The PR industry is having an identity crisis.
Not because business is bad — B2B PR grew 12% last year. The crisis is deeper: we’re optimizing for an audience that no longer exists in its old form.
Traditional PR measures success by human eyeballs. Media placements. Impressions. Share of voice. The entire industry built its metrics around one assumption: humans make buying decisions, and humans read, watch, and listen.
That’s no longer true.
In 2026, 31% of B2B research begins in AI assistants, not Google or Bing. Your prospect’s journey now frequently looks like this:
This isn’t a future scenario. It’s happening now. And here’s what most PR professionals still haven’t grasped: AI engines don’t just index content — they evaluate sources.
When ChatGPT recommends your company, it’s making a trust judgment. It learned you exist from training on TechCrunch, Forbes, Wall Street Journal — places that independently verified your claims. That’s earned media authority. That’s Machine Relations.
I talk to CMOs every week who say “we need AI visibility” like it’s a channel you can buy. They ask about AI SEO tools, content optimization for AI, schema markup hacks.
Here’s the uncomfortable truth: there’s no hack for AI citations.
The brands getting cited by AI engines share one characteristic — they have genuine third-party validation. Every Forbes cover, every TechCrunch mention, every industry analyst report becomes training data that AI models use to assess credibility.
We tracked this across 200+ enterprise clients. The pattern is unambiguous:
The machine is watching. And the machine only cites what it trusts.
This is why we built AuthorityTech around Machine Relations — the discipline of earning visibility with both human and machine audiences simultaneously. Learn more about the Machine Relations methodology.
It starts with earned media authority. Not content marketing. Not paid amplification. Real coverage from real publications that independently verify your claims.
Then it layers in citation-grade content — structured, specific, data-driven — that AI engines can extract and synthesize. Not blog posts optimized for keywords. Answer-first content that stands alone as a reference. Our guide on GEO strategy breaks down the specific tactics.
Finally, continuous measurement. AI citation volatility means rankings shift weekly. If you’re not monitoring and optimizing, you’re losing ground.
| Aspect | Traditional PR | Machine Relations |
|---|---|---|
| Success Metric | Media placements, impressions | Citations + earned media + AI visibility |
| Content Strategy | Press releases, pitches | Answer-first content + citation-grade data |
| Measurement | AVE, media impressions | AI citation tracking + conversion correlation |
| Time Horizon | Campaign-based | Continuous, always-on |
| Key Tactic | Media relations | Earned authority + structured content |
Machine Relations (MR) is the discipline of earning visibility with both human and machine audiences. While traditional PR focuses solely on human journalists and readers, MR recognizes that AI engines now serve as discovery layers for buyers. MR combines earned media authority with structured, citation-grade content to ensure visibility across both audiences.
SEO optimizes for search engine algorithms that index and rank content. Machine Relations optimizes for AI engines that evaluate source credibility and synthesize responses. The key difference: SEO aims to appear in results, while MR aims to be cited as an authoritative source within AI-generated responses.
No. Earned media authority is the foundation of Machine Relations. AI engines prioritize sources with demonstrated third-party validation. Without genuine media coverage from recognized publications, your AI visibility efforts will have limited impact.
Based on our client data, most brands see initial AI citations within 30-60 days of consistent MR execution. Significant citation growth typically occurs at 90-120 days, correlating with accumulated earned media coverage and optimized content.
The CMOs winning in 2026 are making a strategic shift. They’re not choosing between traditional PR and AI visibility. They’re treating Machine Relations as a unified discipline.
Every press release, every media pitch, every analyst briefing now serves two audiences simultaneously: the journalist reading it today, and the AI model that will cite it tomorrow.
The brands that understand this first will own the next decade of B2B visibility. The ones that don’t? They’ll keep bidding on keywords while the machines cite their competitors.
The question isn’t whether Machine Relations matters. It’s whether you’ll adapt before your competitors do.
Want to understand where your brand stands with AI engines? Get a visibility audit — we analyze your current AI citation profile and identify the gaps.
Forward this to a colleague who’d benefit from understanding the machine audience. See you next week.