The real shift: you’re not just marketing to humans anymore
Look at those headlines and a pattern jumps out:
- “How to get indexed by ChatGPT”
- “Why LinkedIn Is the Most-Cited Source in AI Search”
- “FAQs for AEO: How to structure answers that rank in answer engines”
- “What Apple’s Gemini-Powered Siri Means For Search Visibility”
- “Using AI to Support and Defend Your Brand”
Search is no longer just ten blue links and a few ads. Your brand is being summarized, paraphrased, and re-explained by:
- AI assistants (Siri with Gemini, Alexa, Google Assistant)
- Answer engines (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, You.com)
- Social feeds increasingly driven by AI “explainers” and recaps
Your performance problem is now a machine understanding problem. If the systems that explain the internet don’t understand you, your media dollars and content output get silently discounted.
From SEO to AEO: answer engine optimization as a media problem
Old model: rank pages, bid on keywords, retarget visitors.
New model: get your brand’s explanation into the models that power:
- ChatGPT-style answers (“What’s the best tool for…?”)
- Siri/Gemini responses (“Hey Siri, what should I use for…?”)
- AI summaries in search results and social
This is not just an SEO content tweak. It’s a full-funnel issue:
- Brand: Are AI systems describing you the way you want to be positioned?
- Acquisition: Are you even mentioned in “best X for Y” style AI answers?
- Conversion: Are AI tools inside ad platforms and CRMs “getting” your value prop?
CMOs and media leaders who treat this as a side project will watch AI systems route demand to competitors who were more intentional about being machine-readable.
Three uncomfortable truths about AI-shaped demand
1. Most of your “SEO wins” don’t survive AI summarization
You can own a SERP and still lose the answer box in an AI interface. The model might:
- Summarize your content but recommend a competitor
- Skip your brand if your positioning is vague or inconsistent
- Prefer sources like LinkedIn posts or niche blogs that are clearer and more structured
That’s why LinkedIn is suddenly a top-cited source in AI search: it’s dense with clean, declarative, expert statements that models can quote.
2. “Brand safety” now includes model safety
It’s not just about where your ads appear. It’s about:
- What AI tools say when someone asks about your category
- Whether hallucinations are attaching nonsense to your name
- Whether regulatory or “limited ad serving” flags are quietly throttling you
Google’s expanding limited ad serving policies, “blacklist” guidance, and government scrutiny of AI systems all point in the same direction: models are being constrained, and if you’re not clearly on the “safe, high-quality, unambiguous” side, you get downranked or excluded.
3. Your own AI stack is only as good as the inputs you give it
Everyone is buying AI tools for media planning, creative, and CRM. But if your brand’s source material is messy, your tools will:
- Generate generic, off-brand copy
- Misclassify audiences and intents
- Over-optimize for the wrong signals (cheap clicks instead of profitable customers)
AI is not neutral infrastructure. It’s an amplifier of your clarity or your confusion.
A simple operating model: treat AI systems as a new “priority channel”
You don’t need a 50-slide “AI transformation” deck. You need a compact operating model that media and growth teams can actually run.
Think in three layers:
- How machines see your brand (source of truth)
- How machines explain your brand (answer surfaces)
- How your own machines spend your money (internal AI)
Layer 1: Make your brand machine-legible
This is the boring, high-ROI work most teams skip.
1. Build a canonical “brand spec” for machines
Create a single, short, precise document that answers:
- What are you? (category in plain language)
- Who are you for? (segments, use cases, industries)
- What problems do you solve? (explicit, non-fluffy)
- What are your 3-5 proof points? (numbers, logos, outcomes)
- What are the 10-20 questions people actually ask about you?
Then do two things:
- Use this spec as the prompt base for every internal AI tool
- Make public, crawlable versions of this spec in different formats: web pages, FAQs, LinkedIn posts, help docs
2. Clean up entity-level chaos
Models reason in “entities”: companies, people, products. If your entities are messy, your visibility is messy.
- Standardize your brand and product names across site, socials, app stores, and marketplaces
- Fix inconsistent “About” descriptions on LinkedIn, Crunchbase, G2, app stores, directories
- Use structured data (schema.org) to mark up organization, product, FAQ, and review information
- Ensure executive profiles are coherent and connected to your brand story
This is dull work. It’s also the foundation of answer engine optimization.
