GLOBAL REPORT – When ChatGPT first hit the mainstream, it
seemed to many that the multibillion-dollar world of travel search marketing
was about to change overnight.
It didn’t turn out that way.
“When the whole ChatGPT thing exploded, I was very bullish that this would be a
massive disruptor because users would be so excited,” said Mario Gavira, vice
president of growth at online travel agency Kiwi.
“In fact, it didn't move the needle at all or, if it moved at all, it was
marginal.”
The first major test of AI’s influence on search was when Microsoft started
plugging OpenAI’s GPT-4 into its search results in February 2023. Back then,
Bing had a 2.8% market share, compared to Google’s 93.4%. A year later that had
increased to just 3.3% with Google at 91.6%, according to Statcounter.
It’s now clear generative artificial intelligence’s influence on search
marketing is more of an evolution than a revolution.
“There is going to be a slow migration from what we know as
search to this convergence of search and AI,” said Robert Patterson, who leads
the AI expertise hub for travel marketing firm MMGY Global.
Advertising dollars will follow… eventually.
“Brands are so reliant on the results of pay-per-click advertising and have
such high confidence in that being a safe investment place. There's going to be
a hesitancy to a degree to move,” Patterson said.
“Relevancy is where it's at and if AI provides more relevant, detailed results,
it will win ultimately in the end.”
The new AI search engines
Several new AI-native search engines have launched, and
Perplexity has emerged as an early leader.
Perplexity provides a lengthy, “clickless” answer to search queries that
summarizes real-time information and content from a variety of sources, such as
trusted news outlets and blogs and academic papers. Sources for the information
are explicitly listed.
You.com is another of the new entrants hoping to break
Google’s dominance. It was launched in 2020 by ex-Salesforce AI executives and,
unusually, offers users a choice of AI model to create results. It added
real-time responses with citations in 2022.
ChatGPT’s creator OpenAI is also looking to get into the search game directly,
not just via Microsoft. It launched a prototype of its own AI search tool,
SearchGPT, in July 2024 to a closed group of 10,000 testers. It will
integrate its search capabilities directly into ChatGPT in the future.
As focus shifts to clickless results, organic search seems certain to change.
Much effort and money has been spent on trying to figure out Google’s search
signals. In June. Phocuswire
wrote about a leak of Google’s internal API documentation which
gave insights for travel marketers.
“There is a whole cottage industry related to search engine optimization and
making assumptions and testing and seeing what we can do to kind of get our
ways to the top of the search results,” Patterson said.
“Over time those organic listings keep kept getting pushed further and further
down,” he said.
And said Gavira, “When you look at search marketing, it's a combination of the
paid plus the organic, and if the shift of organic is shrinking then then that
is a challenge.
“Even if you have a potential organic link in an AI overview answer, Google
will not have 10 links in the future, it will have one or two.”
Understanding how search functions
The black box nature of AI, in which its creators may not
know how it arrives at the results it produces, could also prove challenging
for travel companies trying to game the algorithms.
MMGY is developing tools for brands that analyze how their
content is perceived AI-powered search engines to advise them on how to modify
the structure of their content and data for better performance.
“We need to produce content both for human consumption and for machine
consumption,” Patterson said.
Yet search results from these new entrants seem unlikely to remain clickless
forever.
A Perplexity spokesperson told Phocuswire that it plans to start rolling out
ads before the end of the year, first in the United States and internationally
over the next year.
“We'll launch with a few select brands across different categories to
experiment with formats and gain initial user feedback.”
The spokesperson added, “It’s important to us that we still maintain the
trustworthiness of answer engine results, so ads will be separate from answer
engine results, and a brand will not receive a more favorable ranking in our
search index by agreeing to advertise.”
Suppliers are also considering adding AI search to their own digital
properties. MMGY is working with search-as-a-service platform Algolia and will
launch its first client website, for a state tourism destination, in Q1 2025.
“We learned that search was a really core functionality of their website for
travelers but also stakeholders,” Patterson said.
Boston-based AI provider Mobi sees this as a huge opportunity. The company
launched its Intent Driven Search (IDS) platform in early September this year.
IDS ingests, cleans and structures more than 40 million data items relating to
locations and properties, from dining and transportation options to activities,
attractions and local wildlife.
Mobi CEO Anna Jaffe said that travelers are moving away from widget-based
search toward more natural language searches.
“We can now do a structured search across our world content store to look for
locations with great diving at this time of year, where there is no hurricane,
the water has the right clarity and people have left positive reviews,” she
said.
The road ahead
Will people move from the Google they know and, to some
extent, trust to these new AI search engines?
“The short answer is yes, but the real question is, how much?” said George
Roukas, president of consultancy Gaipan and co-founder of Hudson
Crossing. “Google is a very formidable player and has a lot of smart
people. They are going to figure out a way to ride this wave and they have
Android, which is going to be key in this fight.”
“They also have lots of relationships in the travel world and already has
shopping and booking infrastructure which Apple and Microsoft don't have,” he
said. “They’ve also got Maps, which will be hugely important for doing this
stuff. And a bazillion businesses worldwide are on Google already.”
Kiwi’s Gavira thinks AI search will grow but agrees that Google will keep its
dominance.
“Google, with its capabilities to AB test everything to death with the volumes
of data they have, will walk this fine line between whenever relevant,
providing the answer, but always optimizing for their core cash cow, monetizing
whenever there is an intent in the query that can send signals to the algorithm
that this customer actually is willing to pay for.”