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lunes, 9 de marzo de 2026

Answer engine optimization strategy beyond basic SEO and AEO tactics

If you’re not in the trenches of search every single day, it’s hard to know how seriously to take answer engine optimization strategy. There are two dominant camps right now: those who see generative AI as the most disruptive shift search has ever experienced, and those who argue that AEO (or GEO) is simply an extension of traditional SEO. 

Free AEO Grader: See How You Rank on AI Search Results

Predictably, the truth lives somewhere in the middle — a lot of AEO is SEO, with some pivots, enhancements, or attention diverted to prominent tactics that help brands gain visibility in AI tools. On the other hand, you can gain visibility in AI tools without ranking well in traditional SEO listings; the tactics can be separated.

What‘s harder to separate is your brand from the consequences of ignoring AI’s impact on search. Google’s AI Overviews (AIO) is taking clicks from websites; clicks drop by 61% when AIO is present and more alarmingly, your potential customers are busy asking AI tools about brands before they decide to create a shortlist. If your brand isn’t getting visibility for those early searches, you’re out of the race before the buyer has even discovered your website.

If you’re creating an answer engine optimization strategy and you want something more nuanced than “just do good SEO,” this is the article for you. I’ll cover how answer engines choose what to cite, where SEO still does the heavy lifting, and what additional work is required to appear in AI-generated answers.

Table of Contents

AEO strategy foundations: how AI engines and LLMs pick sources.

The models that power LLMs, like ChatGPT, are trained on a combination of:

  • Publicly available internet content
  • Licensed third-party data
  • Information generated by human trainers and users

Together, these sources shape how models understand entities, topics, and relationships across the web.

Read more about the foundation of ChatGPT here.

A common misconception is that LLMs were trained on a bunch of sources and that their answers are now set, but this isn’t the case.

Enter Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG).

RAG improves AI responses by adding external context when a question is asked. Rather than relying only on what a model learned during training, RAG allows it to pull in relevant information to produce (in theory!) more accurate, grounded answers.

Here’s what a basic RAG workflow looks like:

diagram shows a basic rag workflow so marketers can understand how llms work before creating their answer engine optimization strategy.

Source

In this search evolution, your content needs to be retrievable, which means being clear in your content (and in the content others publish about you across the web) about who you are, what you do, and how everything is connected.

Entity clarity and consistency help AI systems confidently identify, extract, and reuse your content, reducing confusion and increasing the likelihood that your brand is cited accurately in AI-generated answers. On top of that, there are technical considerations to account for, such as ensuring key content is accessible in HTML. I’ll cover these tactics later.

Answer engine optimization strategy beyond the basics

If you’re a competent SEO specialist, then the five steps below may feel familiar, but it’s important to list these components of an answer engine optimization strategy because some extra focus is required from SEO or AEO teams if you want to succeed in AI-driven search results.

I’ve covered each component in detail below, but this table provides an overview of how each area is managed in an SEO vs. AEO strategy.

Area

SEO

AEO

Audience targeting

Keyword-driven intent and SERP analysis mean audience targeting can get as granular as SERPs will allow. Sometimes, only broader pages rank for specific keywords.

Answer-driven intent allows for highly specific audience targeting based on roles, use cases, and challenges because AI can match answers precisely.

Landing pages

Pages are sometimes designed to rank broadly, and fewer pages are created to avoid keyword cannibalization.

Granular, audience-specific pages are created to address a single audience and their challenges in detail.

Content formatting

Content is optimized for readability, user experience, and ranking signals.

Content must be structured for extraction, such as question-led subheads and direct answer blocks.

HTML and JavaScript

Search engine bots crawl HTML and render JavaScript to discover dynamically loaded content.

Content must exist plainly in HTML so AI systems can reliably retrieve, parse, and cite it without executing scripts.

Keywords and prompt tracking

Keywords serve as directional signals, but success is judged by whether the content meets needs and drives real on-site outcomes.

Prompts serve as directional signals, but success is judged by whether the content meets needs and drives real on-site outcomes.

