Comparison Of AI Citation Patterns Offers Strategic SEO Insights via @sejournal, @martinibuster

BrightEdge published new data showing the different kinds of sites five AI search surfaces tend to show in generated answers. The data makes it possible to see how those differences shape which types of sites each AI engine shows, with strong implications for how to promote to each one.

The research focused on five AI search surfaces:

  1. ChatGPT
  2. Google AI Overviews
  3. Google AI Mode
  4. Google Gemini
  5. Perplexity

AI Engines Cite Different Sources But Recommend The Same Brands

The BrightEdge research compared the top cited website sources across AI engines to measure how much they overlap (Source Overlap). What the data shows is that there was a wide discrepancy across the five AI search engines tested, with the lowest level of overlapping source citations between any two AI search surfaces at 16% and the highest level of agreement between any two engines at 59%.

  • Lowest level of agreement: 16%
  • Highest level of overlap: 59%

Significant Agreement In Brand Citations

BrightEdge also measured brand name overlap between the five AI search surfaces and found that there was more agreement between all five. The lowest overlap between any two AI surfaces was 36% and the highest level of overlap between any two surfaces was 59%.

  • Lowest level of overlap: 36%
  • Highest level of brand citation overlap: 55%

This suggests that name brands that are tightly associated with products and services tend to perform similarly across most of the tested AI search surfaces and may also reflect how widely brands are cited by trusted websites and possibly user intent and expectations.

In my opinion, the takeaway here is that associating a brand with a product or service in a consumer’s mind is a powerful way to influence user expectations which can then translate into branded search. This is something that the SEO community has been slow to pick up on, even though Google has been hinting at user signals playing a strong role in rankings. I say that the SEO community has been slow to pick it up because Google’s been doing this since at least 2004 (Navboost) and most directly with the brand navigation signals in search (Google’s brand signals patent).

Wide Divergence Of Cited Sources

BrightEdge analyzed citations from the five AI surfaces across three types of websites (Institutional, Commercial and Editorial, and User Generated Content) and discovered wide variance between all five engines, despite the convergence on citing strong brands.

Three Categories Of Sites Analyzed

  1. Institutional sites, including government, academic, and big brand industry leaders
  2. Commercial and editorial sites, including media, reviews, and listings
  3. User Generated Content (UGC), including forums, video platforms, and social content

The data shows that every engine draws from all three categories, but weights the mix differently: institutional sources range from a low citation rate of 10% to a high of 26% of citations. Citations of UGC sites range from a low of 0.2% to a high of 18% of citations.

The largest category overlap across all five search engines are found in citations of corporate brand, commercial, and editorial sites, with a low end of 37% on Gemini to as high as 51% on AI Overviews.

BrightEdge offers this takeaway about that data:

“Review sites, comparison content, trade press, retailer listings, and finance data are the sources AI most frequently reaches for. Investment in PR, trade coverage, review site visibility, and category comparison content translates into visibility across every engine, not just one.”

Something that BrightEdge doesn’t mention is that AI search engines surface sponsored articles from trusted websites that are clearly labeled to conform with FTC guidelines on native advertising and Google’s guidelines on sponsored posts. This enables companies to tightly associate their brands with specific products and services and increase the likelihood of being cited in AI search surfaces.

Gemini And AI Overviews Differ On Website Authoritativeness

The difference between the kinds of websites Gemini and Google AI Overviews uses as sources shows that Gemini is more conservative, tending to show more trust toward institutional sites at a higher rate than user generated content (UGC). Institutional sites are academic, government, academic, and big brand sites.

AI Overviews, on the other hand, trusts both institutional and UGC sources of information, with nearly twice as many citations going to UGC websites.

  • Authoritativeness Of Institutional Versus UGC Content
  • Gemini: 26% institutional, 0.2% community
  • AI Overviews: 10% institutional, 18% community

Another revealing finding is that there is a wide variance in thhe top level domains that are cited by each AI search surface. Gemini tended to link out to only the very most trustworthy and authoritative websites. For example, Gemini tended to cite .gov and .org websites at higher rates than any of the other AI engines.

Gemini: 13% .gov, 23% .org

Gemini’s answers tend to trust institutional websites more than user generated content, citing them 26% of the time but distrusts UGC sites, only citing them a fraction of a percentage point. AI Overviews trusts UGC content to a vastly greater extent. Why is that?

It could be that the technologies underlying Gemini and AI Overviews differ. For example, it could be that Google’s FastSearch, which prioritizes speed over other ranking signals, may be a reason why UGC sites are sources more often than they are in Gemini. It’s an interesting question.

I did an informal experiment by asking both Gemini and AI Overviews to compare the use of a specific op-amp (an electrical part) in a specific amplifier.

  • Gemini’s answer cited institutional sources (Texas Instruments and the amplifier’s manufacturer).
  • AI Overviews cited the two institutional websites but also multiple user generated content (UGC) sites.

Gemini’s answer was typically conservative, citing the institutional website (Texas Instruments, the manufacturer).

AI Overviews citations of various UGC sites were useful in the context of this question because actual users shared their experiences with this op-amp as well as actual electronic measurements of the op-amp and comparisons to other ones.

.Edu Sites Not Authoritative?

Another interesting finding is that all of the AI search engines don’t often cite .edu websites. Perplexity cited .edu sites at a higher rate than any of the other AI engines, citing .edu websites 3.2% of the time.

Those results contradict a longstanding belief in SEO circles that .edu sites are more authoritative. BrightEdge’s research shows that .edu sites are not authoritative for the kinds of questions that users are asking AI search engines.

ChatGPT Cites A Higher Diversity Of Sources

The data also shows that ChatGPT shows a more diverse variety of website sources, relying on its top ten sources only 18.5% of the time, with Google AI Mode right behind it with 19.4%. Gemini (26.3%) and Perplexity (26.7%) show a greater amount of the same sites drawn from their top ten.

Percentage Of Top 10 Sources

  • ChatGPT: 18.5%
  • Google AI Mode: 19.4%
  • Gemini: 26.3%
  • Perplexity: 26.7%

Gemini And Perplexity Rely On Authoritative Sites

Gemini and Perplexity tended to rely the most on authoritative websites. As already noted, Gemini trusted institutional sites the most and Perplexity cited .edu sites more than any of the other AI engines.

Perplexity showed a similar pattern of conservatively linking out to the most trusted and authoritative sites. BrightEdge’s report explains:

“Perplexity concentrates more of its citations in institutional medical, government, encyclopedic, and medical publisher sources than any other engine. Combined, those four categories account for approximately 30% of Perplexity’s citations.”

Five AI Engines, Five Distinct Citation Profiles

Here is the breakdown showing the citation distribution for each AI search surface, with Gemini and Perplexity showing a strong preference for authority sites.

