The collision between AI-powered search experiences and traditional publisher business models reached a critical inflection point this week. Local publishers are forming collaborative initiatives to offset revenue losses from AI-driven traffic drops, while new research shows Google Gemini is actually sending more referral traffic to websites than Perplexity—a nuanced finding that challenges assumptions about AI search cannibalization. This data point is crucial as publishers and SEO professionals pivot toward answer engine optimization (AEO) strategies to maintain visibility in AI-generated responses.
The Washington Post's shift toward creator-led video deals following newsroom cuts exemplifies how major publishers are restructuring content strategies in response to AI disruption. Simultaneously, advertisers are reassessing experimental budgets as AI reshapes channel performance and attribution models. The emergence of answer engine optimization as a discipline—with specific tactics for getting content featured in AI responses—signals the industry's recognition that traditional SEO playbooks need fundamental revision for an AI-first discovery landscape.
Sources:
- Google Gemini Sends More Traffic To Sites Than Perplexity: Report via @sejournal, @MattGSouthern
- Local Publishers Hit By AI Traffic Drops Collaborate For Revenue Relief
- After newsroom cuts, The Washington Post turns to creator-led video deals
- What AI disruption means for experimental ad budgets
- Answer Engine Optimization: How To Get Your Content Into AI Responses via @sejournal, @slobodanmanic