# What Is Information Gain?

> Information Gain is Google's method of measuring whether your content adds something new beyond what already ranks. Here's a plain-English explanation with examples, how it affects Featured Snippets and AI Overviews, and how to build it into your content.

SEO Concepts · Featured Snippets · AI Overviews · 2026

# What Is _Information Gain_?

It's the single concept that explains why some pages win Featured Snippets, get cited in AI Overviews, and outrank competitors with stronger domains. And it's simpler than you think. Here's the plain-English explanation, backed by Google's own patent.

Updated **May 2026**|14 min read|MarTech Review Lab

▲ Watch the concept explained — how adding one unique insight changes your ranking potential

★ The 10-Second Definition

**Information Gain** measures how much new, unique information your content adds compared to what already exists in search results. If the top 10 pages for a query all say the same thing, and your page adds something they don't — an original finding, a new data point, a unique angle — that's Information Gain. Google has a patent for scoring it. Featured Snippets reward it. AI Overviews cite pages that have it.

### EXAMPLE: 10 pages ranking for "best standing desk benefits"

What the other 9 pages say

①Better posture

②Reduced back pain

③More energy throughout the day

④Improved focus and productivity

⑤Lower risk of weight gain and heart disease

What YOUR page says

①Better posture

②Reduced back pain

③More energy throughout the day

④Improved focus and productivity

⑤Lower risk of weight gain and heart disease

⑥**Standing desks reduce afternoon cortisol levels by 18%← Information Gain**

That 6th point — backed by your original survey of 400 remote workers — is **Information Gain**. It's the knowledge your page contributes that the reader **cannot find anywhere else**.

### Table of Contents

1.  [The Definition (with Google's Patent)](#s1)
2.  [Why Information Gain Wins Featured Snippets](#s2)
3.  [Why Information Gain Wins AI Overview Citations](#s3)
4.  [Information Gain vs. E-E-A-T: What's the Difference?](#s4)
5.  [6 Ways to Build Information Gain into Your Content](#s5)
6.  [How to Measure Information Gain](#s6)
7.  [How SEONIB Builds Structural Differentiation](#s7)
8.  [FAQ](#s8)

## 1\. The Definition: What Google's Patent Says

Google Patent US10049166B1 — "Information Gain Score"

Google filed a patent describing a system that scores content based on **"the extent to which a document provides information that is novel or adds to the information included in other documents."**

In other words: Google has a documented mechanism for measuring whether your page adds something new compared to the pages a user has already seen — or is likely to have seen. If your page says the same thing as everyone else, it has low Information Gain. If it adds something new, it has high Information Gain.

**Why this matters:** Google's mission is to surface the most useful result for every query. If 10 pages all say the same 5 things, the 11th page that says something different — and valuable — is more useful to the reader. Information Gain is how Google identifies and rewards that difference.

**The practical implication:** You can't win by saying the same thing better. You win by saying something _different_. The bar isn't "write a better article than the top result." The bar is "give the reader something they can't find on any other page."

## 2\. Why Information Gain Wins Featured Snippets

### Featured Snippets

Featured Snippets aim to give users the best possible answer at the top of search results. When multiple pages cover the same information, Google selects the one that adds something new — an additional insight, a more complete answer, or a unique data point.

A page that simply rehashes what every other page says has low Information Gain. Google has no reason to promote it to the snippet — it's saying nothing the user hasn't already seen in the results below.

Query → 10 similar pages → 1 page with IG → Snippet

### AI Overviews

Google AI Overviews generate summaries at the top of search results, citing specific sources. AI engines (Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity) prefer sources that add unique value — not pages that repeat the same information everyone else covers.

If your page provides original data, a unique finding, or an insight that other pages lack, AI engines are more likely to cite your page as the source. Low Information Gain pages are deprioritized in favor of pages that advance the reader's understanding.

