Real‑time PR tool surfaces

FusionScore.ai’s new Thought Leadership tool was promoted as a way to generate real‑time PR and articles on high‑authority sites, framing thought leadership as an automated service. For small event brands that need steady visibility, the pitch is about speed and volume rather than bespoke storytelling. (x.com)

A new kind of public relations pitch is showing up: type in a company, watch software spot a live news angle, then turn that angle into an executive article placed on a media site the same day. FusionScore.ai is selling that as a “Thought Leadership Solution,” not as a writing assistant but as a near-instant publishing pipeline. (youtube.com) FusionScore officially launched on March 30, 2026, and said its core product measures how often a brand appears in answers from ChatGPT, Claude, Grok, Gemini, and other artificial intelligence search tools. The company says its marketing engine, called FusionScore Autonomous Marketing Engine, is built to raise those appearances over time. (tmcnet.com) The sales pitch is not “tell your story better.” The sales pitch is “be first in artificial intelligence search,” with plans that promise 50, 100, 250, or 365 content pieces a year for $1,000 to $3,500 a month. (fusionscore.ai) FusionScore ties that volume to distribution on Insight.TMCnet.com, which it describes as a publication with a Moz Domain Authority score of 82 and more than 48,500 linking root domains. On its own site, the company says that authority lets client content “borrow” trust from an older media property instead of waiting for a small company blog to earn it. (fusionscore.ai) That is the important shift here: thought leadership used to mean a founder had a point of view and a public relations team spent weeks turning it into speeches, op-eds, and interviews. Here, “thought leadership” is being packaged as a system that watches the news cycle, drafts the article, and routes it onto a high-authority site fast enough to catch the trend. (youtube.com) FusionScore says buyers are no longer scrolling ten blue links and are instead asking artificial intelligence tools for shortlists like “top cybersecurity companies” or “best managed information technology services providers in Connecticut.” Its whole product is built around the fear that if a model names five companies and yours is not one of them, you disappear from the buying conversation. (tmcnet.com) Public relations was already moving in this direction before FusionScore showed up. The Public Relations Society of America cited the University of Southern California Annenberg 2025 Relevance Report saying 71% of public relations professionals see artificial intelligence as extremely or very important to the field’s future, and 54% already see it showing up in content creation. (prsa.org) The older promise in public relations was access: know the right reporter, land the right quote, hope for coverage. The newer promise is infrastructure: publish enough credible-looking material on trusted domains that artificial intelligence systems keep finding your name when users ask category questions. (tmcnet.com)

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