BitcoinWorld
Your SEO strategy is built for a search engine that no longer exists
Google I/O 2026 made it official: AI-generated answers are now front and center in search, and most brands have almost no visibility into how AI is describing them to their customers. For anyone who has spent years building a strategy around 10 blue links, the rules just changed in a significant way.
At its annual developer conference, Google confirmed that AI-generated overviews and answers are now the default experience for a growing share of queries. This shift, while anticipated, marks a departure from the traditional search results page that marketers have optimized for since the early 2000s. The implications are broad: brands can no longer rely on ranking for a list of links. Instead, they must ensure their content is structured and authoritative enough to be cited directly by AI models.
On the latest episode of Bitcoin World’s Equity podcast, senior reporter Rebecca Bellan spoke with Matt Thompson, VP of partnerships at Scrunch, a startup positioning itself at the center of the AI search shift. Thompson revealed that AI referrals are converting at 400% higher than traditional organic search. This suggests that users who arrive via AI-generated answers are more intent-driven and trust the source implicitly. However, this also means that being absent from AI answers is a missed opportunity that goes beyond traffic — it affects brand perception and credibility.
While Google remains the dominant search engine, Thompson noted that ChatGPT still holds the lion’s share of AI search traffic. Optimizing exclusively for Google means missing most of the market. Brands must now consider a multi-platform approach that includes optimizing for AI assistants like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and others. This requires a shift in mindset from keyword-based optimization to entity-based and context-rich content.
Thompson also warned that Google’s own SEO best practices might be leading marketers in the wrong direction. Traditional advice around meta descriptions, title tags, and backlinks may not translate directly to AI-driven search environments. Instead, the focus should be on making websites “agent ready” — structured in a way that AI models can easily parse, extract, and cite. Most enterprise sites, Thompson argued, are not prepared for this shift.
Making a website agent ready involves technical and content changes. On the technical side, it means using structured data, clear site architecture, and machine-readable formats. On the content side, it means producing authoritative, well-sourced, and context-rich information that AI models can reference with confidence. Thompson emphasized that this is not about gaming a system but about building genuine topical authority.
The search landscape has fundamentally changed. Google I/O 2026 confirmed that AI-generated answers are no longer an experiment but the new normal. Marketers and founders must rethink strategies built for a search engine that no longer exists. The full Equity podcast episode with Matt Thompson offers deeper insights into these shifts and practical steps for adapting.
Q1: What is the main change Google announced at I/O 2026?
A1: Google confirmed that AI-generated answers are now prominently featured in search results, replacing the traditional list of 10 blue links for many queries.
Q2: How can brands optimize for AI search if traditional SEO no longer works?
A2: Brands should focus on making their websites “agent ready” by using structured data, clear site architecture, and authoritative content that AI models can easily parse and cite.
Q3: Why are AI referrals converting at higher rates than organic search?
A3: AI referrals tend to come from users with higher intent and trust, as the AI has already vetted and summarized the information, leading to more qualified traffic.
This post Your SEO strategy is built for a search engine that no longer exists first appeared on BitcoinWorld.


