As AI reshapes how people search, a lot of attention has gone to a familiar concern: What happens when AI gets it wrong?
But for many brands, that’s not the most urgent
problem. The immediate concern is whether your brand is showing up at all.
As AI-generated answers become a primary way buyers research and evaluate options, visibility is no longer
guaranteed. And for many brands, especially those outside the top tier of their category, the reality is that they are largely absent from the answers shaping buyer research. This reflects a shift in
how information is sourced, surfaced, and trusted.
For years, marketers operated on a relatively stable model that focused on creating more content, optimizing it for search, and expanding
their reach. But that model is straining. As GenAI accelerates content production, the digital ecosystem is filling with material that looks credible (but isn’t), sounds authoritative, and
increasingly blends together. This leaves us with a trust problem.
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Recent research shows that 66% of consumers now report experiencing AI credibility fatigue, and 43% say they don’t
trust much of what they see online anymore. In response, buyers are adapting by relying on shortcuts like shopping familiar brands, using peer validation, and increasingly relying on AI-generated
summaries.
At the same time, the signals marketers once relied on -- reach, volume, and visibility -- are becoming less meaningful. In one analysis of B2B brands, 40% saw reach grow
significantly faster than meaningful engagement. More people are seeing content, but fewer are finding it credible enough to act on.
Yes, AI ranks content, but it also synthesizes it, pulling
from a broad ecosystem that includes earned media, analyst reports, review platforms, community discussions, and brand-owned assets. If a brand isn’t present across those sources, it
doesn’t matter how optimized its website or PR strategy is. It simply won’t appear in the answer.
Too many brands are approaching AI visibility reactively by monitoring outputs and
correcting inaccuracies after the fact. But by then, the narrative is already forming without them.
A proactive position means building presence in the sources AI already trusts, including
credible media coverage, analyst validation, real customer voices and community conversations.
Brands have to earn the right to be included in AI searches, and the ones gaining traction
aren’t just producing more content. They’re delivering human, experience-driven content that is structured and evidence-based.
Credibility today is increasingly built off-site.
Real customer experiences, for example, influence 89% of buyers, nearly double the impact of influencer content. Analyst coverage, reviews and earned media all contribute to the signals that shape
both human perception and AI-generated answers.
Visibility in AI isn't just a content problem. It's an authority problem. AI systems increasingly rely on signals of credibility and
validation across the broader digital ecosystem.
When everything looks credible, real credibility becomes the differentiator. In an AI-discovery model, the brands that win won't be the ones
asking how they rank in the answer. They'll be the ones building the authority, credibility and presence that make them part of it.