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Friday 15 May 2026 4:28 pm

Google built the internet economy. AI is rewriting it.

By: Freddie Bailey

Commercial Director - Halkin

Add as a preferred source on Google
Halkin conference room with modern decor, large meeting table, and cityscape view through floor-to-ceiling windows

For the last two decades, most businesses have competed for visibility.

Google rankings, paid search, website traffic, marketplace positioning and social reach became the foundations of modern customer acquisition. Entire industries were built around helping brands climb search results, generate clicks and capture online demand more efficiently than competitors.

That ecosystem created clear winners. Companies learned how to optimise websites, dominate search rankings and engineer discovery at scale. In many sectors, visibility itself became the commercial advantage.

But AI is quietly reshaping that entire model.

A growing debate within the technology and marketing world has focused on how artificial intelligence could compress traditional online sales funnels. Instead of manually filtering through pages of options, consumers increasingly ask AI-driven platforms to recommend outcomes directly.

That is a fundamentally different type of discovery.

Historically, search has largely operated as a filtering exercise. A customer searches broadly, narrows options and gradually works towards a decision. AI changes that dynamic entirely.

Instead of asking “show me serviced offices in London”, the query becomes far more specific and outcome-driven: find me a 30-desk office near Monument with strong breakout space, hospitality-led service, natural light and flexibility to scale over the next 12 months.

The same pattern is emerging across sectors. Consumers are no longer simply searching for products. Increasingly, they are asking systems to identify the best option for a particular outcome. That changes commercial priorities dramatically.

AI becomes less about presenting inventory and more about recommending trusted solutions. Visibility alone becomes less valuable. Recommendation becomes paramount.

Flexible offices may prove one of the clearest real estate examples of this shift because the market already behaves more like a consumer industry than a traditional property one. Faster decision-making, shorter commitment cycles and constant comparison between operators have made digital discovery central to the sector’s growth. And we are already seeing early signs of the transition.

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Client satisfaction metrics are becoming increasingly important, with operators investing more heavily into platforms such as Resonate and using Net Promoter Scores alongside structured client feedback not simply as operational tools, but as commercial signals. Google reviews are now actively encouraged throughout the client journey, with many operators integrating review requests directly into customer touchpoints and renewal discussions.

Reputation management has moved beyond marketing. Increasingly, it is becoming part of the sales infrastructure itself. And because recommendation engines naturally favour consistency, satisfaction and trust, that matters. The internet rewarded visibility. AI rewards quality.

This is also why expertise is unlikely to disappear, despite the inevitable predictions that accompany any technological shift. In the office market, there is frequent speculation around whether AI will reduce the role of brokers. The reality is probably the opposite at the top end of the market.

The lower-value parts of the process — filtering options, comparing specifications and narrowing shortlists — will inevitably become more automated. But the best brokers have never simply provided options. They act as advisers, negotiators and market interpreters. They understand growth trajectories, operational requirements and commercial risk in ways algorithms still cannot.

As markets become more complex, that strategic guidance arguably becomes more valuable, not less. In many ways, this mirrors what has already happened across multiple industries, where technology compresses administrative friction while increasing the value of genuine expertise.

What may change more materially is how brands compete for attention in the first place.

For years, much of modern marketing has revolved around lead generation mechanics: search rankings, paid acquisition, conversion funnels and traffic optimisation. Increasingly, businesses may need to think more carefully about trust, recognition and recommendation.

If AI narrows the shortlist before a customer even visits a website, brand becomes significantly more important. Companies consistently referenced, discussed and positively reviewed gain an advantage long before direct engagement begins.

That helps explain why so many businesses are now investing heavily into customer experience, content, hospitality, events and broader brand positioning. Across the flexible office market there has been a noticeable shift away from simply marketing desks and square footage towards building recognisable operator identities with clearer positioning and stronger customer engagement.

At Halkin, we have invested heavily into exactly that over the past year. Not simply because branding looks good in a pitch deck, but because the market increasingly rewards businesses with a recognisable identity and reputation for delivery. Increasingly, the experience around the product becomes part of the product itself.

That may ultimately become one of the defining commercial shifts of the AI era. The last two decades rewarded those best at capturing attention. The next will reward those most trusted by the systems directing it.

Read more

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