Digital Marketing

GA4 AI Assistant Traffic Tracks, FAQ Results Gone

Welcome to this week’s Pulse. The updates touch on how you measure AI-assisted traffic, what structured data is being used for visibility, and how the big publisher plans to live after search.

Here is what is important to you and your work.

Google Analytics Adds Native AI Help Channel

Google Analytics now assigns traffic from known AI chatbots to a dedicated “AI assistant” channel group. Custom channel groups with regex patterns are no longer the only way to segment AI-assisted visits and referrals.

Important Facts

Sessions from known AI assistants now receive “AI assistant” as a path, a route to the “AI assistant” default channel, and receive a reserved “(assistant)” campaign label. Google named ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude as examples, but has not yet published a full list of known forwarders. All three changes happen automatically.

Why This Matters

Anyone using a custom channel group to segment AI chatbot traffic can now compare their setup to Google’s native version. The custom regex patterns recommended by Google last August still include domains outside the referrer’s recognized list. Both can run together.

The big question is what you do with the data once it becomes visible. AI assistant traffic is now a separate line item from acquisitions, users, and channel reports. That makes it easy to compare conversion behavior, session quality, and volume against organic search without filtering or manual workarounds.

Google has not said how quickly the known referrer list will grow as new platforms are introduced. If you’re tracking AI assistants beyond the three examples mentioned, keep your custom teams active.

What Industry Experts Say

Kevin Indig, Growth Consultant at Growth Memo, commented on LinkedIn:

“It’s about time! I cried about this on stage yesterday”

Johan Strand, Senior Digital Analyst and Partner at Ctrl Digital, wrote on LinkedIn:

“If you already have a Standard Channel Group set up to inspect AI traffic, it’s probably a good idea to get it used now.”

Read our full coverage: Google Analytics Adds AI Assistant as Channel Group Automation

Google Completes Frequently Asked Questions for Rich Discount Results

Google has retired rich FAQ results, completing a removal that began several years ago. The company added a notice to the FAQ’s edited datasheet without a blog post or separate explanation.

Important Facts

Rich FAQ results have stopped appearing in search results. Google will remove the FAQ search appearance filter from the search console, the rich results report, and support for the Rich Results Test in June. API support ends in August.

Why This Matters

If your reporting pipelines pull FAQ-specific data from an API, those API calls need to be updated before the August cutoff.

Leaving the marker in place shouldn’t cause problems, but it no longer produces that visible effect. Whether the search FAQ schema aids AI is a different question, and the retraction doesn’t answer it.

Read our full article: Google Drops FAQ Rich Results From Search

Ahrefs Report: Adding Schema Didn’t Increase AI Ratings

The Ahrefs report tracked 1,885 pages that added the JSON-LD schema and found no meaningful increase in AI citations across Google AI Overviews, AI Mode, or ChatGPT.

Important Facts

Ahrefs matched each page managed with controls that did not add schema and measured changes in 30-day windows. AI Overview showed a 4.6% decrease compared to controls, while AI Mode (+2.4%) and ChatGPT (+2.2%) showed changes too small to be distinguished from noise.

Why This Matters

The connection between schema citations and AI is widely cited as evidence that structured data improves AI visibility. Ahrefs tested whether the relationship appeared to be causal and found no evidence of a meaningful rise, at least for the pages already indexed. Sites with schema tend to invest in better content, stronger authority, and more links. Those factors may explain the correlation better than the markers themselves.

The report cannot tell if the schema is helping pages that are not yet visible to AI programs. That’s a different equation that needs to be tested. For pages that are already getting citations, however, adding JSON-LD is less likely to be a turn-on.

What SEO Experts Say

Chris Long, founder of Nectiv, wrote on LinkedIn:

“This data changes my view a bit about how it works in influencing AI quotes.”

Read our full coverage: Schema Markup Didn’t Pass AI Citations in Ahrefs Test

Condé Nast CEO: Plan As If Search Traffic Will Be Zero

The CEO of Condé Nast, Roger Lynch, said that he told corporate groups to organize their businesses as if there were zero searches. Lynch made the comments in an interview on TBPN, a technology talk show that OpenAI founded in April.

Important Facts

Lynch described three consecutive years in which internal forecasts underestimated the actual decline in search traffic. You expect search to stay in the single-digit percentage of overall traffic, not literally zero.

Lynch pointed to a “barbell effect” in which large, authoritative brands and small, niche publications perform well, while mid-sized brands get more exposure. Condé Nast’s digital subscriptions grew 29% in revenue last year.

Why This Matters

Lynch explains what third-party data has been showing for months. Chartbeat reported a 60% drop in search referrals to small publishers within two years. The Reuters Institute found that media leaders expect search traffic to drop more than 40% in three years. The difference is that the CEO who runs Vogue, the New Yorker, and GQ now builds budgets around those numbers.

Barbell reviews are worth checking against your client’s portfolio or publishing work. Lynch’s argument is that brands without deep category authority or strong niche focus do not have a clear path forward. AI overviews, commercial links, and sponsored results fill the page before the organic listings appear.

What SEO Experts Say

Kevin Indig, Growth Consultant at Growth Memo, commented on LinkedIn:

“It makes sense, there is no escape for publishers from AEO.”

Read our full story: Condé Nast CEO: Plan As If Search Traffic Will Be Zero

Theme of the Week: Proportion Reaches Crisis

The tools and signals that have defined search visibility for years are being withdrawn, questioned, or abandoned by publishers who rely on them.

FAQ rich results are gone. Schema’s role in AI citations is weaker than suggested connections. A major publisher plans as if search traffic will never recover. Each case involves an area where the old measurement infrastructure is no longer compatible with the landscape.

The GA4 update is the other side of that coin. Google builds native tracking for a growing traffic source while traditional contracts.

AI assistant traffic is a fraction of what the search brings. But now it appears automatically, in the same reports, next to the channels it is measured on.

Top Stories of the Week:

Additional resources:


Featured Image: PeopleImages/Shutterstock; Paulo Bobita/Search Engine Journal

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