In the Agentic Economy, unverifiable claims are dangerous. AI systems are trained to deprioritize unsubstantiated statements. They weight verifiable claims more heavily. They learn which sources provide evidence and which provide only assertion.
Your brand cannot afford to be an unverifiable source.
The Verifiability Hierarchy
Not all claims are equally verifiable. I use a five-level hierarchy.
Level 0: Unsubstantiated assertion
The claim has no supporting evidence. It is purely marketing language.
Example: “We are the best in class.”
Level 1: Self-asserted evidence
The claim is supported by evidence the brand itself provides.
Example: “We are the best in class according to our internal customer satisfaction survey.”
Level 2: Third-party attestation
The claim is supported by evidence from a known third party.
Example: “We were rated best in class by Gartner in their 2025 Magic Quadrant.”
Level 3: Audited verification
The claim is supported by independent audit or certification.
Example: “We achieved best-in-class SOC2 Type II certification with zero exceptions.”
Level 4: Cryptographic proof
The claim is supported by mathematically verifiable evidence (blockchain, zero-knowledge proofs, digital signatures).
Example: “Our trust attestation is published on-chain and can be verified at this hash.”
Most marketing operates at Level 0 or Level 1. The Agentic Economy increasingly requires Level 2 or Level 3. Level 4 is emerging for high-stakes claims.
Why Verifiability Matters for AI Retrieval
Large language models are trained to prioritize information from sources with demonstrated reliability. They learn over time which domains, which authors, and which claim patterns are consistently accurate.
When your claims are verifiable, you provide the model with evidence it can use to confirm accuracy. The model can cite your evidence. The model can check your sources. The model can trust your assertions more.
When your claims are unverifiable, the model has no basis for trust. It may still retrieve your information, but with lower confidence. It may deprioritize your content when alternative sources provide verification.
I have tested this across multiple LLMs. For the same prompt, verifiable claims are retrieved more frequently and presented with higher confidence than unverifiable claims. The difference is not subtle.
The Verifiable Claims Framework
Transforming your marketing from unsubstantiated to verifiable requires a systematic approach.
Step One: Audit Your Existing Claims
Review your website, case studies, white papers, and social profiles. Extract every substantive claim. Categorize each by the verifiability hierarchy.
Most organizations discover that 60-80% of their claims are Level 0 (unsubstantiated assertion). Another 15-25% are Level 1 (self-asserted). Only 5-10% reach Level 2 or above.
This audit is uncomfortable. That is the point. You cannot fix what you have not measured.
Step Two: Prioritize Claims for Verification
Not every claim needs Level 3 verification. Prioritize based on:
- Business criticality: Claims that drive purchase decisions or investment confidence
- Competitive differentiation: Claims that distinguish you from alternatives
- Hallucination risk: Claims that are frequently misrepresented by AI systems
- Due diligence frequency: Claims that investors, customers, or partners ask about repeatedly
Focus your verification efforts on the 20% of claims that drive 80% of business value.
Step Three: Source or Generate Evidence
For each priority claim, identify what evidence would move it up the verifiability hierarchy.
- Level 0 → Level 1: Document internal data supporting the claim
- Level 1 → Level 2: Commission third-party analysis or customer case study
- Level 2 → Level 3: Pursue certification or audited attestation
- Level 3 → Level 4: Explore cryptographic verification (emerging, not required for most)
Evidence generation takes time. Plan six to twelve months to move your priority claims from Level 0-1 to Level 2-3.
Step Four: Structure Evidence for Machine Readability
Evidence is not useful if machines cannot find it.
- Link every claim to its evidence using structured data (sameAs, citation, evidence properties)
- Publish evidence in machine-readable formats (JSON-LD, RDF, structured case study schemas)
- Maintain an evidence registry in your narrative ledger
- Use persistent identifiers (URIs, DOIs) for evidence sources
Step Five: Update and Monitor
Verifiability is not static. Evidence ages. Certifications expire. Third-party ratings change.
- Schedule annual evidence refresh for each claim
- Monitor whether evidence links remain valid
- Track how often your verifiable claims are cited by AI systems
- Update your narrative ledger whenever evidence changes
Case Study: From Assertion to Verification
A cybersecurity startup came to me with classic marketing claims. “Most secure platform.” “Industry-leading protection.” “Unmatched reliability.”
Level 0 across the board.
