In this Tech Insight, we look at what Google Discover is, how it works, and how UK businesses can use it to boost visibility, traffic and engagement without relying on search.
A Quiet Revolution in Discovery
Google Discover isn’t new, but its importance has grown sharply in recent years. Originally launched in 2012 under the name Google Now, the feature began as a predictive assistant, offering up reminders, boarding passes, event alerts and other useful snippets throughout the day. Over time, many of these utilities were moved into Google Assistant, and the feed itself gradually evolved into what became known simply as the Google Feed.
In 2018, it was rebranded as Google Discover, with a clear shift in purpose: to deliver a personalised stream of content to users based on their interests and activity, all without needing them to type in a search. Since then, Discover has quietly become a major traffic driver for news sites, blogs, lifestyle content and increasingly, e-commerce and B2B brands.
For example, according to Google’s own figures, over 800 million people now use Discover each month, and while the company doesn’t publish detailed usage statistics, Search Engine Journal and others report that some media outlets receive up to 40 per cent of their mobile traffic from Discover.
So What Is Google Discover, Exactly?
Google Discover is a personalised content feed that appears directly within the Google app on both Android and iOS devices. It uses machine learning to show you articles, videos, and other online content that match your interests, based on your previous activity.
What makes it different from a news aggregator or a social feed is the way it predicts what you might want to read or watch next, without requiring any input, i.e. there’s no need to type anything in. The user simply opens the app, and it’s all there.
Where Do You Find It, and How Does It Work?
To access Google Discover, users open the Google app which is pre-installed on most Android phones and available on iOS via the App Store. The Discover feed appears directly beneath the search bar on the app’s home screen. On Android, for example, it’s also often accessible by swiping right from the home screen, depending on the device.
On iPhone, users find it under the “Home” tab in the Google app. On Android, it appears in a dedicated “Discover” tab. The feed includes scrollable cards featuring headlines, featured images, and links to the full content, which can be articles, YouTube videos, blog posts, or product pages.
There is no prominent label marking the content as part of Google Discover, but when users scroll through a personalised feed of recommendations in the Google app without entering a search, that is the Discover feed in action.
Personalised But With a Purpose
Google Discover is basically powered by signals from a user’s Web and App Activity, including previous search queries, website visits, YouTube history and location data. The feed can be refined by interacting with the control icons on each content card, such as the heart icon or the three-dot menu, to indicate whether more or less content of a certain type or from a particular source should be shown.
As a result, the feed evolves continually, not just in response to newly published content but in line with the user’s changing interests over time.
How Businesses Can Benefit
For UK businesses, Google Discover offers several potential benefits, such as:
– Brand exposure beyond search queries. Content can reach users even when they are not actively searching.
– High mobile engagement. As Discover is currently available only on mobile devices, it provides direct access to mobile-first users.
– Topical visibility. Content aligned with trending or niche interests may receive significant short-term visibility boosts.
– Longer shelf life for evergreen content. Unlike social media posts, which tend to fade quickly, high-value Discover content can reappear when it becomes relevant again.
A 2024 analysis by Seer Interactive found that most Discover content is seen within three to four days of publication, but older content can still surface if it is considered helpful to a user’s interests. This makes it a useful channel for both timely updates and evergreen material.
However, getting into Discover isn’t guaranteed. A user’s content must be high quality, indexed by Google, and comply with Discover’s content policies. As Google puts it, “Being eligible to appear in Discover is not a guarantee of appearing.”
What Kinds of Content Work Best?
Discover tends to favour:
– News and topical content (e.g. current events, technology, finance).
– How-to and educational guides.
– Blog and lifestyle content (e.g. fashion, food, fitness, travel).
– Product-led content like buying guides or comparisons.
A study from Searchmetrics found that 46 per cent of Discover URLs were from news sites, while 44 per cent were from e-commerce or commercial domains. This mix highlights its appeal across industries.
Visuals Important Too
It should be noted here that visuals also play a critical role. For example, Google recommends using high-quality images of at least 1200 pixels wide and enabling them via the max-image-preview:large tag in your website’s header. Sites that only use small thumbnails or logos are less likely to be surfaced.
How To Optimise for Google Discover
Unlike traditional SEO, optimising for Google Discover is less about keywords and more about content quality and relevance. According to Google and SEO experts, the following best practices can improve the chances of content appearing in Discover:
– Focus on E-E-A-T. Content should demonstrate Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness and Trustworthiness. This is particularly important for topics related to finance, health and business.
– Create helpful, people-first content. Clickbait headlines and manipulative imagery should be avoided. Google’s systems penalise content that withholds key information or uses exaggerated claims to drive engagement.
– Use engaging visuals. High-quality images and videos help attract clicks and improve content performance.
