AdExchanger | June 2, 2025 | By Michael Lehman, President, Nativo
The traditional marketing funnel is quickly being rewritten – not by a consumer trend but by a shift in how machines process and recommend information.
As AI agents like OpenAI’s Operator, Google’s Gemini and Amazon’s Rufus begin to mediate everything from search to purchase, marketers are being forced to confront the reality that they must treat machines as customers.
We have entered the era of agentic AI, where autonomous software agents are powered by large language models (LLMs) that research, evaluate and recommend products on behalf of consumers. These agents don’t “click” in the conventional sense. They don’t scroll endlessly. They don’t get seduced by banner ads. They read, compare, interpret and synthesize. And, increasingly, they decide.
Today, 86% of Google searches already include generative elements. Gartner predicts a 25% drop in traditional search volume as AI search ascends. In this new paradigm, ranking number one in search is no longer the goal. Instead, your brand must be embedded in the answer itself.
LLMs don’t surface blue links; they surface conclusions. When a user asks for “the best laptop for under $1,000,” the model returns a curated response based on its training data, reinforced by high-quality third-party content, product pages, reviews and more. That response may or may not mention your brand. That answer could be outdated, inaccurate or hallucinated.
And yet that response is what the user now trusts.
While AI agents are already reshaping consumer behavior, their engagement with advertising is still nascent and fluid. But the early evidence is clear and revealing.
New research from the University of Applied Sciences Upper Austria, which tested AI agents across simulated hotel booking tasks, found that:
Although still in the early innings, this study suggests something profound: Machines are engaging most with the kind of content they can parse – textual, structured, machine-readable content.
It also stands to reason that, as LLMs continue to evolve, they will be intentionally trained away from formats like banners, which are low-signal and easily gamed, and toward trusted, semantically rich content that aligns with their core competency: language understanding.
This new dynamic is already catalyzing a shift from traditional SEO to generative engine optimization (GEO) – the discipline of ensuring your brand, product or service is favorably represented in AI-generated outputs.
GEO is not about keyword-stuffing or link-building. It’s about narrative authority: crafting and distributing high-quality, context-rich content that LLMs can confidently use to answer queries.
This is where content marketing becomes central to future brand visibility. Articles, explainers, product Q&As, comparisons, reviews – these are no longer just trust-building tools for human readers. They’re training and inference data for the agents shaping future consumer decisions.
The convergence of AI search and agentic AI marks a fundamental shift in the purpose of digital marketing from capturing attention to shaping perception. It’s no longer about being clicked. It’s about being chosen.
The best way to influence that choice? Become a source the AI trusts. And the best way to earn that trust? Credible, structured, optimized and consistent content.
In a world where AI agents are the new gatekeepers, content marketing is not just a brand builder. It’s the new performance engine.
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