The real shift: from AI users to AI orchestrators
Look past the headlines and you’ll see one pattern: everyone is talking about AI tools, but the operators winning right now are doing something different.
They’re not asking, “Which AI tool should I use?”
They’re asking, “How do I orchestrate AI, data, and channels into a system that compounds?”
The AI gold rush is over. The edge is no longer “I use AI.” Your edge is how well you design, connect, and govern an AI-driven performance stack across:
- Tracking and measurement (which is still a mess)
- Search and AI surfaces (ChatGPT, AI Overviews, preferred sources)
- Media buying automation (PMax, Smart Bidding, Shopping, paid social)
- Content and CRO (titles, landing pages, email, creative)
This is the orchestrator role: you decide what gets automated, what stays manual, and how the whole thing feeds back into profit, not vanity metrics.
Why “more AI tools” is not your growth strategy
Look at the current content stream:
- “Top tracking issues” and “conversion strategy case studies”
- “ChatGPT SEO tools” and “AI misinformation experiments”
- “When to say no to PMax” and “Custom GPTs for workflows”
- “AI Overviews visibility factors” and “December core updates”
The subtext: tools are multiplying, but signal is not.
If you’re a performance marketer or media buyer, your problems are no longer:
- “Can I generate content?”
- “Can I automate bids?”
- “Can I get reports?”
Your problems are:
- “Which data do I trust?”
- “Which automations are helping vs. quietly eroding margin?”
- “How do I keep control when platforms and LLMs rewrite the rules weekly?”
AI is now infrastructure. Your job is to architect it, not worship it.
The orchestrator mindset: 5 principles
Think of orchestrating your stack like running a trading desk, not a content farm. Five principles matter:
1. Own your source of truth (or the platforms will)
Between:
- GA4’s sampling and modeling
- Platform-reported conversions (PMax, Meta, TikTok)
- Server-side events, CAPI, and CDPs
it’s easy to end up with three “truths” and no confidence.
Orchestrators do this instead:
-
Define a primary commercial metric
Example: “Blended MER by channel group, 7-day click + 1-day view, net of refunds.” -
Rank data sources by trust, not convenience
1) Finance/CRM
2) First-party analytics (server-side, warehouse)
3) Platform data (for optimization, not truth) -
Use platform conversions as steering signals, not P&L
You optimize to them; you don’t believe them blindly.
If you don’t pick a source of truth, Google, Meta, and Amazon will each volunteer theirs. They will not agree, and you will overspend.
2. Decide where automation stops
Articles about “When to say no to PMax” hint at the real issue: automation is not neutral. Every automated system bakes in someone else’s incentives.
A simple framework:
-
Automate where:
- There’s high-frequency, low-judgment decision-making (bids, budgets within guardrails)
- Feedback loops are fast and measurable (shopping, retargeting, branded search)
- You can monitor drift with clear thresholds (ROAS floors, CPA caps, impression share)
-
Stay manual or semi-manual where:
- Creative and messaging define success (cold social, YouTube prospecting)
- Brand risk is real (AI-generated copy, misinformation-prone topics)
- You’re testing strategy, not just tactics (new markets, new offers, new LTV assumptions)
Orchestrators don’t ask, “Should I use PMax?”
They ask, “What role does PMax play in my channel mix, and what do I refuse to let it control?”
3. Treat LLMs as probabilistic interns, not oracles
Between “AI misinformation experiments” and “What Black Friday reveals about how LLMs understand ecommerce,” one thing is clear: LLMs hallucinate, especially on niche or fast-changing topics.
For operators, that means:
-
Use LLMs to generate options, not answers
Draft 20 angles, 15 subject lines, 10 hooks. You still choose, refine, and test. -
Ground them in your own data
Feed them your product catalog, FAQs, objections, and past winners. A custom GPT trained on your brand beats a generic “SEO GPT” every time. -
Never outsource facts or compliance
Pricing, guarantees, regulated claims, and legal copy must be validated against your own systems and counsel.
The orchestrator question is not “Can AI write this?”
It’s “Where does AI accelerate my workflow without introducing silent risk?”
4. Design for AI surfaces, not just SERPs
Headlines about “ChatGPT Shopping,” “AI Overviews,” and “preferred sources” point to a shift: discovery is moving from ten blue links to AI-generated answers and curated sources.
