GRO Me Insights

What is GEO? Why Generative Engine Optimisation matters more than SEO right now

Written by Suzanne Hevey | 8 April 2026 9:26:37 PM

SEO gets you found on Google. GEO gets you recommended by AI. Only one of those is growing.

That is not a knock on SEO. SEO still matters. But if you have been doing everything right — regular content, decent keywords, a website that actually loads — and you are still not getting found the way you expect, there is a reason for that.

The way people search has changed. The way search engines respond has changed. And most of the advice circulating about how to fix your visibility was written for a version of the internet that is already fading.

This is what you need to understand instead.

What SEO actually does

Search Engine Optimisation is the practice of structuring your website, content, and online presence so that Google (and other traditional search engines) can find, index, and rank you.

When it works, someone types a question into Google. Your page appears in the results. They click. They arrive on your site.

The process is: search → list of results → click → arrive.

You are competing for position in that list. The higher you rank, the more traffic you get.

For years, this was the primary game. And for many businesses, it still drives real volume. So why is it not enough anymore?

What has changed

In the last two years, AI has entered the search process — and it has changed the dynamic fundamentally.

Tools like Google's AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini do not return a list of results. They return an answer. They synthesise information from multiple sources, form a response, and present it directly to the person asking.

When someone asks "what is the best way to improve my local business visibility?" they may never see a list of websites at all. They get a paragraph. Sometimes a recommendation. Sometimes a name.

That name might be yours. Or it might not be.

The process has become: search → AI answer → sometimes a source link.

The click does not always happen. But the recommendation does. And that recommendation shapes decisions.

This is the shift. Traditional SEO optimises for clicks. GEO optimises for recommendations.

What GEO is

Generative Engine Optimisation is the practice of structuring your content, authority signals, and online presence so that AI systems can find, understand, and recommend your business when someone asks a relevant question.

It is not a replacement for SEO. It is a layer on top of it, and in some respects a different game entirely.

Where SEO asks: can Google find and rank this page?

GEO asks: when someone asks an AI about this topic, would my business be the one it references?

The answer to that second question depends on different things than the first. It depends on how your content is structured. On whether you answer questions clearly and completely. On whether you are cited in credible sources. On whether the language you use matches the language people actually ask in.

It depends on authority — not just domain authority in the traditional sense, but on whether AI systems have seen your name, your answers, and your expertise enough times, in enough places, to treat you as a credible source when the relevant question comes up.

Why this matters more for small businesses right now

Here is the part that does not get talked about enough.

Small businesses and founder-led brands have historically struggled in traditional search. The brands with big budgets, established domain authority, and full-time SEO teams dominate the top positions. Getting a small business to page one on a competitive keyword takes significant time and resource.

AI search works differently. It is looking for the most relevant, clearly structured, credible answer to a specific question. A small business that answers a niche question clearly, in the right format, with enough external signals to support its credibility, can appear in an AI recommendation above a much larger competitor.

That is a genuine levelling mechanism. But only if you understand how to use it.

The founders who are building for GEO now are building an asset that compounds. The AI systems learn from what is out there. The more your name, your expertise, and your answers are present and structured correctly, the more likely you are to be recommended. The more you are recommended, the more authoritative your presence becomes.

The founders who wait are not just missing traffic today. They are letting competitors build a lead that will be significantly harder to close later.

How GEO differs from SEO in practice

This is where it gets practical.

Traditional SEO priorities:

  • Keyword density and placement
  • Backlinks from high-authority domains
  • Page speed and technical site health
  • Meta titles and descriptions for click-through rate
  • Ranking for high-volume search terms

GEO priorities:

  • Answering questions clearly and completely (not teasing the answer to keep people on your page)
  • Structured content that AI can parse: clear headings, FAQ sections, direct responses
  • Being cited in credible external sources: publications, directories, PR
  • Using the language your audience actually uses when asking questions
  • Demonstrating consistent expertise across multiple platforms and formats
  • Schema markup that helps AI understand what your content is about

The underlying principle of GEO is this: AI systems are looking for content they can trust to recommend. Trust comes from clarity, consistency, citation, and structure.

If your content is vague, over-optimised for keywords, or written to rank rather than to answer, it will not perform well in the AI layer. Even if it is ranking on page one in traditional search.

The three most common GEO mistakes small businesses make

1. Writing content for keywords instead of questions

AI search is conversational. People ask full questions. "What is the best AI visibility strategy for a small business in Australia?" is a different prompt to "AI visibility strategy." If your content answers the first question directly, it is far more likely to be referenced by AI than content optimised for the keyword phrase.

2. Hiding the answer

This is a trap that traditional SEO actively encouraged. Keep people on the page. Make them scroll. The longer they stay, the better your dwell time.

AI does not care about dwell time. It is looking for the answer. If your content buries the useful information under paragraphs of preamble, AI will pass your content over in favour of something that answers the question in the first paragraph.

Give the answer. Then support it.

3. Having no external presence

AI systems draw from a wide web of sources. A business that only exists on its own website, with no external citations, no PR, no third-party mentions, is a business AI cannot verify. Building an external presence — through digital PR, media, directories, guest contributions — is no longer just good for traditional SEO. It is a fundamental input for GEO.

What to do next

The starting point for GEO is knowing where you currently stand. Not where you think you stand, or where you hope you stand, but where the AI systems actually see you right now.

That means understanding what questions your business should be appearing in, whether you are appearing in them, and what the gap looks like between where you are and where you need to be.

The Gro Score is a free assessment that tells you exactly that. It takes under a minute to complete and you will have your results within one business day.

Get your Gro Score — free →