The acquisition of consumer brands has historically been assessed through a stable set of valuation frameworks: revenue multiples, brand equity surveys, retail distribution metrics, social media reach, and earned media share. These instruments were calibrated for a media environment in which consumers discovered and evaluated brands through search engines, editorial coverage, influencer networks, and physical retail. The purchase decision was visible: a consumer could be tracked from search query to product page to checkout. That environment is changing structurally. Large language models — deployed at scale through ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Claude, and Grok — are increasingly the first point of contact for category research and brand comparison. Consumer research conducted by BCG (2024) indicates that AI systems influence between 29% and 55% of purchase decisions across major consumer categories, with health and wellness, beauty, and consumer electronics among the highest-influence segments. Research by Kevin Indig (2026) documents that 74% of buyers in AI-assisted purchase flows built their consideration set directly from AI-generated recommendations, with 64% never visiting a brand’s website prior to purchase. Within this environment, the AI purchase recommendation — the model’s response to a direct buying query at the decision stage of a purchase conversation — functions as an invisible gatekeeping mechanism. A brand that is consistently recommended by AI models at the purchase decision layer captures AI-mediated revenue. A brand that is eliminated at that layer loses it, regardless of its awareness scores, retail footprint, or content volume. Current brand valuation practice does not measure this. No standard due diligence framework includes a structured assessment of a target brand’s competitive standing within AI purchase recommendation systems. The result is an expanding class of acquisitions in which the acquirer inherits an unknown AI channel liability — a gap between what the brand appears to be worth and what it is positioned to win through the channel where an increasing proportion of purchase decisions are made. AIVO Optimize Working Paper WP-2026-02 · LLM Equity Valuation (LEV™) aivooptimize.com · CC BY 4.0 · Page 3 This paper introduces LLM Equity Valuation (LEV™) as a framework to quantify this gap. LEV is not a replacement for existing valuation methodologies; it is an additive instrument designed to surface a structural risk that existing frameworks cannot detect.
AIVO Standard (Sat,) studied this question.