Gemini

  • 26% institutional sites
  • 23% .org
  • 13% .gov
  • 0.2% UGC

Perplexity

  • 86% of brand mentions appear in position 5 or earlier
  • 30% of citations from institutional medical, government, encyclopedic, and publisher sources
  • 22% institutional sites
  • 3.2% .edu
  • 1.5% UGC sites

ChatGPT

  • Top 10 sources account for 18.5% of citations
  • 20% .org
  • 12% .gov
  • 0.5% UGC

Google AI Mode

  • Top 10 sources account for 19.4% of citations
  • 14% institutional sites
  • 7% UGC

Google AI Overviews

  • 18% UGC
  • 10.6% of citations from a single video platform
  • 10% institutional sites
  • 2.9% from a forum platform

Google AI Is Not One System

Google’s AI Mode and Ai Overviews show almost the same websites, with a 59% rate of overlap of cited websites. Gemini has the least amount of overlap.

  • Gemini vs AI Overviews: 34%
  • Gemini vs AI Mode: 27%

These differences show that the Google’s AI systems rely on different mixes of sources, with Gemini showing the widest amount of difference.

Takeaways

The data makes it easy to view each AI search surface with a shorthand description of what kinds of sources each AI engine tends to cite. There is a wide variance in source citations with clear preferences of which kinds of sites each engine prefers to link to. If there is one big takeaway from the data, in my opinion it would be the importance of establishing a brand connection to products and services.

Other Takeaways

  • Gemini and Perplexity rely on high authority brand and institutional websites.
  • ChatGPT cites a broader range of sources, showing a higher mix of websites.
  • Google’s AI Overviews cites UGC sites more than any other AI search.
  • Gemini shows the least amount of overlap among the three Google AI systems.
  • AI Overviews and AI Mode show the highest level of overlap.
  • Citation overlap varies widely across all five AI engines, indicating major differences in source selection.

Read the BrightEdge report: Why AI Engines Cite Different Sources but Recommend the Same Brands

Featured Image by Shutterstock/Toey Andante

Why Your Content Isn’t Being Cited in AI Answers (And How to Fix It) [Webinar] via @sejournal, @lorenbaker

When a customer asks ChatGPT, Gemini, or another AI tool a question, that system selects a short list of sources to cite in its answer. If your brand isn’t on that list, it’s not a visibility problem; it’s a brand and content strategy problem.

What AI Actually Evaluates

AI systems don’t cite randomly.

They evaluate content against specific criteria: topical authority, structural clarity, and brand trust signals they can measure. Most brands haven’t audited their content against these criteria, making the content of this upcoming SEO webinar an advantage for you.

What You’ll Learn

In this SEJ webinar, Wayne Cichanski, VP of Search & Site Experience at iQuanti, unpacks how AI systems generate answers and what determines whether your brand’s content earns a place in them:

  • How AI-powered search selects and cites content, so you know exactly what you’re optimizing for
  • Which topical authority and brand trust signals determine whether your content earns a place in AI-generated answers
  • Specific, practical tactics for creating and restructuring content that increases your brand’s AI visibility
The Download: Musk and Altman’s legal showdown, and AI’s profit problem

This is today’s edition of The Download, our weekday newsletter that provides a daily dose of what’s going on in the world of technology.

Elon Musk and Sam Altman are going to court over OpenAI’s future

Elon Musk and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman head to trial this week in a case with sweeping consequences. Ahead of OpenAI’s IPO, the court could rule on whether the company can exist as a for-profit enterprise. It could even oust its leadership.

Musk, an OpenAI co-founder, claims he was deceived into bankrolling the firm under false pretenses. He’s seeking $134 billion in damages, the removal of Altman and president Greg Brockman, and the company’s restoration to a non-profit.

Find out how the trial could upend the global AI race.

—Michelle Kim

The missing step between hype and profit

In a celebrated South Park episode, a community of gnomes sneak out at night to steal underpants. Why? The gnomes present their pitch deck. “Phase 1: Collect underpants. Phase 2: ? Phase 3: Profit.” It’s a business plan that captures the current state of AI. 

Companies have built the tech (Step 1) and promised transformation (Step 3). But how they get there is still a big question mark. Read about the potential paths forward.


—Will Douglas Heaven

This story originally appeared in The Algorithm, our weekly newsletter giving you the inside track on all things AI. Sign up to receive it in your inbox every Monday.

Welcome to the era of weaponized deepfakes

For years, experts have warned that deepfakes could be deployed in malicious ways. These dangers are now here.

Cheap, accessible models now produce weaponized deepfakes—from sexually explicit images to political propaganda—that look startlingly real. They’re already inciting violence, changing minds, and sowing mistrust, with women and marginalized groups disproportionately affected.

Experts fear that they’re cratering trust and critical thinking. Here’s why they’re alarmed.

—Eileen Guo

Weaponized deepfakes are on our list of the 10 Things That Matter in AI Right Now, MIT Technology Review’s guide to what’s really worth your attention in the busy, buzzy world of AI. 

The must-reads

I’ve combed the internet to find you today’s most fun/important/scary/fascinating stories about technology.

1 OpenAI has ended its exclusive partnership with Microsoft
The new deal allows OpenAI to court rivals such as Amazon. (Reuters $)
+ Microsoft will still license OpenAI’s tech, but no longer exclusively. (NYT $)
+ OpenAI is missing key growth targets ahead of its IPO. (WSJ $)

2 Google has signed a classified AI deal with the Pentagon
It permits AI use for “any lawful government purpose.” (The Information $)
+ Over 600 Google workers had called for a block on the deal. (QZ)
+ AI firms are set to train military versions of their models on classified data. (MIT Technology Review)

3 The EU has told Google to open Android to AI rivals
It wants to end Gemini’s built-in advantage. (Ars Technica)
+ Google calls the move an “unwarranted intervention.” (WSJ $)
+ A final decision is expected by the end of July. (Reuters $)

4 OpenAI is reportedly developing an AI-first smartphone
It would replace apps with agents. (TechCrunch)
+ Qualcomm and MediaTek may be developing its processors. (Gizmodo)

5 A brain implant for depression is moving into human testing
The FDA has approved a human study of the device. (Wired $)
+ BCIs have thus far struggled to reach the market. (MIT Technology Review)

6 A populist backlash against AI is gaining momentum in rural America
From Indiana to Idaho, voters are pushing back against the technology. (NYT $)
+ Anti-AI protests are expanding worldwide. (MIT Technology Review)

7 DeepSeek has priced its new model 97% below OpenAI’s GPT-5.5
It aims to attract more enterprises, developers, and agent-based users. (SCMP)
+ Here are three reasons why DeepSeek V4 matters. (MIT Technology Review)

8 AI now generates a third of new websites
A study found it’s making the web more cheery and less verbose. (404 Media)

9 Top talent is leaving Big Tech to launch their own AI startups
Meta, Google, and OpenAI are facing a brain drain. (CNBC)

10 Taylor Swift is trademarking her voice and image
The Grammy winner has been the target of numerous deepfakes. (NBC News)
+ A growing number of celebrities are fighting AI with trademarks. (BBC)

Quote of the day

“The reality is people don’t like him.”

—Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers reacts to prospective jurors confessing their negative views of Elon Musk ahead of his legal battle with Sam Altman, The Verge reports.

One More Thing


How covid conspiracy theories led to an alarming resurgence in AIDS denialism

When Joe Rogan falsely declared that “party drugs” were an “important factor in AIDS,” several million people were listening. He also asserted that AZT, the earliest drug used to treat AIDS, killed people “quicker” than the disease itself—another claim that has been disproven.

