
Google Search Hit an All-Time High… And It’s Costing You (Digital Reset Episode 495)
Pundits spent the last year-plus predicting that AI would kill Big Tech. Big Tech’s Q1 2026 earnings suggest they might have missed that meeting.
Google’s search queries hit an all-time high because of AI, not in spite of it — and their search ad revenues grew 19% as a result. Meta’s revenues grew 33% while the price per ad climbed 12%. Amazon introduced Sponsored Prompts, letting brands bid to appear inside prepackaged AI queries in Rufus. And Azure and Google Cloud grew 40% and 63% respectively, at least some of that fueled by payments from OpenAI, Perplexity, and all the other AI companies supposedly disrupting them. The “disruptors” are funding Big Tech incumbents.
As Philipp Schindler said on Google’s earnings call, AI gives Google the ability to monetize searches that were previously too complex to sell against. In other words, Google just told its investors that AI is helping them make money in places they couldn’t before.
And, y’know, Google was already pretty good at making money.
In this Digital Reset episode, Tim Peter breaks down what Q1 2026 earnings actually reveal about where the gatekeeper economy is heading, shares a client story about what it costs to wait too long, and offers you two diagnostic tests you can run this week to find out whether your spend is building owned demand… or if you’re just renting the same customers over and over again.
Key Insights for Strategic Leaders
- The "AI will kill Google" narrative is over. Google’s Q1 results weren’t just strong. They were powered by AI. AI Overviews and AI Mode drove search to an “all-time high.” And they opened new ad inventory on longer, more complex queries that Google previously couldn’t monetize. AI isn’t Google’s disruption. AI is Google’s next growth engine.
- Amazon Sponsored Prompts are a flashing red sign most marketers are missing. Amazon is letting brands bid to appear in prepackaged AI prompts inside Rufus, prompts like "What makes [Brand X] a healthy choice?" Amazon didn’t build a search ad. They built a paid answer embedded in a conversation. Every platform providing an AI interface is going to follow this model. Guaranteed.
- The AI challengers are paying to build Big Tech incumbents. Azure grew 40%. Google Cloud grew 63%, with profits up over 200% year on year. Some meaningful portion of that growth comes from OpenAI, Perplexity, Anthropic, and others paying for compute and processing power. The disruptors are writing checks to the companies they’re supposed to be disrupting.
- Google’s Universal Commerce Protocol is worth watching closely. Google’s Philipp Schindler named the new members of their commerce infrastructure council: Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, Salesforce, and Stripe, along with founding members Shopify, Etsy, Target, and Wayfair. OpenAI, Perplexity, and Anthropic are not on that list. The companies building the next commerce layer have already decided who’s at the table… and who isn’t.
- Every paid return visit is training your customers’ AI agents to route around you. When repeat customers come back through a gatekeeper, you pay interest on a relationship you already earned. Worse, their behavior teaches their AI assistants and agents to treat the gatekeeper as your customer’s preferred path. The cost isn’t just something you pay on this one transaction. You pay it on every future one too.
- The Gatekeeper Test and Owned Demand Test tell you exactly where you stand. Two practical frameworks for auditing every channel you currently spend money on, including: Who owns the data? Does your investment keep working after you stop spending? Answering those questions tells you whether you’re building your business… or if you’re building the platform’s business.
Whether you’re a marketing leader in hospitality, travel, B2B services, or e-commerce, this episode gives you a clear read on what Big Tech’s Q1 2026 earnings mean for your customer acquisition strategy, and what you must do before Q2 grows the gap further.
Google Has Turned Organic Discovery Into Paid Rediscovery (Digital Reset Episode 495) — Headlines and Show Notes
Google Search Hit an All-Time High… And It’s Costing You (Digital Reset Episode 495) — Show Notes and Links
Related Episodes
- The New Gatekeeper Tax: What ChatGPT Ads Mean for Your Marketing Budget (Ep. 490)
- The Long Game: What 15 Years of Digital Marketing Teaches Us About AI (Ep. 489)
- The AI Coin Flip: Why AI Gives Every Customer a Different Answer (Ep. 488)
- The Foundation: From Card Catalogs to Concierges — Your SEO + GEO Blueprint (Ep. 485)
- In the Age of AI, Brand Isn’t Everything. It’s the Only Thing (Ep. 472)
- One Year of Digital Reset: What a Year of AI Disruption Proved (Ep. 494)
Research and Source Links
- Alphabet Q1 2026 Earnings Release (PDF) — Official press release with full financial results referenced in this episode.
