AI Overviews in Google Search changed what people see at the top of results. That shift affects how often your pages are seen, which pages get clicks, and how many visits turn into sales or leads. You don’t need a new toolbelt to measure the impact, but you do need a clear plan.
This guide shows how to track three pillars that matter: impressions, conversions, and visibility. You will learn what each metric means, where to find reliable data, and how to separate AI noise from the real signal.


Contents
TL;DR
- Use Search Console for impressions and CTR to see if exposure and click propensity shift after AI Overviews roll out for your topics.
- Treat conversions as the source of truth by marking GA4 key events, then review attribution to avoid misreading channel impact.
- Track visibility as prominence on the results page with simple, repeatable checks, including the Web filter and above-the-fold notes.
- Compare cohorts of queries likely to trigger summaries against those that rarely do, then report the deltas with plain recommendations.
What AI Overviews Change in Search
AI Overviews are summaries that appear in Google Search results for many informational queries. They are part of Search and cannot be fully turned off; opting into Search Labs can show more experimental experiences, but AI Overviews can still appear even if you do not opt in.
Google has also added a Web filter that shows largely classic text links, which is useful for spot-checking layout and prominence. For publishers and marketers, the practical questions are simple: are you still being seen, are people still clicking, and are the right actions still happening on your site? That is where impressions, conversions, and visibility come in.
The Three Metrics That Matter
These metrics provide a holistic view, moving beyond simple traffic counts to assess both your brand’s presence in the new search landscape and its contribution to your bottom line.
1. Impressions: See If You Still Show Up
An impression means a searcher saw or could have seen a link to your site in a Google surface, such as Search, Discover, or News. In Search Console, an impression is counted when your result is included in the current set of results, even if the user doesn’t scroll far enough to see it, as long as no extra click is required to load more results.
In independently scrolling widgets (like carousels or “People also ask”) and infinite-scroll feeds such as Discover, the item usually has to be scrolled or expanded into view to count. For AI Overviews specifically, supporting links generally only count an impression once they are visible in the overview. That granular definition matters when big summary boxes push classic links lower.
Here are ways to use impressions:
- In Search Console’s Performance report, track total impressions and CTR for core topics before and after notable AI changes.
- Group by query to find which questions lost CTR while keeping impressions. That pattern often means your listing still shows but gets less attention.
- Group by page to see which URLs remain visible. Remember that most metrics are assigned to the canonical URL, so do not be surprised if clicks are credited to a different URL version than your server logs.
2. Conversions: Prove Business Impact
In GA4, a key event is an event that GA4 treats as a conversion-type action. You can mark any important action, such as purchase, lead form submit, free trial start, or account sign-up, as a key event, and GA4 also treats some events (like purchase) as key events by default.
These are what most teams think of as conversions. You can mark up to 30 events as key events in standard properties and more (up to 50) in Analytics 360.
Here are some tips on how to utilize conversions:
- Confirm that your primary actions are real GA4 events and are marked as key events.
- Review attribution settings in GA4 so your reports credit channels the way you expect. For shared reporting with Google Ads, make sure key settings (attribution model, lookback window, and which events are imported) are aligned or intentionally different so you don’t misread channel performance.
- Trend key events from organic search. If conversions hold steady while clicks dip, your audience may be more qualified, or your site is doing a better job with fewer visits.


