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How AI is reshaping SEO: Challenges, opportunities, and brand strategies for 2025


How AI is reshaping SEO: Challenges, opportunities, and brand strategies for 2025

The cyclical, now AI-fueled, “SEO is dead” panic cycle is in full swing. 

But here’s what most of those headlines miss:

Search isn’t a platform, it’s a behavior. 

'SEO is dead' search query - Any time
'SEO is dead' search query - Past year
'SEO is dead' search query - Past month

Whether people are typing into Google or prompting ChatGPT, consumers are still asking questions that require content, expertise, and trust. 

Search isn’t dying – it’s fracturing – as it always has when new platforms emerge and achieve mainstream adoption. 

Fortunately, generative engine optimization (GEO) is based on similar value systems that advanced SEOs, content marketers, and digital PR teams are already experts in.

The entity authority framework

  • Media mentions across trusted publications.
  • Schema-enriched pages with structured data.
  • First-party research that establishes expertise.
  • Expert quotes and branded citations.
Britney Muller on Linkedin - re brand mentions
Lousie Linehan on Linkedin - re brand mentions

While AI will radically change consumer search behavior over the next few years, it’s relying on a lot of the same signals Google’s been rewarding for over a decade. 

To maintain brand visibility as search fractures, brands need unified content and authority-building strategies that drive brand visibility across the multiple platforms where your target market resides: 

  • Indexable web content (for Google and Bing), schema markup for context, E-A-A-T signals and author bios, fresh data-driven insights
  • Structured data and mentions (for LLMs and GEO), expert quotes in trade publications, first-party research citations, brand mentions across authoritative sites 
  • Short-form social content (for TikTok and Reels), searchable captions and hashtags, video content optimized for discovery, cross-platform content threading

Beyond algorithms, I wanted to understand how AI was influencing consumer search behavior and how marketers were adapting their strategies with these transformative workflow tools. 

At SMX Advanced 2025, I presented a cobranded study I led between Fractl Agents, Search Engine Land, and MFour that demonstrates:

  • How consumers are shifting toward AI-powered search.
  • How their trust in AI content is evolving.
  • How marketers are leveraging AI to optimize workflows while maintaining brand credibility.
How AI is reshaping SEO - SMX Advanced

What follows is an actionable playbook built around the key takeaways from our research. 

Consider this your guide to future-proofing your brand visibility and workflow efficiencies in the age of AI. 

1. Two-thirds of consumers think AI will replace search in the next five years

But, AI chatbots only represent 2.96% of search engine traffic, currently

This contradiction reveals the deeper truth: we’re in a paradigm shift of consumer search behavior, not an SEO extinction event. 

Consumers are experimenting with new tools like ChatGPT, but they’re still heavily reliant on traditional search engines for the majority of their queries. 

% of consumers who agree AI will replace traditional search in the next five years
Chatbots vs search engines: Who's winning the traffic war?

The consumer data tells a story that most headlines miss.

People are experimenting with AI-powered search, but 49% of them are still clicking the little blue link for deeper dives. 

What behaviors do consumers notice when using AI search tools like Google or Perplexity?

Nonetheless, friction and innovation drive adoption, and users have been increasingly frustrated with Google’s search experience

In my February 2025 study, users cited ads cluttering search results, inaccurate AI Overviews, and irrelevant results as major friction points in traditional search.

What frustrates users most about Google's search experience - Fractl survey

Consumers aren’t abandoning Google for lack of quality content; they’re escaping SERP friction for clean interface design and faster answers. 

When ads bury answers, clean interfaces reign supreme, and AI tools deliver. At least, they’re ad-free, for now. 

That’s why even as Google gets 5 trillion searches per year (with 20% YoY growth), tools like ChatGPT are already ranking as the 5th most visited site globally, with nearly 5 billion visits per month.

Most visited websites in the world, March 2025

2. 64% feel positive about AI, 74% feel confident using AI tools

Think consumers aren’t AI savvy? Think again.

When it comes to the technology adoption lifecycle, we’re officially entering the Early Majority phase.

After ChatGPT’s explosive growth, 100 million users just two months post-launch and over 200 million registered by Q1 2025, we’re seeing:

  • Major SaaS platforms (Microsoft 365, Salesforce, Slack) bake generative-AI features into everyday workflows.
  • Mid-market and large enterprises piloting (and increasingly licensing) ChatGPT for content.
  • ChatGPT itself achieving household-name status. 