- Alphabet (GOOGL) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript — The Motley Fool — Full transcript including Sundar Pichai’s and Philipp Schindler’s remarks on AI-driven search growth, the "previously really difficult to monetize" quote, and the Universal Commerce Protocol.
Amazon
- Amazon Q1 2026 Earnings
- Amazon Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript
- Sponsored Products Prompts and Sponsored Brands Prompts — Amazon Ads — Amazon’s official announcement of Sponsored Prompts, the new format appearing inside Rufus AI queries discussed in this episode.
- Amazon Sponsored Prompts: What They Are, Why They Matter, and How Brands Should Act — BirdDog Agency — A practical explainer on what Amazon’s new format means for brand advertisers.
Meta
- Meta Reports First Quarter 2026 Results — Meta Investor Relations — Official press release covering the 33% revenue growth and 12% increase in price per ad referenced in this episode.
- Meta (META) Q1 2026 Earnings Call Transcript — The Motley Fool — Full transcript of the April 29, 2026 earnings call.
Microsoft
- Microsoft FY26 Q3 Earnings — Press Release and Webcast — Microsoft’s fiscal Q3 2026 (calendar Q1 2026) results, covering the Azure 40% growth figure discussed in this episode. (Note: Microsoft’s fiscal year runs July–June; their FY26 Q3 covers the calendar period January–March 2026.)
Further Reading
- Ben Thompson/Stratechery’s view of Google/Meta earnings — Ben Thompson’s platform economics analysis referenced in this episode in the context of Amazon Sponsored Prompts and Google’s AI advertising upside.
Buy the Book — Digital Reset: Driving Marketing and Customer Acquisition Beyond Big Tech
Tim Peter has written a new book called Digital Reset: Driving Marketing Beyond Big Tech. You can learn more about it here on the site. Or buy your copy on Amazon.com today.
Past Appearances
Rutgers Business School MSDM Speaker Series: a Conversation with Tim Peter, Author of "Digital Reset"
Free Downloads
We have some free downloads for you to help you navigate the current situation, which you can find right here:
- A Modern Content Marketing Checklist. Want to ensure that each piece of content works for your business? Download our latest checklist to help put your content marketing to work for you.
- Digital & E-commerce Maturity Matrix. As a bonus, here’s a PDF that can help you assess your company’s digital maturity. You can use this to better understand where your company excels and where its opportunities lie. And, of course, we’re here to help if you need it. The Digital & E-commerce Maturity Matrix rates your company’s effectiveness — Ad Hoc, Aware, Striving, Driving — in 6 key areas in digital today, including:
- Customer Focus
- Strategy
- Technology
- Operations
- Culture
- Data
Subscribe to Digital Reset
Contact information for the podcast: [email protected]
Technical Details for Digital Reset
Recorded using a Shure SM7B Vocal Dynamic Microphone and a Focusrite Scarlett 4i4 (3rd Gen) USB Audio Interface.
Running time: 15:22
You can subscribe to Digital Reset in iTunes, the Google Play Store, via our dedicated podcast RSS feed (or sign up for our free newsletter). You can also download/listen to the podcast here on Digital Reset using the player at the top of this page.
Transcript: Google Search Hit an All-Time High… And It’s Costing You
The customer you rent will always cost more than the customer you own. No one understands that better than Google.
Pundits have spent the last year-plus predicting that AI would kill Google and blow up Big Tech. Apparently, Big Tech missed that meeting.
Big Tech’s Q1 earnings prove that that narrative is dead. Gatekeepers aren’t falling behind, far from it. They’re finding new ways to charge you for conversations with customers before those customers ever learn your name.
Google search queries hit an all-time high — that’s a quote — in Q1 because of AI, not in spite of it. Sundar Pichai said it himself that "AI experiences are driving usage." Google’s revenue grew 22% year on year. Search ad revenue grew 19%. Search contributes more than half of all Google’s revenues. And all of this happened even though its network ad revenues fell 4%.
Let me drill down on that point even more clearly. Google is making money from ads on its own sites, even as other sites that depend on Google ads for their businesses lose traffic and revenue. Google’s getting richer and grabbing a bigger slice of the pie.
Similarly, Amazon emphasized a phrase you might want to take note of. They called it "sponsored prompts." They’re letting advertisers — that is, folks like you and me — bid to show up in prepackaged prompts for products or brands directly in Amazon’s Rufus search agent. I particularly love the example they show: "What makes flakes from Nutrition Co. a healthy choice?" It’s brilliant. They’re showing product benefits as part of the prompt.
