Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Measuring Success in the Age of GEO

I am back after missing a week due to the day job! So, you devised your perfect GEO/AEO strategy and started writing your product content in conformance with the methodologies outlined in previous posts . Now comes the million-dollar question: Is it actually working?

Auditing your performance in the age of AI is tricky because the old scoreboard (Google Analytics) might be lying to you. Traffic might go down while your brand awareness goes up—simply because the AI answered the customer’s question without them ever needing to visit your site.

Here is a no-nonsense, friendly guide on how to audit your GEO and AEO efforts, the tools you can use, and how to fix the cracks in your strategy.


1. The "Ego Surf" Audit (Ask the AI)

The simplest way to audit your standing is to go directly to the source. You need to see if the "Generative Engines" (ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Claude) actually know who you are. Also, bare in mind that the AI models don’t reindex as often as the Google Search Index, so this is a long game.

  • The Action: Treat the AI like a potential customer.

  • Brand Audit: Ask, "What is {Your Company Name}?" or "What does {Your Company} sell?" If the AI hallucinates or says "I don't have enough information," you have an AIO (AI Optimization) problem. It means your digital footprint is too small or inconsistent.

  • Category Audit: Ask, "Who provides the best Service in {City}?" or "Compare {Your Product} vs {Competitor}".

  • The Goal: You aren't just looking for a mention; you are looking for sentiment and accuracy. Does the AI recommend you? Does it cite the right features? If it recommends a competitor, analyze why—is their pricing clearer? Do they have more reviews?

2. The Metric Shift: From Clicks to "Inclusion"

In traditional SEO, we obsess over Click-Through Rates (CTR). In AEO and GEO, we care about Source Inclusion and Visibility Scores.

  • Zero-Click Visibility: You need to track how often you appear in "Featured Snippets," "People Also Ask" boxes, or AI overviews. Tools like AIOSEO (for WordPress) or SEMrush can help track these specific SERP features.

  • Position-Adjusted Visibility: This is a fancy term for a simple concept: Did the AI mention you early in its answer? Research suggests that visibility is measured not just by if you were cited, but where and how much of your content was used. You want to be in the first paragraph of the AI’s script, not a footnote at the bottom.

3. The Toolkit: What to Use

You don't need to invent new technology to do this, but you do need to use existing tools differently.

  • AIOSEO (All In One SEO): If you are on WordPress, this plugin has a "Search Statistics" module. It helps you track keyword rankings specifically for content performance and identifies "content decay" (when your old posts stop ranking and need a refresh).

  • Using tools such as AIClicks and Profound, track AEO performance and monitor which products appear in AI citations, which content gets extracted most often, and what language patterns work best. Use these insights to refine your content templates, adjust attribute structures, and improve descriptions across similar products. Once you identify effective AEO patterns.

  • Question Research Tools: Use AnswerThePublic, SEMrush, or even your own customer support tickets. These tell you exactly what questions people are asking. If you aren't answering these specific questions on your site, you are invisible to the Answer Engine.

  • GPT-4 (as an Auditor): You can actually feed your content into ChatGPT and ask it to evaluate it against Google’s E-E-A-T (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, Trustworthiness) standards. Ask it, "How would you rate this article’s authority compared to Competitor {URL}?".

4. Corrective Actions: How to Fix Your Strategy

So, you audited your site and the AI is ignoring you. Here is how to get its attention.

Fix #1: The "Answer First" Adjust (AEO)

If you aren't winning featured snippets or voice search results, your content is likely buried.

  • The Fix: Rewrite your headers as questions (e.g., "How long does a drill battery last?") and provide the answer immediately in a concise, 40–60 word paragraph directly underneath. No fluff, no backstory. Just the answer.

  • Technical Boost: Use Schema Markup (like FAQPage schema). This is code that screams to the robot, "Here is the answer!" Tools like AIOSEO can generate this for you without you needing to code.

Fix #2: The "Citation Magnet" Move (GEO)

If the AI summarizes the topic but doesn't mention you, your content lacks authority signals.

  • The Fix: Add hard data. Don't say "Our software is fast." Say, "Our software processes data 30% faster than the industry average," and cite a source or internal study. Adding citations and statistics can increase your visibility in AI answers by 30-40%.

  • Quote Experts: Include direct quotations from industry leaders or your own experts. AI loves to pull quotes to build its "script".

Fix #3: The "Consensus" Cleanup (Off-Page Audit)

This is the big one. AI doesn't just trust your website; it trusts what the rest of the internet says about you. If you have great content but terrible reviews on Yelp or G2, the AI might skip you.

  • The Fix: Audit your N.A.P. (Name, Address, Phone) across all directories. Inconsistency confuses the AI. Then, actively drive happy customers to leave reviews on third-party sites. The AI looks for "consensus" across the web to verify you are a legitimate recommendation.

