The real shift isn’t AI “content” – it’s AI as the new media channel
Look past the hype cycles and you’ll see the same pattern across those headlines:
- OpenAI is preparing conversion-focused ads inside ChatGPT.
- Google is merging Search, AI agents, and tools “into one.”
- Ahrefs, HubSpot, Buffer, and others are rolling out agents, APIs, and portable AI workflows.
- Search and social teams are suddenly talking about “AEO” (answer engine optimization), not just SEO.
The important story is not “AI makes more content” or “AI automates tasks.” The important story is:
AI agents are becoming chaperones between your customer and your brand – and they’re turning into a media channel you don’t control.
For CMOs, performance marketers, and media buyers, this is not a philosophical shift. It’s a planning, budgeting, and measurement problem that will hit your P&L.
From search results to AI answers: your funnel is being front-ended
Historically, your acquisition stack looked roughly like this:
Query → SERP / feed → click → site / app → conversion.
You fought for:
- Impressions in feeds and SERPs (ads, SEO, content, PR).
- Clicks to owned properties (landing pages, PDPs, app stores).
- On-site conversion (CRO, merchandising, UX, offers).
AI agents are inserting a new step:
Intent → agent (ChatGPT, Gemini, Copilot, in-app assistants) → filtered options → click / action.
That “filtered options” step is the problem. It’s where:
- ChatGPT answers directly instead of sending traffic.
- Google’s AI Overviews summarize and compress your content.
- Retailer agents and “universal carts” pick which products to show.
- Brand-agnostic tools (e.g., meeting schedulers, prospecting tools, idea engines) recommend vendors.
You used to compete in a visible marketplace (results pages, feeds). Now you’re competing inside opaque models and agent workflows.
Why this matters more than yet another channel launch
AI agents are not just “another channel” to add to your media mix spreadsheet. They change three fundamentals:
1. They compress choice
Search might show 10 organic results, 4 ads, and a “People Also Ask” box. A feed might show dozens of posts. An AI answer often gives:
- One synthesized answer.
- Maybe 3-5 named options.
- Sometimes zero links.
Fewer slots mean winner-take-most dynamics. Being “in the mix” is no longer enough; you either make the short list or you’re invisible.
2. They intermediate your brand story
AI agents don’t just direct traffic; they paraphrase you. They decide:
- Which benefits to highlight.
- Which objections to address.
- Which competitors to mention alongside you.
That’s not “brand safety.” That’s brand substitution. If your messaging is generic, the agent will flatten you into “one of many.”
3. They blur paid, earned, and owned
When OpenAI sells “conversion-focused ads” inside ChatGPT, what is that?
- Paid search? Not exactly.
- Display? Not really.
- Affiliate? Closer, but still off.
It’s embedded decision influence at the moment of intent. You’re buying a place in the agent’s short list, not just on a page.
What operators actually need to change in the next 12-18 months
You don’t need a 40-page “AI strategy deck.” You need to quietly rewire a few critical parts of your marketing operation.
1. Treat AI agents as a top-funnel channel in your media plan
Start simple: add a row to your channel plan called “AI surfaces.” Under it, track:
- Search AI: Google AI Overviews, Bing / Copilot, Perplexity.
- Chat AI: ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, etc.
- Retail / marketplace AI: Amazon, Walmart, Target, “universal carts.”
- In-product AI: agents inside tools your buyers already use (CRM, productivity, dev tools).
For each, define:
- Role: discovery, comparison, configuration, or support.
- Primary KPI: assisted conversions, brand mentions, inclusion rate in answers.
- Owner: who actually touches this weekly (search lead, lifecycle lead, product marketing, etc.).
If nobody “owns” AI surfaces, they will quietly erode your branded search and direct traffic while you argue about last-click ROAS.
2. Shift SEO from “rank pages” to “feed models”
The AEO (answer engine optimization) crowd has the right instinct, but most advice stops at “write better summaries.” That’s not enough.
Think in three layers:
Layer 1: Machine-readable clarity
- Use schema markup aggressively (products, FAQs, how-tos, reviews, pricing, availability).
- Make your pricing, specs, and differentiators explicit and structured, not buried in prose.
- Clean up technical basics: robots.txt, sitemaps, canonical tags, CWV. If crawlers struggle, models will too.
Layer 2: Agent-friendly content patterns
- Create content in the exact formats agents like to quote: comparisons, pros/cons, checklists, decision trees.
- Write “agent-ready” copy blocks: crisp, factual, non-hype sentences that models can safely reuse.