And as CEO Andy Jassy said on their earnings call: "If you look at any of these agentic experiences, they tend to be multi-turn conversations where you’re not interacting with one search and getting an answer. You tend to find that you’re asking questions, you’re narrowing questions. And in that process of having multi-turns, there are multiple opportunities to surface relevant products to customers, many of which will be organic and some of which will be sponsored. And it also gives rise to opportunities like sponsored prompts."
As I said, that’s brilliant. I mean, that is — as long as you’re willing to pay for it. I’ll bet that they’re not the last Big Tech brand to make tools like this available, or to gain the new revenues that follow. As Ben Thompson at Stratechery pointed out, "We’ll see how this works, but to the extent that it does, it’s a bullish take for Google as well." I completely agree. I couldn’t agree more.
On that same track, Meta’s revenues grew 33% with more than 8 million advertisers using the company’s creative tools to build their ads. Meta’s ad impressions grew by 19%. But the more important number is that their price per ad grew 12%. They’re making ads more effective and charging you more to enjoy those benefits.
I’m going to take it for granted that OpenAI and other AI — ahem — disruptors will try to compete. They’re fighting for their seat at Big Tech’s table too. They want to be gatekeepers also. Except keep in mind that Microsoft Azure grew by over 40% and Google Cloud grew an astonishing 63%. Google Cloud’s income — that is, its earnings, its profits — grew by over 200% year on year. All of that at least in part because of revenue they’re collecting from folks like OpenAI, Perplexity, and Anthropic.
One throwaway line by Philipp Schindler also caught my attention. He mentioned some new members that have joined their Universal Commerce Protocol Tech Council: Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, along with Salesforce and Stripe, and founding members Shopify, Etsy, Target, and Wayfair. Notice any companies missing from that group? Here’s a hint. Their names rhyme with OpenAI, Perplexity, and Anthropic.
You’ve heard me say this before: gatekeepers gonna gate. Google and the rest of its Big Tech brethren don’t look like they’re in trouble. Quite the opposite. They’re building more gates between businesses like yours and your customers. And they’re charging you more every time you use these platforms to connect with your customers. They didn’t produce quarterly results like these because they’re charging folks like you less to reach your customers.
In today’s episode, we’re looking at Big Tech’s Q1 2026 earnings and what you need to do to ensure that their gains don’t come at your expense next quarter. I’m Tim Peter. This is episode 495 of Digital Reset. Let’s dive in.
Every time a customer comes back to you through paid Google search or Meta ads or Expedia or Booking.com or Amazon — wherever — you’re paying interest on a relationship that you failed to own the first time they found you. It costs you money to talk to someone you already know. Those customers’ behaviors are starting to teach their AI assistants and agents where and how they prefer to find the products, services, and brands they need too. And if they’re always going through a gatekeeper — if customers always go through a gatekeeper first — they’re teaching those AIs that you’re not their first choice, ever.
I had a client a few years back that hired me to help them gain more customers directly and bypass Big Tech gatekeepers. At least, that’s what I thought they wanted.
We worked together for months, but over time I began to realize that I was failing. I could not convince them that they needed to change what they were doing.
The resistance made sense in theory. They got a healthy share of their revenue from third parties with no "upfront cost." I’m deliberately not naming the gatekeepers to protect that client’s anonymity. But the revenues they gained came with a heavy total cost: around 22% of each sale. As the client saw it, they only paid that 22% when the business materialized. Never mind that those sales cost them millions of dollars every year without fail. Millions.
And keep in mind that these so-called "partners" didn’t contribute 100% of their revenue. They paid those millions and had to find the rest of their business through other channels. Just far too often, not their own.
Changing their behaviors required upfront investment that, for whatever reason, I simply couldn’t convince them was worth the risk. And so we eventually decided that we should go our separate ways. Most of the team that I worked with either left or was let go. And last I heard, the company’s in a deep hole and hasn’t yet figured out a way out of it.
That’s not just about them, though. It’s a big flashing red sign in Big Tech’s earnings this quarter that shows what’s coming for you.
Yeah, sure, Google might not cost you twenty-two percent — at least not yet. And maybe ChatGPT is relatively affordable… at the moment. But if you’re paying for every customer every day, every time, it adds up. And fast.
Google is used by pretty much everyone on the planet. They didn’t grow their search ad revenues nineteen percent by finding another billion people to start searching. They did it by getting people to search more often, showing ads more often, getting people to click on those ads more often — or, as Philipp Schindler’s comments suggested, a little bit of each.
