What AI Overviews actually are (and why your traffic dropped)
If you've noticed fewer clicks even though your rankings look fine, you're not imagining it. Google AI Overviews are the AI-generated answers that now sit at the very top of a lot of search results — above the blue links, above the Map Pack, above everything. Google reads a handful of web pages, writes a summary in its own words, and hands the searcher an answer without them ever leaving the results page.
For a Virginia business, that's the whole problem in one sentence: the searcher got what they needed and never saw your site. Ranking #3 used to mean a steady trickle of clicks. Now the answer box can absorb that click before your listing gets a look.
Here's the nuance most agencies skip. AI Overviews don't fire on every search. They love broad, informational questions — "how much does a metal roof cost in Virginia," "do I need a permit to build a deck in Roanoke." They show up far less on high-intent, ready-to-buy searches like "gutter repair near me" or "emergency plumber Richmond." Those still lean hard on the local results and the Map Pack.
So the honest read is this: AI Overviews are eating your informational clicks, not necessarily your buying clicks. The businesses getting hurt are the ones whose whole plan was ranking blog posts to catch top-of-funnel traffic. The fix isn't to panic. It's to change what you're optimizing for.
The click math has changed for local businesses
Let's be plain about the mechanics, because the number that matters isn't your ranking anymore — it's whether your name ends up inside the answer.
When an AI Overview appears, one of three things happens to you:
- You get cited. Google pulls a sentence or a fact from your page and links to you inside the summary. This is the new top spot. Fewer clicks overall, but the ones you get are warmer.
- A competitor gets cited. Someone else becomes the trusted source and you're pushed below the fold, even though you technically "rank."
- Nobody local gets cited. Google pulls from a national site or a directory, and no Virginia business benefits at all. This happens constantly, and it's your opening.
The old playbook was "rank on page one." The new one is "be the source the AI trusts." Related, but not the same thing. A thin page that ranked on backlinks alone can rank and still never get quoted. A clear, genuinely helpful page from a real local expert can get quoted even when it isn't #1.
You're no longer just competing for a click. You're competing to be the sentence Google reads out loud.
For most trades and service businesses in Virginia, that reframe is the whole game. You want your name, your service area, and your straight answers showing up where the buyer forms their first impression — which is now the top of the page, whether they click or not.
How to get quoted inside AI Overviews
Getting pulled into an AI answer isn't magic and it isn't a hack. Google's AI reads the same web it always did — it just summarizes now. The pages that get cited tend to share the same handful of traits. Here's what actually moves the needle for a Virginia business:
- Answer the question in the first two sentences. Don't bury the answer under 400 words of throat-clearing. Lead with it: "A standard architectural-shingle roof replacement in the Roanoke area typically runs $X to $Y" — then explain. The AI lifts the clean answer at the top.
- Write the way people ask. Use the real question as a heading, then answer it plainly underneath. "Do I need a permit to replace my gutters?" beats "Gutter Replacement Services."
- Be specific and local. Vague pages get skipped. Name your counties, cite the Virginia rule that applies, use real prices as ranges. Specificity is what makes the AI treat you as the expert instead of defaulting to a national directory.
- Show you're a real, trusted business. Google leans on trust signals — a complete Business Profile, consistent name, address and phone everywhere, real reviews, an About page with an actual person's name. An anonymous page on a thin site rarely gets quoted.
- Structure it cleanly. Short paragraphs, honest tables, bulleted lists, plain headings. Structured content is easier for the AI to lift accurately without mangling your numbers.
This is exactly the work our AI search approach is built around — writing pages that answer real Virginia buyer questions so clearly that Google's AI has no reason not to quote you.
Your Google Business Profile matters more than ever
Here's the good news for local service businesses. AI Overviews mostly fire on informational searches, but the searches that actually make you money — "someone near me who does this, now" — still run on local signals. And the single biggest local signal you control is your Google Business Profile.
When someone in Hampton Roads searches "seamless gutters near me," Google isn't writing an essay. It's deciding which three businesses to put in the Map Pack. That decision runs on proximity, relevance, and prominence — and two of those three are things you can directly influence.
What to lock down first:
- Complete every field. Primary and secondary categories, service areas, hours, the full service list, real photos. Half-filled profiles lose to complete ones.
- Keep your name, address, and phone identical everywhere. On your site, on every directory, on the profile itself. Inconsistency confuses Google and quietly drags down your local visibility.
- Get reviews, and actually reply to them. Recent, real reviews with owner responses signal an active, trusted business — the exact thing the Map Pack rewards.
- Keep it maintained. Post updates, refresh photos, answer questions. A profile that's clearly alive beats a dormant one.
The businesses winning local search in Virginia right now aren't the ones with the fanciest websites. They're the ones whose local footprint is airtight. If you fix nothing else this quarter, fix your profile. Our local SEO work starts right here, because it's the highest-leverage thing most owners are ignoring.
Where AI search and traditional SEO now overlap
A lot of owners hear "AI search" and assume it's a whole new discipline that needs some secret tool. It isn't. The uncomfortable truth is that the fundamentals barely changed — they just got more important.
Here's how the pieces fit together for a Virginia business:
| Goal | What it drives | What it needs |
|---|---|---|
| Get quoted in AI Overviews | Visibility on "how / what / cost" questions | Clear, question-first, genuinely expert content |
| Win the Map Pack | Ready-to-buy "near me" searches | A dialed-in Google Business Profile plus reviews |
| Rank the blue links | Everything else, including branded search | A fast, well-structured, trustworthy website |
Notice what runs through all three: clarity, trust, and genuine expertise. A page a human finds useful is the same page the AI finds quotable. There's no trick that games the AI while ignoring quality — Google spent a decade building systems to kill exactly that.
So if an agency tries to sell you a "special AI ranking package" that's somehow separate from doing good SEO, be skeptical. The real work is one coherent effort: build a legitimately helpful, fast, trustworthy web presence, and structure it so both people and machines can read it. That's why our SEO and AI search work run together, not as two products on an invoice.
A practical 30-day plan for Virginia owners
You don't need to overhaul everything. You need to move on the handful of things that actually change your visibility. Here's a realistic order of operations for an owner who also has a business to run.
Week 1 — Fix your foundation. Audit your Google Business Profile top to bottom. Complete every field, correct your categories, and confirm your name, address, and phone match your website and every directory. This alone recovers visibility for a lot of businesses.
Week 2 — Rewrite your top pages to answer questions. Take your three most important service pages. Add the real questions customers ask as headings, and answer each one in the first two sentences underneath. Use honest price ranges. Name your service areas. This is what makes an AI Overview consider quoting you.
Week 3 — Build local trust signals. Ask recent happy customers for reviews, and reply to every one. Make sure your business is listed consistently on the directories that matter in Virginia. Add a real About page with a real name and face.
Week 4 — Check your speed and structure. A slow, cluttered site hurts you with both people and the AI. Make sure pages load fast, headings are clear, and the important information isn't buried three scrolls down.
None of this is exotic. It's disciplined fundamentals aimed at a new target. If you'd rather not do it yourself, that's the entire reason Webb Flow exists — tell us about your business and you'll get a written plan, not a pitch full of buzzwords.