Over three decades, I've watched consumer behavior evolve across television, search, and social media. Each shift changed tactics, but not the underlying logic of decision-making.
What I am watching happen right now is different. And I know I am not alone. Every seasoned marketing professional I speak to, whether they built their career in offline media or digital platforms, says some version of the same thing: something fundamental has shifted, and the old playbooks are no longer working the way they used to.
This is not just a platform change. It is a psychological one. For the first time in my career, I am watching users move from searching for information to seeking certainty, and that distinction changes everything.
When Behavior Was Predictable
I remember the era when a celebrity's face on a television screen was essentially a guarantee. Brand loyalty tracked closely with fan loyalty. If your brand ambassador had a devoted following, that following would follow them to your product. It was a simple, time-tested formula: attention creates association, association creates purchase. And it worked, consistently, for decades.
When the internet arrived, it digitized that predictability rather than dismantling it. Google and Yahoo turned discovery into a structured, keyword-driven system. Users searched, engines returned ranked results, and businesses that showed up at the top of those results won the customer. For the better part of a decade, through multiple algorithm updates, through the rise of paid search, through the SEO arms race, the core principle held: be visible, and you will be chosen.
Both eras rewarded the same thing: reach. Who could get in front of the most people, most often? That question shaped marketing strategy for nearly thirty years.
What Has Actually Changed
The change I am describing is not about which platform is winning or losing. It runs deeper than that, it is about how people make decisions.
Celebrity credibility has eroded in a way it simply had not before. It is not that people distrust celebrities, it is that modern consumers understand the commercial ecosystem they operate inside. They know that an endorsement is a transaction. And with global information available at their fingertips at all times, they also know that a single endorsement is not a sufficient reason to spend money.
Younger consumers in particular, Gen Z and late millennials, have moved almost entirely toward first-hand experience. Their own experience, or that of someone in their immediate circle, their age group, their specific context. Not someone famous. Someone relatable. And even then, they verify.
The online and offline distinction has also largely dissolved. A consumer who sees a product in a store will pull out their phone before they put it in their cart. A consumer who hears a recommendation from a friend will cross-check it before acting on it. The behaviors that once lived in separate worlds, browsing a physical shelf, reading an online review, asking a peer, now happen simultaneously, fluidly, and constantly.
What the Research Showed Me
To test whether what I was observing professionally reflected broader behavioral patterns, I ran an in-person field survey from mid-2025, nearly 500 people, not a formal academic study, but a deliberately diverse one: college students, working professionals, homemakers, and retirees across different age groups and economic backgrounds. The results confirmed the pattern I had been sensing.
Among 16 to 20 year olds, 87% said their primary trust for purchase decisions sits with friends, parents or teachers, people in their immediate circle. In the 21 to 30 age group, 73% blend peer input with social media and select individuals they follow, but 96% of that same group said they re-verify suggestions before acting on them. Nearly everyone. Among 31 to 40 year olds, 65% exhibit similar verification behavior. Even in the 41-and-above segment, 44% now follow the same pattern, slower adoption, but the same direction.
The common thread across every age group: trust is no longer accepted. It is earned and then verified. Consumers of every generation have become active validators, not passive recipients.
Are LLMs an Innovation or a Response to Market Pressure?
Looking at technology history, a pattern emerges roughly every ten to fifteen years: radio gave way to television, television to the internet, the internet to search engines, search engines to social media. Each revolution did not just create a new platform, it changed how buyers behaved. Which means, if you are a marketer trying to understand the AI era, the first question is not “how do I optimize for this platform?” It is “how has buyer behavior changed, and why?”
The rise of large language models – ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and others, is a direct response to the psychological shift I have been describing. These tools did not create the verification instinct in modern consumers. They answered it.
Traditional search engines offered a list of options and left the user to sort through competing claims. LLMs synthesize. They aggregate information from multiple sources and return a structured answer. For a consumer whose instinct is to verify, cross-check, and reach certainty before deciding, that is not just convenient, it is exactly what they were already trying to do, done faster.
Here is the insight that I think gets missed: the tech giants who have invested most aggressively in this space – OpenAI, Google, Microsoft – were not motivated purely by innovation. They understood something more uncomfortable. The audience that once lived on their platforms was fragmenting. Attention was splitting across social media, e-commerce platforms, and dozens of other channels. LLMs are, in part, a strategic attempt to re-aggregate that audience under a single, trusted interface.
They are not building these tools because they want to. They are building them because remaining passive risks losing the next interface layer of the internet.
And that changes the stakes considerably. Because an LLM that users trust enough to make purchase decisions through is an LLM that must remain unbiased. The moment users sense commercial favoritism in a recommendation, they abandon it, and move to the next tool that feels more neutral. The entire value proposition of these platforms depends on being perceived as trustworthy.
What This Means for Brands
The shift from visibility to credibility is not a subtle one. In the old paradigm, a brand that showed up frequently enough and loudly enough would eventually be chosen. In this paradigm, showing up is necessary, but nowhere near sufficient. If your brand cannot survive the moment a potential customer decides to verify your claims, through an AI tool, peer networks, reviews, or independent sources, you are unlikely to remain in the consideration set.
A useful example of this shift can be seen in how consumers now make even relatively small purchase decisions. A user may first discover a product through TikTok or Instagram, search for reviews on YouTube, cross-check opinions on Reddit, compare alternatives through Google, and finally ask ChatGPT or Perplexity to summarize the best option before purchasing. What matters is not the number of platforms involved, but the behavior itself.
Another example: Take a procurement manager evaluating CX outsourcing vendors. They may first encounter a shortlist through an AI Overview, cross-check reviews on Clutch, G2 or Trustpilot, look for case studies on the vendor's site, scan Reddit or industry forums for unfiltered opinions, and finally ask ChatGPT to compare the top options. A company that has invested in verified reviews, documented case studies, and third-party editorial coverage survives that journey. One that hasn't, doesn't.
Consumers are no longer relying on a single source of authority. They are building confidence through layered verification, and for brands, that behavioral shift has a concrete consequence.
Practically, this means thinking less about impression count and more about information integrity. Are your claims verifiable? Are you consistent across every surface a user might check – your website, third-party reviews, forum discussions, AI-generated summaries? Is there enough legitimate, high-quality information within trusted ecosystems for an LLM to surface your brand accurately? These are not marketing questions. They are infrastructure questions.
Most brands are still optimizing for the old game: reach, frequency, creative impact. The ones pulling ahead are doing something different. They are making themselves easy to trust at the exact moment a skeptical consumer decides to look closer, not by being louder, but by having nothing to hide when someone does.
The Deeper Shift
What I keep coming back to, after everything I observed in my survey and in three decades of watching markets move, is that the underlying human need has not changed. People have always wanted to feel certain before they commit. What has changed is the threshold for that certainty, and the speed at which they expect to reach it.
Search has not become less important. It has become more decisive. Increasingly, users are not looking merely to explore; they are looking to reduce uncertainty quickly. And if your brand cannot be part of that moment, in a way that holds up to scrutiny, then in that specific moment of decision, your brand simply does not exist.
That is a harder problem than getting your SEO right. But it is also a more honest one, because it forces brands to ask not just “how do I get found?” but “do I deserve to be chosen?”
In the AI era, that is the only question that actually matters.