BEIJING — As Artificial Intelligence fundamentally reshapes the media landscape, industry leaders gathered recently for a closed-door webinar hosted by the American Chamber of Commerce in China (AmCham China). Titled "PR and Marketing in the AI Era: Competency Transformation and New Growth Models," the session convened over 30 communications and brand executives from leading multinational corporations to discuss navigating the shift from traditional search to AI-driven engagement.
The seminar featured Shawn Jiang Xiaofeng, founder of China Advocate, and Michelle Yuan, Communications Director at Pfizer China, who shared strategic frameworks for integrating AI into corporate communications and customer acquisition.
Redefining the "Human Moat" in Public Relations
Addressing the professional anxiety surrounding AI's speed and efficiency, Michelle Yuan argued that PR professionals must pivot away from tasks where machines excel. "If practitioners continue to compete with AI on sheer efficiency, they are entering a dead end," Yuan noted, emphasizing that AI has already reached the pinnacle of industrial-era productivity.
To remain competitive, Yuan proposed a three-pronged "breakthrough" strategy for practitioners:
Cognitive Elevation:
Moving beyond execution to master cross-disciplinary knowledge in strategy, economics, and history, using AI as a "think tank" partner.
Emotional Intelligence:
Prioritizing intuition and trust-building—elements of the "emotional brain" that AI cannot replicate.
Positional Shift:
Transitioning from "tool-based" roles to "resource hubs" that orchestrate AI behavior and amplify human value.

From SEO to GEO: A New Frontier for Growth
Shawn Jiang Xiaofeng shifted the focus to the collapse of traditional search logic. He observed that user behavior has evolved from "finding links" (the SEO era) to "getting answers" via generative AI platforms.
"The era of search engine dominance is ending," Jiang stated, noting that traffic is being aggressively diverted to AI and social platforms. To counter rising costs in traditional channels like Baidu bidding and KOL partnerships, Jiang introduced Generative Engine Optimization (GEO).
Unlike SEO’s focus on keyword matching, GEO leverages AI’s authoritative response mechanisms to build content barriers for brands. China Advocate recently launched a dedicated GEO service to help enterprises:
Optimize Machine Readability:
Structuring brand assets to ensure they are accurately captured and prioritized by AI models.
Build Digital Fortresses:
Transforming official websites into primary data sources for AI crawlers.
Drive Conversion:
Using multi-modal content to guide users directly from an AI answer to sales contacts or official platforms.

Low-Cost Entry for High-Impact Results
A major takeaway for the multinational attendees was the accessibility of these new tools. Jiang revealed that GEO deployment can often be carved out of existing SEO budgets, with entry-level optimization starting at tens of thousands of RMB per quarter.
"In an environment of budget contraction, GEO offers a low-cost way to capture early-stage AI traffic," Jiang said. He noted that optimization can go live in as little as seven days, significantly lowering the "trial and error" cost for risk-averse enterprises.

The session concluded with a consensus that the future of PR and marketing lies in the synergy of human-centric content and AI technology. By embracing AI as a "behavior designer" rather than a threat, brands can secure a competitive edge in an increasingly automated information ecosystem.

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