EPISODE · Jun 23, 2026 · 1 MIN
643 - Why CEOs Are Invisible to AI Search
from The Daily Hint with Jens Heitland · host Jens Heitland
Why CEOs Are Invisible to AI SearchFor most of the last decade, findability meant one thing. Someone heard your name, typed it into Google, and what came back defined how you were perceived. The ecosystem was relatively simple. You either had a presence there or you did not.That has changed, and the shift happened faster than most people in senior positions have had time to notice. Over the last twenty-four months, the way people search for others has shifted in a way most organizational leaders are not prepared for. A growing share of professional searches now happens through AI platforms. ChatGPT, Perplexity, and others have become the first stop for people who want to understand who someone is before they reach out, before they accept a meeting, before they decide whether a person is credible.What that means in practice is this: when someone puts a name into one of those platforms, the AI does not return a list of links. It returns a summary. It synthesizes what it can find across the internet and presents a compressed version of who that person appears to be, based on what has been published, indexed, and associated with their name.The gap I repeatedly see is that most senior leaders have not created the conditions for that summary to reflect what they actually want it to reflect. The public record that AI draws from exists, but it has not been shaped. It has not been structured. And so what gets surfaced tends to be incomplete, generic, or in some cases, simply absent.This is not a communications problem. It is a strategic one. A CEO's public credibility is now partly held in systems they did not design and have not engaged with. The information environment that shapes how they are perceived by potential partners, board members, investors, or future hires is being constructed without their input.What I observe, working alongside leaders who take this seriously, is that the process of shaping that public record is not as complex as it sounds, but it does require a deliberate decision to engage with it. A reasonably consistent presence across the right platforms, content that reflects genuine thinking, and enough continuity over time for AI systems to index a coherent picture, that is typically what it takes. The timeline tends to be between three and four months before the difference becomes visible in search results.The decision itself is the harder part. It requires a senior leader to look at their current digital footprint, assess what AI would say about them today if someone searched their name, and decide whether that output is acceptable. In most cases, when that question gets asked seriously, the answer points toward action.Findability has always mattered. The infrastructure through which it happens has shifted, and the window for shaping it remains open.Highlights:00:00 Findability Matters Now00:04 From Google to AI Search00:26 AI Summaries and CEO Gaps00:57 Owning Your Public Record01:09 Timeline and Taking ActionLinks:https://www.jensheitland.com/links
What this episode covers
Why CEOs Are Invisible to AI SearchFor most of the last decade, findability meant one thing. Someone heard your name, typed it into Google, and what came back defined how you were perceived. The ecosystem was relatively simple. You either had a presence there or you did not.That has changed, and the shift happened faster than most people in senior positions have had time to notice. Over the last twenty-four months, the way people search for others has shifted in a way most organizational leaders are not prepared for. A growing share of professional searches now happens through AI platforms. ChatGPT, Perplexity, and others have become the first stop for people who want to understand who someone is before they reach out, before they accept a meeting, before they decide whether a person is credible.What that means in practice is this: when someone puts a name into one of those platforms, the AI does not return a list of links. It returns a summary. It synthesizes what it can find across the internet and presents a compressed version of who that person appears to be, based on what has been published, indexed, and associated with their name.The gap I repeatedly see is that most senior leaders have not created the conditions for that summary to reflect what they actually want it to reflect. The public record that AI draws from exists, but it has not been shaped. It has not been structured. And so what gets surfaced tends to be incomplete, generic, or in some cases, simply absent.This is not a communications problem. It is a strategic one. A CEO's public credibility is now partly held in systems they did not design and have not engaged with. The information environment that shapes how they are perceived by potential partners, board members, investors, or future hires is being constructed without their input.What I observe, working alongside leaders who take this seriously, is that the process of shaping that public record is not as complex as it sounds, but it does require a deliberate decision to engage with it. A reasonably consistent presence across the right platforms, content that reflects genuine thinking, and enough continuity over time for AI systems to index a coherent picture, that is typically what it takes. The timeline tends to be between three and four months before the difference becomes visible in search results.The decision itself is the harder part. It requires a senior leader to look at their current digital footprint, assess what AI would say about them today if someone searched their name, and decide whether that output is acceptable. In most cases, when that question gets asked seriously, the answer points toward action.Findability has always mattered. The infrastructure through which it happens has shifted, and the window for shaping it remains open.Highlights:00:00 Findability Matters Now00:04 From Google to AI Search00:26 AI Summaries and CEO Gaps00:57 Owning Your Public Record01:09 Timeline and Taking ActionLinks:https://www.jensheitland.com/links
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643 - Why CEOs Are Invisible to AI Search
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