The real shift isn’t AI tools. It’s the AI-first customer.
Scan those headlines and you see the same pattern: new AI ad tools, new AI search behavior, new AI audits, new AI “intelligence platforms.” Meanwhile, CMOs say they don’t have the budget to hit their targets, and media buyers are juggling more channels, formats, and expectations than ever.
The industry is obsessing over AI features. What actually matters is the AI-first consumer.
Search is becoming generative. Feeds are shaped by recommendation engines. Shopping journeys are stitched together by algorithms that don’t care about your funnel diagram. Attention is traded in seconds and priced by machine.
If you’re still optimizing for “the old user” – ten blue links, last-click attribution, static creatives, manual bids – you’re playing the wrong game. The new competitive edge is designing your marketing system for an AI-mediated, inference-driven world.
From queries to inferences: how the customer actually “shows up” now
A useful way to think about this is what Ben Thompson calls the “Inference Shift.” Platforms no longer wait for explicit queries; they infer intent from behavior and context, then decide what to show.
In practice, that means:
- Search is less about typed keywords and more about “what this person is probably trying to do right now.”
- Feeds (TikTok, Reels, YouTube, Prime Video, Netflix ads) are predictive: the system decides what’s next, not the user.
- Ad delivery is heavily optimized by black-box models that reward signals you often don’t see.
For operators, this breaks a lot of muscle memory:
- Keyword lists matter less; entity-level understanding and behavioral signals matter more.
- “Perfect” schema markup that doesn’t change user behavior won’t move the needle – as the AI citation tests are already showing.
- Media plans that assume linear journeys (awareness → consideration → conversion) are misaligned with how AI systems actually assemble impressions.
Why your current playbook is quietly decaying
Look at the headlines again:
- Google’s AI announcements are treated as events, but the real trend is a new search user.
- Short-form video attention science is about not getting skipped in feeds you don’t control.
- Prime Video ads now change based on what viewers already saw – the platform is sequencing your story, not your media plan.
- Adthena, Claude, ChatGPT-based tools promise “intelligence,” but most teams are still feeding them old assumptions.
The result: you’re buying media and producing content for a user journey that existed three years ago, then wondering why CAC is creeping up and branded search is doing all the heavy lifting.
The AI-first marketing stack: four non-negotiables
You don’t need more tools. You need a stack and operating model that assumes:
- Algorithms decide what gets seen.
- Content is consumed in fragments.
- Attribution is probabilistic, not precise.
- AI is both your assistant and your competitor for attention.
Here’s what that looks like in practice.
1. Design for the model, not the interface
Most teams still optimize for interfaces: SERPs, feeds, ad placements. In an AI-first world, you optimize for the model that sits behind them.
That means asking a different set of questions:
- What signals tell the model we’re a good answer?
Think beyond keywords: dwell time, scroll depth, saves, shares, repeat visits, purchase frequency, subscription retention. - Where does our brand “live” as an entity?
Consistent naming, clear topical focus, strong author and brand profiles across platforms, not just on your site. - Are we easy to summarize?
AI systems compress; if your positioning is fuzzy, you either get misrepresented or ignored.
Practical moves:
- Rebuild your SEO briefs around tasks and jobs to be done, not just keywords. Ask, “In what situations should an AI assistant recommend us?”
- Audit your brand entity: consistent descriptions, categories, and proof points across Google Business, LinkedIn, marketplaces, app stores, and major directories.
- Rewrite your core messaging so it can be accurately summarized in two sentences without losing meaning. That’s what models will do anyway.
2. Feed the algorithms with behavior, not just metadata
The Ahrefs and SEJ data on schema and AI citations is the canary in the coal mine: you can’t “mark up” your way into relevance. You need real behavioral proof.
For media buyers and growth teams, this shifts the focus:
- Optimize for engagement quality, not just cheap clicks.
Time on site, scroll depth, add-to-cart rate, and post-click activity are all signals platforms use to refine delivery. - Instrument the full journey.
If your analytics can’t distinguish between a bounced click and a high-intent browser, you’re starving the models of feedback. - Build “signal-rich” experiences.
Interactive tools, quizzes, calculators, configurators, and product discovery flows create more events for models to learn from.
This is also where AI audits actually matter. A 90-day growth audit powered by AI is useful only if it leads to:
- Cleaner event tracking and standardized naming across platforms.
- Better mapping between content types and downstream behaviors (not just CTR).
- Systematic testing of on-site experiences, not just ad creative.
3. Treat creative as a system, not a set of assets
The headlines on short-form attention, trending TikTok sounds, and dynamic Prime Video ads all point to the same reality: your “hero video” is a rounding error. The system decides which fragments get shown, in what order, and to whom.
To win, you need a modular creative system:
- Hooks as a product line.
For every campaign, produce 10-20 hooks (first 3-5 seconds) designed for different contexts: problem-aware, solution-aware, price-sensitive, skeptical, bored. - Message blocks, not monoliths.
