Last week, I read a Cision roundup of PR stats and one line made me pause.
Only 45% of communications leaders said content creation was a top priority. Cision
That number is odd because content is no longer a side project. Content is what powers everything else we say we want: trust, visibility, media interest, search demand and sales conversations that start warmer than “So what do you all do?”
If 2026 is the year your brand wants to be the obvious answer, content marketing is not optional. It is the system.
The quick takeaways
Always on beats campaign mode. Buyers do not make decisions on launch day. They decide in the weeks of small touches leading up to it.
Search is now a mix of Google, TikTok, Reddit and AI answers. If your content cannot be cited, summarized and trusted, you lose visibility even when you “rank.”
Authenticity is now a performance advantage. People have a growing sensitivity to content that feels machine-stamped or overly polished.
Google’s E-E-A-T still matters. Experience, expertise, authoritativeness and trust are also the signals AI systems look for when they decide what to repeat.
Why is content marketing the foundation in 2026
PR used to live on a press release, a pitch and a prayer.
Now PR lives on a search results page, a LinkedIn scroll, a podcast clip, an AI summary and a buyer who wants proof before they take your meeting.
Content is the proof.
It is where your expertise shows up in public. It is where prospects learn your language. It is what reporters check before they reply. It is what AI tools pull from when someone asks, “Who is credible in this space?”
When content is thin, everything downstream gets harder. Pitches feel generic. LinkedIn posts feel like fillers. Sales teams lack stories. Google sees nothing worth ranking. AI sees nothing worth citing.
What replaces campaign-led thinking?
Campaigns are neat. They fit into a quarter. They come with a launch date and a hero asset and a victory slide.
But buying decisions do not happen on your schedule.
Most decisions get shaped by a long chain of small moments: a short video someone sends to a colleague, a newsletter that answers a specific question, a case story that sounds like their situation, a quote that feels like it came from a real person. Cision’s own reporting calls out the shift toward “always on” work.
Always on does not mean posting nonstop. It means building a simple engine that keeps your expertise visible even when you are not launching anything.
What does always on look like in practice?
A weekly or biweekly point of view that answers one buyer's question
A monthly proof piece that shows outcomes, not adjectives
A steady stream of short social posts pulled from real work, real conversations and real client outcomes
A distribution plan that does not rely on “we posted it”
If your 2026 plan has three major campaigns and a quiet calendar in between, your competitors will own the weeks when buyers are actively researching.
Why 2026 content needs to be written for AI answers, not only Google clicks
Don’t get me wrong, Google still matters. But it is no longer the only front door.
People ask ChatGPT, Claude and Perplexity for comparisons, recommendations and summaries. They search TikTok for “what to buy” and Reddit for “what is it really like.” AI-driven shopping and zero-click experiences are pulling clicks away from the old discovery model.
Just today, we took a new client call. Early in the conversation I asked the question I always ask, “Where did you find us?”
Their answer was short and sweet.
“I asked ChatGPT.”
No Google search. No referral from a friend. No scrolling through pages of agency sites. They typed a question into Chat, got a list of options and we were on it.
That moment is the new reality check for 2026. Your buyer does not need to click ten links to form an opinion. They can get a summary in seconds. If your content is not built to show up inside that summary, you are invisible even if your website is strong.
So, the goal changes. You still want rankings and traffic. But you also want content that reads like an answer. Clear language. Specific proof. Real examples. A point of view that feels like it came from a person who has done the work.
So, the goal changes.
In 2026, content has two jobs:
Get cited and trusted when someone asks for an AI tool
That second job is new to many teams. It also explains why E-E-A-T is back on the main stage.
The E-E-A-T reality check
Google’s Quality Rater Guidelines make trust the core of E-E-A-T.
For your content, which means your pages need signals that a human would trust and that an algorithm can verify:
Clear authorship and credentials
Specific experience, not vague “we help brands”
Sources and citations when you reference claims
Real examples, real numbers, real context
Evidence that your expertise exists outside your own website
That is not “SEO fluff.” That is credibility engineering.
Why authenticity wins and glossy content loses ground?
A lot of teams are learning the hard way that polishing does not automatically mean persuasive.
There is growing evidence of a trust penalty around AI-generated marketing content and rising consumer concern about authenticity.
Bynder’s study also found that many consumers can identify AI-generated copy and reported lower engagement when they suspect content is AI-made.
This is not an anti-AI rant. AI can help teams work faster and think more broadly.