Such comments illustrate an unmistakable resurgence in AIDS denialism: a false collection of theories arguing either that HIV does not cause AIDS or that there is no such thing as HIV at all. By the dawn of the millennium, these claims had largely fallen out of favour. That changed when the coronavirus arrived.

Follow the digital path from Covid skepticism to the return of a deadly conspiracy theory.


—Anna Merlan

We can still have nice things

A place for comfort, fun and distraction to brighten up your day. (Got any ideas? Drop me a line.)

+ Explore the planets from your laptop with this live sky map.
+ This marathon DJ set from Daphni is an incredible journey through electronic music.
+ NASA’s stunning Artemis II wallpapers bring a high-res piece of deep space to your phone.
+ This fascinating GPS explainer breaks down how your phone figures out exactly where you are.

New Ecommerce Tools: April 28, 2026

This week’s rundown of new services for merchants includes updates on AI-powered advertising, video ad generators, shoppable videos, B2B commerce, fraud prevention, box-free returns, loyalty programs, digital assistants, agentic commerce, and AI-powered contact centers.

Got an ecommerce product release? Email updates@practicalecommerce.com.

New Tools for Merchants

OroCommerce and Blue Yonder partner to unify B2B commerce and fulfillment. OroCommerce, a B2B ecommerce platform, and Blue Yonder, a supply chain enabler, have partnered. According to the companies, the collaboration gives manufacturers, distributors, and wholesalers accurate inventory availability, pricing, and delivery information before, during, and after purchase.

Home page of OroCommerce

OroCommerce

Feedonomics unlocks agentic discovery with Catalog Exports. Commerce, parent company of BigCommerce and data feed platform Feedonomics, has announced Agentic Catalog Exports. The new service enables merchants to syndicate catalog data to agentic discovery channels, including OpenAI, Gemini, Copilot,  and Perplexity, according to Commerce.

AdRoll and PubMatic enable agent-powered troubleshooting. AdRoll, a multichannel advertising platform, has partnered with PubMatic, an ad performance company. AdRoll uses the Model Context Protocol to query PubMatic’s agentic diagnostics, driving real-time evaluation of campaign configuration and diagnostics. AdRoll’s agents can query PubMatic’s deal diagnostics to identify root causes of performance issues and recommend actions.

Google for WooCommerce connects a store to its YouTube channel. A new extension from WooCommerce lets merchants connect their store to a YouTube channel and tag products from their catalog in videos and shorts. Tagged items will appear as shoppable cards while viewers are watching, and also in the Channel Shopping tab. With Google for WooCommerce, product feeds sync automatically to the Merchant Center for real-time titles, descriptions, prices, and availability.

iDenfy provides fraud prevention solutions for WooCommerce merchants. iDenfy, an identity verification and fraud prevention provider, has launched an application for WooCommerce. The integration gives merchants a way to require identity verification for shoppers before purchase. The service combines biometric face recognition with 3,000 identity documents from 200 countries and territories.

Home page for iDenfy

iDenfy

Amazon Ads launches AI-powered video ad generator in Australia. Amazon Ads has expanded its AI-powered Video Generator to Australia. The tool generates six video options from a product image, existing video, or Amazon product detail page, with multi-scene storytelling, transitions, and background music. Video Generator is available via the Creative Studio in Ad Console at no additional cost for Sponsored Brands video.

ChannelSight launches AI platform for discoverability. ChannelSight has launched a platform to help brands optimize discovery across AI tools and large language models such as ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini. According to the company, the platform monitors a brand’s products across AI systems, scores their discoverability, and recommends improvements, each tied to revenue impact.

UPS Happy Returns expands its box-free, label-free return network. UPS-owned Happy Returns has expanded its U.S. Return Bar network to 10,000 drop-off locations nationwide, primarily through partnerships with Annex Brands and PackageHub Business Centers. Happy Returns states that the expansion reinforces its position as a leading consolidated return network.

Web page for UPS Happy Returns

UPS Happy Returns

TransUnion’s Digital Business Profile helps small businesses. Credit reporting agency TransUnion has launched Digital Business Profile, helping small businesses ensure their information is represented accurately across the digital ecosystem. Digital Business Profile allows companies to manage essential details, such as business name and location, contact information, hours of operation, accepted payment methods, and service areas — all through a single TransUnion portal. Updates automatically distribute across more than 80 directories, maps, apps, and social platforms.

SumUp launches loyalty program for small businesses. SumUp, a global payment technology, has launched Loyalty, a digital rewards program that turns card payments into points and stamps. Available across the U.K., France, Germany, Ireland, Spain, and Italy, Loyalty requires no new hardware and works with merchants’ existing SumUp infrastructure. The program features push notifications, targeted promotions, and an autopilot feature that automatically identifies lapsed customers and sends personalized win-back offers.

Cognizant launches contact center platform. Cognizant, an AI technology provider, has launched Agentic Retail CX, a contact center platform combining Google’s Gemini Enterprise for Customer Experience with Cognizant’s retail capabilities. According to Cognizant, the platform helps retail brands deliver personalized, omnichannel experiences while reducing operational costs.

Home page of Cognizant

Cognizant

Google launches the next evolution of reCAPTCHA. Google has launched Cloud Fraud Defense, an agentic web platform to verify the legitimacy of bots, humans, and AI agents. Fraud Defense’s policy engine allows website owners to allow or block agents and users based on risk scores, automation types, and agent identity. Fraud Defense is invisible for most people, replacing disruptive puzzles with silent background verification.

Zendrop launches AI Creatives for UGC video ads. Zendrop, a dropshipping platform, has announced the beta launch of AI Ad Generator, a tool integrated into the Zendrop platform that enables dropshippers to produce user-generated-style video ads. Every ad is optimized for TikTok, Meta’s Reels, and YouTube Shorts, and saved to a personal Video Library where sellers can deploy across ad channels.

Meta AI business assistant expands globally. Meta is expanding its AI business assistant to advertisers and agencies of all sizes across major global markets, with local-language support in the U.S., Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and Latin America. Per Meta, the assistant lives within existing tools, including Ads Manager, Business Suite, and Business Support Home, and optimizes campaigns and guidance.

Meta's ad portal.

Meta’s ad portal.

OpenAI Crawl Activity Tripled Since GPT-5, Data Shows via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern

OpenAI’s automated crawl activity is estimated to have roughly tripled after the launch of GPT-5, according to a new analysis from Botify and guest author Chris Long.

In Botify’s dataset, OpenAI’s search crawler is now generating more log events than its training crawler. That’s a reversal from the period before GPT-5.

Long, co-founder of the SEO consultancy Nectiv, analyzed roughly 7 billion OpenAI-bot log events from Botify’s enterprise client dataset spanning November 2024 through March 2026.

What The Data Shows

Two of the three OpenAI user agents Botify measured saw activity spike around the GPT-5 launch.

OAI-SearchBot, which retrieves content when ChatGPT performs web searches, recorded about 3.5x more events after August 2025. That works out to roughly 2.2 billion additional events in Botify’s dataset.

GPTBot, which collects training data, recorded about 2.9x more events over the same period. That is another 1.8 billion events.

