All postsTakes

Google just told the market AI content isn't the moat. Structured product data is.

Purva Gupta · Co-founder & CEO · May 18, 2026 · 3 min read
View on LinkedIn

Google just published an official guide on optimizing for AI search and quietly collapsed the premise behind a vendor category that's been raising money for eighteen months.

The guide explicitly dismisses:

  • llms.txt files
  • chunking content for AI consumption
  • rewriting pages specifically for AI systems
  • engineering mentions across the web
  • generating content variants for every fan-out query.

That last one Google flagged as a spam policy violation, which is the part that should make people pause.

A lot of CMOs have already signed contracts with consultancies built around these tactics. Some agencies built their entire pitch on the exact playbook Google just rejected. And there are content programs scaling AI-generated query variants across thousands of pages that, as of this week, may now represent spam risk instead of growth leverage.

What actually works for retailers is the same “boring” infrastructure that has always worked:

  • Merchant Center feeds
  • complete product attributes
  • accurate Business Profiles
  • structured product data

That's the real moat, the structural product layer.

We've consistently seen this with the retailers we work with: no amount of content tricks reliably lifts revenue or impressions over time. Growth comes when product data is complete, accurate, and structured at the attribute level.

Yes, ChatGPT, Claude, and other answer engines may evaluate authority differently. But the platforms driving retail revenue today are still Google surfaces: Search, Shopping, Maps, Discover, and YouTube. And Google just told the market that for retailers the future isn't AI-optimized content. It's structured, trustworthy, machine-readable product data.

See Lily in action

Book a personalized demo and see how Lily can grow your retail revenue.

Related Blogs

Takes

The most expensive thing in retail right now

Brands are pouring attention into a future that isn't generating revenue yet, while the surfaces actually producing revenue today get treated like settled infrastructure. A preview of my CommerceNext session with Ken Pilot and Noam Paransky.

By Purva Gupta

Takes

You don't have an agency problem. You have an input problem.

A CMO fired three paid agencies in two years and decided you can't find a good one anymore. The real problem was upstream: the old agency edge has been commoditized, and the leverage has moved to the inputs only the brand controls.

By Purva Gupta