GEO, or Generative Engine Optimization, is the practice of optimizing content to be selected and cited by AI tools that generate responses — including ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and Microsoft Copilot. GEO specifically emphasizes the generative AI layer: not just getting found, but having your content incorporated into AI-generated answers word for word.
Scott ThomasFounder, AgentScott · AI Consultant · Fallbrook, CA
GEO vs AEO vs SEO: How They Relate
The three terms — SEO, AEO, and GEO — represent an evolution in how search and content discovery work. Each targets a different system and aims for a different outcome.
Optimization Type
What It Targets
Output Goal
Key Platforms
SEO
Search engine crawlers + ranking algorithms
Ranked position in blue links
Google, Bing
AEO
Answer engine citation systems
Be selected as the cited answer
Google AI Overviews, voice search
GEO
Generative AI content selection
Content embedded in AI-generated text
ChatGPT, Perplexity, Copilot
In practice, AEO and GEO overlap significantly — both aim for AI citation. The distinction is one of emphasis: AEO is broader (any answer engine, including Google’s), while GEO specifically refers to the large language model layer where AI doesn’t just cite a source but incorporates your content into a generated response. For most business owners and marketers, they can be treated as one unified strategy.
Why GEO Is Emerging as Its Own Category
GEO emerged as a formal concept from academic research in 2023–2024, particularly from a Princeton University study examining how generative AI selects and cites sources. The research found that content with specific structural characteristics was cited significantly more often in AI-generated responses — even when that content came from smaller, less authoritative domains than competing pages.
According to Scott Thomas, who applies GEO principles to every AgentScott client engagement: “The Princeton findings validated what we were already seeing in practice. Named expert quotes, comparison tables, and direct answer sentences don’t just help with traditional SEO — they’re the exact signals that make AI engines quote your content rather than paraphrase around it.”
The specific finding that drove the most attention: named expert quotes in content increased AI citation rates by approximately 41% in controlled tests. This is why named expert attribution isn’t optional in AgentScott’s content strategy — it’s a measurable citation signal.
What Makes Content GEO-Optimized?
GEO-optimized content is built around the specific qualities that generative AI engines look for when deciding what to incorporate into a response. The signals are different from traditional SEO, and getting them right is what determines whether your content gets paraphrased (invisible) or quoted (visible and attributed).
The key GEO signals:
Quotable sentences — short, direct, standalone statements that make sense without surrounding context. “AEO gets your content cited as the spoken answer in ChatGPT.” is a quotable sentence. A paragraph that builds slowly to a conclusion is not.
Named expert attribution — a sentence or quote attributed to a specific named person with stated credentials. AI engines build expertise profiles on people; content attributed to “the AgentScott team” doesn’t carry the same citation weight as content attributed to “Scott Thomas, AI consultant with 25 years of software development experience.”
Statistical claims with sources — specific numbers (“41% increase in citations”) are more likely to be incorporated into AI responses than vague qualitative claims (“significantly more citations”). Source the numbers where possible.
Comparison tables — structured data that AI can extract and present cleanly. A comparison table with clear column headers and specific values is a GEO signal because generative AI can incorporate it directly into a response without reformatting.
FAQ structure — question-answer pairs that generative AI can match to user queries precisely. Each FAQ pair is a self-contained citation opportunity.
How GEO Fits Into AgentScott’s Approach
GEO signals are built into every AgentScott Service 1 (AEO Website Services) engagement from the first page. Rather than adding GEO as an afterthought, AgentScott’s content strategy is designed around the question: “Will an AI engine quote this sentence directly, or will it paraphrase around it?”
Every service page and library page AgentScott builds includes:
A direct-answer opening paragraph designed to be the citable snippet
Named expert attribution with specific credentials
At least one comparison table where relevant
FAQ section with FAQPage schema
Quotable sentences seeded throughout the body — not just in headers
This is what separates AgentScott’s AEO/GEO strategy from standard SEO work: standard SEO optimizes for ranking signals; GEO strategy optimizes for citation selection. Both are necessary; most agencies only deliver the first.
How to Know If Your Content Is GEO-Ready
Run this checklist against any page on your website:
Does the first paragraph directly and completely answer the page’s primary question?
Is there a named expert credited — not “our team” or “AgentScott recommends” but a specific person with credentials?
Are there standalone sentences in the body that would make sense quoted out of context?
Is there FAQPage JSON-LD schema present on the page?
Does the page have a comparison table or structured list that AI could extract cleanly?
Are there specific statistics or claims sourced to research or named expertise?