Summary Checklist

  1. Ask the AI: regularly prompt ChatGPT/Perplexity to see how it describes your brand.

  2. Track Snippets: Monitor how often you appear in "People Also Ask" or AI Overviews.

  3. Inject Facts: Audit your top pages—if they are full of fluff, replace them with stats, tables, and direct answers.

  4. Check the Vibe: Ensure your off-site reviews and directory listings are squeaky clean.

If you do this, you stop chasing clicks and start building the "influence" that gets you cited as the expert, but remember that this is built over time. Be patient!


Monday, February 9, 2026

Mastering the AI Trilogy: AEO, GEO, and AIO Optimization (AIO)


OK! Let's complete the trilogy. In previous posts I outlined how to be the Answer (AEO) and how to be the Recommendation (GEO). Now, we have to talk about the foundation that holds it all up: AI Optimization (AIO).

If you don't nail this, the other two don't matter because the AI won't even know you exist.



The Cheat Sheet: AEO vs. GEO vs. AIO

Let’s just again set out the terminology of the three strategies and how they stack up and support each other before we get into it:

  • AEO (The Words): Getting your specific text cited as the direct answer to a question (e.g., "Why is my Power Drill vibrating?"). You want to be the snippet.

  • GEO (The Choice): Getting your business recommended in a comparison (e.g., "Best Power Drill in theConstruction Industry"). You want to be the "friend" the AI suggests.
  • AIO (The Identity): Teaching the AI who you are. This is about Brand Knowledge. If the AI doesn't have a confident "mental model" of your business—your hours, your services, your location, it won't risk recommending you, no matter how good your blog posts are.

Think of it this way:

  • AEO is your script
  • GEO is your audition
  • AIO is your ID badge proving you’re actually allowed in the building.

AIO: The "Digital Tumbleweed" Problem

Here is the brutal truth: You could have the best website in the world, but if the rest of the internet is silent about you, you look like a "digital tumbleweed" to an AI.

AI models (like ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity) rely on confidence. They hate hallucinating (making things up) when money or recommendations are on the line. If the AI isn't 100% sure you are a legitimate, active business, it will skip you and send your customers to the competitor it does know.

AIO is the process of filling in the "Knowledge Graph" gaps so the AI feels safe talking about you. Here is how to accomplish that.

1. Feed the Robot Your Resume (Structured Data)

If your website just says, "We make great pizza," the AI thinks, "According to whom? Your mom?". You need to speak the robot's native language to prove you are real.

  • The Move: Use Schema Markup (I need to dive into this in more detail in a separate post later, when I understand it better). This is invisible code that tells the AI, "I am a Restaurant," "I serve Neapolitan Pizza," and "I am open until 10 PM."

  • The Example: Don't just list your hours in plain text. Use "LocalBusiness" schema to hard-code your opening hours, address, and phone number. This helps the AI build a "Knowledge Card" about you so it doesn't have to guess.

  • Tool Tip: You don't need to be a coder. Plugins like AIOSEO (Wordpress) can generate this schema for you automatically.

2. The "Consensus" Strategy (Be Everywhere Else)

This is the part most businesses miss. AI trusts the "consensus" of the internet more than it trusts your own website. If you say you're the best, that's marketing. If Yelp, TripAdvisor, and five industry blogs say you're the best, that's a fact.

  • The Move: You need an "Authority Ecosystem." This means ensuring your business information (N.A.P. Name, Address, Phone) is identical across every directory, map, and review site.

  • The Example: Let's say you run "Peppy's Pizza." If your site says you're open, but Yelp says you're closed, and your Google Business Profile has an old phone number, the AI gets confused. When AI gets confused, it ignores you. Clean up your listings so they all match perfectly.

3. Get "Loud" (Sentiment & Mentions)

This is probably the one thing that involves the most work. AI listens to the crowd. It rewards the "loudest" brands—not necessarily the ones shouting the most, but the ones being talked about the most.

  • The Move: Generate positive sentiment. You need mentions in places other than your site. This includes PR, listicles ("Top 10 lists"), and social media tags.

  • The Example: Weak AIO: You write a blog post called "Why we are the best plumbers." Strong AIO: You get mentioned in a local news article about "Small businesses saving the day" or a Reddit thread about "Reliable plumbers."

  • Why it works: These are "breadcrumbs" that teach the AI that real humans like and trust you.

4. The Wikipedia Test (Establish Entity Authority)

The Holy Grail of AIO is becoming a recognized "Entity." You want the AI to know you like it knows Coca-Cola or Nike (on a smaller scale, of course).

  • The Move: If possible, get a Wikipedia page or a Google Knowledge Panel. If you can't get Wikipedia, aim for industry-specific directories (like G2 for software or Healthgrades for doctors).

  • The Example: If a user asks, "Is Your Company legit?", the AI cross-references these trusted databases. If you are missing from them, the AI might answer, "I don't have enough information on that company," which is the kiss of death for a sale.

Summary

AIO isn't about ranking for a keyword; it's about brand survival.

