The quiet shift: you’re marketing to machines, not people
Look at those headlines and a pattern jumps out: AI content, AI SEO, “Google Zero,” AI video, AI-powered PPC, AI visibility, real-time data, agentic advertising.
Underneath all of it is one uncomfortable truth:
A growing share of your “audience” is not human. It’s models, crawlers, ranking systems, recommendation engines, and ad-serving algorithms that decide what actual people see.
CMOs, performance leads, and media buyers are still managing plans as if the primary job is to persuade humans. That’s now the second job. The first job is to persuade machines to put you in front of humans in the first place.
That shift has huge implications for how you budget, brief, build teams, and measure performance. This is not another “AI will change everything” sermon. This is about the specific, operational changes you need to make when machine audiences become your most important distribution partner.
From channels to gatekeepers: what actually changed?
Historically, channels were pipes. You bought reach and frequency; humans saw your stuff. Now, channels are gatekeepers. The real “audience” you’re competing for is:
- Search ranking systems (Google, AI search, marketplace search)
- Social and content recommendation engines (TikTok, Reels, YouTube, newsfeeds)
- Ad-serving and bidding algorithms (Meta, Google Ads, Amazon Ads, CTV platforms)
- AI assistants and copilots that summarize, recommend, and compare
These systems:
- Parse your content and creative
- Predict which user will respond best to what
- Decide if you even get shown, and at what cost
Your spend efficiency, your brand visibility, and your growth curves all increasingly depend on how well you “market” to these machine audiences.
What most teams are getting wrong
You can see the anxiety in the headlines:
- “Is AI content bad for SEO?”
- “AI content optimization: how to get found in Google and AI search”
- “Brand optimization: why your AI visibility depends on it”
- “‘Google Zero’ misses the real problem: Your next visitor isn’t human”
- “How Real-Time Data Unlocks 100X AI Performance”
- “As programmatic faces signal degradation, agentic advertising offers a solution”
Underneath the surface, three common failure modes show up in real accounts:
1. Treating AI as a copy intern, not a distribution gatekeeper
Many teams use AI to crank out more content and ad copy, then feed it into systems they barely understand. They optimize text, not distribution. Result: more noise, flat reach, decaying organic, and rising CAC.
2. Over-fitting to one machine audience
Entire content and media strategies are being rebuilt around “what Google wants” or “what Meta’s algorithm likes.” That works until:
- A ranking or feed algorithm changes
- AI assistants become the primary interface and rewrite the rules
- Signal loss (privacy, cookies, ATT) breaks your data feedback loop
If your growth model assumes a stable, knowable algorithm, you’re exposed.
3. No owner for machine-facing performance
SEO headlines ask “Who owns SEO in the enterprise?” You can extend that question: who owns performance with machine audiences overall?
In many orgs:
- SEO owns Google’s crawler
- Paid social owns Meta’s ad delivery
- Brand owns “visibility” in some abstract sense
- Analytics owns dashboards
No one owns the system-level question: “How good are we, as a company, at feeding and influencing the algorithms that gate our revenue?”
Think in two audiences: humans and machines
You don’t get to choose between optimizing for humans or machines. You now have to do both, deliberately, and often in tension.
A practical framing that works in the field:
- Human audience: prospects, customers, stakeholders. They care about clarity, emotion, proof, and outcomes.
- Machine audience: ranking systems, recommendation engines, bidding algorithms, AI assistants. They care about structure, signals, consistency, and behavioral data.
Every major asset should be designed with a split brief:
- “What does the human need to believe or do after this?”
- “What does the machine need to see or infer to distribute this?”
Four areas to rebuild around machine audiences
1. Content and SEO: from keywords to machine-readable authority
The SEO headlines are obsessed with cannibalization, title tags, evergreen content, and AI content quality. All valid, but the real game is simpler:
can machines confidently classify you as the best answer for specific problems?
Operational moves:
- Cluster by problem, not by keyword. Stop generating dozens of near-duplicate posts chasing micro-variants. Pick the real problems your buyers have and build deep, canonical resources around them.
- Design for summarization. AI search and assistants will increasingly summarize your content. Use clear headings, tight intros, explicit definitions, and structured data so models can “quote” you cleanly.
- Signal expertise in machine-friendly ways. Author bios, consistent entities (names, brands, products), and clear topical focus help models connect your content to authority.
- Measure machine-facing success. Track not just rankings, but inclusion in AI overviews, answer boxes, and how often your pages are the source for snippets and summaries.
The question is no longer “Is AI content bad for SEO?” It’s “Does this content help machines classify us as the best expert on this topic and reward us with distribution?”
2. Paid media: stop fighting the algorithm, start feeding it
Headlines about hybrid PPC teams, sensitive-category ads, and agentic advertising all point to the same issue: ad platforms’ algorithms are now more powerful than your manual tweaks, but only if you give them the right inputs.
