šļøAI Changed The Web. How To Build For It?

Hi everyone ā hope the weekend’s treating you well. Itās interview time! Subscribe to our YouTube channel, or listen the interviews as podcasts on Spotify or Apple.
At some point in the last year, bots became your biggest website visitors. Not people. Not crawlers. Not even APIs. Bots with goals. Agents with plans and their own agenda.
Linda Tong, CEO of Webflow, has seen it up close ā and she’s redesigning the web to meet them. In this episode, we talk about what it means to build agent-first websites: How to talk to bots. How to let them click buttons. And how to create experiences that work for humans and AI ā without turning the internet into garbage.
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When bot traffic started overtaking humans
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Why AEO (agentic engine optimization) is the new SEO
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Why websites need a second language ā for LLMs
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What “agent-ready” structure really means
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Hybrid UX: visual for humans, semantic for agents
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Why dynamic, personalized web experiences are overdue
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Leadership, kindness, and Enderās Game as a design philosophy
This one’s fast, nerdy, real, and fun. Lindaās not afraid to challenge old assumptions ā or to break her own product if it means building whatās next. Watch it now ā
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The transcript (edited for clarity, brevity, and sanity. Always better to watch the full video though) ā¬ļø
Ksenia Se: Hi Linda, and welcome to Inference by Turing Post. Iām very happy to have you here.
Linda Tong:Very stoked to be here. Thanks for making time ā Iām excited to chat with you.
Ksenia: You’re leading Webflow, a $4 billion no-code web development platform, through an amazing moment. It’s a full-on AI transformation. So hereās the question: thereās a new species online now, right? Not quite APIs, not quite people ā more like, as Karpathy called them (and I love it), āhuman spirits on the internet.ā
So is it true that traffic online isnāt just humans anymore? Do you see these spirits? And when did this shift begin?
Linda: Absolutely. What people are often looking for is a hard number ā like, what percentage of traffic is human vs. bots or spirits, whatever you want to call them. But it really varies.
Some sites are still 90% human, 10% bot. Others? The reverse ā 90% bot, 10% human. So itās not consistent, but I am seeing a clear trend: bots or chat agents are increasingly responsible for a big chunk of site traffic.
And not just passive traffic ā theyāre showing up in the top-of-funnel referrals. Weāre starting to see more and more of that traffic being driven by bots that actually direct people (or other bots) to different parts of the internet.
Ksenia: When did that start?
Linda:Over a year ago. We started seeing early signs at the beginning of last year ā little spikes here and there. But by last summer, it became disruptive.
And since then, itās only grown. If I follow the trend lines, I think bots and agents will make up the majority of internet traffic by the end of this year. So itās not exactly new ā itās been quietly building.
Ksenia: Interesting. So what do you do with that? Does it change your strategy in a meaningful way?
Linda:Absolutely. First, itās really important to understand what this is ā what bot traffic actually means, and how we should think about it.
There are good bots and bad bots. We’ve always had bots ā thatās not new. Bad bots do nefarious things like DDoS your site. But now, we have good bots too. These can come from major LLMs, or from agents trying to index your site, understand it, and reference it in response to user queries in chat.
So you want them to be able to crawl and understand your site. And as more companies build their own models and their own chat-based search tools, weāre seeing more of these agents crawling the web. Overall bot traffic ā good and bad ā is increasing.
People ask me, āShould I just block it?ā And I say: no, donāt block it. Thatās like blocking Google back when SEO was all about optimizing for search. What weāre seeing now is the evolution of SEO into what people are calling AEO, GEO, or AIO ā ways to optimize for AI-driven experiences and generative engines.
Being indexable, referenceable, understandable to these bots is key. You want them to be able to read your site ā not just access it, but actually parse and represent it well.
And just like we used to reverse engineer Google search to climb the rankings, we now have a new challenge: reverse engineering how these chatbots and agents rank or reference content. And itās a different system. Things like site structure, content distribution, content freshness, and external references (like Reddit or social platforms) all matter. So optimizing for this new kind of visibility means adapting how we structure and publish online.
Ksenia: Right. Itās still so early ā weāre figuring out how to interact with these agents and how they can interact with software. Do you think something like llmps.txt, instead of raw HTML, CSS, JavaScript, could be a way to speak to them directly? Also, agents donāt use clickable URLs, right? That has to change.
When you think about infrastructure shifts ā and your job, which is helping others build websites ā whatās your action plan for building websites for agents?
Linda:Itās early days, but I really believe that just like mobile changed everything around 2009ā2010, weāre now entering the era of agent-optimized websites.
