DNHQ Research · Industry deep-dive · May 2026
If you sell services to other businesses in Australia, Google's AI is now in the way on more than half of customer searches. The sources it's reaching for, however, will surprise most B2B marketers. The data points to a different citation strategy than almost any other vertical we tested.
01 · The headline number
51.7%
of B2B services SERPs return an AI Overview
B2B Services sits in the high-exposure quartile alongside Accounting, E-commerce, and IT. 51.7% of commercial searches returned a Google AI Overview, putting the industry roughly 14 percentage points above the national average and inside the same bracket where the SEO playbook needs the most rethinking.
The trigger rate alone isn't the interesting story for B2B. What stands out is the structural source mix Google's AI draws from when it writes those answers. Where Accounting cited the ATO, E-commerce cited Google itself, and IT cited YouTube, B2B is the only vertical we tested where recruitment platforms and LinkedIn dominate. Five of the top eight cited sources are job sites or professional networks.
02 · The intent breakdown
We split every B2B query into one of four intents (informational, commercial, transactional, navigational) and measured each separately. B2B has the most balanced intent distribution of any high-exposure vertical, with two categories sitting above 60% trigger.
Informational intent at 69.9% is roughly in line with other high-exposure verticals. "How does management consulting work", "what is a virtual CFO", "B2B sales process stages". These educational queries drive most B2B content marketing now meet an AI summary on seven in ten searches.
The commercial number is where B2B becomes distinctive. At 47.8%, B2B commercial intent runs 14 points higher than Accounting (33.4%) and well above the dataset baseline. Comparison queries like "best management consulting firms Sydney", "Big 4 vs boutique", "Deloitte vs McKinsey for [industry]" trigger AIO on nearly half their searches. The AI is mediating the consideration set, not just the introduction.
Transactional intent looks alarming at 63.4%, but with only 145 queries in that category the sample is small. Treat the number as directional, not conclusive. Navigational intent (31.6%) follows the pattern from other verticals: brand and login queries are the cleanest surface left.
03 · Mobile vs desktop
We split the dataset by device. B2B Services follows the dominant pattern across our study: mobile AIO exposure runs higher than desktop. The gap is moderate, in the middle of the range we measured.
The +4.4pp mobile gap is consistent with the broader service-sector pattern we've seen across the study (Accounting +7.1pp, Legal +7.2pp, IT +3.5pp). Mobile-heavy lookup behaviour (quick searches between meetings, on-site visits, in-transit research) is exactly the use case Google's AI is optimised for.
Practical implication: if your AIO audits are mobile-only or desktop-only, your reporting is off. For B2B, we'd recommend leading client reports with mobile screenshots while including desktop as a control. The difference between the two is the difference between an executive on the train and that same executive at their desk.
04 · The citation leaderboard
This is where B2B looks unlike every other industry we tested. The top eight cited domains include four recruitment platforms (Indeed, two Seek variants, Glassdoor) and two LinkedIn entries. Together with YouTube and Reddit, these nine sources account for more than 16% of every AIO citation on Australian B2B queries.
| # | Domain | Citations | Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | au.indeed.com | 942 | 3.1% |
| 2 | youtube.com | 927 | 3.1% |
| 3 | reddit.com | 705 | 2.3% |
| 4 | au.seek.com | 650 | 2.1% |
| 5 | glassdoor.com.au | 538 | 1.8% |
| 6 | seek.com.au | 536 | 1.8% |
| 7 | au.linkedin.com | 521 | 1.7% |
| 8 | linkedin.com | 314 | 1.0% |
| 9 | imc.org.au | 272 | 0.9% |
| 10 | deloitte.com | 254 | 0.8% |
Combined, the recruitment + LinkedIn block accounts for 11.6% of all B2B AIO citations in our sample. Add YouTube (3.1%) and the professional-development content cluster gets to 14.7%. By comparison, the ATO's dominance in Accounting was 20.4%, so this isn't quite the same single-source concentration, but it's a remarkably specific pattern.
Our reading on why this happens: Google's AI seems to interpret B2B services queries as professional-context questions. When an Australian buyer searches "what does a management consultant do", "B2B sales process", or "is Big 4 worth the cost", the AI reaches for the platforms where professionals already discuss their work. Indeed for job descriptions, LinkedIn for posts and analysis, Glassdoor for company reviews, Seek for industry guides. The line between "research a B2B service" and "research a career in that B2B service" is fuzzier in Google's model than most marketers assume.
The actionable implication is unusual. For most industries, the citation leaderboard tells you where to invest. For B2B, it tells you that LinkedIn presence has become an AIO citation strategy, not just a recruiting channel. Strong company pages, employee thought leadership, and consistent Australian-context posts on LinkedIn now drive citation alongside their original purpose.
Wider context: 49.6% of B2B AIO citations point to Australian domains. Roughly at the dataset midpoint (54.9%) but below high-AU verticals like Accounting (72.6%). B2B content competes with international consulting firms, US business publishers, and global LinkedIn posts for the citation slot.
05 · Local intent
Across our 18-industry dataset, local-intent queries trigger less AIO than general queries in 17 verticals. B2B follows the dominant pattern, with one of the larger insulation effects we measured.
Add "near me", a suburb, or a city qualifier to a B2B query and trigger rate collapses from 56.6% to 23.0%. A 33.6 percentage-point drop. Among the largest insulation effects in the entire dataset, third only to Real Estate (-37.5pp) and IT Services (-36.0pp).
Why: when an Australian buyer searches "management consulting Sydney" or "business advisor Brisbane CBD", Google's AI reads it as a "find a provider" query, not an explainer question. It defers to the local organic results and steps back.
Translation for your firm: the location- and city-targeted service pages most B2B agencies have built over the last decade still work. "Management consultants [city]", "B2B advisory services [region]", "professional services [suburb]" pages trigger AIO at less than half the rate of your thought-leadership content. They remain among the cleanest SEO surfaces in the vertical.
06 · Page-type safety map
We measured AIO trigger rate by what kind of page ranks #1 in the B2B SERP. The pattern echoes the rest of the high-exposure verticals: blog and thought-leadership content trigger AIO at extreme rates, while homepages and service pages stay relatively clean.
When a B2B blog post or thought-leadership article ranks #1 for a query, AIO appears 87.2% of the time. That's higher than Accounting (82.1%) and IT (82.7%), and among the highest blog-trigger rates in the dataset.
Homepages at 33.0% are reasonably safe, but less so than other service verticals (Accounting homepages trigger only 18.6%, IT 25.4%). The likely reason is that B2B homepages often serve as quasi-content pages, with extensive service explainers and value-prop content that the AI can summarise.
Our view: the page-type spread for B2B isn't as extreme as some verticals (54pp between blog and homepage), but the floor is higher. Even your safest surface (homepage at 33%) is more exposed than most other industries' equivalent. Plan for click-through compression across the whole content stack.
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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