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The communications industry is asking the wrong question about AI 

2 min

The brands winning in AI search are not necessarily the loudest, but the most trusted. 

 

  • Glenn Frates is vice president at Cision, North America 

 

  • Data & Insights

For the past year, the public relations industry has become increasingly focused on how to “optimise” content for AI systems. New acronyms appear every month. New checklists promise visibility inside generative search. Entire strategies are now being framed around trying to influence what AI platforms surface in answers. 

But much of the conversation is missing a more important shift – that AI systems are not behaving like traditional search engines. 

They are not simply ranking pages. They are synthesising information, selecting sources, and constructing answers from patterns of trust, repetition and attribution across the broader information ecosystem. That changes the role of communications significantly. 

The old digital model rewarded discoverability, but now the emerging AI model rewards source authority. 

That distinction matters because many brands are still approaching AI visibility as a technical optimisation exercise, when in reality it is increasingly a communications credibility exercise. 

The brands most likely to appear in AI-generated answers are often not the brands producing the most “optimised” content.  They are the brands consistently publishing useful, attributable information across trusted environments over time. Clear data. Recognisable experts. Strong contextual framing. Consistent topic ownership. Widely corroborated narratives. 

In other words: authority compounds. 

This is one reason press releases are becoming more strategically important again in the AI era, not less.  Structured corporate content distributed across trusted networks creates reinforcement signals that AI systems appear to value. A release is no longer just a media outreach tool; it becomes part of the underlying source layer AI models use to understand companies, industries and narratives. 

The implications for communications teams are substantial. Success is becoming less about producing isolated campaigns designed to “game” visibility and more about building sustained informational authority around the topics a brand wants to own. Helpful content increasingly outperforms promotional content. Educational framing outperforms marketing language. Consistency outperforms occasional bursts of attention. 

Perhaps most importantly, AI visibility is not a one-time win. Large language models continuously absorb, compare and synthesise information from across the web. Brands are not competing for a single ranking position anymore. They are competing to become one of the sources the machine trusts enough to reuse. 

That is a very different communications challenge than the industry was solving five years ago. And many organisations still have not realised the rules changed.  

Want to strengthen your brand’s authority in an AI-driven information landscape? Discover how PR Newswire helps organisations amplify trusted content, build credibility across influential channels and create the signals that support long-term visibility.