This signals that AI has crossed the chasm and is rapidly becoming a go-to search platform for everyday consumers. 

Technology adoption lifecycle

It’s no longer a matter of if this technology will go mainstream – it has. 

Only 8% of respondents weren’t familiar with ChatGPT or Gemini, and 47% said they would explore AI tools as soon as they launch. 

It’s no wonder why, with 59% of people believing AI will improve the quality of their life and only 33% thinking “AI is overhyped.”

Which best describes your feelings about AI today?
Which best describes your level of confidence when using AI tools?

3. 82% find AI-powered search more helpful than traditional SERPs

Yet, only ~ 22% of marketers track LLM brand visibility or traffic. 

Google Search (77%), LLMs (49%), and AI Overviews (38%) top the charts as preferred consumer search tools. 

But with 82% of respondents agreeing that “AI-powered search is more helpful than traditional search engines,” it’s clear how consumer search will evolve in the near future. 

Which tools do consumers regularly use to search for information?
How consumers rate AI-powered search vs. traditional search engines

Although consumer search behavior is rapidly evolving, marketing executives haven’t quite caught up.

Only 22% of marketers have set up LLM brand visibility or traffic monitoring. 

At least marketers recognize the urgency, with 53% saying they’re in the early stages of exploring how to monitor this emerging brand channel.

Is your company monitoring the impact of LLMs like ChatGPT or Gemini on brand visibility or traffic?

4. 78% of marketers and 68% of consumers are concerned about AI-driven misinformation, more than the fear of job loss

It’s not all sunshine and daisies in the world of AI innovation. 

Hallucinations and misinformation are legitimate concerns for consumers and marketers alike. 

How do you rate the quality of Google's AI-generated search answers?
Lily Ray on X

Over the next 12–18 months, “search” will increasingly feel like a dialogue with a model. 

Worried about hallucinations? 

It’s a short-term problem due to premature rollouts, but ultimately:

  • Google’s AI Overviews is built to cite sources.
  • Bing Chat taps real-time crawling to cut down on made-up answers. 

Those safeguards aren’t flawless (yet), but transformer architectures, retrieval-augmented generation, and other core technologies are improving exponentially. 

In 6-12 months, blatant hallucinations should be much rarer, and AI responses will include the trustworthy brand citations we’re all after. 

Lily Ray on X - re AI Mode.png

Still, it’s imperative that we address consumer concerns around the potential impacts of AI, especially regarding misinformation. 

Percentage concerned about the following potential impacts of AI.png

To fight misinformation in AI-driven content workflows, marketers need to double down on: 

  • Proprietary source of truth.
  • Source transparency.
  • Credible author review on E-E-A-T topics.
  • Bias and fact-checking.
  • Robust author bios.

Proprietary “sources of truth” are one of the best ways for you to produce unique, high-value content with robust, accurate data. 

This means giving your AI workflow direct access to proprietary datasets or information, whether that’s: 

  • A knowledge base (i.e., training guides, brand guides).
  • A data feed (i.e., brand research, an API). 

With this, every AI-generated statement can be produced and cross-checked against factual information. 

By feeding AI models proprietary sources of truth, you eliminate guesswork and significantly reduce hallucinations.

For instance, my company creates proprietary brand research enriched with insights from client SMEs, designed to earn newsworthy coverage and authoritative mentions. 

Every step of that process, from research to digital PR, is enhanced by agentic workflows and custom GPTs. 

These AI tools handle the tedious parts, drawing on a decade of training materials, proprietary data, and client guides as their source of truth. 

This streamlines content production and digital PR, while reassuring stakeholders that every AI-driven workflow is grounded in proven industry best practices. 

Fractl- GPT Prompt Library

Source transparency and credible author review on E-E-A-T topics (or really, all topics) are other critical steps for establishing brand credibility. 

All of our clients are encouraged to build authoritative author profiles for SMEs so consumers (and ranking algorithms) have clear source transparency and an immediate understanding of the educated stakeholders who were involved in publishing the content. 

Sample blog post showing SME

Beyond that, AI-driven content should be audited for bias and inaccuracies, especially if you aren’t using a proprietary source of truth. 

While there should always be a “human-in-the-loop” in AI workflows, even humans have these same fallacies. 

