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GEO vs SEO: what’s the difference (and what CMOs should do about it)

André Pitì Avatar

In this article:

Leaders are staring at the same queries and seeing two very different outcomes.

In Google, you fight for blue links. In AI answers, your brand either appears as part of a synthesized response, or it vanishes.

For this latter aspect, GEO (Generative Engine Optimization) – otherwise called AEO – is the area that CMOs should own, or at least know about before throwing money in digital PR or jumping in the Wikipedia’s publication nightmare.

In short, SEO is page-first; GEO is entity-first. Page-first means you optimize individual URLs to earn rankings and clicks. Entity-first means you teach models who you are, what you’re known for, and why you’re credible, so you’re included (and cited) in the answer. Treat them the same and you’ll waste budget. Treat them as complementary and you’ll compound results. 

Stop asking “Which page should we optimize for AI to rank in LLMs’ answers?”

This is an inherently wrong question.

Instead, we could rather pose a question like: “Which information in both our and external websites is creating an entity for LLMs to pick up?”

Bottom line is: SEO asks “which URL deserves position #1, and how to optimize for that?“, While GEO asks “which facts about our entity must the model ‘know,’ and which sources prove them?

Search engines still crawl and index the web as pages. The primary unit of competition is a URL. Ranking systems evaluate content quality, intent match, links, and technical signals to decide which page to show and in what order. The outcome is ranked links that send users to websites. That is the economic engine for classic SEO.

  • How Google “sees” the web: crawlable, indexable pages with structured data that work as hints (e.g., schema.org) layered on top. Structured data improves eligibility for rich results, but the substrate is still a page.
  • What ranks a page: intent satisfaction + quality + authority (often inferred via links/mentions) + technical compliance.
  • Policy context: scaled, low-quality content and “parasite SEO” tactics are increasingly penalized; automation isn’t banned, abuse is. This is driving a return to usefulness over volume.
  • Output & goal: traffic from SERPs to your site, where you convert.

Generative engines (LLM-powered answers) don’t rank pages—they synthesize answers. The model assembles facts and context about entities (brands, people, products, concepts), sometimes citing sources as evidence.

  • Knowledge unit = entity graph: models resolve “who/what” and “how entities relate.” Schema markup helps machines parse pages, but Wikidata and other knowledge bases strengthen the canonical record of the thing itself.
  • Citations are evidence, not endpoints: links in AI answers serve to support claims, not to list options.
  • Output & goal: complete answers delivered instantly—with your brand included as a trusted explainer, originator of a definition, source of a stat, or provider of a product.
  • Today, you should mind both SEO and GEO, but measure and prioritize them differently.
  • If you don’t have a solid SEO structure, GEO should be the least of your problems, as you can only get some temporary quick wins.
  • Use SEO to create web pages as building blocks for entity clarity in GEO.
  • Use GEO analysis to discover facts, sources and topics that LLMs retrieve and base their answers on.

You can’t “rank a page” in a generative answer the way you rank in a SERP. Page-level work still matters, but as raw material: your glossary page defines the concept; your product hub clarifies specifications; your research post contributes a statistic; your expert bio confirms credentials. These page-level artifacts act as features for the entity-level model.

This is also why vague, fluffy copy and inconsistent naming sabotage GEO: if a model can’t resolve the entity or verify the claim, it won’t risk surfacing you—especially as AI providers narrow triggers after high-profile hallucinations in 2024. 

GEO is a matter of knowledge. Meaning, you need visibility on what LLMs are retrieving when prompted about your brand, industry, and topics.

Here are four core steps to prioritize and implement a correct GEO/ AEO workflow.

  • Creation of structured data
  • Wikidata/Wikipedia presence when appropriate: establish or improve items for your brand, products, and executives. Use precise labels, aliases, and properties.
  • Consistent naming across site, social, press, and partner listings. One canonical brand spelling. One product name. One job title.
  • Write definitions, claims, and data points that a model can lift cleanly. Favor declarative sentences and unambiguous units (“We define X as…”, “Our 2025 study found… 1,124 B2B leaders…”).
  • Cite your sources and host first-party evidence (PDFs, charts, downloadable datasets).
  • Use FAQ blocks to normalize common Q→A pairs—helpful for both rich results and AI grounding.
  • Build context-rich clusters: interlink glossary ↔ research ↔ product use cases ↔ expert bios to mirror real-world relationships among entities.
  • Refer to related entities with standard names and link to authoritative profiles (e.g., standards bodies, partner orgs).
  • Treat internal links as relationship edges, not just navigation.
  • Earn authoritative mentions in credible outlets; third-party coverage becomes evidence for LLMs.
  • Mind policy alignment: avoid scaled content abuse and reputation-abuse patterns that can degrade both SEO and GEO. 

This Executive GEO checklist makes it clear with tasks, types of content, and priorities.

For maximum efficiency and SEO compliance, pair it up with the content template generator to ship blog posts that LLM models can cite and humans can trust, without inflating headcount or making production times longer.

Leading indicators (entity-level):

  • Entity recognition/consistency: schema validation pass rate; presence/accuracy of Wikidata items; sameAs coverage.
  • AI answer inclusion & citations: frequency of brand/product mentions inside AI answers across major surfaces (manual spot-checks + vendor tools).
  • Authoritative mentions: net new citations from high-trust domains.

Lagging indicators (business-level):

  • Branded & entity query growth (Google Search Console).
  • Direct & dark-social traffic lift following research releases.
  • Assisted conversions from audiences exposed to AI surfaces (survey + multi-touch attribution).

If you’re a CMO or business leader staring down at shrinking organic clicks and rising AI answers, this is your turning point.

GEO and SEO don’t compete: they compound, but only when your team work for entity clarity, evidence, and distribution.

Our Executive GEO checklist turns the strategy into a sprint plan: what to do first, by which content type, who owns it, and how to measure impact.

Yes, but as signals of authority and provenance, not just ranking juice. LLMs prefer facts with evidence; credible links and mentions strengthen your claims. This also protects SEO performance under evolving spam policies.

Start with entity docs (definitions, specs, bios, research) and connect them with clusters. Add pages only where they add distinct facts or use-case coverage.

You can use the Make-Rev function to create SEO-optimized templates at scale without sacrificing quality. Select the type of content you want to produce or review, and get a structured content backbone with suggestions for each title and paragraph directly in your CMS

No. Done right, GEO reinforces SEO. Clear entities and structured data improve how Google understands your pages, while high-quality sources and mentions help both ranking and AI inclusion.

Contact us to create a combined SEO-GEO strategy.

Add sections for: canonical names/aliases; one-sentence definition; key claims with sources; facts & figures; schema types/fields; related entities; approved sameAs links. Tie every paragraph to a verifiable assertion.

You don’t necessarily need a Wikipedia page to be cited. For instance, you can create a Wikidata item (where notability rules are different) and publish first-party evidence that others can reference. Then earn coverage on reputable sites.

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