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Why it’s time to challenge the Google monopoly.

When one platform controls your visibility, it also controls your perception of reality. Here’s why you need to shift to a digital ecosystem strategy.
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Beth - Digital Marketing Strategist
13th April 2026
Why it’s time to challenge the Google monopoly.

The digital marketing playbook has always been relatively simple. Put your budget into Google Ads, optimise for organic search and watch the leads roll in. And because Google still accounts for nearly 90% of all global search traffic, businesses have willingly put all their commercial eggs into this one algorithmic basket.

 

But while it felt dependable, this was a massive commercial risk. And recently, that risk became reality. Why? Google had a bug.

 

 

 

The Single-Channel Risk Model

 

When a business relies on one dominant platform for customer acquisition, it creates three risks:

 

  • Data distortion: You’re optimising against flawed signals
  • Cost inflation: You’re bidding in an increasingly saturated paid auction
  • Visibility dependency: One algorithm controls your organic pipeline

 

We were already seeing the cost inflation happen with Google Ads as cost-per-click steadily increased. But the data distortion came to a head in April 2026, when Google made an announcement about its organic search reporting. It turns out that a ‘bug’ has been artificially inflating performance stats and over-reporting impressions starting May 13, 2025.

 

So if you’ve found yourself asking, “Why are impressions up but click-throughs down?” You’re not alone.

 

 

 

“It was just a bug”

 

Here’s the official announcement:

 

“A logging error is preventing Search Console from accurately reporting impressions from May 13, 2025 onward. This issue will be resolved over the next few weeks; as a result, you may notice a decrease in impressions in the Search Console Performance report. Clicks and other metrics were not affected by the error, and this issue affected data logging only.”

 

So, Google Search Console had a glitch.

 

But when a multi-billion-pound search engine provides stats that make your organic traffic and visibility look vastly different from what it actually is, it’s not just a glitch. That’s a structural failure in reporting.

The risk isn’t that Google made a mistake. It’s that your growth strategy depends on one platform’s version of the truth.

What the Google bug means for your marketing performance

 

Because Google was artificially inflating organic impressions while actual clicks remained the same, organic click-through rates (CTR) appeared to be in freefall. Not because performance had dropped, but because impressions had been artificially inflated.

 

Businesses of every sector were looking at their dashboards and making decisions based on the assumption that more people were seeing their content. But at the same time, their CTR appeared to be tanking when in reality, it was absolutely fine.

 

This means they spent the last year needlessly rewriting perfectly good meta descriptions, misjudging their market share and wasting budget and time trying to fix a problem that didn’t actually exist. All because Google accidentally inflated impressions.

 

But the risk isn’t that Google made a mistake. It’s that your growth strategy depends on one platform’s version of the truth. And even minor misreporting highlights this risk, because when one platform controls your visibility, it also controls your entire perception of reality. It’s time to challenge the monopoly.

 

 

 

The end of the single search engine model

 

If your entire growth strategy relies on users typing a query into a traditional search bar, your business is vulnerable. The reality is that the internet has fundamentally shifted. People are no longer just Googling. They’re searching, discovering and purchasing everywhere.

 

B2B buyers research solutions on LinkedIn and through AI assistants. Gen Z and Millennials treat TikTok and Instagram as search engines. Consumers turn to ChatGPT and AI Overviews for direct answers over endless scrolling through pages of blue links.

Google will always be a major player in digital growth, but it can no longer be the only player.

Building a resilient digital ecosystem strategy

 

A digital ecosystem strategy is the process of distributing your brand’s visibility, authority and demand across multiple platforms so that no single algorithm controls your growth.

 

This is what ambitious brands need moving forward. They need to stop looking at digital marketing as a Google-centric exercise and instead, build a robust, multi-channel digital ecosystem.

 

This is where the shift towards AI SEO, or Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO) and holistic digital positioning becomes essential. Instead of just trying to game a single algorithm, you have to build a brand presence that is so authoritative and technically sound that it gets cited by AI models, shared across social platforms and discovered wherever your audience naturally spends their time.

 

A true digital ecosystem means:

 

  • Diversifying paid media beyond Google Ads
  • Optimising for AI search and recommendation engines
  • Improving conversion rates before increasing traffic

 

 

Stop renting, start owning

 

The Google monopoly exposed a critical weakness in modern marketing strategies, which was an over-reliance on a single platform. Businesses that diversify across AI search, social discovery and multi-channel media are more resilient, more visible and less exposed to platform risk.

 

Google will always be a major player in digital growth, but it can no longer be the only player. When you build a unified digital ecosystem, you take back control of your brand’s visibility. You stop relying on inflated stats and start driving measurable, real-world revenue.

 

 

 

Four people sit around a meeting table, talking and smiling in a modern, dimly lit office.

 

 

 

The more centralised your marketing is, the less control you have

 

Is your marketing budget overly reliant on a single channel, or are you ready to take back control? Ambitious SME businesses work with The Curious when they are ready to stop renting visibility from a single search engine. If that sounds like you, get in touch.

FAQs

01. Why is relying entirely on Google risky?

Relying solely on Google—whether through paid Ads or organic search—is a commercial liability because it centralises your customer acquisition on a single platform. If paid costs inflate, organic algorithms shift, or the platform's internal data becomes unreliable, your entire sales pipeline becomes vulnerable.

02. What was the Google Search Console bug?

Google confirmed a data logging issue that over-reported impressions from May 2025 onward. While clicks were unaffected, inflated visibility metrics may have misled businesses about performance.

03. What is a digital ecosystem strategy?

A digital ecosystem strategy spreads your visibility across multiple platforms, including search engines, AI tools, social media and paid channels, reducing reliance on any single source of traffic.

04. What is AI SEO or GEO?

AI SEO, also known as Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO), is the process of making your brand visible and recommendable within AI-generated answers rather than just traditional search rankings.

05. Is Google still important for digital marketing?

Yes. Google remains a critical channel for demand capture. However, relying on it exclusively creates risk. A modern digital strategy balances Google with AI search, social discovery and multi-channel visibility.

06. How can I reduce reliance on Google & build a resilient digital ecosystem?

To reduce reliance on Google, businesses need to diversify their marketing across AI search, social discovery and multi-channel paid media. The Curious is a brand-led growth partner helping ambitious SMEs build resilient digital ecosystems that reduce platform risk, strengthen authority and drive consistent, multi-channel growth. Get in touch to learn more.
Woman in a blue patterned dress, sitting on a wooden chair, looking at the camera against a plain background.
By Beth - Digital Marketing Strategist
As our lead Digital Marketing Strategist, Beth draws on nearly a decade of experience to help ambitious brands scale by blending creative campaigns with data-led performance.
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