If you answer “no” to most of these, the page may perform well in traditional SEO while remaining largely invisible to GEO citation systems. AgentScott’s audit process scores all 17 SEO and GEO categories per page and provides a prioritized action plan.
Common misconception: “GEO is just a buzzword for SEO.” GEO targets a completely different layer of the search ecosystem — the large language model that generates responses, not the ranking algorithm that orders links. A site with perfect technical SEO (fast, well-linked, keyword-optimized) and zero GEO signals will rank well on Google while remaining invisible in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and AI Overviews. These are separate optimization problems requiring separate strategies.
Frequently Asked Questions
They overlap significantly and are often used interchangeably. AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) is broader — it covers all answer engines including Google’s AI Overviews and voice search. GEO (Generative Engine Optimization) specifically refers to the large language model layer where AI generates text responses. In practice, optimizing for one largely optimizes for the other. AgentScott uses both terms to describe the same content strategy.
GEO performance is measured by monitoring brand and content mentions in AI-generated responses. This involves manually querying ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews for target questions and tracking whether your content or business is cited. There are emerging tools that automate this monitoring. AgentScott includes citation monitoring in its audit process and checks citation status as part of the ongoing retainer for Service 1 clients.
Yes — local GEO is one of the highest-opportunity areas right now because competition for local AI citations is low. When someone asks ChatGPT “who is the best HVAC company in Temecula?” the AI draws from local web content. A local business with a GEO-optimized website and LocalBusiness schema is far more likely to be cited than a competitor with a generic, unstructured website.
GEO results appear as AI engines re-crawl and index optimized content — typically 4–12 weeks for initial citation appearances. Some queries show faster results if competition is low. Like SEO, GEO compounds over time: more pages, more topical depth, and more citation history build a stronger authority signal that persists and grows.
The technical components (schema markup, page structure, site speed) require some expertise. The content strategy — identifying which questions each page should own, writing citable snippet openings, adding named expert attribution, and building topical depth — is learnable but time-consuming. Most business owners get better results faster by working with AgentScott, which applies a systematic GEO audit and implementation process rather than improving one page at a time.
Get Your Site GEO-Optimized
AgentScott builds GEO signals into every page — quotable snippets, named expert attribution, schema markup, comparison tables, and FAQ structure — so AI engines cite your business, not your competitors.
{
“@context”: “https://schema.org”,
“@type”: “Article”,
“headline”: “What Is GEO (Generative Engine Optimization)?”,
“description”: “GEO is the practice of optimizing content to be selected and cited by AI tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews — having your content incorporated into AI-generated answers directly.”,
“author”: {“@type”:”Person”,”name”:”Scott Thomas”,”jobTitle”:”AI Consultant & Founder”,”url”:”https://aiagentscott.com/about/”},
“publisher”: {“@type”:”Organization”,”name”:”AgentScott”,”url”:”https://aiagentscott.com”,”logo”:{“@type”:”ImageObject”,”url”:”https://aiagentscott.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/agentscott-logo.png”}},
“datePublished”: “2026-06-06”,
“dateModified”: “2026-06-06”,
“mainEntityOfPage”: “https://aiagentscott.com/learn/what-is-geo/”
}
{
“@context”: “https://schema.org”,
“@type”: “FAQPage”,
“mainEntity”: [
{“@type”:”Question”,”name”:”Is GEO the same as AEO?”,”acceptedAnswer”:{“@type”:”Answer”,”text”:”They overlap significantly. AEO is broader, covering all answer engines. GEO specifically refers to the large language model layer. Optimizing for one largely optimizes for the other.”}},
{“@type”:”Question”,”name”:”Does GEO work for local businesses?”,”acceptedAnswer”:{“@type”:”Answer”,”text”:”Yes — local GEO is high-opportunity because competition for local AI citations is low. A local business with GEO-optimized content and LocalBusiness schema is far more likely to be cited than a competitor with a generic website.”}},
{“@type”:”Question”,”name”:”How quickly does GEO show results?”,”acceptedAnswer”:{“@type”:”Answer”,”text”:”GEO results appear as AI engines re-crawl optimized content — typically 4–12 weeks for initial citations. Like SEO, GEO compounds over time as topical depth and citation history build.”}}
]
}
document.querySelectorAll(‘.lib-body .faq-q’).forEach(btn=>{
btn.addEventListener(‘click’,()=>{
const a=btn.nextElementSibling,open=btn.classList.contains(‘open’);
btn.closest(‘.faq’).querySelectorAll(‘.faq-q’).forEach(b=>{b.classList.remove(‘open’);b.nextElementSibling.classList.remove(‘open’);});
if(!open){btn.classList.add(‘open’);a.classList.add(‘open’);}
});
});