode changes the way information is discovered, ranked, and recommended. The conversation offered one of the clearest looks yet at how Google is merging large-model reasoning with Google’s Knowledge Graph, Shopping Graph, Maps data, local listings, image search, and real-world business information.

Stein emphasized a central point: search isn’t going away — but the way people search is changing. AI Mode lets users ask multi-sentence, context-heavy queries and complete tasks (not just receive answers), meaning the entry points and decision steps in the search journey are evolving.

Important Topics Discussed

1. How AI Mode “Reasons” to Produce Answers

AI Mode doesn’t just return a single set of search results. Instead, it performs what Stein calls “query fan-out”:

  • It takes your question
  • Generates dozens of related queries
  • Uses Google Search under the hood to gather supporting evidence
  • Synthesizes the results into a response with links, sources, and next steps

This means Google isn’t replacing search — AI Mode is search, expanded.

2. Google’s Knowledge Sources Go Beyond the Web

Unlike standalone chatbots, Google can draw on:

  • The Knowledge Graph (entities, relationships, facts)
  • The Shopping Graph (50B+ products, refreshed millions of times per hour)
  • Maps & Local Business Profiles (hours, menu data, reviews, images)
  • Lens & visual search understanding

This gives AI Mode context and grounding, helping it recommend places, stores, products, and real-world services — not just text answers.

3. Local Recommendations Now Understand Intent

When a user asks:

“Find a cozy Italian spot for a date night in my neighborhood”

Google evaluates:

  • Location context
  • Review sentiment (“romantic,” “nice ambiance”)
  • Price range patterns
  • Dietary notes or menu highlights
  • Hours + reservation availability

This shifts local SEO from “rank for keywords” to match real-world attributes to human goals.

4. Agentic Actions: AI Can Book, Call, and Compare

Stein demonstrated:

  • AI Mode booking restaurants across platforms (OpenTable, Resy, Tock)
  • AI agent calling multiple local pet groomers, gathering pricing + schedule availability, then emailing results to the user

This is significant:
Businesses without strong websites can still be selected — if their business profile and contact info are correct.

Local SEO now includes:
Answer your phone. Keep your hours updated. Maintain real-world consistency.

5. Personalization Will Be Opt-In

Google plans to let users allow AI Mode to draw from:

  • Gmail signals
  • YouTube viewing + channel interests
  • Docs/Drive planning context (e.g., trip itineraries, school projects)

But only if the user chooses it.

Early personalization is already available in Search Labs for:

  • Shopping comparisons
  • Local restaurant suggestions

6. Ads Are Not Going Away — They’re Evolving

Stein confirmed that:

  • Google Ads will continue to exist
  • But formats will adapt to conversational/search-by-task workflows
  • Ads will appear where they make sense for the user, not as interruptions

Expect:

  • Recommendation-aligned ad slots
  • Contextual suggestions during multi-step tasks
  • Interactive product exploration prompts

7. PR & Reputation Matter More in the AI Era

AI uses the same signals people do when evaluating credibility:

  • Articles
  • Lists
  • Roundups
  • Reviews
  • Brand mentions across the web

This means:

Digital PR becomes a visibility engine — not just a credibility play.

If your business is talked about, AI can find you.

8. Search Behavior Is Shifting to Longer, Conversational Queries

People are asking:

  • 5-sentence questions
  • Queries mixing text + images
  • Questions that bundle preferences, context, and constraints

This is where content strategy must adapt:

  • Offer multi-step guidance, not just answers
  • Optimize content for tasks, not just keywords
  • Use headings that reflect how people ask (full sentences, not fragments)

Key Takeaways

What’s ChangingWhat to Do
Search queries are longer and more naturalWrite content around questions, not just keywords
AI Mode uses business profile data heavilyKeep Google Business Profile complete & updated
Mentions in reputable content influence AI recommendationsInvest in digital PR & earned citations
AI can now book/call/compare providersEnsure pricing, availability, and contact info are accurate
Visual + multimodal search is rising fastAdd original images, labeled sections, structured data
Ads will still matter — just in new formatsPrepare for conversational and multimodal ad placement

Stein’s message is clear: search isn’t disappearing — it is expanding into AI-powered reasoning, personalization, and real-world task completion. Businesses that invest in credibility, structure their information clearly, and understand how users actually express needs will be best positioned for discovery. The future of visibility belongs to brands that are both useful to people and legible to AI.

Watch the full interview below:


Google Cuts Less-Used Search Features & Structured Data Types

Google announced its plan to remove various “lesser-used” structured-data types and search page features as part of its push to simplify the results page and improve efficiency.

According to the official blog post on the Google Developers site, starting January 2026 Google will “remove support for the structured data types in Search Console and its API.”

What’s Being Removed or Clarified

  • Google stated that structured data types such as PracticeProblem markup will be deprecated from Search Console charts, Rich Results Test, and Search appearance filters.
  • The Dataset structured data is confirmed to only apply to Google’s Dataset Search platform—not general Google Search visibility.
  • Google also identified a number of small visual elements/features that will be phased out, including: “Today’s Doodle box,” “Nutrition facts,” “Nearby offers and events,” “Local bike-share station status,” and a TV season selector.
  • The official documentation update highlights that these changes are part of the broader effort to simplify the search results page for users and sites.

Why It’s Important for SEO & Web Teams

For webmasters, content teams, and SEO professionals, these updates mean that some previously implemented structured data may no longer trigger enhanced displays or reporting in Search Console. That doesn’t necessarily mean rankings will drop—but the visibility features associated with certain markup may disappear, and dashboards relying on them can need adjusting. Google emphasised that while indexing and ranking are not being changed for these types, the user-facing features and their measurement may no longer apply.

