What is Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO)?

Search is splitting in two. One half still gives you a list of links. The other half gives an answer — and either mentions your business in it, or doesn't. GEO is what closes the gap.

Short Answer

Generative Engine Optimisation (GEO) is the practice of making your business visible to AI-powered search tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, Gemini, and Bing Copilot. Where traditional SEO aims to rank your page in a list of results, GEO aims to get your business cited inside the answer the AI gives.

Why GEO matters now

Roughly six in ten people now start a search with an AI tool rather than a traditional search engine. Google AI Overviews appear above the standard results on more than half of all Google searches. ChatGPT alone handles billions of queries each month, and a growing share of those queries are the same ones people used to type into Google: best accountant near me, plumber in Brunswick, which CRM is right for a small Australian business.

The shift isn't subtle. It's a fundamental change in how customers find suppliers. And it has a quiet consequence most businesses haven't caught up with yet: being ranked in Google no longer guarantees being mentioned by the AI. Those are now two different games, with two different rulebooks.

GEO is the rulebook for the second game.

SEO vs GEO: what actually changes

The clearest way to understand GEO is to put it side-by-side with the SEO most businesses already know.

Traditional SEO
GEO
Optimises for a ranked list of ten blue links
Optimises for a single synthesised answer that may cite three to five sources
Backlinks and domain authority drive ranking
Clarity, structure, and entity authority drive citation
Goal: earn the click
Goal: be the source the AI quotes — whether the user clicks or not
Measured by rankings and organic traffic
Measured by mentions, citations, and AI-referred sessions
Slow, compounding work over months
Faster feedback loop — citations can shift within weeks

The two aren't enemies. Good SEO still helps. But a lot of the work that wins traditional rankings — long pages padded with keywords, generic introductions, hedged language designed to cover every angle — actively hurts your chances of being cited by an AI.

SEO rewards comprehensive answers. GEO rewards clear ones.

How AI search actually decides who gets cited

Every major AI search engine runs on a process called Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG). It works in five steps:

  1. Expansion. Your question is broken into several sub-questions. "Best plumber in Brunswick" might become five separate queries about ratings, pricing, response times, services offered, and local reputation.
  2. Routing. Each sub-question is sent off to different sources — sometimes a live web search, sometimes the model's training data, sometimes specific authoritative sites like Google Maps or government registers.
  3. Retrieval. A shortlist of candidate pages is pulled together. This pool can run to dozens of pages per query.
  4. Selection. The AI looks at each candidate and asks: can I lift a clean, verifiable, useful sentence out of this page? Only the pages that pass become citations.
  5. Synthesis. The cited passages are rewritten into a single coherent answer.

The selection step is where most businesses lose. A page can survive expansion, routing, and retrieval — meaning the AI found it — and still fail to be cited because the content is too vague, too padded, or too structurally messy for the AI to extract a usable answer.

Three things consistently decide whether selection succeeds:

1. Retrievability

The AI's crawler has to be able to reach your page, render it, and read it. Sites that block AI user agents, rely heavily on JavaScript without server-side rendering, or sit behind aggressive bot protection often fail at this first step. They are invisible before the conversation even starts.

2. Extractability

The page has to contain a clean, declarative answer the AI can isolate. Pages built around opening questions with direct answers, clear headings, defined terms, and short paragraphs get extracted. Pages built around flowing narrative prose, marketing waffle, and hedged language often don't — even when the information is technically there.

3. Trust

The AI looks for signals that your content is worth citing: a named author, verifiable credentials, links to primary sources, a clearly defined business entity, and corroboration from other trusted sites. This is where off-site presence — your Google Business Profile, your LinkedIn, mentions in industry publications, customer reviews — does more work than most business owners realise.

What GEO work actually looks like

GEO isn't a single fix. It's a set of changes across six dimensions, and most websites are weak on at least three of them. At AnswerLab, those six dimensions form the backbone of every GEO Report we produce.

The six dimensions of GEO
1
AI Citability & Visibility
Whether AI tools can crawl your site, extract clean answers, and identify your business as a citable source.
2
Brand Authority Signals
Off-site signals that tell AI your business is real, trusted, and well-defined as an entity — Google Business Profile, reviews, mentions, social presence.
3
Content Quality & E-E-A-T
Experience, expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness — how clearly your content demonstrates real knowledge versus generic filler.
4
Technical Foundations
Speed, mobile rendering, structured data, sitemap quality, and the basic plumbing AI crawlers depend on.
5
AI Crawler Access
Whether the AI bots that matter — GPTBot, PerplexityBot, Google-Extended, ClaudeBot — can actually reach your pages.
6
Local & Entity Signals
For Australian businesses, the local context AI uses to decide whether to recommend you for location-based queries.

Where Australian businesses lose ground

Most AI models were trained primarily on US data. That creates a structural blind spot for Australian businesses: an Australian plumber, accountant, or café is competing against a wall of US-centric content unless the local signals are strong enough to override that default.

The Australian businesses winning AI citation share a few traits:

The bottom line

GEO is not a rebrand of SEO. It's a different discipline, optimising for a different machine, with a different end-state. The discipline rewards businesses that explain what they do clearly, prove they're real, and make it easy for an AI to lift a useful sentence out of their site.

The good news: most Australian businesses haven't started yet. The first movers in any given industry are getting cited disproportionately, and citation tends to compound — once an AI starts mentioning you, it learns to mention you more.

The bad news: the gap between businesses that have done GEO work and those that haven't is widening every month. Waiting is expensive in a way that's invisible until a competitor's name is the one AI keeps suggesting.

If you only remember five things
  • GEO optimises for AI citation, not Google rankings.
  • AI search runs on retrieval — your page has to be findable, readable, and quotable.
  • Clear writing beats comprehensive writing.
  • Off-site signals (GBP, reviews, mentions) often matter more than on-site SEO.
  • Australian businesses face an extra hurdle because most models are US-trained.
Find out if AI can actually find your business

A GEO Report from AnswerLab shows you exactly where your business stands across all six dimensions — and gives you a clear, prioritised list of fixes. $199 covers two reports — a baseline now and a follow-up so you can measure progress as you implement changes.

Get my GEO Report →
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Written by Nevin at AnswerLab AnswerLab is a Melbourne-based AI consultancy helping Australian businesses get found by AI search tools and put AI to work in their day-to-day operations. Plain language. No hype.
Up next in the GEO series

More pillar posts coming soon