The real shift: from search sessions to decision sessions
AI search isn’t “killing SEO.” It’s killing lazy acquisition math.
Scan the headlines: AI Overviews cutting clicks by 58%, Google calling this an “expansionary moment,” Reddit and others chasing AI search, tools racing to monitor “AI visibility.” Underneath the noise is one hard truth:
We’re moving from search sessions to decision sessions. Users aren’t browsing results; they’re asking, “What should I do / buy / choose?” and getting a synthesized answer, often without clicking.
For CMOs, performance marketers, and media buyers, that means the game is no longer “how do I win the click?” but “how do I become the default recommendation inside the answer?”
This isn’t a thought experiment. It’s already showing up in three places:
- AI Overviews and answer engines eating generic search traffic.
- Platforms (Reddit, Amazon, Maps, social) becoming structured inputs to AI systems.
- Ad platforms quietly re-optimizing around “decision moments” instead of raw impressions or clicks.
The operators who win the next 3-5 years will treat AI systems as a new class of “meta-channel” and design for them explicitly.
The new funnel: where AI is quietly inserting itself
Old mental model: awareness → consideration → intent → purchase, with channels mapped neatly along the way.
New reality:
- AI at the top: summarizing culture, trends, and “what people are saying.”
- AI in the middle: compressing research into 1-2 recommended options.
- AI at the bottom: routing to marketplaces, local results, or direct purchase flows.
In other words, AI is now:
- Your comparison site.
- Your review aggregator.
- Your “friend who knows this category.”
If your marketing stack is still optimized for “get traffic, then convert,” you’re going to feel like traffic is mysteriously disappearing. It isn’t. It’s being resolved earlier, inside the answer layer.
What actually matters now: being the recommended choice
AI systems are trained on patterns. They don’t care about your funnel. They care about:
- Clear, structured signals of expertise and relevance.
- Stable, consistent brand and product entities across the web.
- Evidence that real humans choose and talk about you.
Translate that into operator language and you get four priority areas:
- Decision-structured content, not keyword-structured content.
- Entity hygiene across search, maps, marketplaces, and social.
- Proof-of-choice signals (reviews, UGC, expert picks) that machines can parse.
- Media buying that optimizes for “assisted decisions,” not just last-click ROAS.
1. Design for decisions, not just queries
Most SEO and content still looks like it’s 2018: chase a keyword, write a listicle, hope to rank.
But AI Overviews and answer engines are not surfacing “the best-optimized page.” They’re synthesizing decision logic:
- What factors matter for this choice?
- Which options cover those factors best?
- What trade-offs should the user know?
So your content needs to look more like a buying guide designed for a machine to mine, not a human to skim.
Operator checklist: decision-structured content
- Explicit decision frameworks. Don’t just list products. Spell out “how to choose” with criteria, thresholds, and if/then logic. That’s the raw material answer engines extract.
- Stable, comparable attributes. Use consistent tables and schemas (features, specs, pricing tiers, use cases) so models can compare you vs. alternatives cleanly.
- Clear segment guidance. “Best for X” sections (e.g., “best for teams under 50,” “best for heavy mobile usage”) map neatly to the way users phrase AI queries.
- Real constraints. Include where you’re not a fit. It increases trust signals and gives AI a cleaner map of your ideal customer profile.
Brief your content and SEO teams like this and you stop writing “SEO pages” and start writing “answer inputs.”
2. Treat entities as a performance channel
AI search isn’t just reading pages; it’s resolving entities: brands, products, locations, people.
That’s why you’re seeing a surge of content about Maps SEO, local search, and “topical authority.” They’re all proxies for one thing: entity clarity.
Operator checklist: entity hygiene
- Lock down your canonical facts. Name, category, pricing model, core features, locations, parent company. Make sure they’re consistent across your site, Knowledge Panels, Maps, marketplaces, and major directories.
- Use structured data properly. Product, Organization, LocalBusiness, FAQ, HowTo, and Review schemas are now table stakes. They’re not “SEO hacks”; they’re how you feed structured facts into AI systems.
- Fix cannibalization and fragmentation. If you have 12 pages half-competing for the same concept, you’re muddying your entity. Consolidate, redirect, and build clear internal linking that reinforces your main topics.
- Align naming across channels. If your product is “Acme Flow” on your site, “Acme Workflow Suite” on G2, and “Acme Automation” in your ads, you’re training models that these are different things.
In a world of answer engines, entity clarity is performance media. Treat it with the same rigor as your ad account structure.
3. Feed the machine proof that people actually choose you
AI systems don’t just parse your claims; they look for external corroboration. That’s why Discord communities, social-first B2B SEO, influencer programs, and review strategies suddenly feel more consequential.
The question isn’t “are people talking about us?” It’s “is there machine-readable evidence that people pick us?”
Operator checklist: proof-of-choice
- Review depth, not just stars. Long-form, specific reviews with use cases and trade-offs are gold. They give models rich language to associate your brand with particular jobs-to-be-done.
