Marketers use AEO and GEO interchangeably, but there is a difference, and that’s what will be defined and explained in this article. In brief, AEO optimizes content for answer boxes and voice search results, while GEO targets AI chatbot citations and generated summaries. It might be challenging to get everyone in agreement on what’s what, but let’s try. AEO and GEO are not going away, and the faster the industry can align on what these acronyms mean, the better. From a strategic perspective, it doesn’t matter that much since all SEO specialists should already be laying the foundations for AEO, GEO, and, of course, SEO. But with a unified definition, it’ll be much easier to talk about it all. If you’re not sure you’re laying down the work required for AEO or GEO or how to measure their impact, stay tuned because we’ll cover that after defining our terms. Table of Contents AEO vs. GEO: What’s the difference? AEO vs. GEO: Do you need both? Shared Tactics Between AEO and GEO That Drive Results How to Measure the Impact of Both AEO and GEO What’s next for AEO & GEO? Frequently Asked Questions About AEO vs. GEO AEO vs. GEO: What’s the difference? AEO stands for Answer Engine Optimization. AEO focuses on direct answers in search results. It helps website content appear as direct answers in search results. Think: Featured snippets. People Also Ask. Knowledge Panels. And other SERP features. GEO stands for Generative Engine Optimization. GEO optimizes for brand citations in AI-generated summaries. It helps brands get cited inside AI-generated summaries on platforms like Google AI Overviews, Perplexity, and ChatGPT. In simplest terms: AEO optimizes for answers while GEO optimizes for citations. Here’s a comparison table: Strategy Primary Goal How It Shows Up What It Optimizes For Best Use Case AEO Deliver direct answers in search Featured snippets, People Also Ask, and AI short answers Clarity, structure, question coverage High-intent, question-driven queries GEO Earn brand citations in AI summaries Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity Authority, entity clarity, quotable insights Research queries and informational discovery SEO Earn rankings and organic traffic Traditional, organic blue links in search engines Relevance, backlinks, technical performance Long-term acquisition and traffic growth AEO vs. GEO vs. SEO Traditional SEO focuses on three core pillars: Content strategy. Technical SEO. Backlinks. SEO is a broad marketing tactic that encompasses a lot, and many of the elements described under AEO and GEO also fall under its “umbrella.” However, these tactics are increasingly bearing a greater onus due to their impact on AEO and GEO in modern-day SEO. AEO focuses on delivering answers that search engines can extract cleanly. GEO focuses on earning citations inside AI-generated responses — often without requiring a click. When combined, these three strategies ensure brands are: Discoverable in search. Present in the AI tools buyers now rely on for research, vendor comparison, and decision-making. Appear in AI Overviews and other SERP features for maximum visibility. AEO vs. GEO: Do you need both? Both GEO and AEO are rapidly emerging as core marketing priorities as AI-powered search becomes a popular format for consumers to discover brands, compare solutions, and make decisions. According to the HubSpot Consumer Trends Report, 72% of consumers surveyed indicated they intend to rely more heavily on AI-powered search when shopping. From experience, brands absolutely need both (and SEO, of course). I’ve had leads come in from ChatGPT and other generative tools for my own agency and for clients, and those results only happened because my brand is visible across both answer engines and generative engines. AEO and GEO require structured content and clear entities. AEO ensures a website’s content is extractable, structured, and eligible for direct answers in Google and other search engines. GEO ensures that when someone asks an AI model for recommendations, comparisons, or best-of lists, your brand is one of the citations the model pulls into its summary. In today’s search landscape, where buyers increasingly start research in ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google AI Overviews, relying on SEO alone is no longer enough. Pro tip: Read HubSpot’s AEO guide here. Shared Tactics Between AEO and GEO That Drive Results AEO and GEO may show up differently across search and generative search platforms, but they’re powered by many of the same foundational practices. The brands that perform best in AI search are the ones that build structured, answer-first content and maintain strong entity clarity across every page. Below are five core tactics that strengthen both AEO and GEO performance: answer-first content structuring, entity management and consistency, quotable insights and data passages, schema and structured markup implementation, and reinforcement through repetition. Answer-First Content Structuring Answer-first content structuring means leading with the most straightforward answer to a user’s question before adding supporting detail, examples, or context. Instead of burying the key point halfway down the page, writers must surface the most important point immediately in a clean, skimmable format that answer engines and generative engines can extract with zero ambiguity. Writers and AEO or GEO specialists must design content to provide the answer, then elaborate later. For example, in a piece of content, there is a heading, “What is Answer Engine Optimization?” The response, designed to perform well in AI search, will define AEO immediately, like this: “Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) is the practice of structuring content so search engines can extract direct, authoritative answers for featured snippets, AI summaries, and other answer-driven results.” Writing content like this isn’t new to search. SEO specialists have been using this method of writing for years because it helps secure featured snippets or rankings in People Also Ask. But now, with generative engines pulling answers instead of links, content writers need to pay even closer attention to how cleanly and confidently the first 1–2 sentences answer the core question. That opening line is no longer just for users; it’s for the AI systems deciding whether your brand deserves to be cited. Pro tip: Journalists have used a similar structure for decades with the inverted pyramid: Start with the headline and core facts, then layer in context, quotes, and background. Answer-first content is simply the search-optimized version of that same newsroom principle — and it’s now one of the most important practices for AEO and GEO success. Entity Management and Consistency Entity management is the practice of defining your key entities, be it people, products, or concepts. A brand, for example, is an entity. Once established, marketers control entities and ensure they remain consistent wherever they appear. Consistently maintaining accurate, unified references across your website, blog, product pages, documentation, PR, and external mentions means generative citations are more likely to