The real shift: from search results to software agents
Buried under the “Is SEO dead in 2026?” takes is a more important question for operators:
what happens when your buyer never actually visits your site?
Look at the headlines:
- AI Overviews and “traffic Google won’t show you”
- Semantic search as “the only search that matters now”
- “Agentic web” think pieces and “Agentic Customer Platforms”
- AI CRMs, AI content tools, AI images, AI guidelines to combat “AI slop”
The pattern: the user is no longer your only “customer.” Software agents are becoming your new distribution channel and your new gatekeeper.
If you’re a CMO, performance marketer, or media buyer, the question is no longer “How do I rank?” but:
How do I become the default answer for humans and their agents?
What is the “agentic web” in operator terms?
Forget the hype. In practical terms, the agentic web is:
- AI Overviews and answer engines summarizing the web and deciding whether to send you traffic.
- Personal agents (inside phones, browsers, CRMs) that compare, negotiate, and purchase on behalf of users.
- Platform agents (Google, Amazon, TikTok, Meta, CRM copilots) that pick which brand to surface, recommend, or auto-insert.
In this world, your funnel looks less like:
Search → Click → Landing Page → Conversion
and more like:
Intent → Agent → Shortlist → One tap / auto-buy
That breaks a lot of the mental models we’ve used for 15+ years.
The three big problems this creates for marketers
1. Visibility without visits
AI Overviews, semantic search, and answer engines are already:
- Quoting your content without sending traffic.
- Using your brand as an example in answers you never see.
- Driving brand lift you can’t easily attribute.
You can now “win” the query and lose the click.
2. Incomplete and misleading data
You’re seeing:
- Search Console data that’s “75% incomplete.”
- AI surfaces that don’t show in referrers.
- Attribution models that assume a pageview that never happens.
Your dashboards are still describing the old web. The agentic web is happening off-screen.
3. Content quantity vs. content trust
WordPress is publishing AI guidelines to fight “AI slop.” Copyhackers is writing about AI’s trust problem. Platforms are tightening spam rules.
Generating 100 blog posts a month is now a liability unless:
- They’re structured so agents can parse them.
- They’re credible enough that models want to cite them.
- They don’t trip platform quality filters.
Designing for the agentic web: five strategic shifts
This isn’t about abandoning SEO or performance. It’s about changing what you optimize for.
1. Optimize for “answerability,” not just rankings
Answer engines and AI Overviews need content they can safely quote. That means:
- Atomic answers: Short, self-contained explanations and definitions that can stand alone in a snippet or AI answer.
- Clear question-answer mapping: Use headings and copy that mirror how people ask questions, not just keywords.
- Evidence and citations: Data, examples, and outbound links to credible sources so models can treat you as a safe, referenceable node.
If your content can’t be dropped into an AI answer without heavy editing, you’re asking too much of the model – it will pick someone else.
2. Make your site “agent-readable”
Agents are picky eaters. They like:
- Clean structure: Logical headings, no bloated faceted navigation, minimal junk parameters.
- Rich structured data: Schema for products, FAQs, reviews, how-tos, local info, pricing, availability.
- Consistent facts: The same price, specs, hours, and claims across your site, Google Business Profile, marketplaces, and feeds.
Think of this as agent UX. If your information is inconsistent or buried in design flourishes, agents will either ignore you or misrepresent you.
3. Treat “no-click” exposure as a channel, not a leak
You will lose clicks to AI Overviews and answer engines. Fighting that is like fighting featured snippets in 2016. Pointless.
Instead, treat no-click exposure as a channel with its own goals:
- Brand salience: Are you the name that appears in the answer, even if the user doesn’t click?
- Preference shaping: Are your claims, frameworks, or POV what the model repeats?
- Downstream demand: Are you seeing branded search, direct visits, or social mentions rise after increased AI visibility?
You won’t get perfect measurement. You don’t have it for TV or PR either. Set expectations accordingly and look for directional signals, not pixel-level attribution.
4. Build “agent hooks” into your offer and messaging
Personal agents and AI CRMs will increasingly:
- Compare suppliers on structured attributes.
- Apply user preferences (“only sustainable brands,” “under $X,” “highest rating”).
- Auto-renew, auto-swap, or auto-negotiate on behalf of the user.
To win that game, you need hooks that agents can reason about:
- Clear, machine-parseable differentiators: Guaranteed response time, specific SLAs, exact shipping windows, explicit certifications.
- Stable, documented policies: Refund, warranty, cancellation terms that are easy to quote and compare.