Back then, everyone realized they needed mobile-optimized sites. Now, weāll need agent-optimized sites ā sites that are built specifically to interact with LLMs and agentic workflows.
That means rethinking the structure entirely. These agents donāt interact the way humans do ā but theyāre still trying to accomplish similar goals. Today, websites are built for human experiences. But we need to start thinking of agents as a new kind of audience, with their own interaction patterns.
At Webflow, weāre thinking hard about what an agent-first site looks like. How do you make it seamless? Because building for humans is already hard ā mobile, tablet, desktop, different screen sizes, content layouts. Now weāre adding another layer.
And no, we canāt just skip human experiences and build only for agents. So itās about making this complexity manageable and building in a way that serves both.
Ksenia: So whatās most important when building for this new audience? What do agents need?
Linda:The biggest thing is making it easy to reference data.
Sites with deep, tangled architecture, mixed publishing models, or scattered content ā those are hard for agents to parse. These bots are trying to understand your structure, your brand principles, your navigation, your content.
So we need better ways to surface that information ā like site maps, but more dynamic and structured for agents. Right now, a lot of human-facing design is about delight, storytelling, rich visuals ā and that stuff doesnāt translate.
When agents scrape a site, they might hit every page but skip the actual meaning. Thatās wasteful and inefficient. We need to offer a simplified, structured view of whatās on a site ā and how itās connected.
You also mentioned links, and thatās a big one. Your site is just one part of your online presence. Agents are trying to understand your whole brand, not just one domain. So you have to represent where else you live ā your social profiles, media, partner content, etc. Stitching all of that together gives agents a fuller picture.
And third, freshness matters. Recency is heavily weighted. Sites that are updated regularly with real, opinionated, human-written content rank better than stale ones.
So brands need to move faster ā not just to stay relevant, but to be understood. Relevance and dynamism go hand in hand in the world of AI agents.
Ksenia: Thatās all about reading and understanding. What about action? How do you make the agent actually click a button?
Linda:Yeah. I mean, part of it is user experience. It’s a mix of: one, can you simplify your user experience? Whether itās APIs or building an MCP that agents can interact with to take specific actions on your site or product. Right now, people are using MCPs mostly to build capabilities for agents to interact with their site.
But itās still convoluted. The MCP is usually layered on top of the human user journey. APIs were really designed to go directly to the source ā call the action you want, interact the way you want. So, I think thereās a real need to understand which APIs you want to expose to an agent, and maybe publish a sort of manifest ā here are all the actions you want to make available, and here are the guardrails around them.
Thatās what people are trying to simplify with MCPs. Itās probably a midterm solution. Longer term, I think agentic platforms that are hooked directly into those actions are whatās going to take hold.
Ksenia: Do you think we’ll end up with dual outputs ā visual and user-facing for humans, semantic and structured for LLMs and agents?
Linda:I actually think itāll be more of a hybrid. The reason AI has taken off the way it has, the reason it’s disrupting how we work, is because the human-specific interfaces just werenāt enough. If they were, we wouldn’t be seeking alternatives.
People complain about enterprise SaaS software all the time. You just want to update one thing or file an expense report ā really simple stuff. And youāre like, āWhy is this so hard?ā And now with AI, youāre like, āOh, this could be so much easier.ā
So yes, there’s a real need to simplify those workflows. But I donāt think weāre at a place yet where people fully trust an agent to just go and do everything for them. Thereās still human-in-the-loop interaction. I think weāll be in a hybrid world for a while.
The dream, of course, is full automation ā agents doing everything while we go watch Netflix. But in reality, weāre going to want agentic workflows, paired with human-facing experiences that are visual and easy to understand. That way, collaboration with agents still feels natural and intentional. The agent handles the overhead ā the tasks ā while humans step in where it really matters.
Ksenia: Thatās exactly what I was thinking before our conversation. I was playing with a clog, trying to build a website. Itās not perfect, but you can tell it, āNo, I donāt like this color. Give me the color of the sea in the morning sunlight.ā And it gives you something pretty close.
So on Webflow, youāve got the AI site builder. And it has a prompt ā you can edit it ā but itās not really a conversation. Do you think Webflow could become conversational? Merging agentic, human, and dialog-driven interaction?
Linda:I canāt announce anything, but⦠good question.
Our vision as a company ā just to rewind ā Webflowās been around since 2012. The vision is actually pretty revolutionary: we want to bring developer superpowers to everyone.
We get branded as a no-code platform, because that was the movement at the time. But the real thesis is that everyone should be able to build for the web. Everyone should be able to create. Human creativity ā thatās the power weāre trying to unlock.
