AI does not cite brands. It cites sources with a specific shape: independent, structured, repeated, third-party-written. You become visible not by producing more content, but by becoming the kind of entity such sources write about.
This is the pattern that makes the other four actionable. If the first four name what is broken, Source-Shape names the structural repair. It is the hardest pattern to see, because it is never about a single piece of content. It is about the texture of the coverage your brand is the subject of.
AI retrieval systems learn, over millions of training examples, what a trustworthy source looks like. A Wikipedia article. A Financial Times feature. A Serious Eats taste test. A Gartner quadrant. A peer-reviewed paper. A Reddit thread with multiple commenters agreeing. The shape is consistent: the source is independent of the subject, the writing is structured around an evaluative claim, and similar shapes repeat across venues.
Brands that become visible in AI answers have one thing in common. They are the kind of entity that gets written about in that shape, by people who do not work for them. Oatly Barista Edition exists in AI answers because Serious Eats and the coffee press corroborate it in reviews. Nike's Alphafly exists because running-specialist editorial treats it as a product worth comparing. The cultural brand wraps these artefacts, but it is the artefacts that retrieve.
This reframes the work. The game is not to produce more brand content. The game is to produce the kind of specific, testable, claim-bearing product, gesture, or idea that source-shaped content gets written about.
The principle
Stop producing content. Start producing artefacts that content gets written about.
The question a brand should ask itself, every quarter, is not "what should we say next." It is "what should we do next that an independent source will have a reason to describe." The answer is rarely a campaign. It is usually a product decision, a product detail, a specific cultural gesture, a measurable claim. AI is a retrieval system. It rewards brands that generate things worth retrieving about, and ignores brands that only generate things to say.