But if your output reads like it was assembled from five competitor blogs and a prompt, people feel it. Sometimes they cannot name it. They just scroll.
What “authentic” actually means in 2026
Authentic content is not messy on purpose. It is specific on purpose.
A founder describing a decision they made and what it cost
An employee explaining how they solved a customer problem
A customer story told in the customer’s language
A behind-the-scenes lesson that a competitor cannot copy
The most convincing content in 2026 will sound like someone who has done the work talking to someone who needs it.
The part that too many comms teams miss
That 45% stat (45% of communications leaders said content creation was a top priority) matters for another reason.
Content is not just a priority. It takes real capability to do it well.
Cision’s report also notes a gap between prioritizing content and feeling “excellent” at telling a compelling brand story.
I see that gap frequently. The brand is smart. The leadership team is experienced. The marketing team is stretched. Then the content becomes “one more thing,” and the calendar fills with posts that sound like no one.
That is why 2026 content marketing needs a system, not a scramble.
Frequently asked questions about content marketing in 2026
1) How often should we publish content in 2026 to stay visible?
Aim for a cadence you can sustain for six to 12 months. For many teams, that looks like one strong long-form piece every one to two weeks, plus three to five short-form posts pulled from it. At TrizCom PR, we build an always-on calendar that matches your team’s capacity and keeps publishing steady without turning into a scramble.
2) What content formats are most likely to show up in AI answers?
AI tools tend to pull from pages that answer a question clearly and then support the answer with proof. “Explainer” pages, comparison pages, FAQs, glossaries and original research posts are often easier for AI to cite than brand storytelling alone. At TrizCom PR, we map these formats to your buyer questions so your content gets pulled into both AI summaries and search results.
3) How do we track whether AI tools are mentioning our brand?
Start by searching your category questions (incognito) inside the tools your buyers use (ChatGPT, Google Gemini (Google), Perplexity, Claude (Anthropic), Microsoft Copilot, Grok (xAI), Meta AI or Character.AI and document what shows up each month. Then watch for referral traffic from AI sources in your analytics and track brand mentions in earned media and community threads that AI tools commonly reference. At TrizCom PR, we use a number of paid platforms that allow us to track share-of-answer alongside rankings and referrals so you can see where you are showing up and where you are missing.
4) How do you decide which topics to own as a brand?
Choose topics where you have lived experience, a clear point of view and proof you can share. If your sales team hears the same question every week, that topic belongs on your content calendar. At TrizCom PR, we turn those repeat sales questions into a focused topic map (thought leadership) so your brand becomes the go-to answer in your category.
5) What is the fastest content upgrade that improves E-E-A-T?
Add clear authorship and a detailed author box to your highest traffic pages, then strengthen them with specific examples and citations where relevant. Updating outdated pages often moves the needle faster than publishing brand new ones. At TrizCom PR, we prioritize “money pages” first and rebuild them with proof, author credibility and clear next steps.
6) How do we repurpose one piece of content without it feeling repetitive?
Repurposing works when you change the angle, not just the format. Pull one stat, one story, one framework and one contrarian takeaway and turn each into its own post, video or newsletter section. At TrizCom PR, we design content to be repurposed from day one, so one strong piece becomes a full month of distribution.
7) Should leaders write content themselves or can a team ghostwrite it?
A team can ghostwrite, but leaders still need to provide the raw material: stories, opinions, and the real trade-offs behind decisions. The best process is a short interview that turns their lived experience into content without adding more work to their week. At TrizCom PR, we interview leaders, capture their point of view and turn it into publish-ready content that still sounds like them.
What is the best way to use AI tools without sounding like everyone else?
Use AI for outlines, idea expansion, editing and research organization, then replace generic sections with your real examples, metrics and language. If a sentence could apply to any competitor, it is a signal to rewrite it with specifics. At TrizCom PR, we use AI as an assistant, not the author, and we anchor every piece in real proof, so it reads human and credible.
How does media relations and content marketing work together in 2026?
Earned media gives you third-party credibility, and content gives you a place to send attention when coverage hits. When you plan them together, your coverage links to pages that build trust, answer questions, and convert, rather than dumping visitors on a homepage. At TrizCom PR, we align pitches with the right landing pages, so every placement strengthens search visibility and pipeline, not just awareness.
When should a brand use sponsored content instead of earned media?
Sponsored content makes sense when you need guaranteed reach in a specific niche, timeline or geography. Earned media makes sense when you need credibility and long tail trust, so many brands use sponsored placements to amplify proof that earned coverage already created. At TrizCom PR, we help brands use sponsored placements strategically so they extend earned credibility instead of replacing it.