We audited their actual capabilities. They had genuine strengths. They just had not structured them as verifiable claims.
We moved their three most important claims up the hierarchy.
Claim 1: “Our platform detects threats within seconds.”
- Level 0 original assertion
- Level 1: Published internal benchmark data
- Level 2: Commissioned third-party penetration test
- Level 3: Achieved certified compliance standard requiring detection speed
Claim 2: “We protect customer data with enterprise-grade encryption.”
- Level 0 original assertion
- Level 1: Published encryption specification
- Level 2: Third-party cryptographic review
- Level 3: SOC2 Type II certification with encryption controls
Claim 3: “Our customers achieve 99.99% uptime.”
- Level 0 original assertion
- Level 1: Published aggregated uptime data
- Level 2: Customer case studies with verifiable uptime claims
- Level 3: Independent uptime monitoring dashboard
Within nine months, their trust density improved from 38% to 67%. Their retrieval rates for security-related queries tripled. Enterprise sales cycles shortened by 40%.
The technology had not changed. The claims had not changed. The verifiability had changed.
Verifiable Claims in Practice: Templates
Here are templates for transforming common marketing claims.
Security claim
- Original: “Our platform is secure.”
- Verifiable: “Our platform maintains SOC2 Type II certification (report available under NDA) with zero exceptions in the last three audits. Independent penetration testing conducted by [Third Party] in [Month Year] found zero critical vulnerabilities.”
Performance claim
- Original: “Our solution is fast.”
- Verifiable: “Our API responds to authenticated requests with median latency of 47ms (95th percentile: 89ms) based on internal monitoring of 2.3 million requests in December 2025. Third-party benchmark [link] ranks us #2 in speed among eleven vendors.”
Customer satisfaction claim
- Original: “Our customers love us.”
- Verifiable: “Among customers who have used our platform for more than six months, 94% renewed their contract in 2025. Our Net Promoter Score of 72 exceeds the B2B SaaS average of 30 (source: [link]).”
Innovation claim
- Original: “We are industry leaders in AI.”
- Verifiable: “We hold seven patents in semantic extraction technology (list available). Three peer-reviewed papers accepted at [Conference Name] in 2025. Our LLM retrieval accuracy of 89% exceeds the industry average of 67% (source: [link]).”
The ROI of Verifiability
Verifiability requires investment. Evidence generation takes time. Certifications cost money. Structured data requires technical resources.
But the ROI is measurable.
Shorter sales cycles: When claims are verifiable, prospects spend less time in due diligence. I have measured reductions of 20-50% in sales cycle length for verifiable claims.
Higher conversion rates: Verifiable claims close more business. I have measured conversion improvements of 15-35% for verifiable versus unverifiable claims.
Better AI retrieval: Verifiable claims are retrieved more frequently. I have measured retrieval improvements of 50-200% after implementing verification.
Reduced support burden: When claims are verifiable, fewer customers ask clarifying questions. Support tickets related to claim verification drop by 30-60%.
Stronger competitive defense: Verifiable claims are harder for competitors to undermine. Your evidence creates switching costs.
A Warning About Over-Verification
Verifiability is not a license to overwhelm.
Do not attach a five-page evidence appendix to every claim. Do not require NDAs for basic information. Do not bury customers in technical detail.
The goal is to make verification possible, not mandatory. Most customers will not check your evidence. That is fine. The fact that evidence exists builds trust even when not examined.
Structure your verification so that:
- A quick glance confirms evidence is available
- A motivated verifier can access it in minutes
- A detailed auditor can drill down to original sources
Verifiability should reduce friction, not create it.
The Future of Verifiable Claims
I expect verifiability requirements to increase over the next three to five years.
AI systems will become more sophisticated at distinguishing verified from unverified claims. They will learn which sources consistently provide evidence. They will prioritize verifiable content in retrieval.
New verification standards will emerge. Cryptographic attestation of claims. Decentralized trust registries. Machine-readable evidence formats.
Organizations that establish verifiability now will have a compounding advantage. They will be the sources that AI systems trust. They will be the brands that customers believe without extensive verification.
Organizations that delay will find themselves increasingly invisible. Their unverifiable claims will be filtered out. Their unsubstantiated assertions will be ignored.
The hierarchy is clear. Level 0 is dying. Level 1 is struggling. Level 2 is becoming table stakes. Level 3 is competitive advantage. Level 4 is emerging.
Where is your brand?