What to Do Now

Sites that currently use practice-problem or dataset markup should review its purpose: if the markup exists solely for enhanced result display in general search but the feature is being retired, it may be prudent to remove or repurpose it. Also, review analytics and dashboards: if you rely on reports tied to deprecated markup, adjust alerting and measurement systems so you’re not caught off guard once support ends in January 2026.

Google’s move to streamline search features and structured data types reflects the direction of a more efficient and simplified search ecosystem—one that favours high-value, broadly used features over niche enhancements. For SEO practitioners, this is a timely reminder that tech debt (old markup, unused features, legacy dashboards) can become a liability. Staying current with documentation, audit-proofing your markup, and aligning with Google’s stated feature set remains critical for visible and stable performance.


SEMrush AI Visibility Index: Three Months of Data Reveal How Brands Are Performing in AI Search

SEMrush recently launched its AI Visibility Index, analyzing brand mention and source-diversity trends across two major AI search models—ChatGPT and Google AI Mode—over the months of August through October 2025. The data digs into how many brands get mentioned by the models, which domains are cited as sources, and how stable visibility is over time.

Key Findings

  • On ChatGPT, the number of brands mentioned rose by about 12% in September before returning close to August levels in October; by contrast, Google AI Mode saw a 4% drop in brand mentions from August to October.
  • Source-domain diversity increased dramatically in ChatGPT (e.g., nearly doubling in many verticals), while Google AI Mode’s source diversity grew more modestly (≈ 13% increase).
  • In the top 100 brands ranked by weighted Share of Voice, 25 new entrants appeared over the three months—mostly in the lower half of the list—while the top 50 remained relatively stable.
  • Reddit’s role as a cited source changed significantly across models: in ChatGPT its usage dropped by ~82% for the top domains; in Google AI Mode it surged ~74% from August to October.

Why This Matters for Search & AI Strategy

The study highlights that AI search visibility is not identical to traditional search visibility—brand mentions and source prominence behave differently across models. For marketers:

  • Being visible in one model (e.g., ChatGPT) doesn’t guarantee being visible in another (e.g., Google AI Mode).
  • Source strategy matters: some domains are increasingly cited (e.g., Amazon, Yahoo), others are sharply corrected (e.g., Reddit in ChatGPT).
  • Brand visibility in AI search appears relatively stable at the top, but still volatile below the top 50—so emerging brands have opportunity, but must act fast.
  • With source and brand dynamics shifting, traditional keyword tracking alone won’t provide full insight into AI-driven visibility.

Key Takeaways

  • Monitor each AI model separately. What works for ChatGPT may differ from Google’s AI offering.
  • Earn strong mentions across varied high-quality domains. Visibility in AI results is partly built on external credibility.
  • Focus on signal-rich content and structured data. Use reliable sources, update business-profile info, and ensure your site can be cited accurately by AI systems.
  • Be aware of volatility zones. If you’re ranked beyond the top 50 brands in a vertical, expect flux—maintain speed in content and outreach.
  • Track emerging query trends and sources. As AI search evolves, source diversity and brand mentions may offer early insight into opportunity areas.

The SEMrush AI Visibility Index offers a revealing snapshot of how brand visibility is evolving in the AI-driven search era. As models like ChatGPT and Google AI Mode reshape discovery and recommendations, “being visible” means more than ranking well—it means being mentioned responsibly, cited authoritatively, and ready to be recommended. For SEO and digital marketing teams, adapting to this visibility landscape is becoming not optional, but essential.

Read the full report here.


Google Search Console PSA: Verify Your Cloud-Hosting Host to Avoid Visibility Gaps

John Mueller site owners on Bluesky to verify any cloud-hosting hostnames (e.g., buckets, CDNs) in Search Console when they host assets like images, videos or static files.

What’s Driving the Reminder

Many websites serve assets from third-party clouds (Amazon S3, Microsoft Azure Blob, Google Cloud Storage) on hostnames such as bucketname.s3.amazonaws.com or storage.googleapis.com. If these hosts aren’t verified under your Search Console property, Google may not attribute crawl data, indexing issues or Safe Browsing notices to your domain — meaning you could miss alerts or data affecting your visibility.

What Google Recommends

  • Create a branded subdomain like assets.your-site.com or cdn.your-brand.com and use a CNAME to point it at your storage bucket.
  • In Search Console, add and verify that hostname (or your domain property) via DNS verification. This ensures your hosted assets fall under the same verified property as your website.
  • Update internal links so traffic and asset URLs use your branded host. For image-heavy sites, this may cause temporary fluctuations in Google Images indexing.

Why This Matters for SEO & Technical Health

If you skip this step:

  • Crawl or coverage errors tied to your asset host may go unnoticed
  • Safety or malware flags on storage buckets might not alert you
  • Migrating to a new hosting provider becomes riskier (since the hostname is not within your verified control)
  • Asset URLs remain outside your domain’s Search Console property, fragmenting your data

In a world where sites increasingly rely on cloud infrastructure and edge delivery networks, verifying the hosting layer in Search Console is a simple but essential technical-SEO move. By bringing all your resources — web pages, images, videos and static files — under properties you control, you ensure visibility, alerts and reporting remain consolidated. This may not directly boost rankings, but it strengthens your foundation for reliable indexing, clean migration paths and robust monitoring.


As AI-powered search becomes the default experience, the way we think about optimization, visibility, and authority continues to evolve. The theme across all of this week’s updates is clear: clarity, credibility, and structure matter more than ever. Whether it’s how AI Mode interprets intent, how visibility shifts across models, or how technical setup influences indexing — the fundamentals still apply, just in new forms. We’ll continue tracking these changes as they unfold, so you can stay prepared and optimized for the search landscape ahead.