That’s what agentic workflows can be ideal for doing scaled audits of bias and fact-checking. 

agentic workflows can be ideal for doing scaled audits of bias and fact-checking. 

5. 80% of consumers have a neutral or positive attitude toward trusting brands that use AI-generated content, only 20% don’t

While AI Overviews have driven high levels of skepticism in the SEO industry, the broader consumer market is open to trusting AI-generated content. 

Especially when brands follow the guidelines outlined above. 

How likely are you to trust brands that use AI-generated content

Get the newsletter search marketers rely on.

MktoForms2.loadForm(“https://app-sj02.marketo.com”, “727-ZQE-044”, 16298, function(form) {
// form.onSubmit(function(){
// });

// form.onSuccess(function (values, followUpUrl) {
// });
});


6. Only 11% of marketers feel ‘over-reliant’ on AI tools, yet over 50% of feel ‘high pressure’ to adopt AI to stay competitive

AI reliance in the content process

When half your industry feels pressure to adopt something, but only 11% worry they’re overdoing it, you’re looking at classic early-majority anxiety – not actual overreliance.

Marketers who feel “high pressure” to adopt AI are typically part of:

  • The 30% struggling to keep up with the pace of AI advancements.
  • The 29% that fear job security due to AI automation.
  • The 15% who lack internal resources to implement AI effectively. 

Still, the only way to keep AI from taking your job, is to use AI to do your job better. 

What concerns do you have about staying competitive as AI evolves

If these fears exist within your organization, you have a cultural enablement problem, and it’s time to get proactive before cultural sentiment and brand visibility suffer: 

  • Adopt a companywide growth mindset.
  • Promote internal champions to pioneer AI innovation in each department, focusing on custom GPTs, prompt libraries, and agentic workflows.
  • Launch quarterly AI upskilling sprints to keep your team ahead of the curve.

The pressure will only increase as adoption hits mainstream, but the advantage goes to teams that integrate thoughtfully, not frantically. 

7. 74% of marketers are using AI tools in some part of their workflow 

What percentage of your work tasks involve AI?

74% of marketers are using AI tools in some part of their workflow, but only 4% rely on it for more than three-quarters of their work. 

The data reveals where marketers are finding the most value: 

  • 44% use AI for social content. 
  • 43% for SEO analysis
  • 40% for data reports. 

On the other hand:

  • In-house teams lean heavily on social drafting (45%).
  • Agencies focus on SEO optimization and analytics (44%).
  • Consultants prioritize keyword research (48%). 

The pattern? AI’s winning at high-volume, low-creativity tasks.

Which workflows does your company use AI tools for?

The biggest surprise in our research? 

SEO penalties from AI content barely register as a concern among marketers, but misinformation anxiety is through the roof. 

The assumption is that Google will penalize AI-generated content. 

The reality? 

Google’s more likely to reward AI content that demonstrates originality, depth, and clarity than punish content simply because it was AI-assisted. 

It’s time to shift your concern from “will AI hurt rankings?” to “will AI content deserve rankings?” 

Here’s the operational framework that works: 

  • Use proprietary sources of truth to combat misinformation risks. 
  • Demand editorial fact-checking before anything ships. 
  • Design writing prompts that prioritize divergent thinking over generic tone – because creativity still matters, a lot. 
What is your biggest concern about AI-generated marketing content?

The guardrails matter: 

  • Use proprietary sources of truth to combat misinformation anxiety.
  • Design prompts that prioritize divergent thinking over generic tone.
  • Shift concern from “will AI hurt rankings?” to “will AI content deserve rankings?” 

Teams don’t need to fear AI, they need to fear mediocre brand content in a sea of sameness. 

8. 93% of marketers say AI tools are saving them time each week, but only 19% reinvest it in professional development

The assumption is that AI adoption equals productivity gains, but the time paradox reveals the deeper problem: 

  • 93% of marketers say AI tools are saving them time each week.
  • But only 19% reinvest it in professional development. 

Most? They just produce more. 

That’s not optimization, that’s just faster hamster wheels. 

AI tools and time saved

Across the industry, teams that treat AI as a volume multiplier burn out faster than teams that treat it as a capability amplifier. 

As an example, my team drives 70% human strategy, creativity, and relationship building and 30% AI execution, research, and optimization. 

We expect this ratio to shift to 60/40 by 2027, but the human elements will become more valuable, not less. 

