In a recent wide-ranging appearance on The Rebooting Show, Associated Press (AP)’s Chief Revenue Officer Kristin Heitmann laid out how the nearly 200-year-old news wire is pivoting to power the burgeoning AI-driven media ecosystem — this time, with structured, verified data rather than just headlines.
“We are often the first on the ground as eyewitness journalists to report on something. … It’s important for technology organizations to have the most up-to-date information,” Heitmann told host Brian Morrissey. “The value proposition is the same … You want trusted information, you want reliable information, you want to be able to have someone who actually witnessed an event.”
With more than 200 bureaus worldwide, AP has long been the backbone of global news — delivering firsthand reporting to thousands of publications and broadcasts. But as generative-AI tools proliferate, the demand is shifting: developers, platforms, and downstream newsrooms increasingly want clean, structured datasets — not just prose. To meet that need, AP earlier this year rolled out AP Intelligence, a new offering that formalizes its reporting into data ready for AI training, fact-checking workflows, and real-time alerting systems.
“We are a breaking-news organization, we are often the source of information,” Heitmann said. “And we know that’s really important in this new AI ecosystem.”
For AP, the shift feels natural — an evolution of their core strength. But for the broader media world, it represents a striking moment: one of the oldest news agencies embracing a data-native future, embedding decades of journalistic trust into the AI pipelines shaping tomorrow’s media.


