As he noted on Google’s earnings call: "We see AI Overviews and AI Mode continue to drive greater Search usage and growth in overall queries, including in commercial queries… with the ability of AI to better understand intent… I think there is upside… and overall, understanding that we have at Gemini on intent has just significantly expanded our ability to deliver ads on longer, more complex searches that were previously really difficult to monetize."
In other words, Google just told its investors that AI is helping them make money in places they couldn’t before. That’s not future risk. It’s literally what drove their earnings last quarter.
They’re going to put themselves between you and your customers for an increasingly large share of customer activity. And you’re gonna pay for it. They just said that out loud. So is Amazon. So is Meta. So are Expedia and Uber and DoorDash and all of the rest. So are the AI companies. That’s the game they’re playing.
If you’re playing by their rules, you’re already losing. It’s time you change your game.
How? My former client never really asked that question. Not really. Here’s what I wanted them to do.
First, you have to acknowledge the reality of what gatekeepers truly cost you. It’s okay to use them the first time you talk to a customer, especially if it’s someone you can’t reach more easily on your own. But if you’re paying every time you talk to your customers, you’re digging a deeper and deeper hole for yourself. So maybe let’s not do that.
There are two tests you can and should use when evaluating partners and the role they play for your business. And I mean real partners.
The first test is our Gatekeeper Test. Ask yourself two questions for every channel you’re working with right now.
One: Are we using this platform to build our business, or are we building our business inside this platform?
Two: Who owns the data from this interaction with our customer?
If you’re using the platform to build your business and you own the data, congratulations. That’s a core part of your hub. It’s the place that allows you to connect directly with your customers. If you’re building your business inside the platform but you own the data, that’s usually okay too. Just pay attention if the platform starts changing the rules or raising the rent.
If you’re using the platform to build your business but you don’t own the data, you might not actually be building your business. You’re building the platform’s business.
If they own the data — regardless of where you’re building — it’s not your customer. It’s theirs. You’re renting demand. And rented demand is always going to be more expensive than owned demand in the long run.
The second test you want to put to work is the Owned Demand Test. It’s very simple. You ask these three questions:
One: Does your investment using this platform create a direct relationship? Does it lead customers to come directly to you the next time around?
Two: Does your investment make your brand easier to ask for by name?
And three — most importantly — does the investment keep working once you stop spending?
The more you answer yes, the better off you are. And if it’s no up and down the list, you’re not building owned demand. You’re renting it. Again, one of these has a brighter future.
It’s okay to rent traffic once in a while, but it’s a bad idea to rent demand month after month after month. As Big Tech’s Q1 earnings prove, the difference between those two compounds to their advantage every single quarter.
You know that gatekeepers gonna gate. So my question for you is simple. Before you spend another dollar with a gatekeeper this week, run the Owned Demand Test on that channel. If it fails all three questions, you know what you need to do.
And if you know someone else who needs to hear this, send the episode their way. It might save them, their business, and you a world of trouble.
Thank you so much for listening today. You can find the show notes for this episode and the full archive of past episodes at timpeter.com/podcasts.
And if you’re ready to go deeper on making your brand the answer that AI reaches for, my book, Digital Reset: Driving Marketing and Customer Acquisition Beyond Big Tech, is the roadmap you’re looking for. You’ll find a link to that in the show notes, too.
Thank you so much for listening today. I genuinely appreciate you. Until next time, please be well, be safe, and be excellent to each other. I’ll see you soon.
Take Your Next Step Toward a Digital Reset
“Digital Reset with Tim Peter” helps you look beyond the "shiny objects" to build a business that lasts. How can we help you today?
- The Brief: Get the weekly email that turns these strategic ideas into actionable demand. Subscribe to The Digital Reset Brief
- The Book: Master the framework with Digital Reset: Driving Marketing and Customer Acquisition Beyond Big Tech. Buy the Book
- The Experience: Need a bespoke digital strategy for your hotel, resort, SaaS firm, or financial services firm? Tim Peter & Associates can help you. Work with Tim
The post Google Search Hit an All-Time High… And It’s Costing You (Digital Reset Episode 495) appeared first on Tim Peter & Associates.
Więcej odcinków z kanału "Thinks Out Loud: E-commerce and Digital Strategy"



Nie przegap odcinka z kanału “Thinks Out Loud: E-commerce and Digital Strategy”! Subskrybuj bezpłatnie w aplikacji GetPodcast.








