Tygart Media

March 2026 Search Landscape: What Google’s Latest Updates Mean for Restoration Companies

Google just rolled out its March 2026 core update, AI Overviews now cover 60% of informational queries, and zero-click searches hit 80%. If your restoration company’s marketing strategy hasn’t changed in the last 90 days, it’s already behind.

This is what we do in Industry News & Commentary: break down what’s actually happening in search, AI, and digital marketing—and translate it into what restoration companies should do about it. Not the hype. Not the panic. The signal.

Google’s March 2026 Core Update: What Actually Changed

Google began rolling out its March 2026 core update on March 13th. It follows the February 2026 update that specifically targeted scaled AI content and parasitic SEO tactics. Together, these updates represent the most aggressive enforcement of content quality signals since the Helpful Content Update of 2023.

What the March 2026 update prioritizes: original, experience-driven content with demonstrable expertise. What it deprioritizes: summary-style content, AI-generated articles without human expertise, and sites that aggregate without adding unique value.

For restoration companies, the practical impact splits two ways. Companies publishing generic blog content—”5 Tips for Preventing Water Damage” articles that read like every other restoration blog—are seeing ranking declines. Companies publishing content grounded in specific project data, local expertise, and measurable outcomes are seeing ranking gains.

The update also increased emphasis on authorship signals. Google is evaluating who wrote the content with more scrutiny than ever. Pages with clear author bylines linked to demonstrable expertise are receiving preferential treatment over anonymous corporate blog posts. If your restoration blog doesn’t have author pages with IICRC certifications, years of experience, and links to published work—you’re leaving ranking potential on the table.

AI Overviews at 60%: The New Default Search Experience

Google’s AI Overviews now appear in over 60% of informational queries. For the restoration industry, this means queries like “what to do after a pipe bursts,” “how long does mold remediation take,” and “does homeowners insurance cover water damage” are almost always answered directly in the search results—before any organic link gets seen.

The click-through rate impact is severe. Organic CTR for queries featuring AI Overviews dropped from 1.76% to 0.61% since mid-2024—a 61% decline. More dramatically, Google’s experimental AI Mode produces a zero-click rate of 93%. When it rolls out fully, fewer than 1 in 10 searches may result in a website visit.

This doesn’t mean SEO is dead. It means the definition of SEO success is expanding. Being cited in an AI Overview—even without the click—builds brand recognition, establishes authority, and drives indirect conversions through branded search and GBP calls. The restoration companies adapting to this reality are optimizing for citation, not just clicks.

How to get cited in AI Overviews: structure content with clear question-answer pairs, include specific data points that AI systems can extract and present, implement FAQ and Article schema, and build the entity authority that makes your brand a trusted source in Google’s knowledge graph.

The Zero-Click Economy: 80% and Climbing

The zero-click trend has accelerated beyond most predictions. From 56% to 69% between May 2024 and May 2025—a 13-point jump in one year. Current 2026 data puts the number at approximately 80% of all Google searches ending without a click to any website.

For restoration companies, this fundamentally changes how marketing performance should be measured. If you’re evaluating your SEO investment solely on organic website traffic, you’re measuring a shrinking slice of the value your visibility generates. The companies adapting to the zero-click economy are tracking: branded search volume (are more people searching your company name?), GBP impressions and actions (calls, directions, website clicks from the knowledge panel), AI Overview mentions (is your brand being cited?), and share of voice in local results (how often do you appear in the map pack?).

These metrics capture the full value of search visibility, not just the click-through portion.

AI Content Crackdown: What Google Is Actually Penalizing

The February 2026 update specifically targeted “scaled AI content”—websites publishing high volumes of AI-generated articles with minimal human oversight. This affects the restoration industry directly because several content mills and franchise corporate offices have been mass-producing AI blog posts for their networks.

What Google is not penalizing: AI-assisted content where human expertise drives the substance and AI accelerates the production. The distinction matters. An article where a restoration professional provides the insights, data, and experience while AI helps with research, formatting, and optimization is rewarded by the algorithm. An article where AI generates the entire substance and a human adds a byline is penalized.

The key differentiator Google appears to evaluate: does the content demonstrate first-hand experience that an AI system couldn’t synthesize from existing sources? Specific project references, original cost data, local regulatory knowledge, and documented outcomes are signals of human expertise that AI cannot fabricate convincingly.

Perplexity, ChatGPT, and the Rise of AI-First Search

Beyond Google, AI-native search platforms are growing rapidly. Perplexity processes millions of queries daily with a fundamentally different model: it generates comprehensive answers with cited sources rather than returning a list of links. ChatGPT’s search integration and Claude’s web capabilities are creating additional surfaces where restoration companies need to be discoverable.

The consistent finding across all AI search platforms: they prioritize sources that are authoritative, well-structured, factually dense, and clearly attributed. The same content qualities that perform well in Google’s AI Overviews also perform well in Perplexity, ChatGPT, and other AI systems. This is a convergence point—one content strategy serves multiple AI surfaces.

Restoration companies don’t need separate strategies for each AI platform. They need one content strategy built on entity authority, structured data, and information gain—and that strategy will compound across every AI surface simultaneously.

What to Do This Quarter

Audit your content for March 2026 update vulnerability. Any page that’s generic, anonymously authored, or duplicates information available on a hundred other sites is at risk. Prioritize adding author attribution, original data, and local specificity to your most important pages.

Expand your measurement framework beyond clicks. Add branded search volume, GBP impressions, and AI mention tracking to your monthly reporting. If you’re only measuring organic traffic, you’re measuring less than half the value of your search visibility.

Implement comprehensive structured data. Article, FAQPage, LocalBusiness, and Service schema on every relevant page. This is the single highest-ROI technical task for AI visibility in 2026, and the restoration industry’s low adoption rate means early movers gain disproportionate advantage.

Shift content production to the fusion model. Expert humans providing substance, AI providing acceleration. This produces content that satisfies Google’s quality signals at a production cost and speed that pure human workflows can’t match. The March 2026 update made this approach not just efficient—but algorithmically preferred.

The search landscape is changing faster than at any point since the mobile-first indexing transition. The restoration companies that adapt their strategy quarterly—not annually—will capture the market share that their slower competitors are losing right now.


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