User question → AI scans sources → Selects IG-rich pages → Citation

The Core Principle

Both Featured Snippets and AI Overviews are trying to solve the same problem: **give the user the best answer**. If 10 pages all say the same thing, the "best answer" is whichever page adds something the other 9 don't. That's Information Gain — and it's the tiebreaker that determines who gets featured and who gets buried.

## 3\. Why Information Gain Is Even More Important for AI Search

Information Gain has always mattered for Google SEO. But in the era of AI search engines, it matters _more_ — because of how AI engines process and select sources:

**Traditional Google:** Shows 10 blue links. Even a low-Information-Gain page gets seen if it ranks on page 1. The user clicks, reads, and the page still gets traffic even if it says nothing new.

**AI search engines (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews):** Generate a single answer and cite 3-5 sources. There's no "page 1" — either you're cited in the answer, or you're invisible. AI engines select citations based on which sources add the most unique value. Pages with low Information Gain (same information as everyone else) have no reason to be cited — the AI already has that information from other sources.

**The implication:** In traditional SEO, you could survive with low Information Gain by having strong backlinks and domain authority. In AI search, Information Gain becomes the primary selection criterion — because the AI is specifically looking for sources that add something new to its generated answer.

The Shift

**Old SEO:** "Say the same thing as competitors, but with better backlinks." **New SEO (AI era):** "Say something competitors don't — with data, experience, or insight they can't match." Information Gain isn't a nice-to-have. It's becoming the primary differentiator for AI-era visibility.

## 4\. Information Gain vs. E-E-A-T: What's the Difference?

These two concepts are often confused. They're complementary but measure different things:

### E-E-A-T

Evaluates the **credibility of the source**. Who wrote this? Why should you trust them? Do they have experience, expertise, authority, and trustworthiness?

"Should I believe this page?"

### Information Gain

Evaluates the **novelty of the content**. What new information does this page add? Can the reader find this elsewhere? Does it advance understanding?

"Does this page tell me something I didn't already know?"

**A page can have high E-E-A-T but low Information Gain:** A recognized expert writes a blog post that says the same 5 things every other page says. The source is credible, but the content adds nothing new.

**A page can have high Information Gain but low E-E-A-T:** An unknown blog publishes original survey data that nobody else has. The information is novel, but the source lacks established authority.

**The strongest content has both:** A credible expert shares original data, first-hand testing results, or unique insights. This is what Google, ChatGPT, and Perplexity prefer to cite — a trustworthy source that also adds something new.

## 5\. Six Ways to Build Information Gain into Your Content

1

#### Add Original Data

Surveys, experiments, benchmarks, case studies with real numbers. Original data is the highest-impact form of Information Gain — it's information that literally doesn't exist anywhere else.

Example: "We surveyed 400 remote workers and found that 73% report higher afternoon energy when using a standing desk."

2

#### Provide Unique Expert Insights

Perspectives that only someone with hands-on experience would know. Not "the spec sheet says X" but "after testing this for 3 months, here's what the spec sheet doesn't tell you."

Example: "The manufacturer claims 12-hour battery life. In our real-world testing with ANC on, we consistently got 9.5 hours — still good, but worth knowing."

3

#### Cover Subtopics Competitors Miss

Use "People Also Ask" and "AlsoAsked" tools to find questions that the top-ranking pages don't answer. Each unanswered question is an Information Gain opportunity.

Example: Every standing desk article covers "posture benefits." None cover "standing desk transition timeline" — what to expect in week 1, week 2, week 4.

4

#### Add First-Hand Experience

Test results, real-world observations, screenshots, photos, video. First-hand content is inherently unique — nobody else had your exact experience.

Example: Include a photo of your actual desk setup, a screenshot of your posture tracking app after 30 days, or a before/after comparison.

5

#### Include Proprietary Information

Internal benchmarks, customer data, tool-specific findings, anonymized case studies. Information from your own business or testing that competitors don't have access to.