Break your core arguments into reusable blocks: proof, objection handling, social proof, demo, offer. Let algorithms recombine them across placements. - Format-native variants by default.
Vertical, square, horizontal; 6s, 15s, 30s, 90s; sound-on and sound-off. This isn’t “nice to have” – it’s how you earn distribution in each environment.
AI tools can help generate and adapt these pieces, but the strategy is human:
- Define your narrative spine: what must be true in every variant?
- Codify your “creative grammar” for each platform: pacing, framing, text overlays, CTA patterns.
- Use AI to create volume and variations, then use human judgment to select and refine winners.
4. Budget for exploration in a probabilistic world
Most CMOs are underfunded against their stated goals. At the same time, the expectation from CEOs is up and to the right, while attribution is getting fuzzier thanks to AI surfaces and privacy.
In this environment, the old “set it, measure it, prove it” mindset breaks. You need a portfolio approach:
- Separate exploration and exploitation budgets.
Dedicate a fixed share (5-15%) of media and creative budget to testing new AI-driven surfaces (generative search, dynamic CTV, new social formats) without immediate ROI pressure. - Use directional metrics for frontier channels.
Brand search lift, direct traffic, assisted conversions, and retention changes are more realistic than strict ROAS in the early stages. - Shorten your feedback loops.
Weekly reviews on creative and audience performance, monthly on channel mix, quarterly on strategic bets.
The point isn’t to “nail” attribution. It’s to make fast, informed decisions in a world where precision is an illusion.
How to reorganize your team around the AI-first customer
Tools are changing faster than org charts. That’s a problem. You can’t run an AI-first strategy with a 2018 structure.
Three practical shifts:
1. Merge performance and brand into a single growth mandate
In a world of inferred intent, brand and performance are the same game:
- Brand shapes how algorithms and users interpret your signals.
- Performance data tells you which brand stories actually change behavior.
Instead of separate silos:
- Create a unified growth team with shared KPIs: profitable revenue, LTV/CAC, and brand search volume.
- Run joint planning where brand campaigns are designed with measurable behaviors in mind (site visits, trial starts, list signups).
- Use performance channels as always-on brand research: which messages, visuals, and offers resonate under real auction pressure?
2. Add a “model strategist” function
You don’t need another martech buyer. You need someone responsible for understanding how the major platforms’ models see your brand.
This role (sometimes called growth strategist, performance architect, or data strategist) should:
- Map key platforms (Google, Meta, TikTok, Amazon, CTV, marketplaces) and the signals that matter most in each.
- Own event taxonomy, conversion setup, and signal quality.
- Partner with creative to ensure assets are built to generate the right signals (e.g., strong watch-time, interaction, and post-click behavior).
- Translate AI platform updates into specific playbook changes, not just decks.
3. Treat AI as an operator, not a novelty
The teams getting value from AI aren’t using it for “inspiration”; they’re using it for operations:
- Automated 90-day audits of account structure, query mapping, and creative coverage.
- Systematic generation of ad variants based on proven message templates.
- Drafting landing page tests and email flows tied to specific behavioral segments.
- Summarizing qualitative feedback from reviews, support tickets, and sales calls into prioritized objections and proof points.
The key is constraint:
- Give AI narrow, well-defined tasks (e.g., “produce 10 hook variants using this angle and this audience insight”).
- Keep humans in charge of strategy, positioning, and final selection.
- Document prompts and workflows so they become part of your operating system, not one-off experiments.
What to do in the next 90 days
If you’re a CMO, performance lead, or media buyer, here’s a concrete 90-day plan to move from AI-feature-chasing to AI-first-customer thinking.
Weeks 1-2: Diagnose your signal health
- Audit your tracking: events, conversions, and audiences across Google, Meta, TikTok, and your analytics stack.
- Identify 5-10 “golden behaviors” that correlate with high LTV or strong intent (e.g., viewing pricing, using a configurator, watching 75% of a demo).
- Ensure those behaviors are being sent as high-quality signals to your major ad platforms.
Weeks 3-6: Rebuild your creative system
- Pick one core product or offer and build a modular creative kit: hooks, proof blocks, objection handlers, demos, offers.
- Use AI to generate volume, but enforce your narrative spine and brand standards.
- Deploy across 2-3 key platforms with structured testing: hooks vs. hooks, blocks vs. blocks, not random mixes.
Weeks 7-10: Align your org and budgets
- Set a clear exploration budget and define which AI-first surfaces you’ll test (generative search experiences, dynamic CTV, new social formats).
- Establish shared KPIs between brand and performance teams.
- Nominate or hire your “model strategist” and give them ownership of signal quality and platform playbooks.
AI tools will keep shipping. Algorithms will keep changing. The teams that win won’t be the ones who read the most product updates. They’ll be the ones who design their entire marketing system around a simple reality: your customer now arrives through a model’s inference, not a clean, linear funnel. Plan accordingly.