The third user agent, ChatGPT-User, moved in the opposite direction. Long reports a 28% drop in ChatGPT-User log events between December 2025 and March 2026. ChatGPT-User fires when a ChatGPT session fetches a page on behalf of a user, so the drop measures logged user-initiated fetches rather than ChatGPT usage overall.

Long offers two possible readings. One is that fewer sessions may be triggering real-time page fetches. The other, suggested by Botify’s team, is that OpenAI may be relying more on stored or indexed resources, reducing the need to fetch pages in real time. Long does not pick between them.

Search Bot Now Outpaces Training Bot

Before GPT-5, OAI-SearchBot and GPTBot ran at roughly even volumes in Botify’s dataset, with a ratio of about 0.95 search events per training event. After GPT-5, that ratio rose to about 1.14.

The pattern lines up with what Dan Petrovic wrote in August 2025 about GPT-5, arguing that OpenAI was sourcing more answers from live search than from trained memory. Botify’s data is consistent with that read.

Industry Breakdown

The post-GPT-5 search bot increases varied by industry. Healthcare sites saw about 740% more OAI-SearchBot activity after launch; Media and Publishing, 702%; and Marketplaces, Software, and Retail, 190-216%.

Travel sites had the smallest rise at 30%. The search and training balance also varies. Long reports a +256% OAI-SearchBot to GPTBot crawl difference for Media/Publishing, the largest gap. Software and Internet lean toward search, Healthcare and Retail favor training, with -50% and -33%. GPTBot is more active overall.

Botify and Long suggest OpenAI routes prompt types differently: news inquiries trigger live search, health and product queries rely on trained knowledge.

How OpenAI’s Crawl Compares To Google’s

Even after tripling, OpenAI’s crawl activity is much smaller than Google’s.

In Botify’s most recent 30-day window, Googlebot registered 18.2 billion events, compared with 887 million events from OpenAI’s crawlers combined. That puts OpenAI at about 4% of Google’s crawl volume.

A year earlier, the same comparison was 15 billion Google events to 207 million OpenAI events, or about 1.38%. The gap is closing, though Google’s crawl is still roughly 20 times larger in absolute terms.

Bingbot registered about 5.49 billion events in the most recent window, putting OpenAI at roughly 14% of Bing.

Methodology & Commercial Context

The dataset is Botify’s, covering enterprise clients in retail, ecommerce, technology, publishing, travel, and marketplaces. The analysis was conducted by Long as a guest author on Botify’s blog.

For transparency, Botify sells log file analysis and AI bot management software, and the post promotes a follow-up webinar and a product demo.

The dataset skews toward large enterprise websites rather than a representative cross-section of the web.

Why This Matters

In Botify’s dataset, OAI-SearchBot now generates more log events than GPTBot. Sites that block only GPTBot are not blocking the bot OpenAI says is used to surface websites in ChatGPT search answers.

Sites that block OAI-SearchBot may be excluding themselves from ChatGPT search answers.

How This Fits With Other Reports

Botify’s findings line up with patterns other vendors have reported. An Alli AI analysis covered earlier this month found OpenAI’s ChatGPT-User made 3.6x more requests than Googlebot in a smaller WordPress-heavy sample. A Hostinger analysis found OAI-SearchBot’s website coverage reaching 55% while GPTBot coverage fell. Akamai’s recent bot traffic report showed OpenAI leading AI bot traffic to publishing sites.

The reports suggest that AI training crawls and AI search crawls need to be measured separately, especially as OAI-SearchBot activity grows.

The AI Skills Salary Premium via @sejournal, @Kevin_Indig

Boost your skills with Growth Memo’s weekly expert insights. Subscribe for free!

I normally write about strategy and search behavior, not labor markets. But the SEO job market is the clearest leading indicator I’ve seen of how companies are actually valuing AI skills, so I followed the data off the usual map.

946 SEO job postings show companies are willing to pay a premium for AI skills. But the signal is buried in descriptions, and the salary premium only truly activates at mid-level and above.

SEO jobs that mention AI in the title pay $113,625 at the median compared to $89,438 for jobs that don’t. That 27% gap is live in the market right now; it’s not a projection.

In this memo, I’m covering:

  • Where the 25-27% AI pay premium actually shows up in SEO postings.
  • Why screening jobs by title filter misses four out of five of the roles paying more.
  • How to position your resume (or your job description if you’re a hiring manager) so the right opportunities land on your side of the table.

About this data:

  • 946 full-time SEO roles from SalaryGuide.com were included in this analysis, posted December 2025 through March 2026, deduped at company + job title.
  • Salary midpoints from the 41.8% of roles that disclosed pay.
  • “AI mention” means the title or description contains “AI,” “LLM,” “AEO,” “GEO,” “Answer Engine Optimization,” or “Generative Engine Optimization.”

Companies Pay 27% More Salary For AI Skills

AI in the job title commands the bigger salary premium, but the description signal covers far more ground. Only 146 jobs carry AI in the title. 563 include it in the description. The description bucket captures 4x more roles and still delivers a 25% median salary lift over non-AI descriptions ($100,000 vs. $80,000).

Image Credit: Kevin Indig

The dollar deltas are $24,187 for the title bucket and $20,000 for the description bucket. Compounded across salary negotiations over a career, neither is marginal.

The AI Requirement Is Hidden In The Job Description

Only 15.5% of SEO postings include AI in the title. 59.5% require it somewhere in the description. Employers are building AI into the role without putting it in the headline.

At senior levels, the pattern becomes near-universal:

  • 78.3% of director/executive descriptions mention AI.
  • 67.4% of manager descriptions do.

Even at mid-level, one in two job postings includes it.

A hangup here? Filtering job searches by AI in the title misses 80% of AI-required roles. The requirement sits in the body text, not the headline.

Image Credit: Kevin Indig

The AI Skill Premium Grows With Seniority

At entry-level positions, AI skills in the description carry a slight negative premium (-2.3%). Employers don’t pay new grads more for knowing AI.

The signal flips at mid level (+14.3%), then compounds sharply at the management layer.

Image Credit: Kevin Indig

A director with AI in the description earns $35,250 more at the median than one without. Senior roles may earn more, but the premium is due to AI judgment (instead of tool skills). The market pricing is applied accordingly. Junior candidates may need AI on their resume to get the interview, but getting paid more for AI skills happens at mid-level and above.

9+ Years In, AI Skills Are Assumed

Experience requirements tell the same story with a steeper slope: For junior 0-1 year roles, 40.9% mention AI in the description. For roles requiring 9+ years of experience, that number is 92%.

Image Credit: Kevin Indig

At 9+ years, AI isn’t listed as a differentiator. Instead, it’s embedded in the role definition.

The 8% of senior postings that don’t mention it are the outliers.

The Market Has Decided, But The Titles Haven’t Caught Up

Even if the salary premium compresses later, pricing your skills against job description-level signals is still the right move today.

1. If you’re a job candidate: Screen descriptions, not titles. The title filter misses 80% of the AI-required roles and the 25-27% premium that rides with them. Put AI evidence in the top one-third of your resume, or it won’t register for the postings that pay more.

2. If you’re a hiring manager: Your pay bands are already two-tier, whether you’ve formalized it or not. Roles requiring AI pay more at the median, and most of yours don’t say so upfront. Close that gap now.

