Google Just Annexed Your Customer Relationship and Left You the Blueprints to Fight Back
29 mai 2026 • 5 Minute Read • Tod Szewczyk, Directeur principal, services marketing
Years ago, managing the Google relationship at an iconic Chicago ad agency, I brought our Executive Vice President of Strategy the first major study from Unskippable Labs, Google's creative effectiveness research team.
It was a rigorous breakdown of what worked in automotive advertising on YouTube (ABCDs). Sensing a power shift, she looked at it and said, "This is how creativity gets killed in advertising."
She meant data was becoming an intermediary between creative instinct and the final call. That concern looks modest now.
The nature of that power shift has evolved beyond creative optimization.
What Google announced at I/O 2026 puts an intermediary between your brand and your customer at every stage that used to belong to you.
Google now sits in the middle of the query, the research phase, the cart, and even the purchase itself.
Nilay Patel asked the right question on the Vergecast: when Gemini can find things for you, make things for you, and buy things for you, are you even searching anymore?
The version that matters for marketing leaders: when Google can find your customer, advise your customer, hold their cart, and process their payment, what does your brand actually own?
What Google Actually Built at I/O 2026
Interpret the following changes as strategic platform layer changes, rather than product features or UX updates.
The Requirements Google Published and Most Brands Can't Meet
Every announcement came with a set of eligibility criteria. Most teams are treating them as a technology problem for someone else to solve. That's a mistake.
AI Mode and information agents need modular, extractable content, FAQ sections, comparison architecture, and use-case-specific copy that AI can cite without the surrounding page. If your content was written to be read top to bottom, it won't make the shortlist.
Universal Cart requires complete, accurate Merchant Center feeds. If your data is stale or if the data is misattributed, it means no cart eligibility.
AI Overviews, now reaching 2.5 billion monthly users, cite brands with consistent entity presence across the web. Schema, publisher mentions, review volume, and retailer product pages all need to tell the same story. As a result, fragmented signals are increasingly a disqualifier.
Personal Intelligence needs to understand your brand as a consistent entity, including what you sell, who you serve, and what makes you the right answer for a specific need. Ambiguous positioning doesn't survive this level of personalization.
This is a data infrastructure problem, a content architecture problem, and a brand clarity problem. Most marketing organizations aren't structured to address all three at once.
What Your Brand Actually Owns
Your website matters more now than it ever has. It's still the primary source of truth that AI systems read and recommend from. AI answers are increasingly grounded in your site content, product data, schema, and feed.
What's at stake is the direct relationship with your customer.
There's a meaningful difference between a customer who visits your site and buys, and one whose agent evaluates you in the background, puts you on a shortlist, routes the transaction through Universal Cart, and completes the purchase without a single session touching your analytics. Both look like a sale. Only one gives you a customer relationship.
Feeding Google clean data is how you control how you're described in the systems your customers now depend on. Give it bad data and incomplete feeds, and you get described inaccurately, excluded from shortlists, and invisible to agents.
Three Things That Change Right Now
1. Audit how AI currently describes you
Ask ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity to recommend a brand like yours. See if you appear, how you're framed, and whether any of it is wrong. The gap between how you describe yourself and how AI describes you is the size of your problem. Map it before your competitors do.
2. Build your website for extraction, not just conversion
Your content needs to do two things at once: convert the humans who visit and provide AI systems with clean, modular, citable material that stands on its own. Restructure key pages around FAQ blocks and comparison content. Expand schema and treat your Merchant Center feed as a primary product surface, because for Universal Cart, it is.
3. Build a measurement for a funnel that starts before the click
GA4 can't see the consideration stage anymore. You need to track AI recommendation share, prompt inclusion rate, and AI-referred session quality separately. AI-referred conversion is already running 4.4 times higher than standard organic. Set a baseline now, before the agentic era makes invisible starting positions the norm.
Google Built Itself Into the Middle of Your Customer Relationship
Treating I/O 2026 as just another SEO update is the mistake most brands will make.
Look at what actually happened: the query forms before a visit. Consideration runs inside an agent. The cart is Google's. The transaction is Google's. By the time a sale shows up in your data, it may have passed through four layers of Google infrastructure that your brand can't see.
My EVP at that Chicago agency worried that data would intervene between creatives and their instincts.
What Google announced at I/O does something more foundational.
It serves as an intermediary between your brand and your customer at every stage that used to belong to you.
The brands building toward this infrastructure now are protecting more than traffic. They're protecting the customer relationship itself.
Google handed you the blueprints. The question is whether your organization can read them.
See Where You Stand Before Your Competitors Do
Verndale's Complimentary SEO, GEO, & AEO Assessment covers the full stack across technical and on-page readiness, entity authority, AI inclusion rate across priority prompts, feed completeness, and agentic commerce readiness for the Universal Cart era.
Because in the next era of search, visibility depends on whether AI systems can confidently understand, recommend, and transact with your brand.
Get in touch, and let's start with how AI currently describes your business.
Sources: Google I/O 2026 keynote, Sundar Pichai and Elizabeth Reid | Google Search I/O 2026 Blog | Google Shopping: Universal Cart | TechCrunch: Google Search as you know it is over | The Vergcast May 22, 2026 | Google AI Mode Usage Report May 2026 | BrandCapsule AI Visibility Report 2025 | Google "The Rise of the Super-Empowered Consumer," Feb 2026