77Signal
Score
C
Creative BoomJune 18, 2026

The Web That Built Your Creative Business Is Being Dismantled So What Should You Do Now

As AI transforms the way people discover creative work, brands must adapt their strategies to focus on building reputation and direct relationships rather than relying on traditional search and social media algorithms. Creatives are encouraged to cultivate a unique identity and leverage trusted recommendations to thrive in this evolving landscape, where visibility is increasingly determined by context and taste rather than mere keyword optimization.

↑ RisingstrategydigitalidentityPinterest

Creative Boom: Tips Creative Industry The web that built your creative business is being dismantled. So what should you do now? As AI takes over from Google search, the thing that used to draw people to your creative work is disappearing fast. Here's what's happening, and how to respond. Written By: Tom May 17 June 2026 Pinterest is changing. What does that mean for creatives? Image licensed via Adobe Stock At Cannes Lions 2026, Pinterest said something that should stop every creative in their tracks. Alongside a suite of shiny new AI advertising tools, the platform offered a candid description of where the whole industry is heading.

The web, it said, is moving "beyond the traditional search-and-click model toward a more conversational and generative web," where brands now compete "not just for attention, but for recommendation, relevance and action". That might sound like a boringly technical sentence, but buried within it is something very profound that affects every creative working today. Because what it describes isn't just a change in how Pinterest sells ads, but a fundamental change in how people find information and inspiration online. And if you're a creative, the implications for whether you actually get work in future are huge.

Discovery is being dismantled Until recently, the web gifted creatives many ways to attract clients that didn't demand a huge marketing budget. A portfolio site that ranked in search results for "editorial illustrator" or "branding studio Bristol." Instagram, Behance or Dribbble surfacing work to people who'd never heard of you. A piece is getting shared, and the share carries your name back to your profile. None of this required paid promotion. Now, though, every rung of that ladder has been sawn off.

We've seen the decline of organic search: on Google, your freelance or studio site now sits below ads, AI Overviews and big-domain content, making it close to hopeless in promoting your craft. Meanwhile, social algorithms have decoupled reach from quality. Feeds now reward volume, trends and posting cadence rather than the best work, and throttle creators unless they either pay or perform constantly. And now, as the final nail in the coffin, agentic AI (where AI basically acts as your personal assistant) has removed the last thing the first two still left intact: the click that carried a person to your door. Who wins and who loses?

Nowadays, when someone types "find me an illustrator who works in cut-paper collage for a children's book", AI returns an answer, not a list of links to explore. It decides who gets named, and there's no way to influence it: no ad slot to buy, no SEO lever to pull. And how does it reach this decision? AI platforms lean on aggregate signals: who's already cited, listed, written about, and linked to. This favours the already-famous and the big studios with a deep web footprint, leaving the vast majority of smaller independents floundering. It's a virtuous circle for the former, a vicious one for the latter.

The visible gets recommended, and the recommendation makes them more visible. The talented new graduate with a thin online presence isn't in AI's field of view, so they stay invisible forever. Pinterest's new Ask Pinterest app captures this dynamic perfectly. It's designed, the company says, for "more conversational, complex, multi-step decisions that don't fit neatly into a single search": planning a dinner party, furnishing a room over time, finding a gift that feels personal. Truly, it sounds like a great experience. But there's a trade-off, and it's a biggie. When answers arrive without a source, the source no longer matters.

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Intelligence PanelSignal score: 77 / 100
Primary Signal
Rising
Signal confirmed across multiple sources — high conviction
Brand Impact
High
Impact score: 75/100 — broad strategic implications for brand positioning
Novelty
Moderate
Novelty: 70/100 — iterative development of an existing theme
Action Priority
Urgent
Respond within 30 days — category leaders already moving
Scoring Rationale

The article addresses significant changes in the creative business landscape due to AI, offering actionable insights for brand strategy professionals to adapt their approaches.

75
Impact
weight 35%
70
Novelty
weight 30%
85
Relevance
weight 35%
Brands Mentioned
PPinterest
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