Your Website Has a New Kind of Visitor — And It’s Not Human

For as long as the web has existed, websites have been built for two audiences: people and search engines. You optimized your content so human visitors could understand it and take action, and you structured it so Google could index and rank it. That two-audience model has held up remarkably well for about thirty years.
It’s about to become a three-audience model.
AI agents — the kind that power tools like ChatGPT, Claude, and Google’s Gemini when they’re operating on your behalf — are increasingly browsing the web, reading websites, and taking actions for the people using them. And right now, they’re doing it in a way that’s clunky, slow, and frankly a little embarrassing for a technology that’s supposed to be so smart.
A new web standard called WebMCP is about to change that. And even if your website is a straightforward marketing site without a shopping cart in sight, this is something worth understanding — because it’s going to affect how your site gets found, understood, and used in the not-too-distant future.
The Way AI Agents Browse the Web Today (It’s Not Pretty)
When an AI agent needs to interact with a website on your behalf today, it essentially does what a very determined but somewhat confused person would do if they couldn’t read English very well. It takes a screenshot of the page and tries to figure out what everything is. It digs through the underlying code looking for clues. It guesses where to click. It fills in forms by inferring what each field probably wants.
This approach — technically called DOM scraping and visual recognition — works often enough to be useful, but it’s slow, unreliable, and breaks constantly. Move a button two pixels, rename a form field, or change your page layout, and the agent might suddenly have no idea what to do. It’s the digital equivalent of rearranging your office and watching your intern wander around looking confused.
The deeper problem is that websites were never designed with AI agents in mind. Every site implicitly assumes a human is looking at it, reading it, and making decisions. AI agents are trying to operate in a world that wasn’t built for them.
What WebMCP Actually Does
WebMCP — short for Web Model Context Protocol — is a proposed web standard developed jointly by Google and Microsoft, currently being formalized through the W3C (the organization that sets official web standards). At its core, it gives websites a way to explicitly tell AI agents what they can do and how to do it.
Instead of an AI agent having to guess that your contact form is for sending inquiries, your website can clearly publish that information as a structured “tool” — essentially a set of instructions that says: “Here’s what I do, here’s what information you need to provide, and here’s how to make it happen.” The agent calls the tool directly, reliably, every time.
Think of it like the difference between giving someone directions by pointing vaguely and saying “it’s over there somewhere” versus handing them a map with a clearly marked route. WebMCP is the map.
For a simple marketing website, that might mean tools like: find this business’s contact information, submit an inquiry form, locate specific services or pricing, or understand what geographic area this business serves. For an ecommerce site, the tool set gets richer — search products, add to cart, check order status — but the principle is the same.
The technical implementation runs entirely within the browser, client-side, which means for many sites it can be added without a complete rebuild. Well-structured HTML forms, in particular, are already most of the way there.
Why This Matters Even for a Simple Website
The best way to understand what’s at stake is to put yourself on the other side of the equation — not as a business owner with a website, but as a potential customer using an AI assistant to find what they need.
Picture a recently retired couple asking their AI assistant: “Find us a financial advisor in Portland who specializes in retirement income planning and works with clients like us — and go ahead and request a consultation with a couple of promising ones.” The agent visits a handful of financial advisor websites. On some, it can clearly identify the firm’s specialty areas, understand who their ideal clients are, and successfully submit a consultation request form. On others, it fumbles around, can’t make sense of the page structure, and moves on.
Or consider someone newly diagnosed with a skin condition, asking their AI to find a dermatologist in their area who’s accepting new patients and to submit a new patient inquiry on their behalf. Or a small business owner asking their AI to find a commercial insurance broker who handles their industry and request a quote. Or a homeowner asking their AI to find a reputable contractor for a kitchen remodel and reach out to three of them.
In every one of these scenarios, the businesses with WebMCP-ready websites get the inquiry. The ones without it may not — not because their services are inferior, but because their website couldn’t communicate clearly with the agent doing the legwork.
None of these interactions involve anything sensitive or complicated. We’re talking about contact forms, service descriptions, location information, specialty areas, and new patient or new client inquiry forms — the same things your website already handles for human visitors today. WebMCP simply makes those interactions accessible to AI agents working on someone’s behalf, reliably and without the guesswork.
Whether your website handles that agent interaction smoothly, or whether the agent stumbles around and moves on to a competitor’s site that’s easier to deal with, is going to increasingly matter. Not this month. Probably not even this year. But sooner than most business owners expect.
WebMCP is the mechanism that makes your site ready for that interaction — not by changing what your website looks like or does for human visitors, but by adding a layer that speaks directly to AI agents in a language they can use reliably.
This is, in an important sense, the next evolution of what structured data did for SEO. When Schema.org markup became widely adopted, websites that implemented it correctly gained advantages in search results because they were communicating with Google in a more precise and useful way. WebMCP is the same idea, extended to AI agents taking action on behalf of users rather than search engines indexing content.
Where Things Stand Right Now
Full transparency: WebMCP is early. As of early 2026, it’s available in Chrome Canary — a developer preview version of Chrome — behind an experimental feature flag. Broader browser support is expected in mid-to-late 2026, with formal announcements likely at Google I/O or Google Cloud Next. The specification is actively being developed through the W3C with participation from both Google and Microsoft, which signals serious institutional momentum rather than a one-company experiment.
In other words, this is not something most businesses need to act on immediately. It is absolutely something worth having on your radar, and something your web developer should already be tracking.
The businesses that will be best positioned when WebMCP reaches mainstream adoption are the ones whose sites are already built on clean, well-structured code with properly formed HTML — not sites that were slapped together on a page builder with little attention to the underlying architecture. Good technical foundations, as it turns out, make it much easier to layer in new capabilities as standards evolve.
Which is, not coincidentally, exactly how 3rd Studio builds sites.
This Is the Beginning of a Longer Story
WebMCP is one piece of a much larger shift happening in how AI interacts with the web. We’ll be tracking it closely and publishing follow-up pieces as the standard matures, practical implementation guidance becomes clearer, and real-world use cases emerge for sites of all types and sizes.
If you’re curious about whether your current site is well-positioned for where the web is heading — with WebMCP and beyond — that’s exactly the kind of conversation we’re happy to have. The best time to think about future-proofing is before you need to, and a site audit or planning conversation costs nothing but a bit of time.
Get in touch with 3rd Studio to start that conversation. And stay tuned — this is the first in a series of posts on WebMCP and the emerging agentic web, written for business owners who want to stay ahead of the curve without needing a computer science degree to do it.


