The shift: your website is no longer the first screen
In an assistant-first world, people don’t “browse your site” first—they ask for outcomes.
That’s why Google I/O 2026 (May 19–20) matters for product teams, marketing teams, and digital leads: it’s another signal that assistants like Gemini will increasingly shape what users see, expect, and trust.
This playbook is the practical follow-up: how to design your website or web app so it performs well when AI assistants become the interface.
1) Design for answers, not pages
Assistants thrive on clarity. If your site’s core info is scattered, inconsistent, or written like a brochure, assistants will:
- misunderstand it
- oversimplify it
- or avoid it
Do this
- Turn key pages into answer hubs: clear definitions, constraints, “best for” / “not for”.
- Add comparison blocks: X vs Y, pros/cons, typical timelines.
- Write FAQ content that reflects real questions (not internal jargon).
If you’re building the front end with reusable components, keep these blocks standardized. This is where a consistent UI approach (e.g., Tailwind) pays off.
2) Make “next actions” unmissable
Assistant journeys compress decision time. If a user lands on your site after an AI summary, they’re often ready to do something—right now.
Do this
- Put your primary action above the fold (and keep it stable across pages).
- Offer one “fast path” (e.g., request a quote) and one “safe path” (e.g., plan a call).
- Reduce form friction: fewer fields, clearer expectations.
For interactive, app-like flows that need to stay snappy, a modern UI stack like React is a strong fit.
3) Treat trust as a UX layer
If assistants recommend, users will ask: “Why this one?”
Your credibility signals must be easy to find and easy to validate.
Do this
- Show concrete outcomes (numbers, timelines, before/after).
- Use real constraints (“We’re best with teams that…”, “Not a fit if…”).
- Surface security posture early if you sell B2B.
Security is part of conversion. If it helps, here’s how we approach it in projects: Draad & Aikido: Security by default and our ISO 27001 certification.
4) Build an “assistant-ready” information architecture
Assistants need structure. Humans do too—but assistants punish messy structure harder.
Do this
- Standardize:
- services
- deliverables
- pricing approach
- timelines
- case metadata (industry, challenge, outcome)
- Create one source of truth for frequently reused content.
If content must be reused across multiple channels, consider headless architecture so you can distribute the same structured content to multiple experiences.
5) Prepare your web app for copilots and task automation
If you run a portal or custom platform, your “assistant-first” move is not a chatbot. It’s task automation:
- generate a report
- explain anomalies
- help users find features
- summarize changes
Do this
- Document your app’s “capabilities” like APIs (even if they’re UI flows).
- Expose reliable endpoints and permissions.
- Keep a clear separation between:
- data layer
- business logic
- interface
For scalable custom systems, Laravel is a proven foundation.
6) The conversion model changes: measure what assistants influence
Traditional funnels assume:
- impression → click → session → conversion
Assistant-first funnels add:
- assistant exposure → assistant summary → assisted click → conversion
Do this
- Track which pages are used as decision support (FAQs, comparisons, pricing explanations).
- Measure conversion from “high intent” landings (short sessions that still convert are not a problem).
- Improve content that gets users to the final step, not content that inflates time-on-site.
Closing: don’t wait for the perfect spec
You don’t need to predict every Google I/O announcement to act.
You can start now by making your site and web app:
- more structured
- more task-focused
- more credible
- faster and more reliable
That’s not “AI optimization.” That’s building a better digital product.
If you want, we can turn this playbook into a concrete backlog for your platform (UX, content, architecture, tracking).