3. Mid-career and up: This is where the premium actually compounds. If you’re 4+ years in and AI doesn’t appear in the first one-third of your resume, you’re pricing yourself against an outdated market.

Quote from Josh Peacok, founder of Search for Hire:

Having been on hundreds of discovery calls with companies hiring SEOs and having built out hundreds of search teams at Search for Hire, the pattern is undeniable: SEO talent is being priced on two axes now: fundamentals and AI capability. The candidates commanding a premium aren’t the ones who can use ChatGPT, they’re the ones who can build scalable systems with it. But AI without precision judgment can take you a long way in the wrong direction, fast. The real unicorns combine that build capability with deep technical skill, strategic thinking and the ability to sit in front of a client. That combination barely exists and when it does, it doesn’t stay on the market long.

More Resources:


Featured Image: beast01/Shutterstock; Paulo Bobita/Search Engine Journal

APAC Search Strategy Goes Beyond Google & Baidu via @sejournal, @motokohunt

If you approach the Asia-Pacific search strategy as simply an extension of your U.S. or European Google strategy, you will miss how discovery actually works across the region. Google is still dominant in many markets. But the landscape is far more fragmented than most global teams assume.

Japan is a clear example. Bing holds 31.63% of search share alongside Google’s 59.58%, which is enough to materially influence both SEO and paid performance.

South Korea tells a different story, but leads to the same conclusion. Google (46.81%) and Naver (43.96%) operate at near parity, making any Google-only strategy incomplete by design.

Even in Southeast Asia, where Google is often assumed to be universal, local engines still matter.  In Vietnam, CocCoc holds a meaningful 5.34% share of the market, which is enough to influence visibility in some competitive categories.

These are not anomalies but a broader shift.

Information discovery is changing with AI-driven interfaces shortening the path from question to decision. Super-apps and platform ecosystems are also changing where that discovery happens. In many cases, users are no longer moving through the web step by step. They are interacting with systems that interpret, summarize, and guide decisions within a single experience. Put together, fragmentation and interface change are creating a very different competitive landscape.

The advantage in APAC is no longer about understanding a single algorithm or the top-ranking factors. It is about understanding how distribution works across multiple systems, each with its own logic, constraints, and opportunities. That shift requires a different mindset. Not how do we rank? But where do we need to exist?

The Forces Reshaping Discovery In APAC

To understand how search is evolving in APAC, it helps to step back from individual search engines and look at broader behavior patterns. Across Asian markets, four patterns are consistently changing how discovery happens.

The First Is The Rise Of AI-Driven Answer Systems

Search used to require effort. Users entered a query, reviewed results, compared options, and formed their own conclusions. That process is being compressed. A question goes in, and a synthesized answer comes back, often with built-in recommendations.

Visibility changes significantly in this new environment. Simply ranking in SERPS is no longer enough. Future-state content needs to be structured so it can be selected, understood, and cited.

The Second Force Is The Role Of Super-Apps

In markets like South Korea and Japan, discovery is not limited to a browser. It happens inside messaging platforms, content ecosystems, and integrated services. KakaoTalk and LINE are not just communication tools. They are environments where users search, evaluate, and act.

In Japan, it is common to see TV commercials directing users to a LINE account rather than a standalone app or website. For many brands, LINE has become the primary interface for engagement, offering promotions, customer service, and loyalty programs in one place.

That shift matters because users are not always navigating to a site or downloading a brand app. They are interacting within platforms they already use daily. For brands, being present on the web is no longer enough if the decision is made elsewhere.

The Third Force Is Distribution Through Telcos

This is one of the least discussed but most impactful changes. When telecom providers bundle AI tools into their offerings, they accelerate adoption at a scale that traditional product growth cannot match.

In India, Bharti Airtel partnered with Perplexity to provide its Pro offering to roughly 360 million users.

Reliance Jio has taken a similar approach, distributing access to Google’s Gemini AI across more than 500 million users through bundled plans.

In South Korea, SK Telecom also partnered with Perplexity to bring AI-powered search directly into its ecosystem, positioning it alongside traditional engines rather than outside them.

In these cases, adoption is not driven by users seeking new tools. It’s happening because those tools are already there. Pre-installed, bundled, or built into services people use every day.

Instead of gradual growth, usage can scale almost overnight, significantly changing the adoption curve. And because these tools are positioned as assistants rather than search engines, they reshape how users interact with information without requiring them to consciously change behavior.

For search teams, this creates a different kind of competitive dynamic. It’s no longer just about ranking in search engines. The real competition is for inclusion in systems being rolled out to millions of users via existing platforms they are already comfortable using.

The Fourth Force Is The Evolution Of Portal-Based Search

In South Korea and Japan, portals like Naver and Yahoo! are popular and function more like structured environments, with commerce modules, local listings, media, and knowledge panels built directly into the experience. Increasingly, these platforms are adding AI-generated summaries to answer questions without sending users elsewhere.

It changes what success looks like. Ranking still matters, but it’s not the whole story anymore. You also need to show up within these environments.

Once you look at it that way, the objective shifts. It’s less about visibility in one engine and more about being present wherever people are actually finding answers.

Market Realities That Change The Playbook

Once you recognize that APAC is a distributed landscape, the idea of a single “regional strategy” starts to break down. Each market introduces its own constraints and opportunities, and those differences materially affect how search should be approached.

Japan often gets rolled into global strategy, but the numbers don’t really support that. Bing’s share is high enough to affect both organic and paid performance, driven in part by default browser settings and enterprise environments. It’s one of those gaps that’s easy to miss until you look for it.

South Korea is a different kind of challenge. Naver sits at the center of how people discover content, and it doesn’t behave like a typical search engine. The formats, the way results are surfaced, and even what users expect to see all differ. If you approach it with a Google-first mindset, things start to break down pretty quickly.

Vietnam shows a different kind of opening. CocCoc’s share isn’t huge, but it doesn’t need to be. If competitors ignore it, that alone creates room to gain visibility. In markets like this, where local behavior doesn’t fully match global assumptions, those gaps tend to get picked up quickly.

Vietnam highlights a different type of opportunity. Even a smaller share for a local engine can create an advantage if competitors ignore it. In markets where local behavior diverges from global assumptions, these gaps can be leveraged relatively quickly.

India and Indonesia don’t follow the same pattern. Google still dominates, but something else is happening alongside it. AI tools are picking up faster than most teams expect. In some cases, that push isn’t coming from users at all. It’s coming through telco partnerships, bundled access, and tools showing up inside services people already use.

So the way discovery shifts in these markets can feel uneven. It doesn’t necessarily track with what we’ve seen in more mature regions.

The common thread across these markets is that the opportunity is not just in understanding each engine, but in recognizing where competitors are underinvesting.

Where Most SEO Strategies Fall Short

In APAC, the issue usually isn’t a lack of optimization knowledge. It’s how that knowledge gets applied. Most global teams are set up around a centralized model. The tools, processes, and reporting tend to revolve around Google by default. Regional differences are recognized, but they don’t always make it into how work actually gets done.

That’s where things start to drift.

Alternative engines are often pushed aside. Even when the data shows a meaningful share, they’re treated as secondary priorities. Over time, that creates an opening. Teams that do invest, even at a basic level, can pick up visibility that others leave behind.

