When Google’s AI Overviews began dominating search results across Asia last year, the rules of online visibility changed overnight. For Pakistani SMEs, the shift created an urgent question: how do you get cited by an AI instead of buried beneath it?
Islamabad-based Web at Max this week launched a “search-first” web design and SEO framework built to answer that question. The approach structures websites from the ground up so AI systems can read, understand, and recommend them. But the implications extend far beyond one agency’s offering.
Research from SE Ranking shows AI Overviews now appear in over 80% of information-driven searches, and early data suggests they cut clicks on the top organic result by roughly a third. For a tuition centre in Rawalpindi or a garment exporter in I-9, that means a well-ranked site can still lose traffic if AI chooses to cite someone else.
Pakistan’s government announced this month it is building a digital platform to help SMEs sell internationally. The country’s e-commerce market is projected to cross PKR 500 billion by year’s end. Yet online retail still accounts for less than 2% of total sales. The gap between digital potential and digital readiness remains enormous.
So what can small businesses do now? Experts recommend adding structured data markup so AI can parse your content. This way, they can write clear answers to the questions customers actually ask, claiming your Google Business Profile. It also ensures your site loads fast on mobile. Building a consistent presence across review sites and social platforms also strengthens the trust signals AI models rely on.
LinkedIn has already changed a few of these key steps to a better SEO, and Pakistani SMEs can learn the way forward.