Layer 2: Design content for answer engines, not just rankings
Most content is still written for human skimming and Google snippets. You now need content that:
- Is easy for models to quote directly
- Maps cleanly to “best X for Y” and “how do I do Z” intents
- Is consistent enough that multiple sources reinforce the same narrative
1. Write for extraction, not just persuasion
Reframe your content briefs. For each page or asset, ask:
- What one-sentence answer do we want AI to give that could come from this page?
- What bullet list or table could a model lift directly?
- What comparison or framework would be useful for “recommendation” style answers?
Then structure content accordingly:
- Use clear, direct Q&A sections with explicit questions as headings
- Include short, definitive statements models can quote (“[Brand] is a [category] for [segment] that helps you [outcome].”)
- Add concise pros/cons and “best for X” language where honest and accurate
2. Treat LinkedIn and expert platforms as AI training surfaces
If LinkedIn is heavily cited in AI answers, treat it like a structured knowledge base:
- Publish “definitive takes” on your category from credible leaders, not just promo posts
- Use clear, non-hyped language that states what you do, for whom, and why it works
- Encourage your experts to answer real questions in public, not just share links
The goal: when AI looks for “trusted explanations” in your space, it finds your people.
3. Build specific AEO assets
Don’t just tweak existing blogs. Create formats built for answer engines:
- Category explainers that define terms and compare approaches
- Decision guides: “How to choose a [category] tool for [use case]”
- Structured FAQs with short, direct answers
- Case studies that explicitly connect problem → solution → outcome in 3-5 lines
These pieces should be boringly clear. Models love boring clarity.
Layer 3: Make your own AI stack commercially competent
While you’re trying to influence external models, your internal models are already influencing your spend.
1. Give your tools a real brand and performance brief
Most teams drop raw CSVs and random URLs into AI tools and hope for magic. Instead:
- Feed your brand spec (from Layer 1) as a persistent system prompt
- Define what a “good outcome” is in business terms (LTV, payback, margin), not just CTR or CPA
- Document your negative space: who you don’t want, what you don’t do
This makes your AI assistants more like a trained junior strategist and less like a random intern.
2. Audit how AI is shaping your media and creative
Ask your team where AI is already in the loop:
- Bid strategies and budget allocation in Google, Meta, TikTok, Microsoft Ads
- Dynamic creative optimization and auto-generated variations
- Lookalike and predictive audience modeling
Then run a simple quarterly review:
- Where did AI-driven decisions contradict human judgment and win?
- Where did they contradict human judgment and lose?
- What signals are we feeding these systems that might bias them toward cheap but low-quality outcomes?
Use that to adjust conversion events, audience seeds, and creative guardrails.
3. Budget for “AI friction” as a real line item
As policies tighten (limited ad serving, brand safety filters, regulatory guardrails), assume:
- Some campaigns will be throttled or delayed by automated reviews
- Some creative angles will be quietly deprioritized
- Some audiences will be harder to reach without extra verification
Plan for this like you plan for ad fatigue or seasonality. Build backup creative, alternative messaging, and secondary channels that are less policy-sensitive (email, owned communities, direct partnerships).
What this changes for CMOs and media leaders this quarter
If you own a budget, here’s the short list worth acting on in the next 90 days:
-
Run an “AI brand audit.”
- Ask major models: “What is [Brand]? Who is it for? What are the best tools for [your category]?”
- Screenshot and circulate the answers internally
- Flag gaps, inaccuracies, and missing narratives
-
Fund a small AEO task force.
- One SEO/Content lead, one Product Marketing lead, one Media/Performance lead
- Mandate: build the brand spec, fix entity chaos, and ship 3-5 AEO-native assets
-
Standardize AI prompts across your stack.
- Create a shared prompt library for media planning, creative, and reporting
- Bake in your brand spec and performance definitions
-
Update your measurement to include “explanation share.”
- Track not just share of voice in SERPs, but presence in AI answers for key category questions
- Review quarterly alongside brand lift and performance metrics
-
Brief your board and exec team in plain language.
- Not “AI transformation,” just: “Machines are now the first touch for how buyers understand us. Here’s what we’re doing about it.”
The operators who win the next few years won’t be the ones with the flashiest AI tools. They’ll be the ones whose brands are easiest for machines to understand, explain, and recommend – and whose own AI stack is tuned to real commercial outcomes, not vanity metrics.