Additionally, structured data and technical capabilities are not adapted to local ecosystems. What works for Google is assumed to work everywhere, even in environments where search behaves very differently.

Often experimentation is limited or not allowed. Many of the platforms that matter in APAC provide APIs, feeds, and tooling that enable more advanced strategies. These capabilities often go unused because they fall outside standard workflows.

None of these gaps is particularly complex to address. But they require a shift in how teams think about ownership and execution.

The Shift To Answer-Layer Visibility

One of the more subtle but important changes is the emergence of what can be described as the answer layer. Users are increasingly interacting with systems that provide direct responses rather than lists of options. In these environments, visibility is determined by whether your content is selected as a source, not just whether it ranks.

This changes how content should be created, requiring information to be structured in a way that is easy to extract and interpret. Clear definitions, comparisons, and step-by-step explanations become more valuable because they align with how AI systems assemble answers. At the same time, attribution becomes more important. Content that is well-organized, clearly sourced, and easy to validate is more likely to be used and cited.

This is not a replacement for traditional SEO. It is an extension of it. But it does require a different level of intentionality in how content is designed.

Measurement Needs To Catch Up

One of the challenges in adapting to this landscape is that measurement has not kept pace with behavior. Many teams still report on organic search as a single channel. In APAC, that approach obscures more than it reveals.

At a minimum, performance should be segmented by engine and by discovery type. Google, Bing, portal ecosystems, local engines, and AI-driven referrals each behave differently and should be evaluated separately.

Without this level of visibility, it becomes difficult to justify investment or identify where opportunities exist. This is particularly important as AI-driven traffic grows. Early data suggest that referrals from AI systems are increasing rapidly, but in many cases, they are not being tracked or attributed correctly, if at all.

The result is a blind spot in performance reporting at the exact moment when new discovery channels are emerging.

Regulation As A Strategic Constraint And Opportunity

Regulation is increasingly shaping how search and discovery operate across APAC.

Privacy laws in markets like Japan, South Korea, India, and Vietnam are tightening what teams can collect and how they can use it. At the same time, countries like Australia are putting more pressure on AI systems, especially regarding age verification and platform responsibility.

Most organizations still treat this as a compliance task. Something to deal with once it becomes unavoidable. But it doesn’t really work that way anymore.

The teams that plan for these constraints early tend to move faster. Their measurement holds up. Their content strategies translate more easily across markets. They don’t have to keep reworking things every time a new requirement shows up.

Others take a different path. They push harder on data collection, lean into short-term gains, and then end up rebuilding parts of their stack under pressure.

So regulation ends up doing more than limiting what’s possible. It quietly separates the teams that can adapt from the ones that will struggle to adapt to this new ecosystem.

What To Do Next

For teams trying to adapt, the next steps don’t need to be dramatic. Most of the gains come from getting the basics right in the markets that matter.

A good place to start is how you define search. In some markets, Bing deserves to be integrated as a primary channel given its market share. In South Korea, Naver needs to be approached as its own ecosystem rather than an alternative to Google. And in places like Vietnam, it’s worth taking a closer look at platforms like CocCoc to understand whether they contribute meaningful visibility for your category.

At the same time, begin building content that is designed for extraction and citation. This does not require a complete overhaul of your content strategy, but it does require more intentional structuring of key information.

Content that performs well in AI-driven environments tends to be clear, well-organized, and easy to interpret. Definitions, comparisons, step-by-step guidance, and well-supported claims are more likely to be selected and reused because they align with how answer systems assemble responses.

This is where many global teams overlook a significant advantage. Rather than creating entirely new content for each APAC market, there is often an opportunity to extend what already works in the U.S. or Europe. Content that has earned visibility, links, and engagement in one market has already demonstrated its value. When that content is adapted thoughtfully, not just translated, it can carry those strengths into new markets.

The key is in how that adaptation happens. Instead of treating localization as a linguistic exercise, it should be treated as a structural one. Core concepts, definitions, and frameworks can remain consistent, while local relevance is introduced through examples, regulatory context, and market-specific details.

This approach does two things.

First, it accelerates content development by building on proven assets rather than starting from scratch.

Second, it increases the likelihood that content will be recognized, interpreted, and cited across markets, particularly in AI-driven systems that prioritize clarity, consistency, and corroboration.

In a landscape where visibility increasingly depends on being selected as a source, not just ranked, this becomes a meaningful competitive advantage.

Finally, recognize that distribution is now a core part of the market-specific and regional search strategy. Whether through platforms, partnerships, or new interfaces, where your content appears is becoming just as important as how it ranks.

Closing Thought

APAC is often described as complex. That is true, but complexity is not the most important characteristic. Search is no longer defined by a single engine or a single interface. It is shaped by a network of systems that influence how users discover, evaluate, and act.

The teams that succeed will not be the ones that adapt their Google strategy to new markets but the ones that understand how discovery actually works and build their presence accordingly.

More Resources:


Featured Image: ktsdesign/Shutterstock

New: Yoast SEO Content Analyses scores can now chat with “AI” through new API

From today, your AI tools, dashboards, and automated workflows can now talk directly to Yoast SEO, thanks to the new Abilities API, built to work hand in hand with WordPress 6.9 .As WordPress evolves, we evolve with it, and the release of the Yoast SEO Abilities API is an extension of these new capabilities. 

What does that mean in plain English? 

If you use AI assistants, automated workflows, or custom dashboards, they can now automatically find and read your Yoast content scores, without anyone needing to build a custom connection or dig through documentation. It just works. 

Once connected, any compatible tool can instantly pull the following from your most recent posts: 

  • SEO scores and focus keyphrases 
  • Readability scores 
  • Inclusive language scores 

What can you do with this? 

Here are a few examples of what’s now possible: 

  • Ask an AI assistant “How is my SEO health looking this week?” and get a real answer based on your actual posts 
  • Set up a fully autonomous AI workflow, where agents can flag trends in your recent posts. 
  • Pull your content scores into an external dashboard or reporting tool, with no manual exports needed 

In short, Yoast SEO is ready to plug straight into your workflow, whatever that looks like. As WordPress continues to open up new capabilities, you can expect Yoast to be right there alongside it. 

Want to go deeper? 

If you want to see the code, data schema, and full technical details on how to use these new endpoints, head over to our developer documentation for the Yoast SEO Abilities API. 

AEO In 2026: Which Content Formats Earn AI Citations & How to Produce More [Webinar] via @sejournal, @hethr_campbell

AI-generated answers are capturing intent before the click, and that changes where to invest, what to measure, and which formats to prioritize. The question isn’t whether to adapt, it’s knowing exactly what to do first.

Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) Is A Core Discipline

AEO sits alongside SEO as a primary driver of how brands get discovered in 2026. The content formats, authority signals, and workflows that earn citations in ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini are distinct from what drives traditional rankings.

What You’ll Learn

  • Which AEO and content marketing trends will have the most impact on AI citation rate and organic visibility in 2026.
  • How to reframe your success metrics when AI answers replace the click, and what to optimize for instead.
  • Which content formats generate the highest likelihood of AI citation, and how to build more of them into your editorial workflow.
  • How to integrate agentic workflows into your content operation to scale authority-building without losing quality.