We started with a visual builder so people who didnāt code could build powerful websites. Now with AI, weāre accelerating that vision. Instead of just visual tools ā or maybe paired with them ā you can now articulate what you want. You can speak it. You can type it.
And I think weāll go further. I might say: āMake this site feel like a sunset in Athens, Greece ā something Mediterranean.ā And itāll get me something close. But I might also want to interact with it in new ways.
So far, LLMs let us type or speak ā but what if I could draw something? What if I could visually interact with it to spark creativity? I donāt know what that future format will be, but I do believe AI should superpower what you can create with Webflow.
Visual is one mode. Natural language is another. And I think the hybrid of the two could be really powerful. We’re working on a lot of that.
Ksenia: Can you paint the big picture for me ā maybe in a few years, maybe in just a few months ā what does building a website with AI look like in your ideal world?
Linda:Building a website with AI is already here, and it’s only going to get better. But I actually think thatās not where the real challenge lies. Weāre in this creation phase right now ā with AI, you can build a site, an app, a picture, anything. And ideally, it should feel like a conversation.
You might say, āIām building a business. I want a website that reflects the power of my brand, evokes this kind of emotion, looks like this, and includes these elements.ā We can already do that today ā the results vary, of course. Sometimes itās the prompt, sometimes itās the tech. But weāre getting close to the point where what you articulate and what you get are almost perfectly aligned.
Where weāre not spending enough time is asking: once youāve built the website, then what? And this is where it gets exciting. The web is changing ā not just because of the last two or three years, but because weāve been on a transformation for a while.
We used to publish static websites where millions of people had the same experience. Which is kind of absurd, right? Think about e-commerce. If you walk into a physical Gap store, itās laid out the same for everyone ā same racks, same items, same layout. That makes sense because itās a physical space.
But online? There are no physical constraints. Thereās no reason we should all see the same version of a website. The experience should be dynamic. And people have asked, āWhy canāt I make it dynamic?ā But the answer has usually been: āI just donāt have the time.ā
Linda:It takes so much just to get the website built and live. Operating it is already a lift. So the next step ā building a dynamic experience ā often feels out of reach.
Now, with AI, thatās changing. We can move faster. We can make the web dynamic. That means you and I could have completely different experiences on the same site ā based on location, whether youāve visited before, or what I know about you.
Even better, the site can evolve every time you come back. Thatās what excites me most ā not just building a site, but having that site transform to fit its audience. Hyper-personalized experiences, tailored to each visitor.
Because every visitor is different. They have different goals. And if Iām building a site for real interaction, I want to meet those goals in a personalized way.
Ksenia: Yes ā and when you layer on wearables or glasses, the whole visual experience changes again. Thatās such a different interface and view. Itās exciting.
Linda:Exactly. This is why I think the next leap is going to be about dynamic experiences. Right now, weāre all obsessed with what we can create ā but once we get over that hump, weāll be able to focus on how it adapts.
Iāve built websites on every service. Iāve made 70+ apps using different app builders. But the truth is ā most of them are just internet garbage. I made them, and theyāre just sitting there.
Only a small subset are actually used. But those are the ones I want to nurture. I want to build them out, make them sustainable, turn them into real products.
This next phase is the most exciting ā where we go from creation to value. At Webflow, we want to help people build sites, yes ā but more than that, we want to make it easy for those sites to deliver long-term value.
That means thinking about the whole lifecycle:ā How do you create dynamic, personalized experiences?ā How do you leverage insights?ā How do you run experiments?ā How do you manage your content and assets?
Thatās the cool challenge.
Ksenia: Thatās super, super exciting. I wanted to go back to something you mentioned earlier ā SEO. Everyoneās still optimizing for SEO. But is SEO dead? What comes next? And how do you explain to people that maybe they should be optimizing for something else?
Linda:Itās funny ā maybe this is aging me ā but no, I donāt think SEO is dead. Itās just convenient to declare things dead every time a new technology comes along.
I remember when Spotify came out, everyone said, āRadio is dead.ā But radio is still a multi-billion-dollar industry. When digital streaming came out, people said, āBroadcast is dead.ā Itās going stronger than ever.
So I donāt believe that one thing replaces another entirely. What weāre seeing is what always happens with technology shifts: we get a new way of doing something weāve always done ā in this case, search.
Now weāre in a world where you still need to think about SEO ā that doesnāt go away ā but you also need to carve out part of your brain for AEO or GEO. Right now, that means optimizing for chatbots. But whatever new format emerges next, youāll need to adapt to that too.
