Visibility & readiness are not the same question.
How does Sitecore’s acquisition of Scrunch connect to AI readiness? Scrunch is focused on AI search visibility, including how organizations appear in AI-generated answers, where they are cited, and where content may be missing or misrepresented. From there, the practical issue is not the acquisition itself. It is the condition of the information AI systems may be reading, interpreting, summarizing, and reusing.
01Where Scrunch fits in the discussion
Sitecore announced on 3 June 2026 that it had acquired Scrunch, a platform focused on helping brands understand and improve how they appear in AI search. Scrunch’s public positioning is centered on AI search visibility, prompt monitoring, citations, brand presence, and content that can be delivered or interpreted by AI agents.
This gives a current reference point for a wider discussion about how AI systems use public digital content. It does not prove that all organizations have the same problem, and it does not mean AI search visibility is the whole subject.
The useful question is not whether AI search visibility matters in isolation. The useful question is what sits underneath that visibility, and whether the material being read by AI systems is clear enough, current enough, and trusted enough to support the answers those systems produce.
02AI search visibility is about what appears in AI-generated answers
AI search visibility looks at how an organization appears when people use AI systems to ask questions, compare options, research suppliers, or summarize information. It may include whether the organization is mentioned, whether competitors appear instead, which sources are cited, and whether the answer gives a fair representation of the organization.
That is a valid area of work. Organizations have spent many years thinking about how they appear in search engines, and AI-generated answers are now adding another layer to that process. The difference is that AI systems often reduce a large amount of source material into a shorter answer, which means the source material matters in a different way.
This is where the Scrunch and Sitecore acquisition connects to the wider issue. If a platform can help show where a brand appears, is missing, or is misrepresented in AI-generated answers, the next question is where those answers are getting their information from.
03Those answers depend on source material from digital estates
AI-generated answers are not created from nothing. They are influenced by source material that systems can find, access, interpret, summarize, and reuse. That source material can include website pages, product pages, support content, policy pages, PDF assets, documentation, third-party references, review content, media transcripts, and other public signals.
For an organization, this means AI search visibility cannot be separated from the quality and condition of the wider digital estate. If the available information is inconsistent, outdated, duplicated, hard to access, poorly structured, or creating unnecessary risk, those weaknesses may affect how the organization is described or understood.
This does not mean that all pages need immediate correction. It means the organization needs a clear view of what exists before deciding whether visibility, optimization, governance, monitoring, or removal is the right next step.
04Many organizations do not have a clear view of that source material
A practical difficulty is that many organizations do not have a complete and current view of the material carrying their name online. Digital estates grow over time through campaigns, microsites, PDFs, legacy platforms, product documentation, regional sites, partner content, and pages created for specific projects or markets.
Some of that material will still be useful. Some will be out of date, duplicated, weak, hard to read, or no longer aligned with how the organization wants to be understood. Some may also sit outside the normal review process, even though it can still be found and used by search engines, AI systems, and users.
This is the point where AI readiness becomes a practical issue rather than a broad technology phrase. Before an organization can judge how it appears in AI-generated answers, it needs to understand what digital material may be contributing to those answers.
05Foundations matter because AI systems read & reuse content quickly
AI systems can gather, compare, compress, and reuse information faster than manual review teams can check it. That does not make all the results correct, and it does not remove the need for human judgement. It does mean weak foundations can travel further and faster than they did when users mainly moved through search results one link at a time.
A weak page may become part of a summary. An old PDF may still support a current answer. An inconsistent claim may be repeated without the surrounding context. A poor privacy signal may reduce confidence in whether the organization appears responsible from the outside.
The foundations therefore matter because they shape the material that AI systems can work with. Accuracy, currency, accessibility, integrity, privacy, carbon, structure, and consistency are not separate from AI visibility. They are part of the source environment that visibility depends on.
06AI readiness is the process of confirming those foundations
In this context, AI readiness should not be treated as a slogan. It is the process of understanding the digital landscape, then confirming whether the material across that landscape is clear, current, accessible, trustworthy, and suitable for interpretation by AI systems, search engines, agents, and people.
For CMS vendors, this creates a clearer way to support customers beyond publishing and platform features. Vendors can help customers understand whether their estates are ready for the way information is now being found, interpreted, and reused.
For digital agencies, this creates a more useful client conversation after launch and before a new brief exists. The agency can help the client understand where they are now, what may need monitoring, what may need protection, and where improvement or action may be relevant.
AI search visibility and AI readiness therefore address different questions. Visibility asks what appears in AI-generated answers. AI readiness asks whether the underlying material is in a fit state to be found, read, trusted, summarized, quoted, and used.
Conclusion
Sitecore’s acquisition of Scrunch is useful because it gives a current example of attention moving toward AI search visibility. It should not be used as a shortcut to claim that all organizations have the same immediate problem, or that visibility work alone answers the wider question.
The wider question is more grounded. If AI systems are now being used to research, compare, summarize, and recommend, what are they reading from? If the digital estate is unclear, incomplete, outdated, inaccessible, or inconsistent, then visibility work starts with uncertainty.
AI readiness starts by reducing that uncertainty. It helps organizations understand the source material before they judge the output.
The practical sequence
A practical approach can be set out in six steps:
Source directory
The sources below are included to give the article useful reference material. They are separated between the Sitecore and Scrunch acquisition, AI search visibility, and wider evidence on AI readiness foundations.
Sitecore, Scrunch & acquisition coverage
AI search visibility, AEO & GEO context
AI readiness, data foundations, accessibility & governance
Further reading
AI Readiness Whitepaper