About the Speakers

Shannon Vize is Sr. Content Marketing Manager at Conductor, focused on the intersection of AI and content strategy. Pat Reinhart is VP of Services & Thought Leadership at Conductor, with deep experience helping digital teams adapt their search strategies to emerging discovery behaviors.

This session delivers a practical, prioritized framework for operationalizing AEO and building AI search visibility in 2026.

Ensuring continuous discoverability with agentic AI for SEO

In our Rethinking SEO in the age of AI article, we briefly explored how AI might move beyond simple prompt-and-response interactions. One emerging direction is agentic AI. Systems that can take action, not just generate answers. While this space is still evolving, we’re already seeing early signs of tools that can identify gaps, suggest improvements, and adapt to changing trends with minimal input. If these capabilities continue to develop, they could reshape how we think about maintaining continuous discoverability in SEO.

Table of contents

Key takeaways

  • Agentic AI for SEO represents a shift from traditional visibility and ranking to being trusted and understood by AI systems
  • The web’s structure remains stable, but interaction through AI agents changes how content is accessed and consumed
  • SEO must evolve to focus on being structured, reliable, and adaptable for AI interpretation
  • Challenges include data quality, integration complexity, and balancing automation with human judgment
  • The future of discoverability in an agent-driven web emphasizes collaboration between AI and human insight, expanding SEO’s role beyond just ranking

Understanding the coexistence of web and AI agents

Before understanding agentic SEO, let’s first look at the role of AI in shaping the web. Is it staying the same, or quietly changing?

For a long time, the web has been more than just a collection of pages. It has functioned as an interconnected graph of entities. Websites representing people, businesses, ideas, and concepts, all linked together through content, context, and trust. This structure, often referred to as the open web, has remained relatively stable for decades. Humans created content, users discovered it through search or links, and meaning was formed through exploration.

What seems to be shifting now is not the structure itself, but how that web is accessed and consumed.

Earlier, discovery was largely a direct interaction between humans and websites. You searched, clicked, read, compared, and formed your own conclusions. Today, AI systems are increasingly stepping into that journey. They sit between the user and the web, interpreting, summarizing, and sometimes even deciding which information to surface.

This is where the idea of AI agents begins to emerge. Not just as tools that generate responses, but as systems that can navigate the web, retrieve information, and potentially act on it. Early examples, such as experiments in natural language interfaces like NLWeb, hint at a web that can be interacted with more conversationally, without losing its openness and interconnectedness.

Some refer to this shift as the beginning of an “agentic web.” But it’s important to see it less as a complete transformation and more as a layer forming on top of the existing web. The open web still exists, content is still created by people, and links still matter. What’s evolving is how that content is discovered, interpreted, and used.

And that shift in interaction is where things start to get interesting for SEO.

Read more: Yoast collaborates with Microsoft to help AI understand Open Web

What will SEO mean in agentic web?

If AI agents are starting to reshape how people interact with the web, it naturally raises a follow-up question: where does that leave SEO?

For years, SEO has largely been about helping users find your content. You optimized for rankings, improved visibility on search engines, and relied on users to click, read, and navigate. But if AI agents begin to mediate that journey, not just retrieving information but interpreting and acting on it, then SEO may need to expand its role.

Not necessarily replace what exists, but build on top of it.

From ranking pages to being selected by systems

In a more agent-driven environment, discoverability may no longer depend solely on where you rank, but also on whether your content is selected, trusted, and used by AI systems.

That introduces a subtle but important shift:

  • It’s not just about being visible
  • It’s about being understandable, reliable, and usable by machines

AI agents don’t browse the web the way humans do. They:

  • Parse structured and unstructured data
  • Look for clear signals of authority and accuracy
  • Combine information from multiple sources before presenting it

So instead of optimizing only for clicks, SEO may also involve optimizing for inclusion in AI-generated responses and workflows.

What stays, what evolves, what gets added

Let’s ground this a bit. Traditional SEO doesn’t disappear. Many of its fundamentals still apply, but their role may shift.

What stays relevant

  • High-quality, original content
  • Clear site structure and internal linking
  • Strong technical SEO foundations
  • Authority and trust signals (E-E-A-T)

These remain essential because AI systems still rely on the web as their source of truth.

What evolves

  • Keywords → Intent modeling: Less about exact-match phrases, more about covering topics deeply and contextually
  • Rankings → Presence across surfaces: Visibility may extend beyond SERPs into AI summaries, assistants, and agent outputs
  • Clicks → Influence: Users may not always visit your site, but your content can still shape their decisions

What gets added

  • Structured, machine-readable content: Schema, clean formatting, and semantic clarity become even more important
  • Content designed for extraction: Clear answers, definitions, step-by-step explanations
  • Topical authority at the entity level: Being recognized as a trusted source for a subject, not just ranking for a keyword
  • Freshness and adaptability: Content that evolves as trends and information change

So, what does SEO really become?

It starts to look less like a discipline focused purely on rankings and more like one focused on continuous discoverability.

Or, as Alex Moss puts it in his article The Same But Different: Evolving Your Strategy For AI-Driven Discovery, the web itself may be evolving into two parallel experiences:

This has created a split from a completely open web into two – the ‘human’ web and the ‘agentic’ web… SEOs will have to consider both sides of the web and how to serve both.

That framing makes the shift clearer.

Your content still needs to rank. But it also needs to work at a second layer of the web, where AI systems interpret, select, and sometimes act on information before a human ever sees it.

So now, your content needs to be:

  • Understood without ambiguity
  • Trusted enough to be referenced
  • Structured well enough to be reused

In that sense, SEO doesn’t disappear in an agentic web. It stretches.

From helping users find information…

to helping systems choose it.

Role of agentic AI in SEO

If the web is gradually being experienced through both humans and AI agents, then it’s worth asking what role these agents might begin to play in SEO itself. Not as a replacement for SEO teams, but as a new layer within how SEO work gets done.

What we’re starting to see is a shift from SEO as a set of periodic tasks to something more continuous, assisted, and adaptive. Some early tools already hint at this. They don’t just analyze data, they suggest actions. In some cases, they even implement changes. If this direction continues, agentic AI could become less of a tool you use and more of a system you collaborate with.

Let’s break down where this role might start to take shape.

How agentic AI may reshape SEO workflows

Shift Traditional SEO approach (how it typically works today) With agentic AI (emerging direction)
Audits → Always-on optimization SEO teams run audits at set intervals (monthly, quarterly) using tools such as site crawlers.

Issues such as broken links, missing metadata, or slow pages are identified and then manually fixed over time.

Improvements often depend on when the audit is conducted.

Systems continuously monitor site performance, flag issues as they arise, and may suggest or implement fixes in real time.

Optimization becomes ongoing rather than dependent on manually scheduled audits.

Reacting → Anticipating Actions are usually triggered by visible changes.

For example, a drop in rankings leads to an investigation, or an algorithm update prompts content revisions.

SEO is often a response to what has already happened.

AI systems analyze patterns in search behavior and performance data to detect early signals.

This could mean identifying emerging topics, shifting intent, or declining engagement before it significantly impacts performance.

Manual execution → Guided systems Tasks such as keyword research, clustering, content optimization, and internal linking are performed manually or with tools.

