EcommerceIndustry ContextWednesday, July 8, 20264 min read

Why a brand’s reputation precedes it in the AI-driven search era

Modern Retail10h agoamazonwalmarttarget
Why a brand’s reputation precedes it in the AI-driven search era
Executive Summary

In the AI-driven search era, a brand’s reputation precedes it. Earned media is the mechanism through which brands can build the trust and credibility that makes them worth recommending. It’s the difference between being present and being chosen. Sponsored by Journey Further

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Sponsored // July 8, 2026 Why a brand’s reputation precedes it in the AI-driven search era By Journey Further Paul Norris, senior director, organic media, Journey Further Visibility used to be everything in organic search, but a fundamental change is occurring in how consumers find brands.

Brand exploration, evaluation and conversion are collapsing into a single step — a consumer prompt now delivers an AI-synthesized answer. In this AI-driven search era, a brand’s reputation precedes it. Large language models (LLMs) surface opinions from third-party sources: reviews, editorial coverage, Reddit threads and creator endorsements.

In other words, the moment a brand is found is now the moment it is understood and chosen. The implications for marketers are significant, but many brands are not set up to win in this environment. The brands that understand this shift are investing in earned media as a reputation-building exercise, not a link-building one.

Coverage in trusted publications, citations from credible voices and genuine community advocacy are the signals AI models weigh most heavily. They’re how a brand shapes public perception and builds a reputation that surfaces it in AI-driven search results.

Consumers’ shift in search behavior becomes a habit The most concrete evidence of this search shift appears in how consumers construct their AI queries. Short, broad searches dominated traditional search because that’s what keyword-based engines were built to handle. But AI-driven search is built for nuance.

Journey Further’s analysis of global search demand in 2026 versus the same period in 2025 found that searches of five to seven words increased 52% year over year, while queries of eight words or more grew 34% (internal data). Rather than typing a few keywords into search engines, consumers now describe their needs, context and constraints.

The user who writes, “I’m going on a 10-day beach holiday. Suggest three dresses I can dress down for walking tours, but style up for dinner. I won’t have an iron,” will not revert to typing “maxi dress” in a subsequent search.

AI-driven search rewards brand reputation over owned media The uncomfortable truth for many brand marketers is that AI-driven search models don’t learn about a brand primarily from its website, press releases or brand blog. Eighty-four percent of AI citations come from earned media, according to Muck Rack’s May 2026 Generative Pulse study.

Reddit — where community conversations happen outside a marketing team’s control — is the top-cited single domain across every major AI engine at 40% frequency, according to 5W’s 2026 AI Platform Citation Source Index. Google Search still plays a critical role, too.

It surfaces information across the web, defines credibility and filters which publishers’ content AI models draw on. So, traditional SEO signals still matter, but those are now the floor, not the ceiling.

Brand reputation sits above the floor, built in the places an audience trusts: community platforms, independent reviews, editorial coverage and expert endorsements. Being found is table stakes, but AI-driven search determines how a brand is understood and whether that understanding is accurate, positive and consistent enough to earn the click.

Digital PR becomes a primary strategy in AI-driven search For years, digital PR has mainly been a link-building discipline. That framing still holds, but it undersells the reality. Digital PR is one of the most direct levers a brand has to influence its presence in AI-generated answers and shape the way a brand is understood.

The content formats that earn the most high-authority links and, by extension, the most AI citation potential are: information on where to get the best products (lists and reviews); reliable, data-backed research (studies and white papers); and trusted expert commentary.

Journey Further’s analysis of 4,000 recently acquired high-authority links, using its proprietary Salient tool, found that advice pieces attracted 47% of linking coverage. Product launches and shopping guides, by contrast, generated less than 2% of linking coverage combined.

The implication is clear: brands that lead with information and expertise, not product, earn more influence. If an LLM can’t read a brand’s data, the brand is not a contender There is a technical dimension to AI discovery that is often overlooked.

Most brand websites have been optimized for Google Search, which can render JavaScript and other dynamic content. But LLMs largely can’t do this. Product highlights, usage guides and Q&As that load dynamically for Google Search simply don’t exist for AI models.

There has also been a semantic challenge: the product description a consumer types into an AI query often doesn’t match a brand’s language. Mapping the full range of audience descriptors — and building the

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This briefing is based on reporting from Modern Retail. Use the original post for full primary-source context.

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