As a result of our AI efficiency gains over the last two years, we started piloting a four-day workweek in 2023.

As a result, our company culture, client retention, and department KPIs are stronger than ever. 

The lesson for management?

Build AI usage into your org’s KPIs, appoint internal champions, create learning paths, and reward and recharge your team with the time saved. 

9. Search isn’t a platform – it’s a behavior that’s fracturing across interfaces

SEO is no longer about gaming keywords; it’s about earning authority that algorithms recognize universally. 

Let’s all take a deep breath and remind ourselves: content marketing is an advanced skillset that has driven visibility across most of the platforms that emerged over the last decade. 

After all, the most effective SEOs have always focused on producing fresh, educational, data-driven content, which:

  • Drives qualified brand traffic and engagement.
  • Builds authority.
  • Achieves cross-channel brand visibility. 

Today, these strategies have all been proven to elevate brand visibility in organic SERPs, LLMs, SGEs, and AI Overviews. 

Which strategy will you prioritize to offset AI's impact on organic traffic?

We’re not watching the death of search. 

We’re watching the convergence of channels – search, social, AI – all optimized by the same core signals:

  • Authority (citations and mentions).
  • Originality (first-party research and insights).
  • Trust (consistency across platforms and personas).

Digital PR and brand visibility are now essential LLM inputs. 

The same tactics that earn coverage, backlinks, and social engagement also improve your odds in AI summaries and SERP overviews. 

If you can master this convergence, you’ll win on Google, ChatGPT, TikTok, and whatever fractures emerge next.

Remember: the fractures aren’t the problem, they’re the opportunity. 

But only if you stop treating them like separate games and start building the credibility that works across all of them.

Methodology: We surveyed 2,302 U.S. adults and 810 marketers in May 2025 to explore how attitudes and behaviors around AI vary across consumers and marketing professionals. Marketer responses were drawn from a balanced sample, ensuring all referenced subgroups comprised at least 10% of the total sample.



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How AI is reshaping SEO: Challenges, opportunities, and brand strategies for 2025

The cyclical, now AI-fueled, “SEO is dead” panic cycle is in full swing. 

But here’s what most of those headlines miss:

Search isn’t a platform, it’s a behavior. 

'SEO is dead' search query - Any time
'SEO is dead' search query - Past year
'SEO is dead' search query - Past month

Whether people are typing into Google or prompting ChatGPT, consumers are still asking questions that require content, expertise, and trust. 

Search isn’t dying – it’s fracturing – as it always has when new platforms emerge and achieve mainstream adoption. 

Fortunately, generative engine optimization (GEO) is based on similar value systems that advanced SEOs, content marketers, and digital PR teams are already experts in.

The entity authority framework

  • Media mentions across trusted publications.
  • Schema-enriched pages with structured data.
  • First-party research that establishes expertise.
  • Expert quotes and branded citations.
Britney Muller on Linkedin - re brand mentions
Lousie Linehan on Linkedin - re brand mentions

While AI will radically change consumer search behavior over the next few years, it’s relying on a lot of the same signals Google’s been rewarding for over a decade. 

To maintain brand visibility as search fractures, brands need unified content and authority-building strategies that drive brand visibility across the multiple platforms where your target market resides: 

  • Indexable web content (for Google and Bing), schema markup for context, E-A-A-T signals and author bios, fresh data-driven insights
  • Structured data and mentions (for LLMs and GEO), expert quotes in trade publications, first-party research citations, brand mentions across authoritative sites 
  • Short-form social content (for TikTok and Reels), searchable captions and hashtags, video content optimized for discovery, cross-platform content threading

Beyond algorithms, I wanted to understand how AI was influencing consumer search behavior and how marketers were adapting their strategies with these transformative workflow tools. 

At SMX Advanced 2025, I presented a cobranded study I led between Fractl Agents, Search Engine Land, and MFour that demonstrates:

  • How consumers are shifting toward AI-powered search.
  • How their trust in AI content is evolving.
  • How marketers are leveraging AI to optimize workflows while maintaining brand credibility.
How AI is reshaping SEO - SMX Advanced

What follows is an actionable playbook built around the key takeaways from our research. 

Consider this your guide to future-proofing your brand visibility and workflow efficiencies in the age of AI. 

