Most SEO teams celebrate when they hit page one on Google. And they should — it’s still the dominant search channel. But there’s a growing blind spot that’s quietly costing brands qualified visibility: ranking well on Google says almost nothing about whether you’ll show up when someone asks ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google’s AI Overviews the same question.
This isn’t a hypothetical problem. I’ve audited sites with strong domain authority, clean technical foundations, and first-page rankings across dozens of keywords — that were completely invisible in AI-generated answers. And the fix isn’t what most people expect.
What is GEO and why does it matter now
Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) is the practice of optimizing your content to appear in AI-generated answers — not just traditional search results. As more users shift toward conversational search through tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google’s AI Overviews, the rules for what gets surfaced are fundamentally different from what got you to page one.
The market is moving fast. In regulated industries like iGaming, finance, and healthcare, the brands that figure this out early will own a channel their competitors haven’t even started thinking about.
Why your Google rankings don’t automatically transfer
Traditional SEO is built around signals Google has spent two decades refining — backlinks, domain authority, crawlability, on-page optimization. LLMs work differently. They don’t crawl the web in real time and return a ranked list. They generate answers by drawing on patterns learned during training, supplemented in some cases by live retrieval. What gets cited is what the model has learned to associate with credibility, clarity, and direct answerability.
That means a site can tick every traditional SEO box and still be invisible in AI search — because the content isn’t structured in a way that LLMs can easily extract and cite.
How LLMs decide what to cite
There’s no single algorithm to reverse-engineer here, but the patterns are becoming clearer. LLMs tend to favor content that is direct and declarative — it answers the question in the first sentence, not the fifth paragraph. They favor content with strong entity associations, meaning your brand, your name, and your areas of expertise are consistently and clearly connected across the web. They favor structured content — definitions, lists, comparisons, and step-by-step explanations that are easy to extract as a discrete answer. And they favor sources that appear frequently in high-quality contexts, which is where traditional authority signals still play a role, just not the only role.
5 fixes you can apply today
1. Lead with the answer. Stop burying your key point three paragraphs in. State your position or conclusion in the first two sentences, then support it. LLMs reward content that answers directly.
2. Use clear definitions. If your content covers a technical concept, define it explicitly. “GEO is the practice of optimizing content to appear in AI-generated answers” is more citable than three paragraphs that assume the reader already knows what it means.
3. Build entity consistency. Make sure your name, your brand, and your core topics are connected and consistent across your website, LinkedIn, and any third-party mentions. LLMs build associations over time — inconsistency dilutes them.
4. Structure your content for extraction. Use H2s and H3s that could stand alone as questions and answers. Think about how a single section of your article would read if lifted out of context — because that’s often exactly what happens.
5. Earn mentions in AI-adjacent content. Being cited in content that LLMs already trust — industry publications, well-linked blogs, authoritative forums — increases the likelihood that your brand gets pulled into generated answers.
Final thoughts
GEO isn’t a replacement for traditional SEO. The technical foundation still matters — a site that’s slow, poorly crawled, or thin on content won’t win in AI search either. But the brands that treat GEO as a separate discipline, one that runs alongside their existing SEO strategy rather than waiting to replace it, are the ones who’ll have a meaningful head start when AI search becomes the default for their target audience.
If you’re not sure where your site currently stands in AI search, that’s where an LLM visibility audit starts.
