The agent-assisted Internet has arrived, and with it comes a big change in how enterprises should set up and run content operations.
A CMS can no longer simply be the place where content is created, published, and displayed. It needs to act as the orchestration layer for coordinating AI operations.
This goes beyond responding to humans who make requests through a browser. It means connecting to a variety of AI agents that operate behind the scenes via APIs or automated workflows.
Investing in a CMS that provides this agent-ready content infrastructure, such as WordPress VIP, lets you do away with multi-year migration cycles. Instead, you’ll be prepared to keep pace with new AI capabilities as they emerge.
What is agent-ready content infrastructure?
Agent-ready content infrastructure offers a complete platform for running content operations at scale safely and securely with any AI agent.
Traditional content operations in the browser-first era focused on how well platforms and tools served employees, and by extension, the audiences enterprise marketing content is intended to reach. Today, content interacts first with AI agents that consume, distribute, and recommend it.
We’re already seeing the impact of AI on how visitors get driven to a website. McKinsey estimates 20% to 50% of traditional search traffic is at risk of erosion as consumers shift towards AI-powered search engines.
Agent-ready content infrastructure will make enterprise marketing content more visible in AI-powered search summaries and overviews, but that’s just part of the value. It also allows organizations to welcome those who click through from AI search results with digital experiences that provide all the information and context they need to make the right buying decision.
Why is agent-ready content infrastructure important?
Agent-ready content infrastructure lets enterprises deploy AI with confidence that they and their audience won’t experience negative outcomes. The potential for costly errors and reputational damage has reached the point 72% of the S&P 500 flag AI as a material risk in their public disclosures, per Conference Board research.
Beyond boosting the discoverability of products and services in AI search, agent-ready content infrastructure helps organizations get ahead of risks by setting them up for maximum adaptability. Instead of closed systems that lock you into a vendor’s proprietary models, integrations, and timeline, an Open Source approach gives you the freedom to use the models you want. This offers the ability to iterate and evolve your approach to AI based on what works best for your business.
What is agent-ready content infrastructure based upon?
WordPress VIP already offers agent-ready content infrastructure and the ability to easily build an AI orchestration layer through the WordPress Abilities API, MCP Adapter, and WordPress AI Client.
This turns your CMS into a platform that lets you move forward with agentic AI now, with the ability to change models or make other adjustments as AI continues to evolve.
The core principles behind this approach include:
- Keeping content secure and legible to AI agents simultaneously: Large language models (LLMs) need to easily scrape content from brand websites to serve up in AI-generated overviews and summaries. WordPress is building on its more than 20 years of supporting structured content and open standards to ensure that anything our CMS helps publish is easily parsed and protected.
- Running AI through the same governance layer as publishing: Whether inside an editing tool or connecting from an external solution, it’s important that enterprises can apply multi-stage review workflows and role-based permissions to AI in the same way they do to employees. Shared governance, enabled by features such as Safe Publish, supports edge security rules that may be required, as well as full audit logging.
- Aligning context with AI-powered content: Agents not only need to know what to do, but why to do it. Content Guidelines (coming soon to WordPress) addresses that by helping AI agents understand your brand standards, editorial voices, compliance rules, and more. This gives agents a better starting point to executing workflows, providing all the background and details they need up front.
How does agent-ready content infrastructure work?
AI often lends itself to “moonshot” thinking, but a more practical starting point is to identify where AI can help run workflows faster and safer.
In content operations, for example, agent-ready content infrastructure can help editorial teams use AI to enforce brand standards, adapt content across properties, and connect the tools writers already use back to the CMS, all without creating brand risk or compliance exposure.
In development, engineering teams need to move faster without introducing risk. Agent-ready content infrastructure provides them scaffolding that follows platform conventions, triage that doesn’t eat up senior developer time, and velocity with standards built in.
Let’s look at a few more specific scenarios:
- A large enterprise runs multiple sites across several regions. Adapting a single-market asset for each site has traditionally been a manual, labor-intensive process for content teams. WordPress VIP can help them use AI instead to handle content adaptation at fleet scale, taking into account localization requirements, brand safety considerations, and more.
- You may have team members already generating content via Claude, ChatGPT, CoPilot, or other tools. The problem is that those tools can’t access your CMS, view your archive, or apply your editorial guidelines. Since WordPress speaks natively to MCP, your team can ask their AI tool what you’ve published on a topic in the last 60 days. From there, you can identify whether there’s an opportunity to write more on a similar topic or refresh your existing content. Then, agents can help you develop a brief that avoids repeating coverage, apply your Content Guidelines, and queue a draft for editorial review. All from the interface they already use.
- You check the analytics to identify your best-performing content, figure out what’s missing, write a brief, and then hand it to a writer. Agents should be able to take over those tasks and handoffs. That’s why WordPress VIP is already in development with Parse.ly MCP, which will also be able to take the next step and queue a draft in WordPress for review. This closes the analytics-to-editorial loop with AI.
How should agent-ready content infrastructure be evaluated?
Whether you’re considering WordPress VIP or any other provider, agent-ready content infrastructure should support open standards, allow you to swap models, run AI actions through established permission models, and structure your content for LLMs.
The end goal should be the ability to deploy AI agents with strong governance, freedom to make changes, and for humans to play an ongoing role in overseeing and managing content workflows where they can provide the greatest value.
At that point, you can stop trying to picture an AI-powered content operation. You’ll be able to see for yourself how well it’s working.
Author

Shane Schick
Founder, 360 Magazine
Shane Schick is a longtime technology journalist serving business leaders ranging from CIOs and CMOs to CEOs. His work has appeared in Yahoo Finance, the Globe & Mail and many other publications. Shane is currently the founder of a customer experience design publication called 360 Magazine. He lives in Toronto.




