GEO

What is Generative Engine Optimization (GEO)?

Updated May 2026

Search changed. Not slowly, the way search always changes. Suddenly, in a way that most businesses have not caught up with yet.

When someone types "best accountant for small businesses in Austin" or "who's the best consultant for restaurant POS systems" into ChatGPT, Claude, or Perplexity, they get an answer. Not ten blue links. An answer — with names, sometimes with descriptions, sometimes with a direct recommendation. That answer comes from somewhere. The question is whether it comes from you.

Generative Engine Optimization — GEO — is the discipline of making sure that when AI tools answer questions in your category, your name, your business, or your work shows up in the answer. It is to AI search what SEO was to Google search. Different mechanisms, same goal: be findable when the right person is looking.

How it differs from SEO

SEO optimizes for ranking position on a search results page. The game is getting to page one, position one. The mechanism is crawlable pages, keyword signals, backlinks, technical site performance, and a lot of other factors that change every time Google updates its algorithm.

GEO optimizes for citation in an AI-generated answer. The game is being included when an AI model synthesizes a response to a relevant question. The mechanisms are different — and less understood, because the field is still being defined in real time.

What we know from direct testing: AI tools tend to cite sources that are authoritative, specific, and consistently referenced across the web. A business that has a clear entity presence — a website that says exactly what they do and who they serve, mentions in credible third-party sources, consistent information across platforms — is more likely to be cited than one that does not. This is why GEO work starts with entity building, not keyword stuffing.

The three things that determine whether AI cites you

Based on what is currently understood about how large language models and retrieval systems surface businesses, there are three things that matter most:

Entity clarity. AI tools need to understand clearly who you are and what you do. If your website says you are a "holistic wellness practitioner helping people find balance," that is harder to cite than a site that says you are a "licensed physical therapist in Denver specializing in post-surgical rehabilitation for athletes." The more specific and unambiguous your entity definition, the more likely an AI tool is to match you to a relevant query.

Third-party corroboration. AI models are trained on and retrieve from a wide range of web sources. A business that only exists on its own website has a thin presence. A business that is mentioned in local journalism, industry directories, podcast transcripts, review platforms, and guest articles has a presence that multiple sources corroborate — which is what AI tools look for when deciding what to cite as authoritative.

Question-shaped content. AI tools answer questions. If your content is not structured around the questions your target customers are actually asking, you are unlikely to surface when those questions are posed. This is different from keyword-dense content for Google. It is about producing direct, citation-ready answers to the questions that matter in your category.

An audit you can run right now

Before doing any GEO work, you need a baseline. Here is how to run a quick audit in under 20 minutes.

Open ChatGPT, Claude, and Perplexity. In each one, run the following types of questions — replace the brackets with your actual category and location or niche:

Who are the best [YOUR SERVICE TYPE] in [YOUR CITY OR REGION]?
What should I look for when hiring a [YOUR ROLE OR SERVICE]?
Who are some well-regarded [YOUR SPECIALTY] practitioners known for [YOUR SPECIFIC APPROACH]?

Do you appear? If not, that is your baseline. Save a screenshot of each result with the date. You will rerun this audit in 30–60 days to measure whether your GEO work is having an effect. AI tools update their knowledge at different rates — some crawl more frequently than others — so this is a longer game than paid search, but the results compound.

The five foundational moves

GEO strategy is not complicated at the foundation. These five moves are where every business should start.

1. Lock your entity definition. Write a single paragraph — 3–4 sentences — that says exactly who you are, what you do, who you do it for, and where. This paragraph should appear on your homepage, your About page, and every profile you maintain online. Consistency matters: AI tools triangulate across sources. Inconsistent descriptions create ambiguity.

2. Get cited in the right places. Local journalism, industry publications, relevant directories, podcast appearances, guest articles — each one is a corroborating source. A mention in a credible third-party context is worth more for GEO than ten pages of original content on your own site.

3. Create question-and-answer content. Write articles, FAQs, and guides that directly answer the questions your customers ask. Not "About Our Services" pages. Specific, titled, direct answers. "What does a solo financial advisor actually charge?" is a question. Write the answer. AI tools retrieve this type of content when that question gets asked.

4. Add schema markup. Schema markup is structured data you add to your website that tells search engines — and by extension, AI tools — exactly what your business is, where it is, what it offers, and who it serves. For most small businesses, the most important schema types are LocalBusiness, Person, and FAQPage. A developer can add these in an afternoon. They are one of the clearest signals you can send to automated systems about your identity.

5. Monitor and re-audit. GEO is not a one-time project. AI tools update their knowledge over time. Competitors who do this work will start appearing where you are not. Run your audit prompts monthly, screenshot the results, and track changes. The businesses that are most findable in AI search in two years are the ones that started tracking it now.

A prompt for building your entity definition

Use this in Claude or ChatGPT to draft your core entity paragraph. This is not marketing copy — it is designed for factual precision, which is what AI tools can cite.

Help me write a factual, specific entity definition paragraph for my business.
Business name: [NAME]
What I do: [SPECIFIC SERVICE OR PRODUCT]
Who I serve: [SPECIFIC AUDIENCE — be specific about role, industry, location if relevant]
What makes my approach distinct: [ONE SPECIFIC THING — methodology, credential, specialization]
Format: 3–4 sentences. No marketing language. No adjectives like "passionate" or "dedicated."
Write it the way Wikipedia writes about a business — factual and specific.

GEO and SEO: not either/or

GEO does not replace SEO. It runs alongside it. A well-optimized page that ranks on Google is also more likely to be indexed and retrieved by AI tools. The overlap is real. The difference is in what you optimize for: page rank versus citation probability.

For most small businesses, the right move is to pursue both without treating them as the same thing. Your SEO work should continue as it is. Your GEO work starts with entity clarity and third-party corroboration — and that work often improves your Google presence as a side effect.

The businesses that will be hardest to displace in AI search are the ones that built their entity presence early, when there was still relatively little competition. That window is now. It is not infinite.


Ready to go deeper? GEO for Business Owners covers the full system: AI brand audit, entity building, question-shaped content, schema, and citation tracking — written for small business owners, not developers. If you work in marketing, GEO for Marketers (Beginner) includes 15 workflows for making your clients more visible in AI search. Start free: get AI for the Curious — a plain-English tour of the AI tools landscape, including how GEO fits in.