Example: "Across our 200 Shopify store clients, pages with standing desk product reviews convert 23% higher than pages without lifestyle content."

6

#### Structure Content Differently

Don't follow the same H2/H3 pattern as every competing page. If every article uses "10 Benefits of X," try "5 Benefits, 3 Myths, and 2 Data-Backed Insights." Structural novelty itself contributes to Information Gain.

This is what we call "structural differentiation" — different organization, different angles, different types of information from the same topic.

## 6\. How to Measure Information Gain

There's no "Information Gain score" in Google Search Console. But you can approximate it with four methods:

#### SERP Overlap Analysis

Compare your key points against top 10 pages. Count unique points only you make.

#### Snippet Tracking

Pages winning snippets over established competitors typically have higher IG.

#### AI Citation Monitoring

Check if your page is cited in ChatGPT, Perplexity, or AI Overviews.

#### Uniqueness Audit

For each section, ask: "Can the reader find this elsewhere?" If yes, IG = zero.

The Quick Self-Test

Read your article's key sections. For each section, ask: **"If I deleted this paragraph, would the reader find the same information on a competitor's page?"** If the answer is "yes" for every section, your article has near-zero Information Gain. If even one section contains information the reader can't find elsewhere, you have a differentiator. The goal: maximize the sections where the answer is "no."

## 7\. How SEONIB Builds Structural Differentiation

Structural differentiation — organizing content differently from competitors — is one of the six Information Gain strategies. It's also the strategy that can be systematized through content tooling. Here's how it works in practice:

### Structural Differentiation through Content Source Variety

SEONIB's Approach to Information Gain

SEONIB generates content from 5 different sources — and each source naturally produces a different content structure. This means that even when covering the same topic, articles generated from different sources have different structural DNA — which contributes to Information Gain.

#### Keyword Blog → Targeted Structure

Organized around a specific search query. Heading structure matches search intent. Competitors targeting the same keyword will have similar structures — this is where you add original data (strategy #1) to create true Information Gain.

#### Reference Link → Analysis Structure

Organized around a source report or research. Unique angle: your analysis of someone else's data. Most competitors won't have this analysis — instant structural differentiation.

#### Social Link → Narrative Structure

Organized around a personal insight or opinion from a social post. Naturally different from keyword-driven articles — it carries a conversational, perspective-driven structure.

#### AEO Q&A → Extraction Structure

Organized as question-and-answer pairs. This format is structurally unique compared to traditional blog articles — and it's the format AI engines prefer for citation extraction.

**The important caveat:** Structural differentiation is one layer of Information Gain — and it's the layer that can be automated. The highest-impact layer — original data, first-hand testing, proprietary insights — still requires human effort. The winning formula: use tooling for structural differentiation (SEONIB handles this) + add human-generated original data and experience (you handle this) = maximum Information Gain.

The Layered Approach

**Layer 1 (automated):** Structural differentiation — different content formats, different source angles, different organizational patterns. This is what content tools can systematize. **Layer 2 (human):** Original data, first-hand experience, proprietary insights. This is what makes content truly irreplaceable. **Both layers together** = content that's structurally novel AND substantively novel = maximum Information Gain = Featured Snippets + AI Overview citations.

### Build Information Gain into Your Content Pipeline

Use SEONIB for structural differentiation (5 content sources, varied formats) — then add your original data and experience on top.

Free: 8 credits · Starter: $29 **$23.20/月** · Growth: $79 **$63.20/月** · Agency: $199 **$159.20/月**

[Visit SEONIB](https://www.seonib.com)

## 8\. FAQ

Sourced from Google People Also Ask, Reddit r/SEO, r/bigseo, Search Engine Journal discussions, and SEO Twitter/X.

What is Information Gain in SEO?

Information Gain measures how much new, unique information your content adds compared to what already exists in search results. It's backed by Google patent US10049166B1, which describes scoring content based on "the extent to which a document provides information that is novel." If your page adds something competitors don't — original data, unique insights — it has high Information Gain.

