The news: Google is turning search results into a customizable, algorithmic feed.
- The search giant is rolling out Preferred Sources, which allows users to select their favorite blogs or news outlets to appear the most in the “top stories” section.
- The feature aims to help users see more content from their favorite sites, per Google.
- There’s no limit on how many preferred sources users can see, and they’ll still see content from other sites.
Two-thirds of US adults often or sometimes get news from Google and other search engines, per Pew Research. Twelve percent prefer to get news this way over any other platform.
Why it matters: Google generally surfaces content based on relevance and keywords, though the advent of AI Overviews has skewed this. Now that users can refine their search results by personal preference, search engine optimization (SEO) may require more work to target and attract readers.
Small blogs and outlets could struggle to capture new audiences if users are sticking to the sources they already know and rely on.
Bias risks: This update is a big step forward for personalization and user control and a step back for a diversified media ecosystem.
- The feature risks creating echo chambers and leading users to miss out on seeing a variety of angles on news of the day.
- For consumers who rely on search results for information, limiting the number of sources covering news—especially on divisive topics—will likely create filter bubbles.
Our take: If search results become a more limited discovery engine, news sites and blogs may need to rely more heavily on traffic through alternative sources like social media and podcasts.
- Jumping on the growing podcast ad spending train could diversify revenues and tap into more engaged, niche audiences.
- Joining blogging sites like Medium and Substack could help maintain visibility and surface new readers who will add them as preferred news sources, considering the platforms’ focus on content discovery.
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