I wanted to write about this because of Spark Toro’s article by Rand Fishkin. Rand wrote an article about the growth in Google search despite new tools such as ChatGPT. What surprised me in this article is the decline of Google shopping, with 12.07% less traffic in 2024 compared to 2023. Rand’s analysis is based only on the US market.
​Google Shopping’s 12.07% traffic decline year-over-year likely results from a combination of search algorithm shifts, changing consumer habits, rising competition, and alterations in how Google handles paid vs. organic shopping results. Below, we analyze five key factors contributing to this drop, with data and expert insights:
1. Google Algorithm Changes Affecting E-Commerce Visibility
Google rolled out multiple search algorithm updates in 2023–2024 that impacted e-commerce sites’ visibility in search results. Key changes include:
- Quality Content Emphasis – Helpful Content and Core updates targeted “unhelpful” or thin content. Online stores with sparse product descriptions or duplicate manufacturer text lost rankings adavenue.com.
- For example, Google’s Helpful Content update demoted pages that merely list products without unique info, hitting sites that hadn’t enriched their content.
- Product “Reviews” Update – Google refined how it ranks review content, rewarding pages with genuine, experience-based product reviews and punishing thin affiliate reviews​ amsive.com
- Sites relying on generic or third-party reviews saw drops, while those with in-depth, original product information gained.
- User-Generated Content (UGC) Boost – Research in 2024 noted Google’s algorithm favored UGC on e-commerce sites (like customer Q&A or reviews) over off-site review sites​ adavenue.com
- E-commerce brands that encouraged reviews on their product pages saw better rankings, whereas those without on-site engagement “may have lost visibility”​ adavenue.com
- Authority and Intent Shifts – Core updates also seemed to favor large, authoritative retailers in some cases. One SEO case study saw a small online retailer’s traffic drop 40% after an update that began favoring bigger-brand sites with stronger SEO signals adavenue.com
- Additionally, Google may reinterpret user intent: some product searches in 2024 began showing more informational or community results (forums like Reddit) instead of shopping pages​ amsive.com
- In short, these algorithmic shifts caused many e-commerce sites to lose some organic Google visibility, directly reducing Shopping traffic.
2. Competition from Other Platforms (Amazon, Social, DTC, AI)
Intensifying competition in product search is pulling users away from Google Shopping toward alternative platforms:
- Amazon’s Dominance – Amazon has become the first stop for most online shoppers. As of mid-2023, an estimated 56–57% of US consumers start product searches on Amazon, far eclipsing those who begin on search engines (about 34–42%)​ northone.com emarketer.com. This trend grew year over year, indicating that Google lost a share of product-search traffic to Amazon’s ecosystem. If shoppers go directly to Amazon, they bypass Google Shopping entirely.
- Social Commerce (TikTok, Instagram, etc.) – Social media platforms have rapidly become shopping hubs, especially for younger demographics. 17% of US adults now begin shopping searches on TikTok (with Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube similarly capturing ~18–23%)​ emarketer.com. 45% of Gen Z prefer using TikTok or Instagram to search instead of Google​ forestshipping.com. TikTok’s launch of TikTok Shop in late 2023 turbocharged this trend – it added an estimated 11.9 million US buyers in 2024 alone, flooding feeds with shoppable content and drawing more purchase activity inside TikTok’s app​ emarketer.com. As consumers discover and buy products via social videos and influencer posts, less traffic flows through Google’s shopping results.
- Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) and Brand Sites – Many consumers skip aggregators and go directly to brand websites or apps. Strong DTC brands (often discovered via social media or email marketing) cultivate loyal customers who search for the brand name or navigate directly, rather than doing generic product searches on Google. This means some product search traffic that might have gone to Google in the past is now captured by brands’ channels. (For instance, top online retailers like Amazon and Walmart now account for 40% of US e-commerce transactions digitalcommerce360.com, indicating shoppers often start on those known sites.) The proliferation of mobile shopping apps and store loyalty programs diverts traffic from generic Google searches.
