Profound: Winning the AI Search Economy
If Hightouch is transforming customer engagement, Profound is tackling a different challenge entirely.
Founded in 2024 and already valued at more than $1 billion, Profound reflects the explosive emergence of what many analysts are calling the “AI Search Economy.”
For years, brands and their agencies focused obsessively on ranking highly on Google. Today, consumers are increasingly asking questions directly inside ChatGPT, Perplexity, Claude, and other AI assistants. Profound helps companies understand how their brands appear in AI-generated responses and provides tools to improve that visibility.
This represents a completely new category of marketing. Traditional SEO agencies spent years optimizing websites for search engines. AI visibility optimization requires understanding how large language models gather, interpret, and present information. The speed of Profound’s rise—reaching unicorn status by 2026 after a 2024 founding—demonstrates how quickly this new market is developing and how rapidly investors are moving to capture it.
Gradial: Automating Marketing Execution
While Hightouch focuses on decision-making and Profound focuses on AI visibility, Gradial addresses the execution layer.
The company has raised $55 million to automate a wide range of operational marketing tasks that traditionally require teams of project managers, designers, content specialists, and quality assurance professionals. Its platform handles content updates, campaign deployment, website changes, redesigns, quality assurance, and marketing workflow management.
Its customer roster already includes major enterprises such as AWS, T-Mobile, and Prudential. The value proposition is straightforward: eliminate the delays between strategy and execution by allowing AI systems to perform many of the tasks that previously required multiple handoffs across departments.
Why This Matters: The End of the Retainer Model?
Perhaps the most disruptive aspect of these companies is not technological, but financial. For decades, agencies have operated on retainers, hourly billing, and project fees. These AI startups are increasingly rejecting those models.
They are not pitching agency owners; they are selling directly to CMOs.
They price based on outcomes rather than retainers. They promise measurable business results instead of billable hours. Most importantly, they are targeting the middle layer of agency work—the strategists, coordinators, campaign managers, optimization specialists, and execution teams that have traditionally connected creative ideas to final delivery.
The traditional agency model monetizes people; the AI model monetizes performance. As AI systems become more capable, clients may become less interested in how many people work on an account and more interested in what outcomes are achieved. This seemingly small shift in pricing structure could have profound implications for the economics of the entire industry.
Automating the Middle
The traditional agency model has always resembled a pyramid: junior talent at the base, mid-level operators in the center, and senior leadership at the top. These AI companies are automating the middle—everything between the brief and the finished campaign.
For agency leaders, the implications are impossible to ignore. The concern is not that AI will replace creativity, brand strategy, storytelling, or executive relationships overnight. Those remain deeply human disciplines. However, many agency profit centers reside in execution, coordination, optimization, reporting, and project management—the exact functions AI systems are increasingly targeting.
This does not necessarily mean agencies will disappear. Instead, they may be forced to evolve into AI-enabled strategic partners. Future agencies could become smaller, more specialized, and more focused on creativity, business strategy, brand positioning, and human insight, while relying heavily on AI systems for execution.
The agencies most likely to thrive may not be the ones resisting AI, but the ones embracing it first. Just as digital transformed advertising in the early 2000s and social media reshaped marketing in the 2010s, AI appears poised to redefine agency economics in the second half of this decade.
For agency owners, marketing executives, and investors alike, the emergence of companies such as Hightouch, Profound, and Gradial offers a glimpse into that future. The debate over whether AI will impact agencies is largely over.
The question is no longer whether AI will change the agency business. The question is how much of the traditional agency workflow will remain human-driven over the next five years. A future is emerging where artificial intelligence is not simply a tool used by agencies, but where AI increasingly becomes the agency itself.