SEO & Blogging

Only 15% of the pages found by ChatGPT are from the last answers: Report

ChatGPT returns many more web pages than it lists. A new analysis by AirOps found that 85% of detected sources do not appear in the final response.

Why do we care. If you want your content to be cited in AI-generated responses, discovery is not enough. Most returned pages are invisible to users.

Finding the essentials. In AI responses, retrieval is not the same as citation. Your page can be indexed and retrieved but still lose a citation to a source that better matches the information or supporting context.

  • This drives improvements in getting selected within the AI ​​integration process—not just visibility in search results, according to the report.

In numbers:

  • 82,108 citations appeared in the final responses.
  • Only 15% returned pages cited.
  • 85% of the pages that appeared during the survey did not appear in the responses.

Citation rates also vary by question type:

  • 18.3% for product acquisition questions
  • 16.9% with questions about how to do it
  • 11.3% confirmation search

Fan questions. ChatGPT often expands information through additional internal searches while generating an answer, creating what the report calls a “second citation area.” For the entire dataset:

  • 89.6% of alerts triggered two or more follow-up searches.
  • Fan searches yielded 15,000 pieces of information to 43,233 questions.
  • 32.9% of page citations came from the results of the follower output only—not the original information.
  • 95% of the fan exit queries had a normal search volume that didn’t exist.

Google ranking relevance. Top Google rankings are highly associated with citations:

  • 55.8% of cited pages are ranked in the top 20 of Google.
  • Pages ranked 1 were cited 3.5 times more than pages outside the top 20.

About the data. AirOps analyzed 548,534 pages received across 15,000 instructions to test how ChatGPT expands queries and selects quotes.

Lesson. The Impact of Retrieval, Outbound, and Google SERPs on ChatGPT Citations


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Danny Goodwin

Danny Goodwin is the Editorial Director of Search Engine Land & Search Marketing Expo – SMX. He joined Search Engine Land in 2022 as a Senior Editor. In addition to reporting on the latest marketing news, he hosts Search Engine Land’s SME (Subject Matter Expert) program. He also helps organize US SMX events.

Goodwin has been editing and writing about the latest developments and trends in search and digital marketing since 2007. He was previously Editor-in-Chief of Search Engine Journal (from 2017 to 2022), managing editor of Momentology (from 2014-2016) and editor of Search Engine Watch (from 2007 to 2014). He has spoken at many major search conferences and virtual events, and has shared his knowledge in a variety of publications and podcasts.

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