Article
Creating a Licensing Strategy for AI-Ready Content
Victor AyacheWhat is a recession?
The rule of thumb is two consecutive quarters of declining growth. High unemployment, decreased spending, high inflation, lower consumer purchasing power, low consumer confidence, poor investment performance, and panics are all characteristics. Since the COVID-19 pandemic, logistics and energy tensions, the war in Ukraine, and now in the Middle East, along with persistent high inflation, all contribute to forecasts of growth in 2022-2024 being below average performance in the last 30 years. Although global growth showed resilience in 2023 and inflation rates are falling, we are still below historical averages. We are pretty much in a recession.
Creating a Licensing Strategy for AI-Ready
In today’s AI-driven discovery landscape, it is no longer enough for brands to provide only product descriptions and specifications. Large Language Models (LLMs) and generative engines increasingly rely on rich, contextual content such as peer reviews, editorial features, tutorials, and high-quality images to provide accurate and engaging answers to user queries. Brands that strategically license their content to these AI systems position themselves for enhanced visibility, credibility, and authority. Licensing ensures that your materials are ingested, understood, and referenced consistently across AI-powered platforms.
Beyond Text: Leveraging Images and Multimedia
Traditional SEO primarily relies on text-based signals including keywords in titles, headings, meta descriptions, alt text, and links. Images alone cannot be fully interpreted by search engines in the same way text can. They can contribute to engagement or appear in Google Image Search, but the underlying ranking signals still depend on textual content. LLMs and multimodal AI engines can process both text and images. Licensing high-resolution product photos or editorial visuals allows AI models to interpret the content of images directly, not just the surrounding text or metadata.
When AI engines consistently draw from your licensed materials, your products gain credibility and authoritative presence in digital ecosystems. For high-end or design-focused brands, visuals and storytelling are central to consumer perception, making licensing a powerful tool for brand recognition.
Creating Content That AI Can Use
Not all content delivers equal value to AI discovery. Brands should prioritize assets that improve both comprehension and context for LLMs. High-resolution product images that clearly showcase details, textures, and applications are essential, while editorial features, tutorials, and peer reviews provide context and practical insights that AI models can summarize and reference. By licensing these materials, brands ensure their products are understood in the same way a human reviewer might explain them, giving AI the confidence to surface them in responses and recommendations.
Implementing a Licensing Strategy
A successful licensing approach requires planning, structure, and careful management of rights. Brands need to identify AI platforms and LLM providers capable of ingesting both visual and textual content and structure assets with descriptive metadata, captions, and categories to ensure proper interpretation. Licensing terms should allow AI usage while protecting intellectual property, and ongoing monitoring of engagement ensures content is referenced accurately. This approach allows brands to extend into AI-driven discovery channels while maintaining control over how their materials are presented, increasing visibility and strengthening credibility.
Looking Ahead
As AI continues to transform product discovery, licensing high-quality content will become a core part of digital strategy. Brands that adopt this approach early, especially microbrands, will benefit from greater exposure, higher trust, and stronger alignment with AI-powered commerce trends. In the next article, we will explore content integration for photographic work, a topic deserving dedicated discussion due to licensing, media rights, and AI ingestion considerations.