Generative Engine Optimization Tips for Beginners
15 practical GEO tips for improving your brand's visibility in ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Claude, Copilot, and Google AI Overviews — from entity clarity to structured content, external signals, and a 30-day action plan.
Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) is the practice of improving how your brand, content, and signals appear in AI-generated search answers. AI tools like ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Claude, Microsoft Copilot, and Google AI Overviews are increasingly used by buyers to research categories, compare vendors, and find solutions. If your company does not appear in relevant AI answers — or appears with the wrong description — your brand may be missing from a growing share of buyer discovery.
This guide covers 15 beginner-friendly GEO tips, a layered GEO strategy, GEO best practices for AI products and SaaS companies, common challenges, common mistakes, and a 30-day action plan for getting started.
Note on GEO: Generative engine optimization is a newer practice. Best practices are still emerging, AI systems change frequently, and results take time. These tips are based on current understanding of how AI systems use web content, entity signals, and external mentions. Treat them as a starting framework, not a guaranteed formula.
15 Generative Engine Optimization Tips for Beginners
These tips work together. Start with the ones that address your biggest gaps.
Define the entity clearly on your website
AI language models build understanding from named entities — people, organisations, products, places, and concepts. If your website does not clearly state who you are, what your company does, who you serve, what category you are in, and where you operate, AI systems may misrepresent you or fail to include you.
Action
Add a clear company or product definition on your homepage, About page, and core product pages. Make it simple, specific, and consistent across your site.
Answer real buyer questions in plain language
AI systems often generate answers by drawing from content that directly addresses common questions. Generative engines like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini summarise information from web pages, documents, reviews, and other sources. If your content answers the buyer questions your audience asks, it is more likely to be included in relevant answers.
Action
Create pages and sections that answer specific buyer questions. Use question-format headings. Keep answers direct, factual, and useful.
Write for one clear audience
Content written for too broad an audience is harder for AI systems to use confidently. When content clearly targets a specific role, industry, company size, or use case, it is more precise — and more useful as a source.
Action
Define who each content piece is written for and make that clear in the introduction. Use specific audience language such as 'for early-stage SaaS companies' or 'for IT security directors in financial services'.
Add structured data to key pages
JSON-LD structured data helps search systems and AI crawlers understand what your content is about. Schema types including Organization, Article, FAQPage, Product, BreadcrumbList, and Person help systems parse your content more accurately.
Action
Implement JSON-LD schema on your homepage, service pages, blog posts, and FAQ pages. Start with Organization, BreadcrumbList, and FAQPage if resources are limited.
Build external mentions from credible sources
AI systems draw on external signals such as third-party reviews, press coverage, analyst mentions, industry directories, social profiles, podcasts, and conference talks. A brand with strong external presence across credible sources is easier for AI systems to verify and recommend.
Action
Actively build credible external mentions. Pursue press coverage, industry publication contributions, podcast appearances, analyst briefings, directory listings, and verified social profiles.
Use consistent language for your category and product
If your website uses five different terms for the same product category, AI systems may struggle to include you accurately in relevant answers. Consistency across owned content, press, profiles, reviews, and social reduces ambiguity.
Action
Choose primary terms for your product category, use case, buyer type, and company description. Use those terms consistently across your website, external profiles, and third-party content.
Demonstrate E-E-A-T signals throughout your content
Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness (E-E-A-T) are signals that influence how AI systems assess content credibility. Content written with real expertise, examples, data, and named authors tends to be treated as more credible.
Action
Add named authors or contributors to important content pieces. Include experience-based examples. Link to original research, industry data, or verified sources. Build author pages that show credentials.
Create comparison and alternative content
Buyers use AI to compare options, find alternatives, and understand differences between products. If you do not have comparison content, competitors may appear in those queries and you will not.
Action
Create pages that compare your product to alternatives, explain your differentiation, and address common buyer comparison questions. Use clear headings and structured comparisons.
Update content regularly
AI systems may prefer recent, current information. Content that is regularly updated shows that a company is active and maintains accurate information.
