There’s a new search strategy in town! Generative engine optimization (GEO), the younger sibling of search engine optimization (SEO), has arrived at the station.
There’s a good chance you’re already familiar – if you head to Google and ask it a question, you’ll likely see an AI-generated blurb at the top of your search results.
If you own a business and have spent time and resources vying for that top search position with SEO, this shift might be frustrating. Do you need to start all over again to optimize your content for this new type of search?
Good news: There’s no need to reinvent the wheel, but it is time to adjust strategy slightly.
Your existing SEO best practices will handle most of the heavy lifting, but there are a few clever shifts to make to stay visible, relevant and competitive.
Acronyms abound in the digital marketing world. What does this new one mean and why is it important going forward? Here’s what you need to know.
Generative search relies on artificial intelligence (AI) to pull together information from multiple sources and compile unique, coherent responses to user queries.
With generative search, users receive AI summaries with direct answers at the top of their search results page instead of a traditional list of links.
When generative search results are accurate, they can save time and increase helpfulness for the end user.
For people creating internet content, however, this signals a slight shift. To get your content featured in that top-result AI summary, your content needs to be AI-ready.
Generative engine optimization is how you get AI-ready content.
GEO combines traditional SEO practices with an understanding of how AI models process and prioritize content. If you apply GEO principles well, your content will be poised for visibility in generative search engines such as Google’s AI Overviews and Microsoft Copilot.
Fortunately, best GEO practices don’t exclude human readers. You can (and should) write for both human and AI audiences – but more on that in a moment.
First: Why is it critical to focus on this now?
GEO is a brand-new concept and an area of AI use that’s getting understood and structured right now. That means there’s a lot of uncertainty surrounding the adoption of these strategies.
And there are a lot of opportunities for those who do adopt these strategies to stand out.
In a nutshell, traditional SEO relies heavily on keyword and backlink placement, good content structure and back-end technical site optimization.
Although these elements are and will remain important, it’s time to shine a spotlight on creative, authoritative and relevant content to succeed with GEO.
Your mission is to write content that is clearly helpful and well-structured so that both AI and human readers instantly understand the value you’re bringing to the table. That’s a big ask, but I have some practical tips to share.
Are you interested in being an early adopter of GEO best practices and taking advantage of this paradigm shift?
Start weaving these practices into your content creation routine.
Here’s a term to keep in mind: Fluency optimization. This trendy phrase boils down to keeping your content easy to read for robots and humans alike.
Here’s a quick checklist for accomplishing this:
Keeping your content organized and skimmable makes your information accessible for all readers, AI and otherwise. A clear, strategic content structure also makes it easier for you to stay on track.
Dig deeper: Mastering content quality: The ultimate guide
As you learn more about GEO, E-E-A-T is an acronym you’ll see often.
It stands for experience, expertise, authoritativeness and trustworthiness.
The more you sound like a trustworthy, authoritative, experienced expert in your content, the more humans and AI want to read, remember and rank your pieces.
To do this, consider:
The Venn diagram of content that’s written well for both machine and human writers may be a circle. Keep your language structured and clear, with personable asides to delight human readers and crisp, to-the-point headers so robots can hone in on shareable information.
Your goal is to make it very, very easy for AI to extract key points for use in generative search and keep your content fun and valuable for humans to read.
This may seem like a tall order, but with consistency, structure and clarity, you’ll be well on your way.
Dig deeper: 25 tips to optimize your content for people and search engines
The thought may have already crossed your mind that if you’re writing for AI, at least in part, then using AI to write may be a strategic choice.
This depends on your familiarity with AI and your comfort as a writer. Relying on AI as an assistant for initial content outlining, brainstorming and even content analysis can be valuable. (It certainly helps with the hardest part of any project – getting started!)
One word of caution: Although AI can help you generate initial drafts or iterate engaging headers, you should still plan on editing, fact-checking and refining the content before publishing. For one thing, AI can make things up (or “hallucinate” information) and you wouldn’t want to put your readers or your own reputation at risk with false content.
In addition, it will become increasingly important to differentiate what you say from the growing mass of purely AI-generated content out there. (E-E-A-T, remember?)
Dig deeper: AI content creation: A beginner’s guide
As you expand your experience with generative search techniques and tweak your content with GEO, two factors will help you succeed:
Why?
Generative search is giving savvy business owners an opportunity to rethink online visibility. By investing in both GEO and SEO techniques, you can boost the relevancy and competitiveness of your content.
The main thing to remember is that your content needs to be high-quality, authoritative and relevant.
Write to your strengths and prioritize clear content structure, and you’ll be well on your way to winning the game with generative engine optimization.