GEO, AEO & AI Search7 items What is Generative Engine Optimization (GEO)?
Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) has become one of the most important disciplines in digital marketing in 2026. As AI-powered search platforms process hundreds of millions of queries per week and deliver synthesised answers rather than lists of links, the question every brand must answer has changed — from "how do we rank on Google?" to "how do we get cited by AI?"
This report provides a comprehensive overview of what GEO is, how it differs from SEO and AEO, why it matters in 2026, and which platforms and agencies are leading the space.
<h2>What is GEO?</h2>
Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) is the practice of optimising your content to appear as a cited source inside AI-generated responses from platforms like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, Gemini, and Claude.
When a buyer asks ChatGPT "what is the best fund administration platform for private equity?" or asks Perplexity "which customer feedback tool do enterprise SaaS companies use?", those AI systems don't return a list of links. They synthesise information from multiple sources and deliver a structured answer — citing the sources they deemed most credible, relevant, and authoritative. GEO is the work of making your brand one of those cited sources.
GEO goes by several names across the industry — Answer Engine Optimization (AEO), Large Language Model Optimization (LLMO), Generative Search Optimization (GSO), and AI Optimization (AIO). They all describe the same discipline: structuring content so that AI systems surface and cite it when generating answers.
The term was first formalised as a research discipline in 2023 by researchers at Princeton University, Georgia Tech, and IIT Delhi, whose foundational paper demonstrated that specific content optimisation strategies could measurably increase LLM citation rates.
<h2>How GEO Differs from SEO and AEO</h2>
Understanding GEO requires understanding how it relates to the disciplines it builds upon.
SEO (Search Engine Optimization) optimises content to rank in Google's list of blue links. The goal is a click to your website. SEO remains critical in 2026 — organic search still drives 53% of all website traffic — but a growing percentage of searches now end without a click, as AI-generated overviews answer the query directly on the results page.
AEO (Answer Engine Optimization) originally emerged to optimise for featured snippets, voice search, and People Also Ask boxes. In 2026, AEO has largely been subsumed by GEO — since most voice and conversational queries now route through AI systems that use the same generative response mechanisms.
GEO builds on SEO foundations but adds specific requirements. Where SEO optimises for keywords and backlinks, GEO optimises for content structure that AI systems can parse and extract cleanly, factual density with specific verifiable citable statistics and claims, entity authority showing how well-established your brand is as a recognised entity across the web, question-format headings that mirror the actual queries AI platforms receive, third-party citations and mentions that signal credibility to AI systems, and direct lead-with-the-answer formatting using a TLDR-first content structure.
The key insight from Brandlight's 2026 research: the overlap between top Google links and AI-cited sources has dropped from 70% to below 20%. Ranking well in traditional search no longer guarantees visibility in AI answers. Brands need a separate, dedicated GEO strategy.
<h2>Why GEO Matters in 2026</h2>
The numbers tell the story clearly: Perplexity AI processes over 200 million queries per week — a 400% increase from 2025. Google AI Overviews now appear in 40% of all search queries. ChatGPT has surpassed 800 million weekly active users. AI-referred traffic converts at 2.17% versus 1.16% for traditional organic search — nearly double the conversion rate. AI-referred sessions grew 527% year-over-year according to Previsible's 2025 AI Traffic Report. 38% of B2B buyers now use AI chatbots during the vendor evaluation process (Forrester, 2026). Gartner projects traditional search volume will drop 25% by end of 2026.
The implication for brands is stark: if your content is not structured to be cited by AI systems, you are invisible to a fast-growing segment of your most valuable prospects — those who arrive from AI platforms convert at twice the rate of standard organic traffic.
<h2>How GEO Works: The Core Mechanics</h2>
When a user asks an AI platform a question, several things happen before an answer is generated:
1. Query fan-out. The AI breaks the question into multiple sub-queries and searches for each separately. A question like "what is the best CRM for B2B sales teams?" might generate sub-queries like "best B2B CRM 2026," "CRM for sales teams features," and "CRM pricing comparison." GEO requires content that ranks for these sub-queries, not just the primary keyword.
2. Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG). For real-time platforms like Perplexity and Google AI Overviews, the AI fetches current web content and synthesises it into an answer. Your content must be crawlable, fresh, and structured for AI extraction. This is why GEO strategies can surface recently published content even when base AI models were trained on older data.
3. Source credibility evaluation. AI systems assess source authority using signals that overlap with — but are not identical to — traditional SEO signals. Entity recognition (how well-established is your brand in the AI's knowledge graph), third-party citations (mentions on Reddit, G2, Wikipedia, authoritative publications), and content freshness all influence citation likelihood.
4. Content extraction. AI systems pull specific passages, statistics, and structured data from your content. Content that is formatted for extraction — question-format headings, direct answers in the first sentence of each section, bullet-formatted key points, and clearly labelled data — is consistently cited more frequently than content with the same information buried in dense prose.