Sitecore is acquiring generative engine optimization (GEO) startup Scrunch for around $225 million, according to a Bloomberg report, adding AI answer-engine visibility to an enterprise content platform that has been quietly building toward a machine-readable web strategy.
What do 1,000 journalists and PR pros know about AI that you don't? They took AI Quick Start, a 1-hour live class from The Media Copilot. 94% satisfaction. Find out how to work smarter with AI in just 60 minutes. Get 20% off with the code AIPRO: https://mediacopilot.ai/
Neither Sitecore nor Scrunch have confirmed the price. The deal marks one of the larger investments in the emerging GEO market: the practice of optimizing brand content so it surfaces in AI-generated answers rather than traditional search results.
Scrunch’s platform shows brands real-time signals about how they appear across various AI platforms, along with competitive analysis and technical audits. Its Agent Experience Platform, or AXP, is designed to deliver content in formats AI agents can read and use without disrupting the human experience. Notable clients include Lenovo, Skims, Headspace, and Penn State University.
“We’re at a pivotal moment where companies must rethink traditional digital strategies and accept that the internet must be written for machines to understand if we want humans to experience it,” Eric Stine, Sitecore’s CEO, said in a statement.
Scrunch CEO and cofounder Chris Andrew echoed the same urgency in his own statement. “By joining forces, we’re helping companies meet buyers where they are, moving beyond traditional SEO to win inside AI-generated answers,” he said. “That’s where Scrunch’s AXP is a critical advantage, delivering content in a format AI agents can read and use, without disrupting the human experience, allowing brands to become the trusted sources that power those answers.”
The GEO space is becoming increasingly competitive as brands seek visibility in the AI experiences where consumers are spending more time. Scrunch previously raised $26 million, including a $15 million Series A last summer led by Decibel, with participation from Mayfield, Homebrew, and others.
The deal logic is in the numbers. Scrunch told ADWEEK last year that conversion rates in AI search are three to five times higher than in traditional online search, citing its own data. “A visitor coming from AI search is buying faster than a traditional organic visitor,” Andrew said at the time. Independent verification of those figures was not provided.
Third-party research offers some corroboration. In research conducted by Akamai, AXP-enabled webpages saw a 364% lift in brand presence in responses to non-branded AI prompts and a 218% spike in citations appearing in AI responses.
Stine said the combination would allow brands to “show up with greater clarity, authority, and relevance so they can build trust, increase share of voice, and influence decisions early in the buying journey when it matters most.”







