Ecommerce KPIs for the AI Search Era: What to Track in 2026
Ecommerce KPIs for the AI search era look very different from the ones marketers tracked five years ago. Search has changed.
Ecommerce KPIs for the AI search era look very different from the ones marketers tracked five years ago. Search has changed.
Discovery now happens inside ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, Gemini, and Claude before a buyer ever sees a search results page.
The result is a strange-looking dashboard. Organic traffic is down 20% or 40%, but revenue is flat or growing. Average position keeps slipping, and conversion rate keeps climbing. Most marketing teams are reporting on the wrong metrics, which makes them panic about the wrong things.
This guide walks through what to track now, what to stop measuring, and which tools can actually help. If you’re still working on the visibility itself, our guide to generative engine optimisation for ecommerce covers how to actually get cited. Everything in the AI search measurement space is under two years old, so we’ll be honest about where it’s still rough.
The old SEO scorecard had three pillars: organic traffic, keyword rankings, and click-through rate. Each one is breaking down for a different reason.
Organic traffic is a vanity metric now. When a shopper asks ChatGPT to recommend a wireless coffee grinder under $200, and your brand gets mentioned, the click might never happen. They go straight to the brand they remember.
Keyword rankings have lost most of their meaning. Ahrefs studied 300,000 keywords in February 2026 and found a 58% CTR drop on top-ranking pages when an AI Overview was present. Ranking #1 used to mean traffic. Now it means a chance at a citation.
Click-through rate is collapsing across the board. Comparing your 2026 CTR to a 2023 benchmark tells you almost nothing useful. Industry analysts call this pattern the Great Decoupling. Impressions keep rising while clicks keep falling, because Google is increasingly answering the question itself.
You’re not failing at SEO. The rules changed underneath you, which is the bigger story behind how AI will change SEO.
Instead of tracking dozens of metrics that don’t talk to each other, group your KPIs into three layers. Each layer answers a different question.
| Layer | Question it answers | Example KPIs |
| Visibility | Are we showing up in AI answers? | AI mention rate, share of voice, and AI Overview inclusion |
| Authority | Are we being cited and trusted? | Citation count, source quality, sentiment |
| Outcome | Is it driving revenue? | AI-referred traffic, branded search lift, conversion rate by source |
Visibility tells you whether your brand exists in the conversation. Authority tells you whether AI systems treat you as a credible source. Outcome tells you whether any of it matters for the business.
A healthy dashboard tracks something from each layer. A broken dashboard tracks ten things from the first layer and zero from the third.
Visibility is the entry point. If your brand isn’t being mentioned, nothing else in the funnel matters.
The KPIs to track here:
Run prompts manually if you don’t have tooling yet. Even 60 to 100 runs per prompt gives you a defensible baseline.
A mention is when an AI system names your brand in an answer. A citation is when it links to your site as a source. These are very different things, and most teams conflate them.
What to track:
Authority sits upstream of visibility. Brands that show up in AI answers consistently almost always have a strong citation profile feeding them, which sits on top of solid ecommerce search infrastructure.
Visibility and authority matter, but the CFO only cares about one thing. Did any of this turn into revenue?
This is where most ecommerce teams get tripped up, because GA4 hides a lot of the answer by default.
This is illustrative, not a real client.
Say MeadowFox Home Goods sells mid-range bedding and bath products through their own Shopify store. In 2023, their dashboard tracked organic sessions, average position, top 10 keyword rankings, total backlinks, and revenue.
By Q3 2025, sessions were down 32% year over year. The marketing team panicked. Leadership asked hard questions. SEO budget was on the chopping block.
Then they rebuilt the dashboard for the AI search era.
What they found:
What they cut from reporting: average keyword position, total backlinks, and bounce rate.
What they added: AI mention rate across four engines tracked through Otterly, citation count, branded search trend in GSC, and conversion rate by source segmented as AI vs. organic vs. paid.
Six months later, AI-referred revenue was 4.1% of total revenue. Small in absolute terms, but a real channel that finally showed up in reporting. The dashboard matched the business.
Every tool in this category is under 18 months old. Methodologies differ. Accuracy varies by platform and category. Pick one, learn its quirks, and don’t expect any of them to give you a perfect number.
Otterly.AI. Tracks six AI platforms (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, AI Mode, Gemini, Copilot). Pricing starts at $29 per month, which makes it the most affordable serious option. Good for small to mid-sized brands and agencies. The platform is built around prompt monitoring and citation tracking. Limitation: like all tools in this space, it samples prompts at scheduled intervals, so it can miss the dark queries AI systems generate internally during query fan-out.
Searchable. Tracks ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and Copilot. Pricing starts at $50 per month. Strong on competitive analysis and integrates with GA4 and GSC. Limitation: smaller platform coverage than some competitors, and the category is moving fast enough that any single tool’s edge can disappear in a quarter.
Ahrefs Brand Radar. Bundled into Ahrefs plans from around $129 per month. Uses a database of more than 300 million search-backed prompts across six AI platforms. Strong infrastructure and competitive intelligence. Limitation: independent reviews in early 2026 documented significant accuracy issues compared to manual mention counts in some categories. Useful for trend direction, less reliable for precise mention numbers.
Semrush AI Visibility Toolkit. Part of Semrush One, the 2026 version of the Semrush platform. Tracks ChatGPT, AI Overviews, AI Mode, Perplexity, and Gemini. Includes a 0 to 100 AI Visibility Score and sentiment analysis. Limitation: still building out, and the proprietary visibility score can be hard to compare across categories.
The honest take: every tool in this space is best treated as a directional signal, not a precise measurement. Use one, check it against manual prompts occasionally, and don’t put your annual strategy on the back of any single dashboard. It’s all as new for these tools as it is for the rest of the world. Things take time. Until then, we use these tools for direction, to find patterns, and rely on our manual checks from time to time.
The KPIs you track shape what your team optimizes for. Ecommerce brands winning AI search aren’t tracking more metrics than everyone else. They’re tracking different ones, on a framework that matches how buyers actually discover products in 2026.
Start with the three-layer model. Pick one tool. Set up your GA4 channel grouping this week. The hard part is dropping the metrics that used to define success.
If you want help building this kind of dashboard for your own store, that’s part of our AI SEO for ecommerce work.
Yes, but not by default. You need to create a custom channel grouping that classifies sessions from chatgpt.com, perplexity.ai, gemini.google.com, claude.ai, and copilot.microsoft.com as their own channel. Set it up under Admin > Attribution settings > Manage channel groupings. Without it, most AI traffic gets misattributed to Direct or Referral.
If you’re under $100 a month in budget, Otterly or Searchable cover the basics well. If you already use Ahrefs or Semrush, the AI features bundled into those platforms are a reasonable starting point. Whichever you pick, plan to live with it for six months before evaluating alternatives.
Yes. Non-branded organic traffic is still many times larger than AI-referred traffic for most ecommerce brands, and traditional SEO signals like clean structure, good content, and strong backlinks directly feed AI visibility. We’ve covered where to put your effort in traditional SEO vs GEO. The shift is in what you measure, not whether you do SEO.
Visibility metrics weekly. Authority and outcome metrics monthly. Don’t react to daily fluctuations. AI answers vary run to run, and short-term noise will make you chase ghosts.