A marketing director I spoke to recently said something interesting: “Our SEO is strong, traffic is stable… but somehow we're not being recommended anywhere.”
That “anywhere” wasn't Google.
It was ChatGPT, Gemini, and every other AI layer quietly replacing search.
And that's where Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) comes in.
Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) is the practice of structuring your content, data, and brand signals so that large language models (LLMs) can recognize, trust, and recommend your brand when generating answers—not just rank your pages in search results.
Most teams think they've adapted.
In many cases… they haven't even started.
The Problem Isn't Ranking. It's Recognition.
Here's what usually happens.
Your content ranks.
It gets indexed.
It even performs decently.
But when someone asks ChatGPT:
Your competitor shows up. You don't.
Not because your product is worse. Because your brand is not understood by the model.
That's a very different problem.
The Problem Isn't Ranking. It's Recognition.
SEO was always about pages. GEO is about entities and relationships.
Google needed
- Keywords
- Backlinks
- Technical health
LLMs need
- Clear brand identity
- Consistent contextual mentions
- Structured, repeated associations
If your brand is scattered across slightly different descriptions, inconsistent positioning, and generic blog content, then the model does what it's designed to do.
It ignores you.
Not intentionally. Just… naturally.
A Pattern I Keep Seeing (And It's Subtle)
The pattern
A SaaS company invests heavily in content. Blogs, landing pages, case studies—all well written.
But when you step back and ask: “What does this company actually stand for?”
There's no sharp answer. Everything sounds… acceptable. Safe. Broad.
And that's exactly the issue. Because LLMs don't reward “acceptable.” They reward clarity + repetition.
If your competitor is consistently described as:
And you are:
Guess who gets picked?
The Real Shift: From Keywords to Knowledge Positioning
This is where many marketing teams hesitate. Because GEO forces a different kind of discipline.
You're no longer just publishing content. You're building a machine-readable identity.— The GEO Discipline
That includes:
- Defining your category clearly
- Owning specific use-cases
- Repeating core positioning across platforms
- Aligning internal and external messaging
It sounds simple. It's not. Because it requires saying no to vague positioning.
What Usually Gets Ignored (But Matters Most)
Most people don't notice this…
That means:
- Mentions across the web matter more than isolated authority pages
- Context matters more than volume
- Consistency beats creativity (to an extent)
So if review sites describe you differently, your own website uses multiple narratives, or third-party mentions are weak or missing—you don't just rank lower.
You disappear from AI-generated answers.
A Slightly Uncomfortable Thought
The volume trap
You might think: “We just need more content.”
But what if the issue is not volume? What if your current content is too generic to be remembered?
What we've seen
Companies publish
200+articles… and still don't get mentioned once by LLMs.
That's not a distribution problem. That's a definition problem.
What GEO Actually Demands From You
Not more blogs.
Not better keywords.
But sharper decisions.
You need to:
- Decide what one thing you want to be known for
- Reinforce that across every channel
- Ensure third-party validation aligns with it
- Structure content so models can extract clean answers
And yes, this often means reworking existing content—not just adding new pieces.
Where Most Teams Get Stuck
They treat GEO like an extension of SEO. It's not.
SEO
Visibility
Competing for clicks against ten links on a page.
GEO
Inclusion in an answer
Being chosen as the answer when a model generates a response.
That's a higher bar.
One Practical Reality
If your competitor is already being mentioned consistently by AI tools… they're training the models faster than you are.— The Compounding Curve
And catching up later is harder than it looks.
Not impossible.
But definitely not quick.
The Quiet Shift Happening in 2026
Search hasn't disappeared. But decision-making has moved.
People don't browse ten links anymore. They ask one question. And trust the answer.
“Are you ranking?”
// It's now“Are you being recommended?”
Because those are no longer the same thing.