1. Two-thirds of consumers think AI will replace search in the next five years

But, AI chatbots only represent 2.96% of search engine traffic, currently

This contradiction reveals the deeper truth: we’re in a paradigm shift of consumer search behavior, not an SEO extinction event. 

Consumers are experimenting with new tools like ChatGPT, but they’re still heavily reliant on traditional search engines for the majority of their queries. 

% of consumers who agree AI will replace traditional search in the next five years
Chatbots vs search engines: Who's winning the traffic war?

The consumer data tells a story that most headlines miss.

People are experimenting with AI-powered search, but 49% of them are still clicking the little blue link for deeper dives. 

What behaviors do consumers notice when using AI search tools like Google or Perplexity?

Nonetheless, friction and innovation drive adoption, and users have been increasingly frustrated with Google’s search experience

In my February 2025 study, users cited ads cluttering search results, inaccurate AI Overviews, and irrelevant results as major friction points in traditional search.

What frustrates users most about Google's search experience - Fractl survey

Consumers aren’t abandoning Google for lack of quality content; they’re escaping SERP friction for clean interface design and faster answers. 

When ads bury answers, clean interfaces reign supreme, and AI tools deliver. At least, they’re ad-free, for now. 

That’s why even as Google gets 5 trillion searches per year (with 20% YoY growth), tools like ChatGPT are already ranking as the 5th most visited site globally, with nearly 5 billion visits per month.

Most visited websites in the world, March 2025

2. 64% feel positive about AI, 74% feel confident using AI tools

Think consumers aren’t AI savvy? Think again.

When it comes to the technology adoption lifecycle, we’re officially entering the Early Majority phase.

After ChatGPT’s explosive growth, 100 million users just two months post-launch and over 200 million registered by Q1 2025, we’re seeing:

  • Major SaaS platforms (Microsoft 365, Salesforce, Slack) bake generative-AI features into everyday workflows.
  • Mid-market and large enterprises piloting (and increasingly licensing) ChatGPT for content.
  • ChatGPT itself achieving household-name status. 

This signals that AI has crossed the chasm and is rapidly becoming a go-to search platform for everyday consumers. 

Technology adoption lifecycle

It’s no longer a matter of if this technology will go mainstream – it has. 

Only 8% of respondents weren’t familiar with ChatGPT or Gemini, and 47% said they would explore AI tools as soon as they launch. 

It’s no wonder why, with 59% of people believing AI will improve the quality of their life and only 33% thinking “AI is overhyped.”

Which best describes your feelings about AI today?
Which best describes your level of confidence when using AI tools?

3. 82% find AI-powered search more helpful than traditional SERPs

Yet, only ~ 22% of marketers track LLM brand visibility or traffic. 

Google Search (77%), LLMs (49%), and AI Overviews (38%) top the charts as preferred consumer search tools. 

But with 82% of respondents agreeing that “AI-powered search is more helpful than traditional search engines,” it’s clear how consumer search will evolve in the near future. 

Which tools do consumers regularly use to search for information?
How consumers rate AI-powered search vs. traditional search engines

Although consumer search behavior is rapidly evolving, marketing executives haven’t quite caught up.

Only 22% of marketers have set up LLM brand visibility or traffic monitoring. 

At least marketers recognize the urgency, with 53% saying they’re in the early stages of exploring how to monitor this emerging brand channel.

Is your company monitoring the impact of LLMs like ChatGPT or Gemini on brand visibility or traffic?

4. 78% of marketers and 68% of consumers are concerned about AI-driven misinformation, more than the fear of job loss

It’s not all sunshine and daisies in the world of AI innovation. 

Hallucinations and misinformation are legitimate concerns for consumers and marketers alike. 

How do you rate the quality of Google's AI-generated search answers?
Lily Ray on X

Over the next 12–18 months, “search” will increasingly feel like a dialogue with a model. 

Worried about hallucinations? 

It’s a short-term problem due to premature rollouts, but ultimately:

  • Google’s AI Overviews is built to cite sources.
  • Bing Chat taps real-time crawling to cut down on made-up answers. 

Those safeguards aren’t flawless (yet), but transformer architectures, retrieval-augmented generation, and other core technologies are improving exponentially. 

In 6-12 months, blatant hallucinations should be much rarer, and AI responses will include the trustworthy brand citations we’re all after. 

Lily Ray on X - re AI Mode.png

Still, it’s imperative that we address consumer concerns around the potential impacts of AI, especially regarding misinformation. 