Action
Add 'Last updated' dates to key pages. Review and update important content at least quarterly. Refresh data, examples, and statistics when they become outdated.
Claim and verify your presence on AI-adjacent platforms
Some platforms are referenced frequently by AI systems. These can include LinkedIn company pages, Crunchbase, G2, Capterra, Product Hunt, industry directories, Wikipedia if relevant, and verified social profiles.
Action
Claim and complete your profiles on platforms relevant to your industry. Ensure all information is accurate, complete, and matches what is on your website.
Use FAQ sections on every core page
FAQ sections directly address specific buyer questions and are easy for AI systems to parse. When a buyer asks an AI about your category or product, FAQ content may be used to generate part of the answer.
Action
Add a relevant FAQ section to every important service, product, or content page. Limit each question to one clear question and one direct answer. Mark up with FAQPage schema.
Write a clear, public company description
AI systems often extract company descriptions from About pages, press releases, LinkedIn profiles, and other public sources. An unclear or inconsistent description makes it harder for AI to accurately represent your company.
Action
Write a clear one-paragraph company description that states what you do, who you serve, what category you are in, and what makes you different. Use this description consistently across all channels.
Optimise for question-format queries
AI search is heavily query-driven. Buyers type or speak questions such as 'What is the best tool for X?' or 'How does Y compare to Z?' Content that addresses these question formats is more likely to appear in answers.
Action
Include question-format headings in long-form content. Write introductions that directly address the core question a buyer might ask. Use conversational language that matches how buyers phrase questions.
Use internal links to show content relationships
Internal linking helps AI crawlers understand relationships between your pages and topics. It also helps establish depth of expertise on a given subject.
Action
Link related content pages together. Build topic clusters: a core pillar page linking to specific supporting pages. Ensure every page links to at least two to three related pages.
Monitor AI answers regularly
GEO is an ongoing process. AI systems update their knowledge and change how they generate answers. What is working today may need attention in three months. Regular monitoring is essential.
Action
Test your brand's presence in AI tools at least monthly. Use the key prompts your buyers are likely to ask. Record results and track changes. Use GEO monitoring tools when available.
GEO Strategy for Brands: Three Layers
A practical GEO strategy for B2B companies operates across three connected layers. Beginners should focus on Layer 1 first, then build outward.
Layer 1: Owned content
What you control directly
- Website content: clear entity definition, buyer-centric answers, updated pages, FAQ sections
- Structured data: JSON-LD schema on all core pages
- Content quality: named authors, data citations, demonstrated expertise
- Internal linking: topic clusters and related content connections
- Page structure: clear headings, question-format titles, direct answers
Layer 2: Earned presence
Third-party signals you build
- Press and media: industry press mentions, product announcements, executive contributions
- Analyst mentions: Gartner, Forrester, IDC, G2 reports, independent analyst commentary
- Community content: podcast appearances, conference talks, contributor articles
- Social signals: verified LinkedIn profile, consistent social presence
- Partner and client content: case studies, testimonials, co-authored content
Layer 3: Claimed profiles
Platform presence you maintain
- LinkedIn company page: complete, accurate, regularly updated
- Crunchbase: company information verified and maintained
- Review platforms: G2, Capterra, Trustpilot, or equivalent for your market
- Industry directories: relevant listings with accurate descriptions
- Google Business Profile: if applicable to your company
GEO Best Practices for AI Products
AI product companies face specific GEO challenges: crowded categories, fast-changing terminology, frequent product updates, and buyers who rely heavily on AI tools to research vendor options.
Claim your category clearly
AI products need a clear and specific category description. If you say you are a 'platform', 'tool', 'solution', or 'AI product' without specifying what type, AI systems may not include you in category-specific answers.
Define your technical approach
AI and SaaS buyers often ask about the underlying approach, method, or technology. Content that explains your product's approach clearly and accurately helps AI systems include you in method-specific queries.
Address the comparison question early
AI tools are heavily used for comparing software. Create dedicated content that answers common comparison questions — both fair comparisons and honest differentiations — so your position is clear.
