AEO vs GEO vs LLMO: the terms, demystified
You will see three acronyms thrown around for the same idea. Here is the plain-English map.
- AEO — Answer Engine Optimization. The broad, practical term: making your business easy for AI *answer* engines to confirm, understand, and cite.
- GEO — Generative Engine Optimization. The name used in the Princeton "GEO" study (KDD 2024). Same goal, with an academic emphasis on which levers measurably lift how often a page is cited.
- LLMO — Large Language Model Optimization. Frames the work around being surfaced by large language models like the ones behind ChatGPT, Gemini, and Claude.
Do not get hung up on the labels. They describe one job: be the honest, well-documented, easy-to-quote answer. The rest of this guide is how.
Why AI search optimization matters now
A few years ago, "showing up on Google" meant ranking in the list of blue links. That is changing fast. People now ask ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google's AI Overviews a question and act on the answer they are handed — often without clicking anything.
Two numbers frame the shift:
- Google's AI Overviews now appear in roughly 45% of searches *(industry estimate)*.
- Those AI answers can reduce clicks to websites by up to about 58% *(industry studies)*.
Put together: a large and growing share of searches get answered before anyone reaches a website, and when the AI does name businesses, it names only a few. If you are not one of them, you are invisible to that search — no matter how well you rank in the old list below.
The GEO levers: what actually moves AI visibility
The Princeton "GEO" study tested specific content changes to see which ones increased how often a page was cited by generative engines. The results are concrete and white-hat.
*Source: Princeton GEO study, KDD 2024. Figures are approximate lifts measured under the study's experimental conditions — not guaranteed real-world results.*
| Lever | Approximate effect on AI visibility |
|---|---|
| Citing credible sources | up to ~40% lift |
| Adding relevant statistics | up to ~37% lift |
| Adding quotations (e.g., from experts or customers) | up to ~30% lift |
| Keyword stuffing | up to ~10% *drop* (it hurts) |
The pattern is clear: AI rewards content that reads like a trustworthy, well-sourced answer, and it penalizes spammy keyword tricks. Write for a skeptical human and cite your facts — that is also what the machine wants.
The content formats AI cites most
The same line of research looked at *what kind* of content gets pulled into AI answers:
- Comparison articles — about 33% of AI citations *(industry analyses of AI search results)*.
- Definitive guides — about 15% of AI citations *(industry analyses of AI search results)*.
So a clear "X vs Y" comparison or a thorough how-to guide on your trade is exactly the format AI reaches for. That is not a trick — it is because those formats answer real questions cleanly, which is the whole point.
The white-hat playbook
Here is the concrete work, in priority order for a local business. None of it is a shortcut; all of it is the same honest work that helps you in regular search too.
- Lock down NAP consistency. Write your business Name, Address, and Phone number *identically* on your website, your Google Business Profile, and every directory. Same spelling, same suite number, same phone format. Inconsistency is the single most common reason an AI cannot confirm you and names a competitor instead.
- Earn steady, genuine reviews. A stream of recent, real reviews is one of the strongest signals that you are a trusted business. Ask happy customers, reply to every review, and never buy or fake them — engines and people both catch it.
- Get cited on trusted third-party sites. A mention on a local news site, a "best in [city]" roundup, a chamber of commerce page, or a supplier's "find a pro" directory is worth more than anything you say about yourself. These third-party citations are what AI trusts most.
- Write answer-first content. Lead each page with the direct answer to a real customer question, then explain. "How much does a water heater replacement cost in [city]?" should be answered in the first sentence. This is the content AI lifts into its answers — and the format it cites most.
- Add schema markup. Structured data spells out your name, location, services, hours, and reviews in a format machines read easily. It does not guarantee a citation, but it removes ambiguity so both Google and AI engines understand exactly who you are.
Honest note: do these consistently and you become the natural answer — the easiest, most-confirmed choice. That is the whole game. There is no hidden setting that forces a citation.
What you cannot control
Be clear-eyed about the limits, and walk away from anyone who is not.
- You cannot control the exact wording of an AI answer.
- You cannot force ChatGPT, Gemini, or Google AI to name your business.
- You cannot guarantee a #1 position — in search or in AI answers.
Any vendor promising "guaranteed ChatGPT placement" or "we'll get you to #1 in AI" is selling something that does not exist. What you *can* control is whether your business is the well-documented, well-reviewed, clearly described, widely cited option. Do that, and you stack the odds — honestly.
How AEO fits with regular SEO
There is almost no conflict between getting cited in AI answers and ranking in normal search. The same fundamentals serve both.
| SEO (traditional search) | AEO/GEO (AI answers) | |
|---|---|---|
| Goal | Rank in the list of links | Get named and cited inside the AI's answer |
| Where you appear | Search results page | ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, AI Overviews |
| Consistent NAP | Helps | Helps |
| Real, recent reviews | Helps | Helps |
| Third-party citations | Helps | Helps |
| Answer-first, source-backed content | Helps | Helps (often quoted directly) |
| Schema markup | Helps | Helps |
AEO is just SEO done well, structured so a machine can quote it cleanly. Get the fundamentals right and you show up in both places.