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How TikTok & Xiao Hong Shu Are Replacing Google for Gen Z

The Rise of Social Search: How TikTok & Xiao Hong Shu Are Replacing Google for Gen Z

Gen Z isn’t Googling, they’re searching on TikTok and Xiao Hong Shu. Here’s why social search is rising in Malaysia and what it means for businesses.

Table of Contents

Why Gen Z Is Moving Away from Google

For years, Google was the default place to search for anything — from “best café in KL” to “how to fix a leaky tap.” But habits are changing. Gen Z in Malaysia is increasingly turning to social media platforms like TikTok and Xiao Hong Shu for answers instead of Google.

Why? Because social search feels:

  • More authentic → Reviews and recommendations come from real people, not websites.
  • Faster → Short videos show answers in seconds.
  • Visual-first → TikTok and RED show experiences, not just text.

For younger Malaysians, Googling feels outdated. They’d rather watch a quick café review on TikTok than scroll through a blog post.

How TikTok Became a Search Engine

TikTok is no longer just about dances and memes — it’s become a discovery engine. Users search directly in TikTok for:

  • Food recommendations (“best nasi lemak in PJ”)
  • Lifestyle tips (“Pilates classes in KL”)
  • Product reviews (“Is Dyson Airwrap worth it?”)

TikTok’s algorithm + search means users don’t just find content; they get personalised answers. That’s why it’s eating into Google’s share of Gen Z searches.

The Rise of Xiao Hong Shu (RED) in Malaysia

Xiao Hong Shu (小红书), also known as RED, is booming among Malaysia’s Chinese-speaking community. It’s part social media, part search engine.

On RED, people don’t just scroll — they search for reviews before buying or trying anything. From skincare brands to travel spots and new cafés, RED has become a trusted recommendation hub.

For Gen Z Chinese Malaysians, RED often replaces Google because it feels closer to word-of-mouth — authentic reviews by peers, not ads.

What This Shift Means for Businesses

If your business is still thinking only about Google SEO, you’re missing where Gen Z actually searches. This shift means:

  • Hashtags are the new keywords → Optimising TikTok and RED posts for trending hashtags is like doing SEO.

  • Videos are the new blog posts → Short, authentic content outranks long, polished ads.

  • KOCs (Key Opinion Consumers) are the new reviewers → Everyday users influence purchase decisions more than professional critics.

👉 Businesses targeting Gen Z in Malaysia need to treat TikTok and Xiao Hong Shu like search platforms, not just social platforms.

How to Optimise for Social Search

  1. Use Searchable Captions & Hashtags
    Include keywords users would type, like “best furniture shop in KL” or “affordable facial Penang.”

  2. Create Content That Answers Questions
    Think: “Where to eat in Subang?” → Answer with a TikTok/RED video.

  3. Leverage Reviews & KOC Marketing
    Seed products with micro-creators who post authentic reviews. These rank higher in social search.

  4. Track Trends
    On TikTok, trending audio and hashtags influence discoverability. On RED, community tags matter.

  5. Encourage UGC (User-Generated Content)
    Customers posting about your brand act like “social search results” that new buyers trust.

Final Thoughts

The rise of social search shows one clear truth: Gen Z doesn’t search like older generations. For them, TikTok and Xiao Hong Shu are the new Google.

Businesses in Malaysia that adapt early — by creating authentic, searchable content on these platforms — will capture the next generation of consumers. Those that ignore this shift risk being invisible where their future customers are looking.

In short: if Google SEO was the game of the 2010s, social SEO is the game of the 2020s.