If you don't verify your identity across the web, you are leaving your reputation up to the AI's assumptions. And as we know, you don't want to lose revenue because a robot assumed you went out of business three years ago.

Your AIO To-Do List:

  1. Schema: Mark up your site so the AI understands your data.

  2. Consistency: Ensure your name, address, and phone number are identical everywhere.

  3. Reviews: Get your customers to talk about you on third-party sites (Google, Yelp, G2).

  4. Mentions: Get cited in "Best of" lists and local directories.


Monday, February 2, 2026

Mastering the Art of Answer Engine Optimization (AEO)


Think of
Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) as a sub genre of GEO which I explored in my previous post while we walk through some of the details and have a closer look into what it’s all about…

The Cheat Sheet: AEO vs. GEO

Before we dive in, let’s clear up the alphabet soup. Both strategies want AI to notice you, but they play different positions on the field.

  • AEO (Answer Engine Optimization): This is about being the direct answer. When someone asks a specific question (e.g., "How long does a drill battery last?"), you want the AI to read your specific sentence verbatim as the solution. It’s about winning the "Featured Snippet" or the voice answer on Alexa/Siri.

  • GEO (Generative Engine Optimization): This is about being the recommendation. When someone asks a complex question (e.g., "Best drills for contractors"), you want the AI to synthesize your content with others and cite you as an authority in its custom-written essay. It’s about influence and reputation.

Think of it this way: AEO is writing the summary on the back of the book so the librarian can instantly answer a quick question. GEO is ensuring your book is cited in the librarian's research paper.


AEO: The Art of the "Zero-Click" Win

We are moving toward a world where people don't want links; they want answers. If your customer asks, "Why is my power drill not working?" they don't want to read your company history. They want to know if they need to replace the battery.

AEO is the art of structuring your content so clearly that an AI (like ChatGPT, Google’s AI Overview, or Siri) looks at it and says, "This is the perfect answer," and serves it up on a silver platter, often without the user ever clicking your website.

Here is the playbook for getting your content chosen as the "Answer."

1. The "Answer First" Rule (Don't Bury the Lead)

To reiterate what I discussed in my previous post, LLMs (Large Language Models) are impatient. If you write a 2,000-word blog post where the actual answer is buried in paragraph twelve, you lose.

  • The Move: Identify the specific question your customer is asking and answer it immediately in a clean, 40–60 word paragraph at the very top of your section.

  • The Example: Let's say you run an HVAC company.

    • Bad AEO: Starting with "Drilling into steel and concrete is one the most challenging mediums that stress your drill operability…..."

    • Good AEO: Create an H2 header: "Why is my power drill not working?" Immediately follow it with: "The most common reason for a power drill not working is due to poor battery health after a long period of heavy usage."

    • Why it works: You gave the AI a perfect, bite-sized snippet it can steal and read aloud to the user.

2. Product Titles & Descriptions That Actually Talk

Generic product pages are AEO killers. If you just list "Model X Drill" and a price, the AI has nothing to say. You need to anticipate the follow-up questions.

  • The Move: Rewrite descriptions to proactively answer questions about specs, usage, and problems.

  • The Example:

    • Bad AEO: "Cordless Power Drill. High quality."

    • Good AEO: "This Cordless Power Drill features a 20-hour battery life on a single charge and is water-resistant, delivering a massive 1,400 in-lbs of torque"

    • Why it works: You just answered "How long is the battery?", "Is it water-proof?" and “How much torque does it have?” in one sentence. The AI can now match your product to those specific queries.

3. The Q&A Format (FAQ Pages on Steroids)

AI models love the "Q&A" format because it mimics how they are trained. You can force your way into the conversation by structuring data exactly how the AI wants to see it.

  • The Move: Create "Question/Answer" pairs. Don't just rely on paragraphs; use an FAQ list where the question is an H3 header and the answer is body text.

  • The Example:

    • Q: "Is the Milwaukee FPD3 a hammer drill?"

    • A: "Yes, the Milwaukee M18 FPD3 is a percussion/hammer drill designed for drilling into brick, concrete, and masonry."

    • Why it works: You are literally feeding the robot the script. This creates "prime fodder" for AI overviews and voice search results.

4. Speak the Robot’s Language (Schema Markup)

This is the technical bit, but it’s crucial. You need to use code to tell the search engine exactly what it is looking at. This is called "Schema." and we will visit this in future posts, it’s something at the top of my list to understand further.

  • The Move: Use "FAQPage" schema or "Product" schema. This puts invisible labels on your content that shout, "Hey Google, this text here is a price," or "This text here is an answer to a common question."

  • The Result: It makes it incredibly easy for the engine to index your content as a verified answer, drastically increasing your chances of showing up in rich results and AI summaries.

The Bottom Line

AEO is about utility. It’s about accepting that your website might not be the destination anymore—it’s the database the AI uses to do its job. Be concise, be factual, and answer the question before the user has a chance to scroll.


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