SEO specialists interpret the data and execute changes step by step.

AI assists with these tasks by identifying keyword opportunities, grouping topics, suggesting optimizations, and even applying specific changes.

SEOs shift toward guiding strategy, reviewing outputs, and setting priorities.

Static content → Adaptive content Content is created, published, and revisited occasionally.

Updates are often triggered by performance drops, outdated information, or scheduled content refresh cycles.

Content evolves more dynamically.

Systems can recommend updates based on performance, refine sections for clarity, or restructure content to better match user intent and AI consumption patterns.

Generic UX → Contextual journeys Most users experience the same content and navigation structure.

Personalization is limited or rule-based, such as basic recommendations or segmented landing pages.

Experiences become more contextual.

Content, navigation, and recommendations can adapt based on user behavior, intent, or journey stage, creating more relevant and engaging interactions.

Technical maintenance → Intelligent infrastructure Technical SEO involves periodic checks for issues such as crawl errors, indexing problems, and schema gaps.

Fixes are prioritized manually based on impact and resources.

AI systems continuously monitor technical health, automatically prioritize issues, suggest fixes, and, in some cases, implement them.

Structured data, internal linking, and site architecture can be dynamically optimized.

A quick example: structuring content for machines, not just humans

If agentic systems rely on structured, connected, and machine-readable content, then this isn’t entirely new territory for SEO.

In many ways, we’ve already been moving in this direction through structured data and schema. What’s changing is how important and foundational it may become.

For example, features like schema aggregation in Yoast SEO bring together different pieces of structured data across a site and connect them into a more unified graph. Instead of treating pages as isolated units, they help search engines better understand how entities, content types, and relationships fit together.

This might seem like a technical detail, but it reflects a broader shift.

If AI agents are parsing, combining, and interpreting content across multiple sources, then clarity and connection at the data level become more important. Not just for visibility in search results, but for how content is understood and reused.

So while agentic AI may feel like a new layer, some of the foundational work, like structuring content, defining entities, and building semantic relationships, is already part of modern SEO. It just becomes more critical in this context.

So, where does this leave SEO teams?

If there’s one pattern across all of this, it’s not replacement, but redistribution.

  • Agentic AI may take on:
  • Repetitive tasks
  • Data-heavy analysis

Continuous monitoring

Which leaves humans to focus more on brand-building aspects like:

  • Strategy and positioning
  • Editorial judgment and brand voice
  • Deciding what should be done, not just what can be done

In that sense, agentic AI doesn’t redefine SEO overnight. But it does start to reshape how it’s practiced.

Understanding the risks and challenges of agentic AI for SEO

So far, agentic AI might sound like a natural evolution of SEO. But, as with most shifts in technology, it may also come with trade-offs.

Not because the technology is inherently problematic, but because it introduces new dependencies, new layers of complexity, and new decisions for SEO teams to navigate. In that sense, adopting agentic AI isn’t just about adding a new capability. It may also involve rethinking how much control to delegate and where human judgment continues to play a critical role.

Here are some of the challenges that could emerge as this space evolves:

1. High technical and integration complexity

Agentic systems are unlikely to operate in isolation. They may need to connect with your CMS, analytics tools, and multiple data sources.

This could introduce challenges such as:

  • Managing integrations across platforms
  • Ensuring consistent and reliable data flow
  • Defining clear workflows across systems

For many teams, this might not be plug-and-play. It could require time, experimentation, and coordination across different roles.

2. Data quality and dependency

Agentic AI may be heavily dependent on the quality of data it receives. If the data is:

  • Outdated
  • Incomplete
  • Poorly structured

Then the outputs could reflect those gaps.

At scale, even small inconsistencies might influence multiple recommendations or decisions. Which is why maintaining clean, reliable data sources may become even more important in an agent-driven setup.

3. Risk amplification and the need for governance

One of the strengths of agentic AI is speed. But that same speed might also amplify unintended outcomes.

Without clear guardrails:

  • Content updates could introduce inaccuracies
  • Technical changes might lead to issues like broken links or indexing errors
  • Best practices may not always be consistently followed

This is where governance frameworks and approval checkpoints may become essential, not to slow things down, but to keep them aligned.

4. Hallucinations and accuracy considerations

AI systems can sometimes generate outputs that sound plausible but aren’t entirely accurate.

In an SEO context, this might look like:

  • Misinterpreted data
  • Inaccurate keyword insights
  • Fabricated or blended information

The challenge is that these outputs can be difficult to spot at a glance. This suggests that validation and source-checking may remain an ongoing part of the workflow.

5. Limited understanding of nuance

SEO often goes beyond data and structure. It includes tone, context, and intent. Agentic systems may not always fully capture:

  • Brand voice and positioning
  • Legal or compliance nuances
  • Subtle differences in user intent

This could result in outputs that are technically sound, but not always contextually aligned. Human input may still play a key role here.

6. Balancing automation with human judgment

A broader question that may arise is how much to automate.

  • Too much automation might: Reduce control over strategy or brand
  • Too little might: Limit efficiency and scalability

Most teams may find themselves balancing the two. Using agentic AI to extend their capabilities, while still guiding direction and decision-making.

7. High initial investment and learning curve

While agentic systems may offer long-term efficiency, getting started could take time. This might involve:

  • Learning how the systems work
  • Setting up workflows and integrations
  • Aligning outputs with business goals

There’s also a level of uncertainty here. The technology is still evolving, and so are the tools built around it. Which means costs, capabilities, and best practices may continue to shift.

For many teams, adoption may not be immediate. It could happen gradually, through testing, iteration, and figuring out what actually works in practice.

8. Zero-click experiences and shifting traffic patterns

As AI systems become more involved in surfacing information, zero-click experiences may become more common.

Users might:

  • Get answers directly within AI interfaces
  • Interact without visiting the original source

This doesn’t necessarily reduce the importance of SEO, but it may shift how success is measured. Visibility and influence could become just as relevant as traffic.

What discoverability might look like in an agent-driven web?

Agentic AI may open up new possibilities for how SEO is done. But alongside that, it may also introduce new considerations.

It could require:

  • Stronger data foundations
  • Clear governance and review processes
  • A thoughtful balance between automation and human input

In many ways, the goal may not be full automation. It may be a better collaboration.

Even if agents take on more execution, the responsibility for direction, accuracy, and trust is likely to remain human. And maybe that’s the more interesting shift here. Not whether AI agents will “take over” SEO, but how they might reshape what good SEO looks like.

If discoverability is no longer just about ranking, but also about being selected, interpreted, and reused by systems, then the role of SEO starts to expand. It becomes less about optimizing for a single interface and more about preparing content to exist across multiple layers of the web.

So the question isn’t just:

“How do we rank?”

It might slowly become:

  • How to stay understandable across multiple LLMs?
  • Do we remain trustworthy enough to be referenced?
  • How do we design content that works for both humans and machines?

We don’t have all the answers yet. And maybe that’s okay.

Because this isn’t a fixed destination. It’s something that’s still taking shape.

And as it does, SEO may continue to evolve alongside it. Not disappearing, not being replaced, but adapting to a web that is becoming more dynamic, more layered, and a little less predictable.