All it does is add more work. Itās no longer a one-dimensional game. It used to be: just optimize your website for SEO. Now itās SEO and AEO. And the big question is: does what you do for AEO hurt your SEO score? Thatās what weāre thinking about a lot, and helping our customers navigate.
SEO has always been about things like keywords, backlinks, domain authority ā how your site is referenced.
AEO is different. Itās a lot more weighted toward authenticity. It looks at your contentās quality, how authentic it is, how you’re referenced across the web. Places like Reddit or Quora can boost your rating. It values freshness ā how recent your content is, how often itās updated. And it looks at how easy your site structure is to parse.
So youāre optimizing for two different sets of signals. Thankfully, we havenāt seen one actively harm the other ā yet. But they are clearly diverging in how they define relevance and trust.
Ksenia: Sounds like weāll need to create a guide. Do you have one?
Linda:We donāt have an official guide ā yet. But weāve shared some best practices. Weāve run a couple of webinars and posted follow-up blog posts with key takeaways.
The reason we havenāt formalized a guide is: unlike most tech changes, this space is shifting every few days. New models keep coming out, and each one thinks differently.
AEO isnāt consistent. You have to consider how Gemini handles it versus how ChatGPT does, versus Claude. Each one has a different methodology, different weightings.
So weāre still in early days as a society in understanding how this all works. Even the models themselves are continuously adjusting.
The people who will win here are the ones who keep testing, keep learning, and iterate fast. Weāve got a few best practices ā but who knows if theyāll still be best practices three weeks from now.
Ksenia: We donāt have much time, so I want to switch gears. Weāve been talking a lot about agents, about agents talking to agents, and even AGI and superintelligence. What is AGI to you? And if it happens, will it be able to design, code, deploy products and websites? Would it use something like Webflow ā or replace it?
Linda:Iāll zoom out a bit ā not just thinking about software, but about the role of AI in human life.
My personal belief is that AGI will be an accelerant and a partner to humans. What makes us unique as a species is that weāre creative, opinionated, and constantly changing. AGI will reflect human intelligence and synthesize it at scales weāve never seen. Itāll be able to iterate and create ā it might mimic some human behaviors ā but I donāt believe it will replace us.
Now, applying that back to software: AGI will absolutely change how we interact with tools to accomplish tasks. It might be able to do most of the work. But I still believe it will need some direction ā some human perspective.
Will Webflow exist in that world? I hope so.
Will it exist in the form it does today? Probably not. It will be fundamentally different. But the mission ā to help people tell stories, build digital experiences, and create ā that has lasting value.
Ksenia: Itās hard to stay flexible in times like these.
Linda:It is. You have to be fearless.
What does that mean for how we operate as a business? It means weāll have to disrupt ourselves. And thatās painful. Itās scary. There are risks ā revenue, relevance, everything. But I believe that if we stay focused on doing something valuable for people and for businesses, weāll find a way through it.
Itāll just be a very interesting journey.
Ksenia: Letās stay human for a moment. Can you tell me what book shaped you most ā in business or life?
Linda:Youāre going to think Iām an alien now. My favorite book ā and series ā is Enderās Game by Orson Scott Card. I reread the whole series every year. Iāve been doing it since elementary or middle school.
The core series is Enderās Game, Speaker for the Dead, Xenocide, and Children of the Mind. Then thereās a parallel series called Enderās Shadow ā about eight books total, not counting some of the more recent additions.
Enderās Game is about a six-year-old boy whoās trained in space to save humanity. He and other brilliant children are taken to a place called Battle School, where theyāre trained in war, theory, and leadership to fight an alien species called the Buggers.
Whatās so compelling is that you see leadership development through the eyes of a child. Humanity decides that children ā not adults ā are best suited to protect the world. Theyāre manipulated, yes, but also taught strategy and theory.
Ender, despite being the youngest and smallest, becomes the leader everyone follows. Heās brilliant. Heās empathetic. And he takes on this enormous burden of responsibility. One of the most beautiful lines in the book is:
āHe could never defeat an enemy unless he loved them ā because only when you love someone do you truly understand their weakness.ā
That always stuck with me.
The book is fun and intense, but itās also a profound exploration of leadership. It shows that true leadership isnāt about authority ā itās about influence. And Ender leads through kindness and understanding, not power. Thatās what shaped me most.
Ksenia: You mentioned kindness. Iāve been thinking a lot about kind AI. Thatās something we donāt talk about enough.
Linda:Absolutely. Maybe thatās what we need to build next.
Ksenia: That would be wonderful. Thank you so much for this conversation ā it was fascinating and a lot of fun.