- AI-Driven Shopping Tools – The emergence of AI assistants and shopping chatbots is creating new competition for Google. A recent Adobe survey found that 39% of consumers have used AI search tools for online shopping tasks​ theverge.com. Services like ChatGPT (which reached 100M users in early 2023) and Bing’s AI chat can handle product queries or recommend items, sometimes negating the need for a traditional Google search. While Google Search still vastly exceeds AI tools in volume, these alternatives are growing in popularity for product research. As more shoppers experiment with AI-driven recommendations or price-comparison bots, some traffic that previously would go to Google Shopping is siphoned off to these new tools.
3. Changes in Consumer Behavior
Underlying the platform shifts is a broader change in how consumers search and shop online, which contributed to Google Shopping’s decline:
- Shifting Search Habits – Consumers (especially younger ones) increasingly treat social media as search engines. Beyond just product discovery, people now use TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube to search for reviews, unboxings, and recommendations actively. Over half of Gen Z already use social platforms as their primary way to search for brands and products​ forestshipping.com. This “social search” habit means fewer product queries on Google.
- Preference for Visual & Interactive Content – Shoppers gravitate toward visual and interactive experiences. They might scroll through a TikTok feed or Instagram Shop for inspiration or use Pinterest and other visual search tools rather than typing keywords into Google. Even on Google, users expect richer results (images, videos, 3D views), and if Google’s Shopping results don’t provide that engaging experience, users may look elsewhere.
- Increased Use of AI and Voice – Consumers are also trying new ways of asking for what they want. Some use voice assistants (“Hey Alexa, find me…”) for shopping inquiries, bypassing Google. Others use AI chatbots to get personalized suggestions. As noted, a significant share of consumers have experimented with AI search for shopping. This indicates a behavioral shift: people are becoming comfortable with non-traditional search interfaces, which can reduce reliance on Google’s classic search page.
- Higher Expectations & Search Fatigue – After years of online shopping, users are savvy and often know exactly where to go. Many will jump straight to a known retailer or price comparison site to save time. If Google’s results are perceived as ad-heavy or not immediately applicable, users might form habits of avoiding Google for shopping. For example, a typical pattern is using Google for general info but going to Amazon for product specifics. This changing behavior pattern, at scale, contributes to the drop in Google Shopping traffic.
4. Broader E-Commerce Search and Retail Trends
It’s essential to put Google Shopping’s performance in the context of the broader e-commerce landscape:
- Market-Wide Growth vs. Google’s Decline – Overall online shopping isn’t shrinking – in fact, US e-commerce sales grew about 7.5–8.7% in 2024​ digitalcommerce360.com. Global e-commerce also expanded (~8%+ growth). This means the 12% drop in Google Shopping traffic is a relative decline in Google’s share of that growing pie. Consumers spend more online, but a significant portion of that activity happens through channels other than Google search.
- Amazon’s Continued Ascent—The trend of search migrating to Amazon has been building for years and accelerated through 2023–24. Industry analyses note that “Amazon’s ascendance comes at Google’s expense.” By 2024, Google’s share of product search slipped into the 30–40% range, while Amazon climbed well over 50%​ emarketer.com. In practical terms, Google is no longer the default starting point for many shoppers, whereas it might have been a decade ago.
- Rise of Retail Media Networks – The growth of retail media is another sign of where traffic is going. Retailers like Amazon, Walmart, and Target have built their ad platforms (search ads within their sites), attracting ad dollars that once went to Google. Amazon’s share of US search ad spend rose to ~22% in 2024, while Google’s fell to ~7.6%​ growth mediapost.com. This reflects how brands and shoppers alike are focusing on marketplace search engines. If advertisers are allocating more of their budget to Amazon search ads, it’s because that’s where the eyeballs are.
- Comparison Shopping & Niche Search – Some of the traffic may have shifted to specialized shopping search engines or comparison tools. For example, consumers looking for deals might go straight to price-comparison sites, or those seeking a specific product category might use niche search (e.g. searching directly on Etsy for handmade goods, or on Zalando for fashion in Europe). These niche behaviors distribute searches across various platforms instead of funneling all product queries through Google.