Practical shifts:
- Consolidate, don’t fragment. Over-segmentation and endless micro-campaigns starve the algorithm of data. Fewer, larger campaigns with clear objectives perform better in modern platforms.
- Feed the right conversion signals. If you’re optimizing for cheap leads instead of qualified pipeline or LTV, the machine will happily find you junk. Invest in clean downstream conversion and value tracking.
- Creative as structured input. Treat ad creative as data, not just aesthetics. Distinct hooks, offers, and formats give the algorithm meaningful variation to test across audiences.
- Accept the black box, own the guardrails. You won’t fully “understand” the algorithm. Your job is to set constraints (brand safety, geo, caps) and define what “good” looks like in business terms.
The media buyer’s craft shifts from “micro-optimizing bids” to “designing a clean training environment for the ad delivery system.”
3. Brand and “AI visibility”: design for being recommended
You’re not just fighting for search rankings. You’re fighting to be the default recommendation when a user asks:
- “What’s the best accounting software for small agencies?”
- “Which running shoes are best for flat feet?”
- “What’s a good alternative to [your competitor]?”
That’s what the “brand optimization” and “AI visibility” pieces are really about.
Concrete steps:
- Make your positioning machine-distinct. If your brand language is interchangeable with your category, models will treat you as a commodity. Be explicit about your “for whom / for what” in plain language.
- Own key entities and associations. Ensure consistent naming of your brand, products, and core use cases across your site, profiles, and major listings. Machines build graphs; don’t confuse them.
- Curate third-party signals. Reviews, case studies, PR, and directory listings are now training data. Invest in quality, recency, and consistency; they influence both human trust and model recommendations.
- Monitor how AI describes you. Regularly test how major AI systems summarize your brand and competitors. If the description doesn’t match your strategy, you have a visibility and messaging gap to close.
4. Data and operations: real-time is now table stakes
Pieces about “real-time data unlocking AI performance” aren’t hype. Machine audiences learn from behavior. If your feedback loops are slow or noisy, you’re training them badly.
What operators are doing differently:
- Shortening the learning loop. Move from weekly to daily (or intra-day) checks on key machine-facing metrics: match rates, conversion signal quality, creative fatigue, and anomaly detection.
- Cleaning the training data. Fix broken tracking, dedupe events, and remove spam and test traffic from your optimization goals. Garbage in is now literally garbage out in your distribution.
- Building “machine health” dashboards. Beyond revenue and ROAS, track things like crawl errors, content duplication, ad disapprovals, limited learning flags, and share of impressions by placement.
- Creating incident playbooks. Treat major algorithm shifts, tracking breaks, or feed issues like outages. Have predefined responses, roles, and communication paths.
Org design: who actually owns the machine audience?
The “Who owns SEO?” debate is a symptom of a larger problem: your org chart was built for a world where channels were mostly passive pipes. That world is gone.
You don’t need another fancy title, but you do need clear ownership for machine-facing performance. In practice, leading teams are doing one of three things:
- Creating a “distribution systems” lead. Someone senior who owns performance across SEO, paid media, feeds, and AI visibility, with authority to set standards and resolve conflicts.
- Building a cross-functional machine audience squad. SEO, paid, analytics, product marketing, and data engineering meet regularly with a shared backlog focused on machine-facing improvements.
- Embedding AI and data specialists in channel teams. Not as central “AI labs” that write thought pieces, but as operators who sit inside PPC, SEO, and lifecycle teams to improve how they work with algorithms.
The test: if you ask “Who is accountable for how well we perform with non-human audiences?” and you get more than one name, you have a gap.
How to adjust your 12‑month plan
This doesn’t require a full reboot. It requires a re-weighting of priorities and some blunt decisions.
Over the next 12 months, CMOs and growth leaders should:
- Reframe KPIs. Add machine-facing metrics (crawl health, AI search inclusion, signal quality, algorithm “learning” status) alongside human-facing ones (pipeline, revenue, NPS).
- Audit assets for dual audiences. For your top 50 pages and top 20 campaigns, explicitly map: what’s the human job, what’s the machine job, and where are you failing either.
- Stop producing content that machines will ignore. If a piece has no clear machine-distribution path (search, social, email, PR, community), question why you’re making it.
- Invest in fewer, deeper machine relationships. Pick your priority machine audiences (e.g., Google search, Meta ads, Amazon search, TikTok feed, key AI assistants) and focus on becoming “easy to understand” for them.
- Train your teams on how algorithms actually work. Not at the whitepaper level. At the “what inputs matter and what we can control” level, specific to each platform.
The marketers who win the next cycle won’t be the ones who shout the loudest at humans. They’ll be the ones who quietly become the preferred partner of the machines that decide which humans ever see them at all.