The Search Engine Journal just reported that 50.33% of searches on Google end up with no clickthroughs to websites because Google provides all the answers a user would need on the first results page itself. Google has become the "Librarian of the Universe" and has amassed more information than all libraries on planet Earth combined. Google has a singular objective: to provide answers - ultra-fast, relevant and straight to the point - to any question a human may have and, of course, make money in the process. With the advance of mobile and voice assistants, these answers happen more and more in the form of "Zero Click Searches" where the answer is provided right at the top of the SERP (Search Engine Results Page) and the user simply has no need to click and read further. With less than 5% of searches on Google resulting in clicks on paid search listings (Google Ads), does this mean the end of hotel paid search marketing?

Peter O’Connor
Peter O’Connor
Professor of Strategy at University of South Australia Business School

Although they are reluctant to admit it, search engine marketing in all its forms has already revolutionized most hotel's sales, marketing, and distribution.  And now with increased prominence on its right-rail 'Knowledge Graph' listing, Google is doing a better job of providing customers with relevant information than most hotel websites.  

Unfortunately, there is no such thing as a free lunch.   Already Google is monetizing this service through its metasearch product, and associated costs will undoubtedly increase as the product gains further traction with consumers.  With the exact business model of this new development still to be clarified, the only thing we can be sure of is that the cost of 'direct' distribution, which is in reality 100% facilitated by search, will inevitably further increase.

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