- Google’s Own SERP Changes – Interestingly, even within Google’s ecosystem, the beneficiaries of late 2023 changes were often e-commerce giants or community sites. SEO research observed that for many product-related queries in 2024, the top organic results skewed towards Amazon and other e-tailers, and user forums (Reddit, Quora) amsive.com. Fewer third-party review websites appeared. This suggests that while Google’s referrals might still send users to buy products, many clicks went to Amazon or something similar. This doesn’t help a typical retailer’s Google Shopping traffic and might not register as “Google Shopping” visits for others. In essence, Google became a gateway to Amazon for many shoppers, which isn’t a loss of search volume per se but a loss of traffic for other merchants relying on Google.
5. Advertising and Paid Search Factors
Changes in Google’s ad products and SERP layout likely contributed to the drop in organic Shopping traffic by diverting clicks elsewhere or altering measurements:
- More Ads Crowding the SERP – Google significantly expanded paid Shopping ads and other sponsored units in 2023. Where there used to be perhaps one or two small text ads, now up to four sponsored Shopping ads often appear at the top of product search results, complete with images and sitelinks. searchinfluence.com. These eye-catching ad boxes push the organic results (including free product listings) further down, sometimes below the fold. Users often have to scroll past a “wall” of ads to reach organic listings. The result is a lower click-through rate for organic Google Shopping links, as many users click a top ad or skip scrolling or get frustrated. Essentially, Google has made its SERPs more pay-to-play, cannibalizing free clicks.
- Paid Placement in Shopping Tab – Even within the dedicated Google Shopping tab, paid product listings are prominently featured. Google introduced free product listings in 2020, but the primary slots on the main search page remain paid ads raddinteractive.com, and the Shopping tab mix still favors sellers who bid on Shopping ads. If Google adjusted the balance or gave more prominence to paid “Buy on Google” options, it could reduce traffic from free listings. Some merchants also report that running Google Shopping Ads can steal traffic from their free listings, as Google may show the paid result instead (leading to a known effect where enabling ads lowers free listing performance support.google.com).
- Google Ads Policy/Format Changes – Google continually tweaks the appearance of shopping ads. In 2021, they rolled out Performance Max campaigns (which auto-distribute shopping ads across YouTube, Gmail, etc.), and updated Merchant Center requirements. These moves increased advertiser participation. With more businesses advertising their products, the competition in Google Shopping ads grew – likely improving Google’s ad revenue, but meaning fewer easy organic impressions. Users who see a relevant ad might not bother clicking an organic result below, further dropping organic traffic.
- Generative AI Search Results – Google’s experimental Search Generative Experience (SGE), introduced in 2023, has implications for clicks. SGE uses AI to answer queries directly on the results page, sometimes including product recommendations or summaries for shopping queries. Early data shows that when Google’s AI overview is present, organic CTR plunges – one study found the organic click-through rate went from ~1.4% to just 0.6% on queries with AI answers, as the AI result captures users’ attention seerinteractive.com. Even paid ad CTR fell ~25% in those cases ​accelerateddigitalmedia.com. So, as Google experiments with AI answers at the top of search results, fewer users may click through to any Shopping link. While SGE was limited in 2024 (not fully rolled out to all users), it points toward a future where Google might resolve more shopping inquiries without a click-out, impacting traffic.
- Tracking and Analytics Changes—It’s worth noting that many site owners transitioned from Google Analytics UA to GA4 in 2023. Some perceived drop in “Google Shopping” traffic could be due to how GA4 attributes and tracks organic shopping clicks differently (for example, misclassifying some sources or filtering out specific sessions due to privacy changes). However, the bulk of the decline is more likely due to the substantive factors above rather than a measurement quirk.
In summary, Google Shopping’s 12% traffic decline in 2024 can be attributed to Google’s own algorithm and interface changes reducing organic exposure, alongside a broader migration of shoppers toward Amazon, social media, and other channels. Consumers are searching differently – often outside of Google – and when they use Google, the landscape is more competitive (with more ads and richer content capturing clicks). All these factors have siphoned away the growth that Google might have otherwise seen. The trend underscores the need for e-commerce marketers to diversify traffic sources and adapt to new consumer behaviors outside of traditional search. Thus, improving the quality of your data feed to maximize your ranking is essential.