Welcome back to this week’s Side Income Roundup, Monday, March 16.
AI is quietly becoming the front door to a lot of online content, and most people haven’t adjusted for it yet. This week we’re looking at what that shift means for your visibility, a few tools worth knowing about, and some platform changes that affect how you measure and create content.
AI search is rewriting how people discover your content
Three tools for AI visibility, lead capture, and video ads
Meta’s ad metrics just changed (and Threads has a new trick)
A framework for validating your next offer before building it
Ad platforms are going full autopilot, and what that means for you
Let’s get into it.
THIS WEEKβS BIG IDEA AI Search Is Changing Who Finds Your Content
Something is shifting in how people discover online content, and it’s happening faster than most marketers realize. AI assistants like ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini are now answering questions directly by pulling from web content, which means your blog posts and product pages can be cited in an AI response without the user ever visiting your site.
This concept, sometimes called “zero-visit visibility,” changes the rules of the game for anyone who relies on content to drive traffic. The old playbook of ranking on page one and waiting for clicks still matters, but there’s now a parallel channel where AI systems decide whether your content is clear and structured enough to reference. If it is, you get exposure to a completely new audience. If it isn’t, your competitors do.
The biggest practical shift is in how you write. AI systems prioritize content that clearly states the problem, the solution, and who it’s for, ideally within the first few sentences. Vague introductions and slow-building narratives get skipped entirely.
Our Take: Check the first 150 words of your top three blog posts right now. If they don’t clearly state the problem, the solution, and who it’s for, rewrite them so an AI assistant can pull a clean, accurate answer. That’s the new front door to your content, and most people haven’t touched it yet.
TOOLS OF THE WEEK
VisibleFirst
Generates an llms.txt file, AI-optimized schema markup, and an AI visibility score dashboard so you can see exactly how ChatGPT, Claude, and Gemini discover your site. Free forever, no credit card required.
LeadQuizzes
AI-powered quiz builder that generates complete lead quizzes from a single text prompt. Built-in lead scoring qualifies, segments, and tags leads automatically and pushes scored data straight to your CRM.
ROAS Suite
Paste your store URL and it generates production-ready video and image ads for Meta and YouTube. It pulls your logos, fonts, colors, and product data automatically, so there’s no scripting or design work needed.
Our Take: VisibleFirst is the one I’d install first if you’re running a WordPress site with affiliate content. Getting your pages indexed properly by AI search is going to matter more every month. Install it, run the audit on your top five posts, and see what it flags. That alone will tell you whether your content is ready for the way people are starting to search.
TODAYβS QUICK WINS
Meta Standardizes Ad Metrics Across Platforms
Meta has updated its ad reporting metrics to align with other platforms, making cross-platform campaign measurement more consistent. If you’re running ads on Meta alongside other channels, your dashboards may look different this week. Worth logging in and reviewing how the new labels map to what you’ve been tracking.
Threads Rolls Out “Dear Algo” Feature
Threads users can now type “Dear Algo” into a post and tell the algorithm what they want to see more of. For marketers, this is a signal that content quality and specificity matter even more on the platform, because users are actively curating what shows up in their feeds.
Our Take: If you’re running Meta ads, log in this week and check how the new metric labels map to what you’ve been tracking. And if you’re posting on Threads, the “Dear Algo” feature is a reminder that the platform is rewarding specificity over volume, so write for the people who actually want your content, not the algorithm.
FROM OMC
The “Pre-Sell Before You Build” Framework
If you’ve ever spent weeks (or months) building a course, product, or coaching program only to launch it to silence, this post explains why that happens and how to avoid it. The framework is simple: write the offer, present it to a small audience, measure their response, and build only if the signal is strong. One email can tell you more than three months of building.
Our Take: Before you build your next offer, write a 250-word pitch describing it as if it already exists and send it to a small segment of your list. If 5-10% click through, you’ve got a green light. If nobody moves, you just saved yourself months.
AI SPOTLIGHT Ad Platforms Are Going Full Autopilot
Google Performance Max and Meta Advantage+ are now assuming full AI automation of bidding, targeting, and creative. Advertisers generated nearly 70 million creative assets using Google’s Gemini in Q4 2025, and ByteDance’s new Seedance 2.0 tool can produce multi-shot commercial video from text prompts alone. The direction is clear: the platforms want you to hand over creative and targeting decisions to their AI systems.
Our Take: Manual campaign management is being phased out. If you’re still hand-tuning bids and targeting on Meta or Google, start testing their AI-driven campaign types this week so you understand how they work before manual options start disappearing entirely.
UNTIL NEXT WEEK…
Keep it simple this week:
Run your top three blog posts through the “first 150 words” test for AI readability
Install VisibleFirst if you’re on WordPress and check your AI visibility score
Log into Meta Ads Manager and review the updated metric labels
If you have an offer idea, write the pitch email before you build anything
The tools are changing fast, but the principle stays the same: put your content where the attention is moving, and let the market tell you what to build.
Talk soon,
Aidan