- Answer “which X should I choose for Y?” questions with clear segmentation (use cases, budgets, skill levels).
Layer 3: Citations and authority signals
- Prioritize mentions and citations in trusted sources (industry media, reviewers, analysts) over raw backlink volume.
- Monitor where AI agents already cite you – and where they cite competitors instead.
- Feed your own public APIs, docs, and knowledge bases with up-to-date, high-precision information.
The job is no longer “get this page to rank.” It’s “make this fact pattern easy and safe for an AI agent to repeat with our name attached.”
3. Design “agent paths” alongside user journeys
Your current journey maps probably look like:
Ad → landing page → nurture → sales.
Add a parallel map:
Prompt → agent → shortlist → brand touchpoint → conversion.
For your top 5-10 revenue-driving journeys, ask:
- What would a buyer actually type into ChatGPT / Gemini instead of Google?
- What would their internal agent (in a CRM, browser, or OS) see about us?
- Where do we want the agent to send them – and what do we want the agent to say?
Then build specific assets for those paths:
- Agent-friendly comparison pages that answer “Which tool is best for X?” without fluff.
- Clear pricing and packaging pages that can be summarized without misrepresenting you.
- Short, factual “why us” narratives that models can safely compress.
4. Rebalance your creative: less volume, more distinctiveness
If AI agents are paraphrasing your message, sameness is fatal. You can’t out-generic a generic model.
That means:
- Fewer, sharper claims. Decide on 1-3 non-obvious, non-commodity benefits and hammer them consistently.
- Concrete proof. Case studies, benchmarks, and specific numbers that agents can quote.
- Memorable language. Phrases and frames that are hard to paraphrase without losing meaning.
The AI era is oddly good news for real positioning. Models flatten weak differentiation and exaggerate strong differentiation. Pick a side.
5. Prepare for “agent media buying” before it blindsides your budget
Conversion-focused ads inside ChatGPT and AI-infused Demand Gen campaigns are early signals of where this goes:
- Agents will recommend products and services as part of their answers.
- Platforms will sell you influence over those recommendations.
- Attribution will be even messier than current multi-touch chaos.
Before this is fully mainstream, decide:
- Who owns it: Does this sit with search, programmatic, or a new “AI surfaces” owner?
- How you’ll judge it: Incremental lift vs. branded search, not just CPA in isolation.
- What you won’t do: For example, no black-box agent deals without lift tests or brand guardrails.
Treat early AI ad products like you treated early programmatic: small test budgets, brutal measurement, fast iteration.
Org design: the quiet reason most teams will miss this shift
The headlines about “enterprise SEO recommendations failing for psychological reasons” are a clue. The blocker here isn’t tooling; it’s org structure.
AI agents cut across:
- Search (SEO + SEM).
- Content and brand.
- Product marketing.
- Data / analytics.
- Product and engineering (where in-product agents live).
If you treat this as “an SEO thing” or “a paid media experiment,” it will die in committee.
Practical move for a CMO:
- Appoint a single owner: “AI Surfaces Lead” or similar, reporting into growth or marketing.
- Give them a small, cross-functional squad: one search specialist, one content/brand lead, one PM, one analyst.
- Set a hard, commercial target: e.g., “Maintain or grow non-brand organic + direct conversions in markets where AI Overviews are live.”
Then get out of their way for 90 days. Ask for experiments, not a manifesto.
What to actually do this quarter
If you want something you can put into a Q3 plan, use this as a checklist:
-
Audit your AI footprint.
- Query ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity for your top 50-100 category and brand terms.
- Document: where you’re mentioned, how you’re described, which competitors appear.
-
Patch obvious gaps.
- Fix missing or outdated facts (pricing, features, positioning) on your own properties first.
- Update key third-party profiles (review sites, marketplaces, app stores) that models scrape.
-
Ship 3-5 “agent-ready” assets.
- One crisp comparison page in your category.
- One updated “why us” page with concrete proof.
- One structured FAQ that answers real buyer questions in factual language.
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Add AI surfaces to your reporting.
- Track branded search, direct traffic, and organic conversions in markets where AI features are rolling out.
- Watch for unexplained drops that correlate with AI changes, not just algorithm updates.
-
Run one controlled paid test.
- Test a small budget in an AI-influenced format (e.g., Demand Gen with AI creative, or an early ChatGPT ad product if available).
- Measure incremental lift vs. your existing search and social spend.
The operators who treat AI agents as a real, measurable media channel – not a sci-fi sideshow – will quietly compound an advantage while everyone else debates prompt engineering on LinkedIn.