I feel like we’re on the cusp of something big. The kind of shift you only notice in hindsight— Like when your parents tried to say “Groovy” back in the 80s or “Dis” back in the ‘90s and totally blew it.
We used to “Google” something. Now we’re just waiting for the official verb that means “ask AI.”
But for brands, the change runs deeper.
In this post-click world, there’s no click. Let that sink in. No context trail. No scrolling down to see your version of the story.
Instead, potential customers are met with a summary – And that summary might be:
- Flat [“WidgetCo is a business.” Cool. So is everything else on LinkedIn.]
- Biased [Searching for “best running shoes” and five unheard-of brands with affiliate deals show up first—no Nike, no Adidas.]
- Incomplete [Your software’s AI-powered dashboard doesn’t even get mentioned in the summary—just “offers charts.”]
- Or worst of all: Accurate… but not on your terms [Your brand’s slogan shows up—but it’s the sarcastic meme version from Reddit, not the one you paid an agency $200K to write.]
This isn’t just a change in how people find you. It’s a change in who gets to tell your story first.
And if you’re not managing that summary, someone—or something—else already is.
From SEO to SRO
For the past two decades, brands have optimized for search. Page rank. Link juice. Featured snippets. But in a world of AI Overviews, Gemini Mode, and voice-first interfaces, those rules are breaking down.
Welcome to SRO: Summary Ranking Optimization.
SRO is what happens when we stop optimizing for links and start optimizing for how we’re interpreted by AI.
If you follow research like I do, you may have seen similar ideas before:
- AEO: Answer Engine Optimization
- GEO: Generative Engine Optimization
- AI Visibility Optimization (AIO)
But here’s where SRO is different: If SEO helped you show up, SRO helps you show up accurately.
It’s not about clicks – it’s about interpretability. It’s also about understanding in the language of your future customer.
Why SRO Matters
Generative AI isn’t surfacing web pages – it’s generating interpretations.
And whether you’re a publisher, product, or platform, your future visibility depends not on how well you’re indexed… …but on how you’re summarized.
New Game, New Metrics
Let’s break down the new scoreboard. If you saw the mock title image dashboard I posted, here’s what each metric actually means:
🟢 Emotional Framing
How are you cast in the story? Are you a solution? A liability? A “meh”? The tone AI assigns you can tilt perception before users even engage.
🔵 Brand Defaultness
Are you the default answer—or an optional mention? This is the AI equivalent of shelf space. If you’re not first, you’re filtered.
🟡 AI Summary Drift
Does your story change across platforms or prompts? One hallucination on Gemini. Another omission on ChatGPT. If you don’t monitor this, you won’t even know you’ve lost control.
🔴 Fact Inclusion
Are your real differentiators making it in? Many brands are discovering that their best features are being left on the cutting room floor.
These are the new KPIs of trust and brand coherence in an AI-mediated world.
So What Do You Do About It?
Let’s be real: most brands still think of AI as a tool for productivity. Copy faster. Summarize faster. Post faster.
But SRO reframes it entirely: AI is your customer’s first interface. And often, their last.
Here’s how to stay in the frame:
Audit how you’re summarized. Ask AI systems the questions your customers ask. What shows up? Who’s missing? Is that how you would describe yourself?
Structure for retrieval. Summaries are short because the context window is short. Use LLM-readable docs, concise phrasing, and consistent framing.
Track drift. Summaries change silently. Build systems—or partner with those who do—to detect how your representation evolves across model updates.
Reclaim your defaults. Don’t just chase facts. Shape how those facts are framed. Think like a prompt engineer, not a PR team.
Why Now?
Because if you don’t do it, someone else will – an agency (I’m looking at you ADMERASIA), a model trainer, or your competitor. And they won’t explain it. They’ll productize it. They’ll sell it back to you.
Probably, and in all likelihood, in a dashboard!
A Final Note (Before This Gets Summarized – And it will get summarized)
I’ve been writing about this shift in Designed to Be Understood—from the Explain-It-To-Me Economy to Understanding as a Service.
But SRO is the part no one wants to say out loud:
You’re not just trying to be ranked. You’re trying not to be replaced.
Ask Yourself This
If you found out your customers were hearing a version of your story you never wrote… what would you do?
Because they already are.
Let’s fix that—before someone else summarize It for you.
~Walter