Percentage concerned about the following potential impacts of AI.png

To fight misinformation in AI-driven content workflows, marketers need to double down on: 

  • Proprietary source of truth.
  • Source transparency.
  • Credible author review on E-E-A-T topics.
  • Bias and fact-checking.
  • Robust author bios.

Proprietary “sources of truth” are one of the best ways for you to produce unique, high-value content with robust, accurate data. 

This means giving your AI workflow direct access to proprietary datasets or information, whether that’s: 

  • A knowledge base (i.e., training guides, brand guides).
  • A data feed (i.e., brand research, an API). 

With this, every AI-generated statement can be produced and cross-checked against factual information. 

By feeding AI models proprietary sources of truth, you eliminate guesswork and significantly reduce hallucinations.

For instance, my company creates proprietary brand research enriched with insights from client SMEs, designed to earn newsworthy coverage and authoritative mentions. 

Every step of that process, from research to digital PR, is enhanced by agentic workflows and custom GPTs. 

These AI tools handle the tedious parts, drawing on a decade of training materials, proprietary data, and client guides as their source of truth. 

This streamlines content production and digital PR, while reassuring stakeholders that every AI-driven workflow is grounded in proven industry best practices. 

Fractl- GPT Prompt Library

Source transparency and credible author review on E-E-A-T topics (or really, all topics) are other critical steps for establishing brand credibility. 

All of our clients are encouraged to build authoritative author profiles for SMEs so consumers (and ranking algorithms) have clear source transparency and an immediate understanding of the educated stakeholders who were involved in publishing the content. 

Sample blog post showing SME

Beyond that, AI-driven content should be audited for bias and inaccuracies, especially if you aren’t using a proprietary source of truth. 

While there should always be a “human-in-the-loop” in AI workflows, even humans have these same fallacies. 

That’s what agentic workflows can be ideal for doing scaled audits of bias and fact-checking. 

agentic workflows can be ideal for doing scaled audits of bias and fact-checking. 

5. 80% of consumers have a neutral or positive attitude toward trusting brands that use AI-generated content, only 20% don’t

While AI Overviews have driven high levels of skepticism in the SEO industry, the broader consumer market is open to trusting AI-generated content. 

Especially when brands follow the guidelines outlined above. 

How likely are you to trust brands that use AI-generated content

Get the newsletter search marketers rely on.

MktoForms2.loadForm(“https://app-sj02.marketo.com”, “727-ZQE-044”, 16298, function(form) {
// form.onSubmit(function(){
// });

// form.onSuccess(function (values, followUpUrl) {
// });
});


6. Only 11% of marketers feel ‘over-reliant’ on AI tools, yet over 50% of feel ‘high pressure’ to adopt AI to stay competitive

AI reliance in the content process

When half your industry feels pressure to adopt something, but only 11% worry they’re overdoing it, you’re looking at classic early-majority anxiety – not actual overreliance.

Marketers who feel “high pressure” to adopt AI are typically part of:

  • The 30% struggling to keep up with the pace of AI advancements.
  • The 29% that fear job security due to AI automation.
  • The 15% who lack internal resources to implement AI effectively. 

Still, the only way to keep AI from taking your job, is to use AI to do your job better. 

What concerns do you have about staying competitive as AI evolves

If these fears exist within your organization, you have a cultural enablement problem, and it’s time to get proactive before cultural sentiment and brand visibility suffer: 

  • Adopt a companywide growth mindset.
  • Promote internal champions to pioneer AI innovation in each department, focusing on custom GPTs, prompt libraries, and agentic workflows.
  • Launch quarterly AI upskilling sprints to keep your team ahead of the curve.

The pressure will only increase as adoption hits mainstream, but the advantage goes to teams that integrate thoughtfully, not frantically. 

7. 74% of marketers are using AI tools in some part of their workflow 

What percentage of your work tasks involve AI?

74% of marketers are using AI tools in some part of their workflow, but only 4% rely on it for more than three-quarters of their work. 

The data reveals where marketers are finding the most value: 

  • 44% use AI for social content. 
  • 43% for SEO analysis
  • 40% for data reports. 

On the other hand:

  • In-house teams lean heavily on social drafting (45%).
  • Agencies focus on SEO optimization and analytics (44%).
  • Consultants prioritize keyword research (48%). 