Measuring success

Organic traffic, rankings, click-through rates, and tangible business impact, such as conversions, revenue generated, and pipeline influence.

Visibility, citations, and tangible business impact, such as conversions, revenue generated, and pipeline influence.

1. Know your audience on a granular level.

A strong answer engine optimization strategy starts with a deeper understanding of the audience. Yes, traditional SEO typically requires this, too, but with the opportunities created by AEO, it’s extremely shortsighted not to revisit your ideal client profile (ICP) and get granular.

The next section elaborates on the why behind this, but in short, it’s no longer enough to know which keywords a broad market searches for. You need clarity on who is asking the question, why they’re asking, and what kind of answer would genuinely help them move forward.

AEO strategy requires mapping buyer questions to answer types and platforms.

Remember: people are searching for personalized, nuanced, detailed questions in AI search, and if you want to serve your audience via AI, you need to get into the nuance.

Granularity also creates strategic flexibility. You can address specific industries, roles, or use cases without forcing everything into a single, catch-all page — while still benefiting from your broader SEO foundations.

Pro tip: When planning AEO content, write down the exact person you’re answering before you write the answer. If you haven’t created buyer personas, you need them for every decision maker, especially if you’re in B2B.

HubSpot’s Make My Persona helps marketing teams define clear buyer personas by mapping roles, goals, challenges, and decision drivers to a single, consistent profile. Clear personas create stronger entity–intent alignment, making it easier to produce audience-specific answers that AI systems can accurately extract and cite.

screenshot from hubspot’s make my persona shows how marketers can easily create a buyer persona to inspire their answer engine optimization strategy.

Once you’ve established your audience, you can serve them on your site.

2. Create targeted pages that address specific audiences and their challenges.

SEO landing pages have traditionally been shaped by what Google appears to reward in the search results. For example, if a search for “SEM marketing consultant for ecommerce” returns mostly broad SEO service pages, teams often conclude that the safest place to target that term is the broad service page, rather than creating a dedicated landing page for the ecommerce audience.

Here’s the SERPs showing pretty generic Search Engine Marketing (SEM) services.

Google SERPs shows how traditional SEO fails and AEO strategy can help brands get visibility in front of their audiences

While this approach can work for rankings, it’s limiting. Broad pages leave little room to address nuance or fully explain a specific offering. In this case, going deep on the PPC side of SEM might dilute relevance for an SEO-focused page, while keeping it high-level risks underselling the full service altogether. The result is content that ranks but does not effectively address any particular audience.

This is where traditional SEO fails.

With SEO, searchers have to open numerous links and explore websites to find case studies before they can feel confident that the SEM services offered are suitable and that the company excels in their industry.

AEO resolves this problem by summarizing information from across the sources and providing a solid starting point for discovery and further research. AEO-driven search creates far more freedom and opportunity to serve narrow, well-defined audiences with highly targeted content.

Here’s a screenshot of AIO taking a searcher directly to their solution by mentioning brands:

screenshot from aio shows how an effective aeo strategy brings companies to the top of google.

Granular pages that address a specific role, problem, or use case make it easier for AI systems to identify a clean, relevant answer and cite it. A single paragraph can surface in an AI response even if the page itself would never rank on page one of traditional search. This is why smaller brands can now earn top-of-funnel visibility in AI answers, even when their broader SEO performance isn’t especially strong.

Pro tip: If a page tries to speak to everyone, it gives an answer engine nothing specific to quote. The more precisely you define the audience, their challenges, and your solutions, the more likely your content is to be extracted and reused.

3. Format correctly in a way that helps AI

Even the most targeted pages can be overlooked by AI crawlers if the structure makes it hard for AI systems to extract a clear answer.

Content formatting should use question-led subheads, direct answer blocks, and semantic triples. I’m keeping this brief because I explore this in more detail later in the article.

4. Keep content available in HTML.

There are technical considerations that influence the success of an AI engine optimization strategy, and one of the most important is ensuring that content is available in HTML.

