The survey also identified six archetypes, each with different behaviors and expectations for how brands should respond:
The Traditionalist (24%): Defaults to established search engines for reliable, structured answers. They trust authoritative sources and stick with familiar platforms, especially for sensitive or high-stakes queries like health or finance.
The Price Shopper (21%): Laser-focused on value, they compare prices, hunt promotions, and weigh product specs against reviews. Their path to purchase is quick, practical, and driven by efficiency.
The Explorer (18%): Turns to AI to go beyond simple lookups, asking layered or open-ended questions. They enjoy discovering new connections, options, and insights along the way.
The Creator (15%): Uses AI as a partner for brainstorming and ideation — from drafting resumes to experimenting with new ideas. Gen Z leads this group, blending creativity with everyday problem-solving.
The Social Proof Seeker (14%): Rarely buys without validation from others. They rely on reviews, influencers, and user-generated content on platforms like TikTok or Reddit to confirm decisions.
The Accidental Searcher (8%): Doesn't always start with intent, but stumbles on products while scrolling social or hopping platforms. Their discovery is opportunistic, sparked by the right content at the right time.
"Search is no longer a single journey: it's a messy web of platforms, formats, and expectations," said Mark Kabana, VP, Data Innovation at Yext. "Consumers bounce between AI, social, and traditional results not out of curiosity, but because they don't trust the first answer. Brands need to stop optimizing for keywords and start optimizing for delegation. In a fragmented landscape, structured, machine-ready data is your only shot at being chosen — not just seen."