DNHQ Research · Industry deep-dive · May 2026
If you run an Australian IT or managed services firm, Google's AI is citing YouTube tutorials and Reddit threads instead of your website on more than half of customer searches. The pattern is unique enough that the answer isn't "write more blog content". It's something else entirely.
01 · The headline number
52.5%
of IT & tech services SERPs return an AI Overview
IT and tech services landed in a near-three-way tie with E-commerce for second place in our overall rankings, with 52.5% of commercial searches returning a Google AI Overview. That puts the industry 14.7 percentage points above the national average, and inside the same high-exposure bracket as Accounting and Australian online retail.
But the more interesting story isn't the headline number. It's who the AI is citing instead of your firm. Across every Australian industry we tested, the dominant sources were government domains, regulators, retailers, or authority publishers. For IT, the dominant sources are YouTube and Reddit, with Google's own properties not far behind. The structural picture for Australian IT firms is different from every other vertical in the study.
02 · The intent breakdown
We split every IT and tech services query into one of four intents (informational, commercial, transactional, navigational) and measured each separately. Where e-commerce queries skewed heavily commercial, IT skews heavily informational, and the trigger rate follows.
Informational intent at 71.4% is the danger zone. "How to set up Office 365 MFA", "what is a VPN", "fix iPhone won't update". These are the explainer queries that drive most IT-firm blog traffic. Google's AI returns an answer for more than seven in ten of them.
Transactional intent at 48.3% sits notably high (the dataset baseline is 34.6%). The pattern looks like E-commerce: Australian IT transactional queries usually carry a definitional component. "How much does managed IT cost", "is Office 365 worth it". These read as buying questions but Google treats them as explainers.
Commercial intent is moderate at 41.0%. Pure commercial comparison queries ("best MSP Brisbane", "managed IT vs break-fix") still get an AI Overview around 4 in 10 times.
Navigational queries sit at 30.8%, the highest navigational rate in any vertical we tested. Australian IT users navigate constantly: "Microsoft 365 admin", "Okta login", "Atlassian status". A lot of those navigational queries get an AI summary alongside the link.
03 · Mobile vs desktop
We split the dataset by device. IT and tech services follow the dominant pattern across our study: mobile AIO exposure sits above desktop. The gap is moderate (not as extreme as the +7pp gaps in Accounting and Legal), but it's directionally consistent with most service verticals.
The +3.5pp mobile gap is unsurprising given the query patterns. Quick troubleshooting questions ("why is my wifi slow", "iPhone won't charge") happen on the device that's broken, which is almost always mobile.
Practical implication: if your IT firm's AIO audits are running on desktop, you're understating real exposure by ~3.5pp. Smaller than the +7pp gap for accounting, but still meaningful enough to matter when you're briefing a client on the scale of the threat.
04 · The citation leaderboard
This is where Australian IT looks different from every other vertical we measured. For Accounting, ATO.gov.au led the field. For E-commerce, Google's own properties. For IT, the #1 and #2 cited sources are YouTube and Reddit, with Google in third. User-generated tutorial video and forum content are the structural sources Google's AI draws from.
| # | Domain | Citations | Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | youtube.com | 1,816 | 6.1% |
| 2 | reddit.com | 1,579 | 5.3% |
| 3 | google.com | 1,093 | 3.7% |
| 4 | au.indeed.com | 636 | 2.1% |
| 5 | seek.com.au | 533 | 1.8% |
| 6 | au.seek.com | 437 | 1.5% |
| 7 | thepcdoctor.com.au | 417 | 1.4% |
| 8 | cleverfiles.com | 361 | 1.2% |
| 9 | geeks2u.com.au | 340 | 1.1% |
| 10 | payam.com.au | 255 | 0.9% |
YouTube alone accounts for 1,816 citations, 6.1% of every AIO citation in our IT sample. Add Reddit's 1,579 (5.3%) and these two user-generated platforms account for more than 11% of all citations on Australian IT queries. That's higher than any other vertical's top-two-source concentration outside Accounting (where the ATO alone accounted for 20%).
The implication is direct. The classic SEO response to AIO exposure ("publish more authoritative blog content") doesn't fit IT in 2026. Your competition for the AI's attention isn't other Australian IT firms with stronger domain authority. It's a senior sysadmin posting a fix to r/sysadmin and a five-minute walkthrough on YouTube. Those channels were already winning IT informational search before AIO. AIO just made them the primary source.
The Australian IT firms that do appear in the top 20 (thepcdoctor.com.au, geeks2u.com.au, payam.com.au) share a pattern: long-running brand presence, location-specific service pages, and category-narrow content. Niche authority, not broad reach, gets cited.
Wider context: only 42.3% of all AIO citations on IT queries are Australian domains. Below the dataset average (54.9%) and one of the lowest AU-share verticals in the study. IT content competes globally. Google's AI reaches for international YouTube creators, Stack Overflow, Reddit threads, and US-based tutorials in a way it doesn't for Accounting or Real Estate.
05 · Local intent
This is the strongest insulation effect we measured. Across every other industry, local-intent queries trigger less AIO than general queries (gaps run 10 to 17 percentage points). For IT, the gap is more than double the average.
Add "near me", a suburb, or a city qualifier to an IT query and the trigger rate collapses from 57.3% to 21.3%. A 36 percentage-point drop. Among the largest insulation effects in the entire 18-industry dataset, behind only Real Estate (-37.5pp).
Why: when an Australian customer searches "IT support Brisbane CBD" or "managed services Newcastle", Google's AI knows the customer wants a list of providers, not a definition of managed IT. So it steps back and lets the organic results breathe.
Translation for your firm: the service-area and city-targeting pages most IT companies have built over the last decade are still doing their job. "Managed IT services [city]", "IT support [suburb]", "computer repair [region]" pages trigger AIO at less than half the rate of your blog content. They're the cleanest surface left in the vertical.
06 · Page-type safety map
We measured AIO trigger rate by what kind of page ranks #1 in the IT SERP. The pattern echoes what we saw in Accounting: extreme spread, with blog content at the high end and homepages at the low end.
When an IT blog post ranks #1 for a query, AIO appears 82.7% of the time. When a homepage ranks #1, it's just 25.4%. The 57.3-point spread is one of the widest in our entire dataset, narrower only than Accounting (56.6pp).
What's interesting for IT specifically: product pages trigger AIO at 63.9%, higher than location pages at 50.0%. Product-comparison searches ("SonicWall vs Fortinet", "Office 365 vs Google Workspace") fall into the same AI-eats-the-explainer pattern as informational content.
Our view: the page-type safety map for IT is almost perfectly aligned with the local-intent finding. The pages that target location-qualified queries (service pages, city pages) are safe. The pages that target informational, product-comparison, or how-to queries (blogs, product overviews, FAQs at 33%) are exposed.
07 · What to do about it
What's next
This page draws from the complete State of AI Search for Australian SMEs, 2026: 116,918 SERPs across 18 industries, 6 cities, and 19 numbered findings. Read the full study, or get a free 10-keyword AIO audit on your firm's specific search terms.
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