That changes how you think about visibility:
-
Structure content for machines, not just humans
Clear entities (brands, products, categories), consistent naming, clean schema, and unambiguous product data make you easier to “understand” and surface. -
Build topical authority, not just keyword coverage
LLMs and AI Overviews tend to favor sources that appear authoritative across a topic, not just a single keyword. Thin, scattered content loses. -
Think in “answer objects,” not just pages
FAQs, comparison tables, pros/cons, specs, and how-tos that can be extracted and summarized by AI models.
You’re no longer just optimizing for Google’s crawler. You’re optimizing for a growing layer of AI systems that decide what’s “relevant” and “trustworthy” before a human ever sees you.
5. Close the loop from impression to inquiry to revenue
Case studies about “37% more inquiries” and “email segmentation driving more sales with less traffic” all share one trait: they connect channel activity to business outcomes.
Orchestrators build loops, not silos:
-
From media to CRM
UTM discipline, click IDs, and server-side tracking that tie ad clicks to leads, opportunities, and revenue. -
From CRM back to media
LTV cohorts, churn data, and high-value segments synced back to ad platforms and email tools for smarter bidding and segmentation. -
From experiments to playbooks
Every winning test becomes a documented pattern: “Offer + angle + audience + channel + creative format.” AI can then remix within those patterns instead of starting from zero.
Without closed loops, AI just helps you make the wrong decisions faster.
Building your orchestrator stack: a practical blueprint
Here’s a simple way to move from “AI user” to “AI orchestrator” over the next 90 days.
Step 1: Stabilize tracking and truth
- Audit all tracking: pixels, tags, GTM, server-side, CAPI, offline conversions.
- Define your commercial source of truth and how often it’s refreshed.
- Set acceptable variance thresholds between platform-reported and internal numbers.
- Kill or fix any channel you can’t reliably measure at least to a directional level.
Step 2: Map your current automations
- List every automation: PMax, Smart Bidding, ASC, automated rules, scripts, AI-generated ads.
- For each, answer: “What decision is this making for me?” and “What’s the failure mode?”
- Tag each as: keep, constrain (add guardrails), or pause.
- Where you pause, define the manual decision logic you’ll use instead.
Step 3: Introduce AI where it compounds, not where it’s trendy
-
Identify 3-5 workflows that are:
- Repetitive (weekly or daily)
- Rule-based or pattern-based
- Currently bottlenecked by human time, not judgment
-
Common high-ROI candidates:
- Ad creative ideation and first drafts
- Keyword expansion and negative keyword mining
- SEO title/meta rewrites at scale (with human QA on high-value pages)
- Email segmentation logic and dynamic content ideas
- Build one custom GPT or prompt library per workflow, tied to your brand data and rules.
- Measure time saved and performance impact; keep only what improves both.
Step 4: Design for AI-driven discovery
- Audit your top revenue-driving topics and categories.
- For each, check: do you have depth (multiple strong assets) or just a single “hero” page?
- Add structured elements: FAQs, comparisons, specs, and schema markup.
- Monitor how often you appear in AI Overviews, ChatGPT answers, and other AI surfaces for core queries (manual checks + tools where available).
Step 5: Institutionalize feedback loops
- Set a recurring “orchestration review” (biweekly or monthly) with media, CRM, and analytics.
- Review:
- Channel performance vs. commercial source of truth
- Automation behavior (where did it drift, where did it help?)
- AI workflows: what’s actually saving time and driving profit?
- Turn learnings into playbooks and update your AI prompts and automations accordingly.
What this means for your role as an operator
The industry is moving from “How do I keep up with every AI update?” to “How do I design a system that stays effective even as everything changes?”
In that world, your value is not:
- Knowing every new feature in PMax or every TikTok hashtag trend
- Writing every ad or email by hand
- Memorizing every Google core update nuance
Your value is:
- Choosing the right metrics and data sources to believe
- Deciding where to trust automation and where to override it
- Designing workflows where AI makes your team faster without making your results dumber
- Translating messy platform output into clear business decisions
Anyone can “use AI.”
The operators who will still be compounding three years from now are the ones who orchestrate it.