– Optimise metadata. Page titles should clearly reflect the main topic without being overly promotional.
– Improve mobile user experience. Fast-loading, mobile-friendly websites perform better in Discover, which is currently a mobile-only feature.
– Leverage structured data. Schema markup is a type of code that helps Google understand what the content is about. Using formats such as Article, NewsArticle or VideoObject can help clarify the purpose and type of content.
Discover performance can be tracked in Google Search Console using the “Discover” report, which shows impressions, clicks and click-through rate over a 16-month period. However, because Discover traffic is recorded as “Direct” in Google Analytics, Search Console remains the more reliable source for analysis.
Access and Availability
Google Discover is free to use, both for users and for content creators. Users access it via the Google app on Android or iOS, or via some mobile browsers on the Google homepage. Businesses don’t need to pay to appear, although Google Discovery Ads, a separate paid product, allow businesses to place sponsored content into the feed.
Discovery Ads can extend the reach of brand storytelling or promotional content, but they follow separate rules and are managed via Google Ads, not organic inclusion.
The organic Discover feed is primarily available in mobile form, though recent reports suggest that Google is testing a desktop version, which could increase its value for B2B and SaaS companies with more desktop-centric audiences.
Who Can Use It And What’s Required
Any business with a website indexed by Google is technically eligible for Discover. There’s no need to apply or sign up. However, visibility depends on several factors, which are:
– Content must be deemed helpful and relevant by Google’s systems.
– It must be well-formatted for mobile, and free from violations such as misleading titles or adult content.
– Businesses must avoid hosting content that could be seen as low-quality, offensive, or manipulative. For example, Discover applies SafeSearch filters and additional relevance controls.
It’s also worth noting that Discover content is driven by individual user interests. If those interests shift, or if the content becomes less relevant, visibility may drop. This makes Discover an unpredictable, though potentially powerful source of traffic.
As Google explains: “Given its serendipitous nature, you should consider traffic from Discover as supplemental to your keyword-driven search traffic.”
Are There Any Alternatives?
While no rival offers quite the same predictive content feed on search platforms, there are several comparable features from other tech companies, such as:
– Microsoft Start. This is a personalised news feed integrated into Windows and the Edge browser, showing curated content.
– Apple News. Available on iOS devices, this offers personalised news and magazine content. However, it prioritises selected publisher partnerships and doesn’t index the open web.
– Flipboard. This is a popular app that curates content based on interests, similar to a digital magazine.
– Facebook’s News Feed and LinkedIn’s feed can serve a similar discovery role, though these are typically limited to in-network or followed sources.
These platforms may be better suited for audience engagement, but none really match Google Discover’s reach, automation, or integration with search intent. For that reason, Discover has quietly become an essential part of the content strategy playbook, particularly for mobile-first businesses aiming to grow their reach.
What Does This Mean For Your Business?
For UK businesses, Google Discover could present a real opportunity to reach audiences who may never have searched for them. Its personalised, interest-based model allows content to appear in front of users at the moment it is most relevant, without the need for a query. This gives brands the chance to surface articles, videos or product content in a more organic and contextually aware way than traditional search. For those already investing in quality content, it provides an additional pathway to visibility, one that can support both brand building and direct engagement.
However, while the potential reach is significant, the unpredictability of Discover may make it less dependable than search for consistent traffic. The feed is shaped by shifting user interests and algorithmic decisions that are not easily controlled, meaning spikes in visibility can be short-lived. For publishers, this volatility may pose a challenge when forecasting traffic or measuring ROI. For Google, it raises wider questions about editorial responsibility and how its AI models decide what is surfaced, particularly when it comes to news or sensitive topics.
The fact that Google does not offer detailed breakdowns of Discover’s performance data also limits transparency for businesses trying to assess impact. Search Console provides a helpful overview, but for many, the lack of insight into why certain pieces appear or disappear from the feed makes strategic planning difficult. It remains a supplementary channel rather than a core traffic source, particularly for B2B organisations who are still more likely to rely on desktop-based search and direct outreach.
Even so, as Google continues to integrate Discover more tightly with its search ecosystem, the line between active search and passive discovery is blurring. This has implications not only for marketers and content creators but also for how people consume information online. Competing services from Apple, Microsoft and others offer similar functionality, but none currently combine Discover’s predictive capability with the scale and depth of Google’s search infrastructure.
For content-focused businesses, the message about Discover is that clear, high-quality, mobile-friendly content that aligns with user interests is more valuable than ever. Also, while Discover may never be a guaranteed traffic source, it is already influencing how information is surfaced and consumed. Ignoring it could, therefore, mean missing out on a growing and increasingly influential part of the search experience.