Marketing leaders find the same principles driving successful SEO—creating high-quality, structured, and user-centric content—are also effective for AEO. The focus should be on adapting existing strategies rather than inventing new ones from scratch.
As users shift from keywords to conversational prompts in AI browsers, SEO strategy must also evolve. The focus should be on creating 'answer-ready' content that directly and comprehensively addresses likely user questions, positioning your brand as a primary source for the AI to cite.
Businesses excelling at traditional SEO can still be invisible to AI-powered search engines. AI prioritizes structured data (schema) and directory signals differently than Google's algorithm. A separate strategy for "Answer Engine Optimization" (AEO) is now required.
Don't abandon SEO for GEO. LLMs rely on the same crawling and indexing systems as traditional search engines. To be cited by AI, you must first have strong SEO fundamentals like fast load times and structured data. GEO then builds on this by focusing on answering specific user questions.
Following SEO, App Store Optimization, and social virality, the next major distribution channel is AI answer engines. Product teams must now strategize how to get their brand, features, and knowledge base indexed and surfaced in AI responses, making AEO a critical growth lever for the modern era.
Instead of treating Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) as an experimental project requiring new budget, leading brands are reallocating funds from underperforming paid ads and traditional SEO. This strategy allows them to act immediately and gain a first-mover advantage while competitors are delayed by internal budget approval processes.
Generative AI has neutralized content volume as a competitive advantage. In fact, inconsistent messaging across many assets can penalize a brand in AI models. This reverses the old SEO playbook, making it critical to focus on fewer, higher-quality pieces with deep expertise and a consistent narrative across all channels.
With AI-powered search, user behavior has shifted to asking direct questions. Effective SEO now requires structuring content to directly answer the specific questions buyers are asking search engines and AI tools, rather than just ranking for keywords.
With 80-90% of AI-powered searches resulting in no clicks, traditional SEO is dying. The new key metric is "share of voice"—how often your brand is cited in AI-generated answers. This requires a fundamental strategy shift to Answer Engine Optimization (AEO), focusing on becoming an authoritative source for LLMs rather than just driving website traffic.
While long-tail SEO has become less effective, it's a primary strategy in AEO. Users ask longer, more conversational questions (25 words on average vs. 6 for search). Companies can win by creating content that answers very specific, niche questions that have never been searched for before.
As users increasingly get answers from AI assistants, marketing strategy must evolve from Search Engine Optimization (SEO) to Generative Engine Optimization (GEO). This means creating diverse, authoritative content across multiple platforms (podcasts, PR, articles) with the goal of being cited as a trusted source by AI models themselves.