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Google Tests “Show More” Button That Jumps Straight Into Ai Mode – What That Means for Search & Content Strategy

Google's "Show More" Test
Graig Upton 06/10/2025

In typical Google Search fashion, change is coming, and fast. Google is reportedly experimenting with a tweak to its Ai-powered “Overview” boxes, turning the “Show More” button into a gateway to full Ai Mode. This subtle shift could have big implications for how content is discovered, consumed, and prioritised.

Here’s what our clients and content strategists ought to know, and how to prepare.

What’s changing?

  • Current behaviour: When users click “Show More” within an Ai Overview (those compact summaries at the top of the results), it expands that summary, revealing more of the text and associated citations relating to your published content.
  • New test behaviour: Instead of simply expanding the summary, Google is apparently redirecting users into Ai Mode. In effect, you skip over the expansions and citations altogether, going straight into an Ai-generated narrative.
  • This change has been observed in mobile results by multiple search watchers (e.g. Harpreet, Brodie Clark).

At present, it’s only a test which is not yet rolled out universally, and many users have been unable to replicate it reliably.

Why it matters for publishers & marketers

This is more than a minor UI tweak. If this change sticks, it shifts the dynamics of visibility, attribution and traffic.

  1. Citations might be bypassed
    One fear is that content loses visibility if users are taken into Google’s Ai-driven narrative before seeing or clicking citations. The traditional path of “see the snippet → click to read original” could be disrupted.
  2. Organic clicks could drop
    If users are swept into Ai Mode instead of being shown the rest of the excerpt plus links, there’s a chance fewer users will click through to the original content.
  3. Content relevance & signal importance escalate
    When Google’s Ai is the vessel users are riding, how the Ai selects, weighs and frames your content becomes more critical. Your content needs to be not just high quality but also contextually strong (e.g. with endorsements, topical authority, and good semantic alignment).
  4. Mobile-first pushes intensify
    Since this test is already being observed (primarily) on mobile search, it underscores even more that mobile experience, content structure, and snippet optimisation are pivotal.
  5. Greater opacity / less control
    This gives Google more control over the narrative flow users see. As publishers, you may get less control of how your content is introduced or summarised.

What can you do now

You can’t stop Google testing, but you can position yourself to fare better when/if this change rolls out. Here’s a game plan:

Objective What You Should Do
Maximise signal strength Ensure your content is well sourced, clearly sourced, and uses strong E-A-T (Expertise, Authority, Trust). Provide clarity in headings and summarised snippets so Ai has robust raw material.
Snippet optimisation Craft your opening paragraphs, subheadings, meta description and structured data in a way that gives Ai a good prompt to reference your content accurately.
Citation & linking strategy Use internal and external links, authoritative sources, and structured data (schema) to reinforce your positioning.
Mobile UX & load performance If users are largely on mobile, ensure your pages load fast, content is readable, and navigation is user-friendly.
Monitor & test Keep an eye on your Analytics, Search Console, and visibility metrics. When you spot drops correlated with such experiments, conduct controlled experiments on your pages.
Diversify traffic sources Don’t rely solely on organic search. Maintain strong presence via email, social, direct, referrals, and partnerships.

Key Takeaways (For our clients)

  1. It’s experimental, but serious
    Google’s tests often foreshadow wider changes. This one could recalibrate how search traffic behaves.
  2. Your content must be Ai-friendly
    The better structured, authoritative and clear your content, the more favourable signals you feed into Google’s Ai decisions.
  3. Citation visibility is under threat
    If “Show More” bypasses your content, the incentive for users to click through diminishes, making your citation strength and context more critical.

Stay agile & data-driven
Watch your traffic shifts, run small page experiments, and adapt quickly as patterns emerge.

Graig Upton

Graig has over 20+ years of experience in SEO consultancy and is efficient at identifying solutions with on-page and off-page SEO strategies.

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