How does Information Gain affect Featured Snippets?

Featured Snippets aim to give users the best answer. When multiple pages cover the same information, Google selects the one that adds something new. A page with high Information Gain — original data, unique insights, or information competitors lack — is more likely to earn the snippet because it provides value other pages don't.

How does Information Gain affect AI Overview citations?

AI engines (Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity) select sources that add unique value. Information Gain directly influences citation selection: pages providing unique findings or data are more likely to be cited. Low-IG pages (repeating what everyone says) are deprioritized because the AI already has that information from other sources.

Can you explain Information Gain with a simple example?

10 pages rank for "best standing desk benefits." All 10 mention the same 5 benefits. Your page mentions those 5 plus a 6th: "standing desks reduce afternoon cortisol by 18% according to our survey of 400 remote workers." That 6th point — backed by original data — is Information Gain. It's new knowledge the reader can't find on the other 9 pages.

What is the Google Information Gain patent?

Google patent US10049166B1 describes a system that scores content based on novelty relative to other documents. It explicitly considers "the extent to which a document provides information that is novel or adds to the information included in other documents." This gives Google a documented mechanism for measuring and rewarding Information Gain.

How do I create content with high Information Gain?

Six strategies: (1) Add original data — surveys, experiments. (2) Provide unique expert insights. (3) Cover subtopics competitors miss. (4) Add first-hand experience. (5) Include proprietary information. (6) Structure content differently from competitors. The goal: give readers something they can't find on any other page.

What is structural differentiation?

Structural differentiation means organizing content in a way that's structurally different from competing pages — not just different words, but different organization, angles, and information types. If competitors use "10 Benefits of X," try "5 Benefits, 3 Myths Debunked, 2 Data-Backed Insights." This structural novelty contributes to Information Gain by presenting information from a new angle.

What's the difference between Information Gain and E-E-A-T?

E-E-A-T evaluates source credibility — "Should I trust this?" Information Gain evaluates content novelty — "Does this tell me something new?" A page can have high E-E-A-T but low IG (expert says same things as everyone). And high IG but low E-E-A-T (unknown source with original data). The strongest content has both: credible source + novel information.

How do you measure Information Gain?

No direct score in Google Search Console. Approximate with: (1) SERP overlap — compare your key points vs. top 10 pages, count unique points. (2) Snippet tracking — pages winning snippets over competitors likely have higher IG. (3) AI citation monitoring — check if cited in ChatGPT/Perplexity/AI Overviews. (4) Content uniqueness audit — for each section, ask: "Can the reader find this elsewhere?"

Does SEONIB help with Information Gain?

SEONIB contributes structural differentiation — one layer of Information Gain. Its 5 content sources (keyword, hot topic, social link, reference link, product) naturally produce different content structures for the same topic. However, the highest-impact Information Gain — original data, first-hand testing, proprietary insights — still requires human effort. Use SEONIB for the structural layer; add your original data for the substantive layer.

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#### MarTech Review Lab

SEO Research · Senior Analysts

We research and explain SEO concepts with practical clarity, drawing from Google patents, search behavior data, and real-world testing. Our team combines 10+ years in SEO, content strategy, and search technology analysis. This analysis draws from Google patent US10049166B1, SERP feature studies, and our testing of content structural differentiation across 40+ articles. Contact: team@martechreviewlab.com

## Related Reading

-   [How to Get Cited by ChatGPT, Perplexity & AI Search Engines](#)
-   [What Is SEONIB? How It Differs from Jasper, ChatGPT & Other AI Tools](#)
-   [5 Ways SEONIB Auto-Generates Blog Articles + Brand Workspace](#)
-   [From Product Link to SEO Article: We Tested It](#)

Published: May 1, 2026 · Last Updated: May 27, 2026 · Contact: team@martechreviewlab.com

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