What the 2026 Data Says About AI Search and Agency Visibility
This note pulls together the most load-bearing numbers from current public research on generative search, for internal reference and for citation inside future C2Creview content.
Key figures (sourced from public 2026 industry research — verify against original reports before republishing exact numbers):
- A meaningful share of ChatGPT's most-cited pages carry no organic Google visibility at all, per Ahrefs research cited across multiple 2026 GEO reports.
- Fewer than 10% of sources cited across ChatGPT, Gemini, and Copilot rank in the Google top 10 for the same query.
- ChatGPT's weekly active users reportedly grew from roughly 400 million (Feb 2025) to roughly 900 million (Feb 2026), per OpenAI's own reporting.
- Roughly half of B2B software buyers now say they start research in an AI chatbot more often than in Google, per a G2 "Answer Economy" survey of over 1,000 buyers (April 2026).
- Content that cites external sources and includes concrete statistics reportedly saw a 30–40% lift on core AI-visibility impression metrics in the original Princeton GEO research.
What this means for C2Creview specifically: as a review and ranking platform, our own structured data — verified reviews, category pages, and consistent agency profiles — is well positioned to become a source AI systems cite when someone asks "what's the best [category] agency." That's a meaningful strategic asset worth protecting and reinforcing through consistent freshness and clear schema markup across c2creview.co.
Open questions for further research:
- How often is C2Creview itself currently cited inside AI-generated answers to agency-recommendation queries?
- Which of the six category pages (web development, software development, digital marketing, mobile app development, e-commerce development, translation services) currently have the strongest schema and citation-readiness, and which need work first?