- Ratings and reviews that are structured, not just pretty: Star ratings, attributes, and tags that can be filtered and ranked.
You’re not just persuading a human with a clever line. You’re arming an agent with facts it can use to justify picking you.
5. Stop treating AI as a content intern; treat it as a channel partner
Most teams are using AI to:
- Crank out more copy.
- Generate images faster.
- Draft emails and social posts.
That’s table stakes. The more important move is to treat AI systems as distribution partners:
- Feed them: Maintain clean, up-to-date knowledge bases, product feeds, and documentation that models can ingest.
- Instrument them: Track mentions in AI Overviews, citations in answer engines, and agent-driven conversions where possible.
- Influence them: Publish original research, data, and definitions that models want to use as ground truth.
The brands that become “source material” for agents will quietly accumulate an unfair advantage.
What this means for your media and channel mix
Paid search and shopping: from keywords to intents and constraints
As agents do more of the searching and comparing, your paid strategy should pivot from:
- Micro-managing keywords to defining intent clusters and outcomes.
- Manual bid tweaks to clear guardrails: margins, inventory, LTV segments.
- Ad text tinkering to strong, consistent value props that match your structured data and landing pages.
Think “teach the algorithm how a good customer looks and what a good deal is,” not “outsmart the auction with clever hacks.”
Organic: from “SEO team” to “answer design team”
The SEO roadmap that dies every January usually fails because it’s a backlog of tactics, not a strategy.
In the agentic web, your organic program should be built around:
- Critical intents: The 20-50 intents that actually move revenue, not the 2,000 keywords you could rank for.
- Answer architecture: How each intent is answered across your site, AI answers, social, PR, and sales materials.
- Technical cleanliness: Fixing crawling, cannibalization, and faceted nav issues that confuse both bots and agents.
Call it SEO if you want. Functionally, it’s product management for your information.
Brand and PR: from “coverage” to “training data”
Digital PR isn’t just about backlinks anymore. It’s about:
- Getting your brand, frameworks, and claims into high-authority sources that models train on.
- Being quoted in expert roundups, research, and explainers that become canonical references.
- Owning distinctive language that agents repeat when summarizing your category.
In other words, you’re not only persuading journalists; you’re seeding the next generation of models.
How to operationalize this in the next 90 days
You don’t need a five-year transformation plan. You need a concrete 90-day move that changes how your team works.
Step 1: Map your “agent-sensitive” journeys
Identify 5-10 journeys where agents are already intervening or soon will:
- High-intent search queries in your category.
- Repeat purchases and subscriptions.
- Vendor comparisons in B2B.
- Local and “near me” behavior, if relevant.
For each, ask: If a personal agent handled this for the user, would we still win?
Step 2: Audit your “answer surface”
For those journeys, audit:
- What shows in AI Overviews / answer engines now (use manual checks and available tracking tools).
- How your brand is mentioned, if at all.
- Whether your site offers a clean, atomic answer that an agent could safely quote.
This is your new “page 1” audit.
Step 3: Fix the top 10 structural blockers
With your SEO and dev teams, prioritize:
- Cleaning up faceted navigation and junk parameters.
- Adding or correcting key structured data (products, FAQs, local, reviews).
- Standardizing critical facts (pricing, specs, policies) across all surfaces.
This is boring work. It’s also the foundation for any agentic strategy.
Step 4: Design “agent-first” content for 5 core intents
Pick five revenue-critical intents and:
- Rewrite or create pages with clear question-answer sections.
- Add evidence, examples, and outbound citations.
- Align claims with your structured data and ad copy.
Use these as patterns for the rest of your content over time.
Step 5: Update how you report performance
Add a simple “agentic web” section to your monthly reviews:
- AI Overview / answer engine presence for key intents (even if it’s manual tracking).
- Branded search trends, direct traffic, and assisted conversions.
- Quality signals: reviews, citations, PR mentions, and content quality scores where available.
The goal isn’t perfect accuracy; it’s to stop managing a 2020 funnel with 2026 realities.
The uncomfortable truth (and opportunity)
The agentic web will quietly erase a lot of mediocre marketing:
- Confusing ads will be filtered out by agents optimizing for clarity and outcomes.
- Bloated tech stacks that don’t talk to each other will fall behind AI-native CRMs and platforms.
- Content created for volume, not usefulness, will be ignored by models trained to avoid “AI slop.”
The upside for operators is simple:
if you design your information, offers, and systems for agents as seriously as you once designed them for humans, you’ll win both.