3. Visibility: Understand Real Estate And Prominence
Visibility here means how prominently your result appears on the page, not a Google-provided metric. Think of it as your share of attention on the results screen.
It’s different from impressions or CTR. Impressions tell you if you showed up, and CTR tells you how often people clicked once they saw you. Visibility fills the gap in between: it forces you to look at where you sit on the page, what’s above you (like AI Overviews or video blocks), and how crowded the screen is when a real person runs that query.
Here are tried-and-tested tips to boost visibility:
- Run a short, fixed set of representative queries each week. Note whether an AI Overview appears, where your result lands relative to it, and whether other features crowd you out.
- Use the Web filter to view a simpler page of classic links and compare where your listing appears versus the default view.
- Track changes by intent type: how-to, comparison, local, and transactional queries can behave differently.
Quick Comparison: Which Metric Answers What
Learn how to select the right metric by clearly outlining what each metric answers, where the data comes from, its main advantages, and potential pitfalls to watch out for.
| Metric | What It Answers | Primary Source | Strengths | Watch Outs |
| Impressions | Are we still being shown for our topics? | Google Search Console Performance | Directional exposure trend; query and page cuts; CTR context | Carousels and infinite scroll nuances; canonical URL aggregation can mask duplicates |
| Conversions | Are we still hitting business goals? | GA4 key events and reports | Source of truth for value; channel comparisons; Ads integration | Must mark events; attribution settings affect credit; limits per property |
| Visibility | How prominent are we on the results page? | Manual SERP checks; documented screenshots | Explains CTR changes; ties layout to performance | Not a native metric; requires consistent sampling and notes |
How to Attribute Changes to AI Overviews
Treat AI Overviews as one of several forces. Seasonality, site changes, news cycles, and ranking updates all move your numbers. To isolate impact:
- Use cohorts: Compare question-led queries that often trigger summaries to navigational or brand queries that rarely do.
- Look for paired patterns: A drop in CTR with steady impressions points to layout and attention issues. A drop in impressions suggests ranking or coverage issues.
- Check reporting rules: Search Console assigns most performance data to canonical URLs; GA4 key events depend on the event names you mark. Misalignment can look like traffic loss when it is really a reporting change.
- Keep screenshots: Document what the results page looked like when you saw a shift. Small layout tweaks explain a lot.
A Simple Reporting Framework
Once a month, put everything on a single page. Start with a short headline for each of your three pillars: impressions, conversions, and visibility. Then add three simple charts:
- Impressions and CTR over time
- Organic key events over time
- The share of your sampled queries that show an AI Overview on top
Finish with three key insights and three recommended actions, ranked by impact. Example actions might be: tightening or adding FAQ sections, sharpening the intro summary at the top of key pages, or carefully using snippet controls when you need to limit how much content appears in search.
Agencies and teams can also use GEO services packages to ensure these reports are consistent, structured, and easy to scale.
Examples
Take a look at these practical case studies on how the three metrics were used to diagnose and respond to AI Overview changes.
Recipe Publisher
A mid-sized recipe site saw steady impressions for “how to make sourdough starter”, but CTR fell after AI Overviews began summarizing steps. The team refreshed the page intro with a concise, scannable summary, added a clear jump menu to techniques, and improved structured data.
They also tracked a weekly SERP sample and annotated when the Web filter showed their listing as a top classic link. CTR recovered partway, and time on page improved, indicating visitors who clicked were more engaged.


B2B SaaS Lead Gen
A SaaS vendor noticed a 12 percent decline in clicks on “SOC 2 readiness checklist”, while GA4 key events for demo requests stayed flat. The team confirmed AI Overviews appeared on most checklist queries and that their result sat just below the summary.
They tightened the page’s first 150 words, added a short comparison section that answered related questions, and marked “download_checklist” as a key event. The next month, clicks stabilized and assisted conversions from organic rose, likely due to better alignment with summary-triggered intent.
Actionable Steps / Checklist
This checklist simplifies the complex process of measuring AI Overview impact into manageable monthly and weekly tasks, ensuring practical application and consistent monitoring.
- Confirm GA4 key events for your top 3 business actions; mark them and verify in Realtime and DebugView.
- In GA4, review Attribution settings so organic credit aligns with how you make decisions.
- In Search Console, export the last 6 months of Performance data by query and page; keep a monthly baseline.
- Build two query lists using question-led queries and non-question core queries for your brand or category.
- Sample your top 20 queries weekly. Capture whether an AI Overview appears, your rank, and any major features crowding the page.
- Compare CTR and impressions by cohort monthly. Flag patterns where CTR dips but impressions hold.
- Improve page intros. Put the answer up top in plain English, then expand with depth.
- Add concise FAQs that mirror common follow-up questions.
- Use snippet controls sparingly if you must limit previews. Test the effect on visibility before broad rollout.
- Present one monthly one-pager with metrics, screenshots, and three prioritized actions.
Glossary
Take note of these technical terms and key concepts to understand the discussion on measuring AI impact.
- AI Overview: An AI-generated summary that can appear in Google Search results for certain queries.
- Impression: A count when a link to your site is included in the current set of results on a Google surface. For most web results, it doesn’t have to be scrolled into view as long as no extra click is needed to load more results.
- Key Event (GA4): An important action (for example, purchase or lead submit) that GA4 treats as a conversion. You mark events as key events in GA4, and some events (such as purchase) are key events by default.
- CTR: Click-through rate, calculated as clicks divided by impressions.
- Canonical URL: The preferred version of a page that Google uses to consolidate signals and reporting.
- Snippet Controls: Meta tags and attributes such as nosnippet, max-snippet, and data-nosnippet that limit preview text shown in results.
FAQ
Can I turn off AI Overviews for my site or users?
No, you can’t turn off AI Overviews because they’re a part of Search. Users can opt into or out of certain experiments, but AI Overviews can still appear. Focus on making your answer clear and useful.
Does Search Console show AI Overview impressions separately?
Google has not provided a dedicated AI Overviews report in Search Console. Use cohorts and CTR patterns to infer impact.
Should I block snippets to avoid being summarized?
You can limit or remove previews with nosnippet or max-snippet, but test carefully. Overly strict settings can reduce how and where your pages appear.
What if clicks fall but conversions hold?
You might be attracting fewer but better-qualified visits. Keep improving page clarity and measure key events; do not chase clicks for their own sake.
Final Thoughts
AI Overviews changed the real estate on results pages, but the fundamentals still win. Track whether you show up, whether people take action, and where your listing sits on the page. Then iterate on clarity, structure, and proof. Keep your reports simple, your samples consistent, and your next steps concrete.