- Expert and list inclusion. “Best X for Y” lists are getting cleaned up by Google, but curated, credible lists still matter as training signals. Aim for fewer, higher-quality inclusions.
- Public customer stories. Case studies, testimonials, and quotes that name segments, metrics, and scenarios are more useful than vague praise. Again, it’s about decision logic.
- Owned communities with searchable content. Discord, forums, Slack groups, and subreddits where users troubleshoot, compare, and recommend you are all raw material for AI. Don’t just host them; structure them (pinned FAQs, categorized threads).
Think of this as “training data strategy” for your brand. You’re not just persuading humans; you’re educating the models that will advise those humans.
4. Rethink media buying for an answer-first world
Media buying has quietly been moving this way already. Google’s “helpful AI” positioning, Meta’s Advantage+ products, Amazon’s ad revenue growth – all are about pushing spend into systems that optimize across the journey.
But most teams still report and optimize like it’s 2015: channel-by-channel ROAS, last-click bias, and a fixation on traffic volume.
Operator checklist: decision-centric media
- Reframe your north star. Move from “cost per click” or “cost per lead” to “cost per qualified decision.” That might look like sales-accepted opportunities, free trials that hit activation, or first purchases with repeat potential.
- Buy into decision moments, not just placements.
- On Amazon: sponsor category and competitor terms where users are already comparing.
- On social: retarget based on behaviors that signal research (product page visits, comparison content, buying guide views).
- On search: prioritize queries that clearly encode decision intent (“vs,” “best for X,” “how to choose”).
- Use creative to pre-empt the answer engine. Your ads should mirror the structure of a good AI answer:
- State the job-to-be-done.
- List the 2-3 factors that matter.
- Show how you win on those factors.
Not just “benefits,” but explicit comparison logic.
- Instrument “assists,” not just conversions. Track views and engagements with buying guides, comparison pages, and calculators as first-class events. These are the same touchpoints AI is compressing for users.
When your reporting reflects decision-making, you stop panicking about top-of-funnel traffic declines and start seeing where the real leverage is.
5. Governance: AI-ready without outsourcing your judgment
There’s a parallel conversation happening about “responsible AI in advertising” and “AI’s trust problem.” Both matter, because the temptation right now is to hand your message – and sometimes your strategy – to a handful of tools.
That’s how brands end up with generic AI sludge that trains models to see them as interchangeable with everyone else.
Operator checklist: AI use with a spine
- Decide where AI is allowed to create vs. assist.
- Assist: research, clustering queries, drafting outlines, summarizing customer feedback.
- Create (with review): ad variants, social posts, microcopy.
- Off-limits: positioning, pricing rationale, core narratives, public statements on sensitive topics.
- Mandate “source-aware” outputs. When AI generates content, require explicit reference to internal sources: customer interviews, win/loss notes, support logs, sales calls. Otherwise you’re just regurgitating the same public corpus as your competitors.
- Protect your distinct voice. Build a simple voice and message guide, then fine-tune your prompts and review process against it. Consistency is another strong signal for both humans and models.
- Audit for hallucinated claims. Especially in regulated or complex categories, assign someone to spot-check AI-generated claims against legal and product reality.
AI should compress grunt work so your team can spend more time on judgment – not the other way around.
How to operationalize this in the next 90 days
This shift is big, but you don’t need a 12-month transformation program. You need a focused 90-day sprint that changes how your system thinks.
Month 1: Map where AI is already touching your funnel
- Audit your top 100 queries (search, site search, and customer questions) and check how they appear in:
- Google AI Overviews / answer boxes.
- Amazon / marketplace search (if relevant).
- Maps / local packs (if relevant).
- Reddit and major forums.
- Identify 10-15 “decision queries” where you currently appear in some form (organic, paid, reviews, mentions).
- Document your entity footprint: Knowledge Panel, Maps, major directories, marketplaces, review sites, and social bios.
Month 2: Fix the obvious structural gaps
- Clean up entity inconsistencies: names, categories, descriptions, and key facts.
- Ship or overhaul 3-5 high-impact decision pages:
- “How to choose [category] for [segment].”
- “[Your product] vs [top alternatives]” with honest, structured comparisons.
- Buying guides with explicit criteria and trade-offs.
- Implement or fix core structured data (Organization, Product, LocalBusiness, FAQ, Review).
Month 3: Rewire media and measurement
- Redefine 1-2 primary performance KPIs around qualified decisions (e.g., sales-accepted leads, activated trials, high-intent signups).
- Adjust bidding and budget allocation toward decision-intent queries and placements.
- Tag and track decision-assist content as its own stage in your funnel.
- Run a controlled test:
- Variant A: traditional “benefit-first” ads.
- Variant B: decision-structured ads that mirror answer-engine logic.
- Compare not just CTR, but downstream decision KPIs.
The AI layer is going to keep eating surface-level traffic. That’s fine. Your job is to make sure that when users stop searching and start deciding, your brand is already baked into the answer.