Publish use case content
Specific use case pages help AI systems understand which buyers your product fits best. Generic benefit content is less useful than specific use case descriptions with named buyer types.
Create integration and ecosystem content
Buyers often ask AI tools which products integrate with their current stack. A dedicated integrations page or integration-specific content helps AI include you in these queries.
Build case study and proof content
AI systems may treat proof-backed content as more credible. Case studies, outcome data, and evidence-based claims support visibility in competitive AI queries.
30-Day GEO Action Plan for Beginners
If you are new to GEO, use this four-week plan to get started without feeling overwhelmed.
Days 1–7
Audit and define
- Test your brand in ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Claude, and Copilot
- Record what AI says about your company and competitors
- List the 10–20 buyer questions you want to appear in
- Check your website for entity clarity, FAQ sections, and structured data gaps
Days 8–14
Fix owned content
- Update your About page, homepage, and core product pages with clearer entity definitions
- Add FAQ sections to two to three core pages
- Implement JSON-LD schema on key pages
- Create or update a consistent company description
Days 15–21
Build two to three content pieces
- Create a comparison or alternative page if none exists
- Write one piece answering a top buyer question directly
- Update or create a case study or proof page with clear outcomes
Days 22–30
Claim and connect
- Audit your Crunchbase, LinkedIn, and review platform profiles
- Update all external profiles to match your website description
- Plan your next press or media opportunity
- Set a recurring monthly prompt monitoring check
GEO Challenges for Beginners
AI systems do not cite sources consistently
Some AI tools cite sources. Others do not show which sources influenced an answer. This makes it hard to directly attribute GEO improvements to specific content changes.
AI answers change frequently
AI systems update their models and training data. An answer that appears one week may change the next. GEO requires ongoing monitoring, not a one-time fix.
Results take time
GEO visibility improvements often take weeks or months to show changes. Beginners should expect a medium-term effort rather than immediate results.
Some AI surfaces are hard to influence directly
AI systems may use many data sources. Not all can be directly controlled. Focus on the things you can improve: owned content, structured data, and earned external mentions.
GEO tools are still evolving
Unlike traditional SEO, GEO measurement tools are newer, less standardised, and more variable in methodology. Start with manual checks and add tools when you have a clear monitoring need.
Common GEO Mistakes to Avoid
Starting with tools instead of strategy
A GEO monitoring tool is useful only when you know which prompts matter. Define the buyer questions you want to appear in before investing in software.
Writing for AI instead of buyers
GEO is not about gaming AI systems. It is about creating clear, useful, accurate content that AI systems can confidently draw from when helping buyers.
Ignoring external signals
Owned content alone is not enough. External credibility signals — press, reviews, analyst mentions — are also important for AI system confidence.
Treating GEO as a one-time project
AI systems update constantly. GEO requires ongoing monitoring, content updates, and external signal building — not a single project sprint.
Focusing only on brand mentions
Appearing in AI answers with the wrong description is as bad as not appearing. Monitor what AI says about your company, not just whether it mentions you.
Skipping structured data
Structured data is one of the clearest ways to help AI systems accurately interpret your content. It should be part of every GEO implementation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Resources
What Does GEO Mean?
A clear definition of GEO and how it differs from SEO and AEO.
GEO vs SEO
The difference between generative engine optimization and traditional SEO, and how to do both.
Best GEO Tools
How to choose GEO monitoring tools for product marketing and growth teams.
AEO Guide
Answer Engine Optimization — making content work in AI-generated answers.
GEO Guide
The comprehensive guide to Generative Engine Optimization for B2B companies.
E-E-A-T Guide
How Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trust affect AI and search visibility.
AI search visibility strategy
Ready to Improve Your GEO Strategy?
Mustard Seed Solutions helps B2B technology and professional services companies build practical AI search visibility strategies. If your team is ready to move beyond the beginner tips and build a full GEO program — covering content strategy, entity clarity, external signal building, and AI visibility measurement — we can help you build and execute a plan that fits your stage and goals.
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