The pattern? AI’s winning at high-volume, low-creativity tasks.

Which workflows does your company use AI tools for?

The biggest surprise in our research? 

SEO penalties from AI content barely register as a concern among marketers, but misinformation anxiety is through the roof. 

The assumption is that Google will penalize AI-generated content. 

The reality? 

Google’s more likely to reward AI content that demonstrates originality, depth, and clarity than punish content simply because it was AI-assisted. 

It’s time to shift your concern from “will AI hurt rankings?” to “will AI content deserve rankings?” 

Here’s the operational framework that works: 

  • Use proprietary sources of truth to combat misinformation risks. 
  • Demand editorial fact-checking before anything ships. 
  • Design writing prompts that prioritize divergent thinking over generic tone – because creativity still matters, a lot. 
What is your biggest concern about AI-generated marketing content?

The guardrails matter: 

  • Use proprietary sources of truth to combat misinformation anxiety.
  • Design prompts that prioritize divergent thinking over generic tone.
  • Shift concern from “will AI hurt rankings?” to “will AI content deserve rankings?” 

Teams don’t need to fear AI, they need to fear mediocre brand content in a sea of sameness. 

8. 93% of marketers say AI tools are saving them time each week, but only 19% reinvest it in professional development

The assumption is that AI adoption equals productivity gains, but the time paradox reveals the deeper problem: 

  • 93% of marketers say AI tools are saving them time each week.
  • But only 19% reinvest it in professional development. 

Most? They just produce more. 

That’s not optimization, that’s just faster hamster wheels. 

AI tools and time saved

Across the industry, teams that treat AI as a volume multiplier burn out faster than teams that treat it as a capability amplifier. 

As an example, my team drives 70% human strategy, creativity, and relationship building and 30% AI execution, research, and optimization. 

We expect this ratio to shift to 60/40 by 2027, but the human elements will become more valuable, not less. 

As a result of our AI efficiency gains over the last two years, we started piloting a four-day workweek in 2023.

As a result, our company culture, client retention, and department KPIs are stronger than ever. 

The lesson for management?

Build AI usage into your org’s KPIs, appoint internal champions, create learning paths, and reward and recharge your team with the time saved. 

9. Search isn’t a platform – it’s a behavior that’s fracturing across interfaces

SEO is no longer about gaming keywords; it’s about earning authority that algorithms recognize universally. 

Let’s all take a deep breath and remind ourselves: content marketing is an advanced skillset that has driven visibility across most of the platforms that emerged over the last decade. 

After all, the most effective SEOs have always focused on producing fresh, educational, data-driven content, which:

  • Drives qualified brand traffic and engagement.
  • Builds authority.
  • Achieves cross-channel brand visibility. 

Today, these strategies have all been proven to elevate brand visibility in organic SERPs, LLMs, SGEs, and AI Overviews. 

Which strategy will you prioritize to offset AI's impact on organic traffic?

We’re not watching the death of search. 

We’re watching the convergence of channels – search, social, AI – all optimized by the same core signals:

  • Authority (citations and mentions).
  • Originality (first-party research and insights).
  • Trust (consistency across platforms and personas).

Digital PR and brand visibility are now essential LLM inputs. 

The same tactics that earn coverage, backlinks, and social engagement also improve your odds in AI summaries and SERP overviews. 

If you can master this convergence, you’ll win on Google, ChatGPT, TikTok, and whatever fractures emerge next.

Remember: the fractures aren’t the problem, they’re the opportunity. 

But only if you stop treating them like separate games and start building the credibility that works across all of them.

Methodology: We surveyed 2,302 U.S. adults and 810 marketers in May 2025 to explore how attitudes and behaviors around AI vary across consumers and marketing professionals. Marketer responses were drawn from a balanced sample, ensuring all referenced subgroups comprised at least 10% of the total sample.



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It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for ‘lorem ipsum’ will uncover many web sites still in their infancy.

The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making

The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution of letters, as opposed to using ‘Content here, content here’, making it look like readable English. Many desktop publishing packages and web page editors now use Lorem Ipsum as their default model text, and a search for ‘lorem ipsum’ will uncover many web sites still in their infancy.

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It is a long established fact that a reader will be distracted by the readable content of a page when looking at its layout. The point of using Lorem Ipsum is that it has a more-or-less normal distribution

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