How is AI search content different from organic search content?
Organic search content is written to win a click. AI search content is written to win a citation.
Google still sends traffic when you rank for the right keywords. But AI tools often answer the question inside the interface. They draw from sources that appear clear, credible and easy to summarize. That changes how you write and how you structure the page.
What does organic search rewards most?
Matching keywords and intent
Strong on-page structure with helpful depth
Internal links that guide people to the next step
Fast pages and clean technical SEO
Backlinks that signal authority
What does AI search rewards most?
Direct answers that can be quoted in one or two sentences
Clear claims backed by evidence, examples, data or sources
Strong E E A-T signals like author bio, credentials, real experience
Scannable formatting that makes it easy to extract key points
Consistent terminology so the model understands who you are and what you do
The simplest way to think about it
Organic search asks: “Will someone click this?”
AI search asks: “Is this safe to repeat?”
How to write one piece for both
Start each section with a plain language question, then answer it in the first 2 to 3 sentences
Add proof right after the answer, like a metric, a mini case story, a quote, a citation or a specific example
Use short headings, bullets and labeled steps so AI can lift clean chunks
Include an author box and update dates so trust is obvious
Add a FAQ section that mirrors how people talk, not how marketers write
If your content reads like an answer, it can rank on Google and show up in AI summaries without you having to create two separate versions.
A simple content engine for 2026
Here is a structure that works across industries, whether you run a cybersecurity firm, a professional services team or a wellness brand.
1) What do buyers ask before they trust you?
Collect the real questions from:
Sales calls
Customer support tickets
RFP language
DMs and comments
The questions your team gets at events
Reddit threads
Those questions are your editorial plan. Not trend lists.
2) What proof can you publish without breaking confidentiality?
Proof is not always a full case study.
Proof can be:
A before-and-after metric with context
A decision framework you use with clients
A lesson learned from a project
A myth you see in your industry and why it persists
3) What can your team say that AI cannot invent?
AI can remix. It cannot live your meetings.
Pull content from:
The debates your team has behind closed doors
The mistakes you stopped making years ago
The tradeoffs you choose and why
The advice you give clients do not want to hear but need
That is where your differentiation hides.
4) How will each piece get distributed?
Publishing is not distribution.
Build a plan for:
One owned channel that compounds, like a blog or landing page
One LinkedIn Article
One third-party channel where you show up with expertise, like podcasts, trades or community platforms
Earned media that builds third-party credibility, like interviews, contributed (byline) articles or press coverage in outlets your buyers trust
Sponsored content that puts your message in front of the right audience, like newsletter placements, podcast sponsorships or paid features in trade publications
5) What will you measure that is not vanity?
Likes are not useless. They are just incomplete.
In 2026, useful signals include:
Search impressions for high-intent questions
Referral traffic from credible sites
Newsletter replies and forwards
Mentions in the places your buyer’s trust
A few lines worth stealing
· Content is the evidence your PR runs on.
In 2026, the brands that win are the ones AI can cite and humans can trust.
Always on is not a posting schedule. It is a credibility habit.
Authentic beats polished because specificity beats performance.
Content Creation in 2026
If content creation is a top priority for only 45% of communications leaders, the other 55% are leaving visibility and trust to chance.
In 2026, content marketing is the simplest lever that improves every channel at once: PR, organic search, AI search visibility, social performance and sales readiness.
Not because you publish more.
Because you publish what only you can say, you publish it consistently and you make it easy for both people and machines to trust.
Want your brand to show up when buyers ask AI
If your team is still treating content as “nice to have,” 2026 will make that expensive. TrizCom PR helps leaders turn expertise into a content system that earns trust across Google, AI answers, social and earned media. If you want your brand to be the name that shows up when someone types “Who do you trust for this?” let’s talk.
Everyone has a story. Let TrizCom PR tell yours.
Author
Jo Trizila, Founder & CEO, TrizCom Public Relations
Jo Trizila leads Dallas‑based TrizCom PR, an award‑winning digital public relations agency she founded in 2008. She has guided integrated PR programs for startups, middle‑market companies and national brands, with deep experience in crisis communications, expert positioning and data‑driven media strategy.
Jo is also the creator of Pitch PR, a press release distribution company and a frequent speaker on earned media ROI, including sessions at the Earned Media Mastery virtual summit.
For more information contact jo@trizcom.com or 214-242-9282.
