Joseph Carlson

Is Google Search in the early stages of being disrupted by LLM's (ChatGPT, Grok, Claude, etc)?

8 months ago | [YT] | 132



@TheRenegadeMoose

Hold up lemme google it first

8 months ago | 82

@gustavo_gonzaga

When I can't solve a problem with LLM's, I go to Google. When google can't solve, I go to YouTube search some tutorials

8 months ago | 123

@matiascastillo2210

I'm a millennial, and I teach my daughter how to Google stuff and ask GPT questions, because searching isn’t the same as asking.

8 months ago | 17

@JonJon-kx6xl

I never got this because google also has AI and could so easily just put a "ask ai" button right next to regular Google search put adds in the ai with paid links at the bottom and market it better

8 months ago | 58

@TheStewPup

I've found myself using a combination of both, and I imagine that'll continue as the norm - 1. ask question to ChatGPt. 2. Ask Google and verify results using trusted sources

8 months ago | 3

@Boblol126

I think it’s plausible that LLMs are eating away at Google Search’s market share in terms of general information provision. However it’s important to differentiate between the two. In my experience, LLMs are very good at clearly explaining things and giving suggestions while Search remains useful for connecting users to products and services and vice versa.

8 months ago | 3

@316sahil

AI overview+ Google search is very useful, especially when AI overviews points to the underlying articles

8 months ago | 2

@enioT8

I personally cannot imagine anything different than Google Search and Gemini blending together in the near future. Same thing with Google Assistent and Gemini. It seems so logical to me, am I missing anything?

8 months ago | 3

@JonJon-kx6xl

Also it's google SEARCH that's one of the biggest parts people leave out if you want to look for a specific piece of information you can't really ask ai or you'll be asking 100 questions instead of being able to pick from the pool of links and being able to preview it before clicking

8 months ago | 2

@gyanaavaibhav

Depends on the question you are going to as if the information is not available then no google is the go to if too much information is available then yes look at cooding there are millions of lines of code available that is why it can generate them unlike some other problems and those lines too are filled with some errors

8 months ago | 1

@johnnyg3606

Ask Jeeves..

8 months ago | 5

@ksrengaram

I think Google’s LLM will catch up with competitors quickly with the amount of data they have along with cash-pile which can be deployed upon their will, i feel its just a matter of time before all LLM’s going to be similar, provided Google has upper hand with wealth of data to refine their LLM’s to come out strongly.

8 months ago | 5

@Jellybane1

It’ll be like Airbnb to hotels, similar and may take some share, but hotels still have their core model that keeps their core customers and attract more.

8 months ago | 4

@timowa_a1935

Whenever I need specific websites I go to Google

8 months ago | 1

@henryt9731

It already has when gen alpha started “tik toking” instead of googling

8 months ago | 0

@CEO_MongeInvestidor

When I need a short and direct answer, I prefer Google.

8 months ago | 0

@james09jr

Google search business model isn’t about giving detailed answers, it’s about connecting advertisers to consumers. Until gen AI can do that, it’s not a threat.

8 months ago | 7

@haoyangsun3278

when llm return you a link, did llm use Google search to get to that link?

8 months ago | 1

@khondoker_alam

Not sure how LLM model can monetize their search business from ads

8 months ago | 1

@glennvdw

Google returns results quicker, that’s I guess one of its advantages

8 months ago | 3