A firm launched an AI‑driven customer‑service assistant that, on paper, was modern and capable enough for the role. The bot went live, but within a week the volume of support tickets actually increased.
The culprit wasn’t the model; it was the company’s own website. The return‑policy the assistant had to quote lived in a PDF, the shipping calculator was a multi‑step form, and the product specifications were hidden behind a tabbed interface that only loaded after a click. To a human visitor the site works perfectly, but to the AI half of the site effectively doesn’t exist.
This is the obstacle most agentic AI deployments are confronting today, and it has little to do with the underlying model.
McKinsey’s 2025 State of AI report shows that 23 % of organisations are already scaling agentic AI in at least one business function, with another 39 % experimenting. The majority of these projects will hit the same wall: a website built for humans being fed to software that needs capabilities humans never required. The next leap for AI agents isn’t sharper reasoning—it’s the capacity to truly navigate and utilise the live internet.
The three tasks an AI agent must master on the web
Search. The agent must locate the exact information, not just a list of URLs. For example, if a user asks an insurance chatbot whether a policy covers a specific event, the bot needs to surface the relevant clause, not a generic search‑results page.
Scrape. After finding the page, the agent has to extract the content cleanly. Modern sites often load data via JavaScript, hide text inside accordions, tabs, or lazy‑loaded sections, so the raw HTML the agent receives can look nothing like what a human sees.
Interact. This is where most demos crumble in production. Crucial information is frequently hidden behind “load more” buttons, search boxes, multi‑step forms, navigation menus, or login walls. A scraper that only reads static pages can’t reach it; an agent that can click, navigate, fill out forms and submit them can. Interaction is the newest and toughest capability, and it powers the most valuable use cases—price‑comparison shopping assistants, research tools that pull data from interactive dashboards, and support bots that traverse documentation portals just like a real user would.
Firecrawl builds the underlying layer
Firecrawl is one of the companies constructing infrastructure that supports all three functions. Its platform sits between AI agents and the live web, handling search, scraping and interaction as managed services behind a single API. The open‑source project has amassed over 120,000 stars on GitHub, and customers such as Lovable, Replit and Zapier run it in production. Nexus Venture Partners led a $14.5 million Series A round in 2025, with Shopify CEO Tobi Lütke joining as an investor after first using Firecrawl as a client.
The value proposition is simple: an AI agent built on top of Firecrawl doesn’t need custom code for every site it touches. It calls an API, and the platform takes care of rendering JavaScript, navigating dynamic pages, interacting with elements, and returning structured output that the AI can consume.
“Every AI company needed clean web data and nobody was solving it well,” says Eric Ciarla, co‑founder of Firecrawl. “So we built Firecrawl.”
Ciarla and his co‑founders ran into the problem while building Mendable, an AI search platform. The search engine worked, but the pipeline that pulled data from each client’s website kept breaking whenever the site changed. Rebuilding fragile extraction code for every new integration was a constant headache—a situation many AI firms face when they try to ingest web data.
AI is becoming the new discovery channel
For two decades, the route from “a customer is looking for something” to “the customer finds your business” usually ran through traditional search engines. Today, AI assistants are increasingly the first stop for people seeking recommendations, comparisons or answers. The assistant goes out, gathers information from relevant sites on the user’s behalf, and returns a synthesized response. If the assistant can’t parse your site, your business disappears from its answer.
Ciarla argues this flips the usual narrative around AI crawlers. Historically, they were seen as unwanted bots that consumed bandwidth without delivering human traffic. That made sense when only search engines were reading sites at scale. Now, when AI agents are the very path humans use to discover information, blocking them is akin to shutting off an emerging discovery channel.
What sets Firecrawl apart is that it requires no action from the website owner. Most AI‑visibility solutions ask site owners to add markup, expose new endpoints, or restructure pages. Firecrawl works in the opposite direction, automatically converting human‑readable pages into machine‑readable data in real time, without the site owner ever needing to know an AI is looking.
The ecosystem question
As agents harvest more data from more sites, the relationship between AI systems and content creators becomes a pressing issue. A model that extracts value from web content without giving anything back to the publishers isn’t sustainable. Publishers are pushing back with lawsuits and access blocks, and major sites are increasingly walling off their content from AI crawlers.
In March 2026, Firecrawl partnered with Wikimedia Enterprise to route its Wikipedia traffic—2‑3 million requests per month—through Wikimedia’s commercial APIs instead of scraping pages directly. The deal swaps heavy‑handed scraping for paid, structured access and helps support the volunteer community that maintains one of the web’s most‑cited information sources.
“The community members who write and edit these articles hold immense power in the age of AI,” Ciarla said. “We want to ensure our infrastructure supports their work rather than just consuming it.”
This partnership is one possible model; similar arrangements may appear as AI products move from demos to large‑scale production. The companies that build the underlying infrastructure will shape how AI interacts with the web.
What this means for you
If you’re building AI products, the takeaway is clear: the model is no longer the main differentiator. Frontier models are widely available and the gap between them is narrowing. What separates a production‑ready AI product from a flop is the underlying layer that can actually retrieve the needed information. Investing in that layer can yield significant engineering advantages.
If you run a business and haven’t considered AI agents reading your website, now is the time to start. The discovery channel is shifting. A customer who once would have found you via a traditional search engine may now rely on an AI assistant. If that assistant can’t read your site, you risk being invisible.