Last week, I received yet another eye-rolling vendor email: “Hi Laura, we want you to know we have skilled engineers readily available for long-term contracts … ”

Wrong name. Wrong role. Wrong company. Wrong everything.

So after double-checking my calendar to make sure it was not 2007, I came back to the present. And despite experiences like this, content really is moving toward something more consequential: a long-imagined state of personalization that organizations are only now starting to operationalize.

Vendor Moves Signal A Structural Shift

In just a few weeks, several major vendors made moves that signal changes in how content is surfaced and prioritized in AI-driven environments:

  • Adobe introduced Brand Visibility and announced the acquisition of Semrush, moves intended to help brands influence how they appear in AI-generated answers.
  • Optimizely launched an answer engine optimization (AEO) insights platform and partnered with Conductor, reinforcing the shift from SEO to AEO.
  • Sitecore acquired Scrunch, with the aim of strengthening its ability to connect content to AI-driven discovery.

These moves point to a broader reality: Answer engines are becoming the primary arbiters of what content is surfaced — and what is excluded — from customer experiences. Forrester data suggests this shift is already underway: 69% of digital business strategy decision-makers are piloting or deploying solutions to improve visibility in answer engines. Competition is moving beyond rankings toward inclusion, accuracy, and influence within AI-generated results.

At the same time, buyer journeys are increasingly mediated by AI systems that interpret, compress, and deliver information. That reduces opportunities for direct engagement and raises the bar for content. It now needs to be structured, credible, and machine-ready enough to be selected at all. But visibility is only the first step.

What Happens After The Answer Matters More

When a visitor arrives from an answer engine, they expect continuity with the experience that sent them there. That expectation appears to be shaping the next wave of vendor innovation. 

Knotch, a content and customer journey intelligence provider, recently introduced ACE, which it describes as “AI experience infrastructure for the conversational web,” positioned to deliver hyperpersonalized experiences to AI-native consumers wherever they land. Notably, Think with Google served as its first deployment, helping shape its technical foundation. Optimizely’s Agent Platform points in a similar direction, connecting LLMs and agent execution to the digital experience layer — an approach intended to ground AI-driven interactions in brand context.

In other words, the market is moving from helping brands show up in AI answers to helping them respond more intelligently once they do. That is a much bigger — and much harder — promise.

The Content Goalpost Has Already Moved

The shift from visibility to hyperpersonalized experience orchestration sounds compelling. It is also easy to underestimate. Carrying context across fragmented customer touchpoints requires integration most organizations do not yet have. It depends on connected systems, accessible data, interoperable workflows, and agent capabilities that remain largely unproven at scale.

It also raises a deeper question: How will these insights shape not just content but demand and go-to-market execution? The vision is moving quickly. Enterprise reality is moving more slowly.

Early Steps Toward Intelligent Content

Regardless, these moves matter. They point toward the infrastructure needed to support what Forrester defines as intelligent content: content that combines human creativity, AI, and data to continuously optimize experiences. That future depends on connected systems, usable data, orchestration, and governance that allow content to adapt without losing control.

What Organizations Should Do Now

  • Plan for integration as the real work. The biggest barrier will not be features but fragmented systems and inaccessible data. Success depends on how well you can connect the stack.
  • Pressure-test early success stories. Initial proof points will likely reflect organizations with stronger data maturity and governance than most. Their conditions may not match your own.
  • Push vendors for specifics. Ask what data is required, what systems must connect, and what outcomes should follow. If the answers stay vague, the offering probably is, too.
  • Avoid premature platform switching. Most major vendors are moving in this direction. A rushed rip-and-replace decision is more likely to create disruption than advantage.
  • Expect more M&A and more noise. Vendors will keep acquiring capabilities to stay credible in an AI-shaped market — but more deals won’t necessarily bring more clarity.

This Is A Planning Moment

AI is becoming an active layer between brands and buyers. That means content is no longer simply published — it is interpreted, selected, and carried forward by machines. Organizations should be aligning content, data, and AI strategies now. In an AI-mediated experience, content will increasingly need to be usable, trustworthy, and connected enough to carry forward into the experience.

The organizations that begin building that foundation now will be better positioned not just to show up in AI-mediated experiences but to make those experiences count.