Most CMOs are still measuring impressions. Impressions are 2014.
The Condé Nast CEO just made that impossible to ignore. A year ago, Roger Lynch told his teams to plan as if search traffic is zero. This week he said it on a national broadcast and told the Financial Times that Google search is “no longer a meaningful driver” of traffic to his properties.
Lynch is a visionary media executive — he saw the structural shift before his peers, moved a year early, and named it without spin. Marketers should treat his statement as a budget signal, not a publishing headline.
Here’s the signal. The funnel no longer starts with a search box. It starts with a question typed into an AI engine — ChatGPT, Claude, Perplexity, Gemini, Google AI Overviews. The engine answers. The answer names a short list of brands. Your brand is on that list, or it is not in the buyer’s consideration set. There is no page two.
That single change makes a new metric the most important number in marketing: Citation Share — the rate at which your brand appears when an AI engine answers a category question that should belong to you.
It is measurable. We measured it. My firm audited the Condé Nast portfolio across all five engines — 300 prompts, 12,000 prompt-engine data points — and graded it A− in aggregate. The methodology that grades a publisher grades a brand exactly the same way.
For a marketing organization, three implications.
Your reporting is measuring the wrong layer. Reach, CTR, and impressions describe a discovery system that is being replaced. They will look healthy while Citation Share quietly goes to a competitor.
Paid won’t fix it. You cannot buy your way into a synthesized answer. The engines cite brands that earn structured, consistent authority across sources the model trusts. That is earned media plus owned authority plus GEO — Generative Engine Optimization — run as one system.
This is a now problem. Forty percent of product research already starts inside an AI engine. The gap between category leaders and laggards in Citation Share is wider than anything we saw in the SEO era — and it compounds, because engines reinforce the brands they already cite.
Lynch had the vision to call the shift early and the candor to say it plainly. The marketing leaders who win the next decade will do the same thing inside their own organizations — retire the vanity metric, adopt Citation Share, and build the infrastructure before the crisis, not during it.
The buyer asks AI before they ask anyone else. The only question is whether the answer is you.
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Ronn Torossian is Founder and Chairman of 5W, the AI Communications Firm, and a two-time published author. The full study is at 5wpr.com/research/conde-nast-ai-citation-portfolio-2026.

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