SERP Features That Steal Your Clicks (And What to Do About It)
Featured snippets, PAA, knowledge panels, and AI Overviews are taking your traffic. Here’s how to respond.
Google’s SERP features are siphoning clicks away from organic results. Here’s how featured snippets, PAA boxes, and AI Overviews affect your traffic — and what you can do about it.
Google used to be ten blue links. You ranked well, you got clicks. Simple.
That version of Google is gone.
Today, a search results page is packed with features that answer the searcher’s question before they ever reach your website. Featured snippets. People Also Ask boxes. Knowledge panels. And now, AI Overviews that synthesize an answer right at the top of the page.
The result? Fewer clicks on organic listings — even for pages that rank well.
The zero-click problem is real and growing.
Studies from Rand Fishkin and SparkToro have tracked this trend for years. As of their most recent data, roughly 60% of Google searches end without a click to any website. Google is increasingly keeping users on its own properties, serving answers directly in the search results.
For anyone investing in SEO, that’s a significant headwind. You can do everything right — great content, strong backlinks, solid technical SEO — and still watch your organic traffic stagnate because Google is siphoning clicks before users get to you.
Featured snippets: the double-edged sword.
Featured snippets pull a short answer from your page and display it above the organic results (the so-called “position zero”). On one hand, this can reduce clicks — the searcher reads your answer and moves on. On the other hand, if you’re not the one in the snippet, someone else is getting that visibility instead.
The pragmatic move is to target featured snippets intentionally. Structure your content with clear, concise answers to specific questions. Use header tags that match common queries. Provide direct definitions, numbered steps, or comparison tables. Google tends to pull snippets from content that’s well-organized and directly addresses the query.
You may not get more clicks from every snippet you win. But you’ll get more than you would by letting a competitor take it.
People Also Ask: underrated real estate.
PAA boxes appear on a huge percentage of search results now — some studies estimate over 80% of queries. Each expanded question links to a source page. And because PAA boxes are interactive (users click to expand), they tend to attract attention.
To show up here, focus on answering related questions within your content. Build FAQ sections. Use natural question-and-answer formatting. The more clearly your page answers adjacent questions to your primary keyword, the more likely Google is to pull from it.
Structured data helps you stand out.
Schema markup won’t directly boost your rankings, but it can make your listing more visible when it does appear. Review stars, FAQ dropdowns, how-to steps, product pricing — these rich results take up more visual space and draw the eye. When you’re competing against SERP features that are actively stealing clicks, making your own listing more prominent matters.
AI Overviews: the newest threat.
Google’s AI Overviews are still evolving, but the direction is clear: Google wants to answer complex queries without sending users anywhere. For informational queries especially, this reduces organic click-through rates further. The best defense is creating content that goes deeper than a summary — content that provides analysis, original data, tools, or perspectives that an AI overview can’t fully replicate.
When organic clicks shrink, every click matters more.
This is the part that connects directly to CTR. If Google is giving away fewer organic clicks per search, then the clicks that do happen become more valuable. A page that earns a higher click-through rate in this environment captures a larger share of a shrinking pool.
That’s exactly why CTR optimization is more important now than it was five years ago. When clicks were abundant, a mediocre CTR was survivable. When clicks are scarce, it’s not.
SerpClix uses an army of over 400,000 real human clickers to boost your organic CTR. Get started with a free trial or log in to your dashboard to set up your next click order.
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