
What happened: a March 2026 quality shift
In early March 2026 Google rolled out a broad core algorithm update that industry trackers and publishers say tightened how Search treats AI-generated and programmatic content, and increased the weight of expertise and author signals in rankings.
Why this matters for marketers
Where past updates focused on surface-level signals, this release emphasizes E‑E‑A‑T (experience, expertise, authoritativeness, trustworthiness), topic-level authority, and verified author entities — meaning content that merely rephrases information at scale (even if AI-assisted) is now at higher risk of demotion. Publishers and brands that rely on bulk AI page generation or thin affiliate content are reporting steep visibility losses.
Observed impacts on sites and ad performance
Early analysis from SEO observers shows three clear patterns: (1) AI content farms and high-volume programmatic pages saw the largest declines, (2) sites with original research, first‑party data or verified author profiles gained or stabilized, and (3) some advertisers experienced landing-page performance drops where ad creative drove traffic to thin, largely AI-written pages. Marketers should treat SEO and landing-page quality as linked to ad ROI.=
Practical steps for marketing teams
If your content program used automated drafting at scale, start with a prioritized audit: identify thin pages, flag high-volume AI output, and mark pages that lack demonstrable author expertise. Many consultants recommend consolidating low-value pages, adding author schema, and replacing generic copy with unique data or first‑hand experience. For implementation details, review the latest guidance in Google Search Central documentation when planning changes to content and metadata.
Recommended checklist
- Run an AI-content inventory and tag pages by creation method and editorial review level.
- Prioritize pages with the biggest traffic or conversion drops for human rewrite or enrichment.
- Add clear author bylines, bios, and structured author markup where appropriate.
- Invest in unique assets (original images, testing data, case studies) that AI can’t replicate.
- Measure engagement signals (dwell time, pogo‑sticking) as part of recovery tracking.
What experts on X are saying
Noted SEO analyst Glenn Gabe (G‑Squared Interactive) and other search experts have been active on X, flagging volatility and specific SERP tests such as changes to AI Overviews and recipe link behavior; Gabe’s posts called attention to early winners and losers and encouraged careful log-level analysis of indexing and image selection. Industry recaps show the community is tracking both the rollout and Google’s follow-up adjustments.
How to align content operations with the new signals
Marketing operations should update workflows so AI assists rather than substitutes human expertise: require human validation steps, record author credentials, and treat AI drafts as first drafts that must be enriched with proprietary insights or testing. Also diversify acquisition channels so short-term ranking volatility doesn’t cripple lead flow. Longer-term, build content that can be cited by AI Overviews and LLM-based answer systems — clear structure, data-backed claims, and source attribution help with citation likelihood.
Conclusion — three short takeaways
Audit fast, add human expertise, and invest in unique assets. The March 2026 core update didn’t ban AI; it changed the economics of using it at scale without editorial craftsmanship. Marketers who treat AI as a drafting partner and restore authoritativeness and original data to their pages will be best positioned as rankings stabilize.