be accurate. When your product names, features, claims, and categories are described consistently across multiple surfaces, AI tools can reliably connect those references back to you. The more precise and consistent your entities are, the more confidence generative engines have when deciding which brand to cite in overviews or summaries. With AI models pulling from thousands of sources (your site, competitor sites, Reddit, forums, UGC, reviews), inconsistent entity signals become a real risk. If your materials list is described one way on your product page but differently in a press release or a reseller listing, AI systems may merge or misinterpret your data. Entity management fixes this by making your information stable, repeatable, and unambiguous across the entire web — which is now essential for earning citations in AI-powered search. For example, if you sell running shoes, you will likely cover the shoes’ lifespan. Mentioning the sneakers’ lifespan on the product page might make sense since the entities are connected, but the manufacturer’s guarantee of the shoe’s lifespan might differ from experience. Users on Reddit might claim they last 200 miles, others say 1,000. There’s no universal truth, but if you clearly cite the accepted industry ranges (e.g., 300–500 miles) and explain why, you give AI models the best possible chance of repeating the correct information and citing you as the source. Entity clarity is becoming a form of quality control in AI search. Unfortunately, it won’t guarantee citation. Here’s an example I found when I tested AI search engines for Backlinko: A search for the lifespan of running shoes returned information stating 450–500 miles. But the actual range on the manufacturer’s website is 300–500 miles. Source Quotable Insights and Data Passages Quotable insights are short, authoritative statements or data points that AI engines can lift directly into summaries. These might be stats, expert explanations, definitions, or clear recommendations. Pro tip: Use quotable insights in a separate paragraph, and don’t forget to answer the heading directly first. This means quotes or additional insights should come after the short paragraph that defines the main point. Generative engines prefer clean, self-contained passages that can be cited without restructuring. Give them a “ready-made” quote; it may increase the chances of appearing in AI Overviews or ChatGPT responses. It also improves AEO because those same passages often get pulled into answer boxes. Clear definitions, strong statements, data, and expert opinions have long been part of SEO, helping demonstrate experience, expertise, authority, and trust (E-E-A-T). Still, AEO and GEO ask SEO specialists to remember and emphasize the importance of insights and data. Schema and Structured Markup Implementation Schema markup is structured data that helps search engines understand the meaning of content — from products, FAQs, authors, how-tos, ratings, and more. It turns plain text into clearly defined entities and relationships that machines can trust. Basically, schema markup is additional code that crawlers can read. Schema is crucial for AEO and GEO because it tells answer engines exactly what content represents, increasing a website’s eligibility for snippets and rich results. It’s equally important for GEO because structured markup reinforces entity consistency, which generative engines use to verify information and decide which brands to cite. As an SEO specialist, I’ve been adding schema for years. For me, it’s non-negotiable. Some of my most used schema types for B2B include: Person schema helps understand who a subject-matter expert is, including their credentials, roles, specializations, and publications. This is especially powerful for E-E-A-T because it ties authoritative content directly to a real expert. Organization schema defines the company as an entity, including the legal name, brand name, industry category, contact details, social profiles, and subsidiaries. It creates the “source of truth” about a company. FAQ schema explicitly marks up questions and answers, giving search engines and AI models a clean, structured understanding of what each section of content represents. Service schema defines the specific services a business provides, including what the service is, who it’s for, what problems it solves, and any related offerings. Product schema provides structured data about products, including specs, features, benefits, variations, materials, ratings, and more. Reinforcement Through Repetition Reinforcement through repetition means getting key facts, claims, and definitions repeated consistently across multiple reputable sources so AI systems start treating your version as the authoritative one. AI models don’t take websites at face value; they triangulate. They look for patterns, overlaps, and repeated assertions across the web. If only a brand’s website says a product reduces downtime by 30%, AI treats it as unverified. If 10 independent sources say the same thing, including press, partner pages, documentation, industry publications, and comparison sites, then AI models adopt it as truth, and citations become more representative of the message brands want to share. Pro tip: I know how it is to worry about repetition, but marketers must remember that only a small percentage of their audience sees the content they publish. Lots of variables play into this, including what the algorithm shows, when people log into their devices, and what they’re looking for at the time. A social media post, for example, may only reach 8% of a large audience. It doesn’t hurt to post things twice, or again on another platform. How to Measure the Impact of Both AEO and GEO Measuring AEO and GEO requires a shift away from traditional SEO metrics like rankings and traffic. AI-driven search changes where users discover information, how they evaluate brands, and what signals influence their decisions. Instead of tracking only clicks, marketers now need to measure visibility within AI-generated answers, citation accuracy, and the downstream impact on conversion quality and pipeline. Below are the five metrics that give the clearest view of AEO/GEO performance and where to optimize next. They include AI visibility and citation coverage, content quality and answer readiness, conversions and revenue influenced by AEO/GEO, lead quality from AI-influenced discovery, and page performance and user behavior. AI Visibility and Citation Coverage AI visibility and citation coverage measures how often a brand appears in generative search experiences like Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini. Instead of tracking only clicks or rankings, this metric tells marketers whether AI systems are pulling content into their answers, summaries, and recommendations. Plus, marketers can establish whether AI tools are mentioning a brand positively or negatively. The easiest way to track this is with HubSpot’s AI Search Grader. AI Search Grader measures brand visibility and citations in AI search. It’s a free tool that analyzes any domain and shows how visible a brand is across AI engines. It highlights where the brand