Google is testing a new search interface change that’s easy to miss at first glance but meaningful for anyone relying on organic traffic, PPC, or LSAs: a sticky “Ask Anything” AI box that follows users as they scroll through search results.

It keeps the AI prompt constantly visible—nudging users away from traditional link-clicking behavior and deeper into Google’s AI experience instead of external websites.

ADSQUIRE is already testing how this impacts visibility, CTR, and lead flow across legal accounts, and early signals are worth paying attention to.

What’s Changing

The “Ask Anything” prompt originally sat under AI Overviews as a static entry point into AI Mode. Now Google is testing a version that sticks to the screen as users scroll.

As users move through:

  • AI Overviews
  • Paid search results
  • Organic listings

…the prompt remains fixed, constantly inviting follow-up questions inside Google’s AI experience.

Key behavior shift:

  • Clicking a link becomes secondary
  • Asking another question becomes the default action path
  • Users can stay inside AI Mode without ever returning to SERPs

Once clicked, users are pulled into a conversational interface where answers are continuously generated—without needing to visit a website.

 

Why This Matters for Law Firms

 

This is less about UI and more about funnel control.

Visibility is being siphoned away from the SERP

When users enter AI Mode mid-scroll:

  • PPC ads no longer appear
  • LSAs are no longer visible
  • Organic listings are effectively bypassed

A meaningful share of traditional “decision moments” are now happening inside a closed AI environment.

Click behavior is being reshaped in real time

Google has already confirmed that users ask significantly longer queries inside AI Mode—nearly 3x longer than traditional search.

That matters because:

  • Longer queries = fewer clicks
  • Fewer clicks = fewer opportunities to reach your site
  • Fewer site visits = fewer intake actions

The SERP is slowly becoming an input layer, not a destination.

Your ads don’t compete if users never see them

If the sticky AI prompt pulls users into AI Mode early in their session:

  • Your ad never gets viewed
  • Your impression opportunity disappears mid-scroll
  • Your conversion path never starts

The shift isn’t just lower CTR—it’s reduced exposure to the auction entirely.

 

Our Take

 

Google is steadily collapsing the distance between “searching” and “being answered.”

The sticky AI box is a small UI test, but the direction is consistent:

  • Keep users engaged inside Google
  • Reduce reliance on outbound clicks
  • Turn search into a conversation layer instead of a referral system

For legal advertisers, that means visibility is no longer just about rank or placement—it’s about whether you’re included before the user transitions into AI Mode at all.

 

What ADSQUIRE Is Doing

 

We’re treating this as a visibility fragmentation issue across SERP + AI surfaces.

  • Monitoring AI Mode entry behavior
    Tracking when users are being pulled out of SERPs mid-session
  • Measuring impact on PPC + LSA exposure
    Identifying drop-offs in impression share tied to AI Mode engagement
  • Analyzing CTR shifts across query types
    Especially high-intent injury and attorney searches
  • Building multi-surface visibility strategies
    Ensuring clients are present across AI, paid, local, and organic—not dependent on any single layer
  • Stress-testing conversion paths
    Evaluating how fewer SERP visits impacts intake volume and lead quality

 

Bottom Line

 

The sticky “Ask Anything” box is another step in the same direction Google has been moving for years: fewer exits, more in-platform engagement, and tighter control over the search journey.

For law firms, the impact is simple:
If users never fully return to the search results page, your ads—and your website—have fewer chances to win them.

ADSQUIRE is actively testing and adapting to this shift as it unfolds. The firms that stay ahead of these interface changes will maintain visibility. The ones that don’t will feel it in reduced traffic long before official rollout announcements ever catch up.

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