Adobe Buys Semrush: A Shift in SEO and AI Content | IFT
Adobe’s $1.9B acquisition of Semrush will reshape SEO and AI content strategy. Explore the implications and benefits for marketers and brands.
What we know about the acquisition
- Adobe’s public statement says the acquisition is part of a broader push to deliver “customer experience orchestration in the agentic AI era,” combining traditional SEO with emerging “generative engine optimisation (GEO)” to offer holistic brand visibility across search engines, AI-powered chatbots, and web channels.
- Semrush is a leading visibility and content-marketing SaaS platform, with tools for keyword research, competitive intelligence, site audits, content planning, backlink analysis, and more, which are all super critical for SEO.
- The deal is expected to close in the first half of 2026, subject to regulatory approvals and shareholder consent.
- Adobe views this as a way to unify traditional SEO, content analytics and generative-AI content workflows under one roof. They want to help brands remain discoverable, whether users search via search engines or AI chat interfaces.
What this means for SEO, content and “AI-powered content strategies”
A. SEO + GEO under one ecosystem
By absorbing Semrush, Adobe isn’t just acquiring a legacy SEO toolset; it’s betting that visibility in the era of AI will require integrated management across search engines and generative-AI outputs.
For content strategists and marketers, that means: you’ll likely see tools evolving to help plan content not just for Google/Bing ranking, but also for voices like chat-based search, AI assistants, and recommendation engines.
This could shift the balance from purely “keyword-based” SEO to more layered strategies: keyword SEO, question/answer content for AI, brand-visibility content, structured data optimisation, and multimodal content (text, video, audio).
B. Greater emphasis on brand visibility, not just keyword ranking
Traditionally, SEO has focused on organic search ranking via keyword research, backlinks, domain authority, etc. As part of Adobe’s broader “customer experience” offering, Semrush’s tools will likely merge with analytics, content supply-chain tools and brand-engagement tracking.
This means metrics and priorities might shift: not just “rank #1 for keyword X,” but “be found by AI assistants,” “own your brand narrative across search and AI channels,” and “ensure brand consistency across web, AI, and content touchpoints.”
For agencies and content teams (like IFT), it opens an opportunity: offering clients services around holistic brand visibility, rather than just search ranking.
C. Potential benefits for clients and users of tools like Semrush
- Access to deeper integration with enterprise-grade marketing, analytics, and content tools via Adobe’s stack (e.g. Adobe Experience Manager, Adobe Analytics, Adobe’s Brand Concierge), which may help streamline workflow for large organisations. Adobe Newsroom+1
- More robust capabilities for generative-AI-powered content creation and optimisation. As Adobe and Semrush position for the “agentic AI era,” we can expect enhancements around content ideation, optimisation for AI outputs, and visibility across both traditional and AI-driven search. Adobe Newsroom+1
- For smaller agencies or freelance content specialists: potentially easier access (via Adobe’s broader tool-suite) to enterprise-grade visibility tools. This may democratise advanced SEO + GEO tools beyond large brands.
Why this deal underscores a broader shift in content and digital marketing
Several trends converge here:
- The rise of AI-powered search interfaces and LLM assistants means people may no longer rely solely on traditional search engines to discover information.
- Marketers are beginning to recognise that being “findable” now means being visible to AI, not just via ranking algorithms, but via structured content, brand signals, and AI-ready content.
- The consolidation of tools (SEO + content + analytics + AI) under providers like Adobe suggests a future where marketing toolchains become more unified and integrated, reducing friction for brands managing complex content ecosystems.
For us at IFT, this reinforces the importance of building content strategies that are platform-agnostic and future-ready: SEO-first, yes, but also AI-ready, brand-consistent, and adaptable across channels.
What agencies and brands should start doing now
- Begin auditing existing content and SEO strategies through a dual lens: traditional SEO and readiness for AI-driven discovery (structured data, clarity, brand voice, useful context).
- Plan content with “AI discoverability” in mind, not purely search keywords, but also questions, conversation flows, rich context, and reusable brand assets.
- Keep an eye on the Adobe–Semrush integration roadmap. As the platform evolves, integrating tools from both sides may unlock efficiencies in content planning, analytics, optimisation and reporting.
- When advising clients: shift the conversation from “rankings” to “visibility and discoverability in a hybrid web + AI ecosystem.”
What this deal doesn’t guarantee (yet)
- It doesn’t automatically make “AI-generated content = ranking content.” While Adobe positions Semrush for “GEO,” traditional SEO fundamentals (quality content, relevance, authority, UX) remain crucial.
- Integration may take time, and until then Semrush will likely continue operating as a standalone SaaS. The promised benefits will only materialise once Adobe folds the technology into its broader stack, and that's subject to regulatory and shareholder approvals.
- The SEO & content ecosystem will likely remain fragmented for a while. Other SEO tools and platforms will continue to compete.
Final thoughts
The acquisition of Semrush by Adobe represents more than a financial deal. It signals a turning point for how content, SEO and brand visibility will be approached in the near future.
For marketers, agencies and content strategists, this moment demands a shift: from thinking in terms of rankings and keywords to thinking in terms of brand visibility across a hybrid environment of search engines and AI assistants.
At IFT, we believe this is an opportunity. One to help clients navigate a new era of content discovery, where visibility means more than being first in search results. It means being discoverable, authoritative and present wherever their audience seeks information: search engines, AI chatbots, or hybrid recommendation systems.