Google’s search crawlers can render JavaScript, which means they’re often able to discover text that isn’t present in the raw HTML. As a result, traditional SEO can sometimes rely on JavaScript to load or reveal content dynamically. Content doesn’t have to be included in HTML for SEO That said, this approach still comes with risk; not all rendered content is indexed, especially when it’s hidden behind tabs, accordions, or filters that require user interaction.

AI crawlers don’t behave like Googlebot. They rely on HTML only. If important answers only appear after scripts run, there’s a real risk they won’t be retrieved, extracted, or cited at all.

The takeaway is simple: if content is critical to being understood or referenced by AI systems, it should exist plainly in the HTML, not depend on JavaScript to appear.

5. Don’t get too wrapped up in keywords and prompts.

Over-reliance on keywords has always failed to tell the full story, but with AEO and prompt tracking in the mix, it falls short more than ever.

Keyword data can indicate demand, and prompt tracking can help determine who has visibility and where, but AI tools change their sources a lot, based on what’s recently updated, individual searcher personalization, and, of course, the nuance of prompts is impossible to track.

Is it useful to track keywords and prompts? Sure, but with caveats…

Pro Tip: Don’t get so wrapped up in prompt tracking that it becomes your primary source of success because AEO success isn’t just about whether a prompt triggers a mention. It’s about whether your content genuinely meets a specific need, answers the right question, and supports decision-making. The most reliable signal that your strategy is working is still a tangible impact on your website: engagement, conversions, and bottom-of-funnel outcomes like revenue, not isolated visibility metrics alone.

How to format AEO content so LLMs extract and cite it.

LLMs need content to be clearly structured and easy to extract. The formatting principles below build on familiar SEO best practices but apply them more deliberately so that individual passages can stand on their own within AI-generated answers.

Write question‑led subheads with direct answers.

LLMs are optimized to respond to questions, so your content should mirror that structure.

There’s no strict format, but here’s a guide to help you write succinctly:

  • Write a 40–80-word answer directly under each question. You can elaborate further after the first sentence or two if you want to.
  • Stick to one idea per sentence, so it’s simple.
  • Use clear subject–predicate–object phrasing to reduce ambiguity. More tips on this later.

These formats are not exactly new, and are likely already included in your digital strategy guide, particularly in your SEO blog.

When it comes to AEO strategy, it doesn’t hurt to give this format some extra thought.

Tools like Breeze AI Suite help marketers write content that ranks in AEO and SEO. Breeze AI helps writers research common buyer questions and plan extraction-friendly answers directly inside their workflow. Combined with Content Hub, writing and marketing teams become an unstoppable force. Content Hub operationalizes templates, briefs, and reusable content patterns that support extractable answers at scale.

Combined with HubSpot’s Marketing Hub, markets can orchestrate cross‑channel promotion and nurturing around answer‑ready content.

Use semantic triples

Semantic triples are a writing and structuring technique that expresses meaning through explicit relationships: a subject, a predicate, and an object. This approach makes it easier for AI systems to understand not just the words on a page, but how concepts relate to one another.

HubSpot does this particularly well. Instead of vaguely describing capabilities, HubSpot explicitly states what its product is, what it offers, and how it’s used.

For example, instead of a vague description like “HubSpot offers powerful tools to help businesses grow and improve their marketing efforts.” We use explicit, entity-driven descriptions, like “HubSpot is a CRM platform that provides marketing automation, sales enablement, and customer service tools for B2B companies.”

Broken down into a semantic triple:

  • Subject: HubSpot
  • Predicate: is a
  • Object: CRM platform

In this structure:

  • The subject is a clearly identifiable entity that AI systems can recognize and classify, such as a company, product, person, or concept.
  • The predicate defines the relationship between the subject and the information that follows.
  • The object provides the specific, factual information that defines or explains the subject.

This level of clarity helps AI systems understand not just keywords, but meaning. Use them to identify who the expert is, what they’re authoritative on, and how concepts relate to one another.

Pro Tip: Semantic triples don’t have to take over your writing; just consider them in your next piece. In my experience, with semantic triples front of mind, I use them a lot more now than I did before, and I like them! It makes sense to me that semantic triples lead to unambiguous content, and that must be helpful for AI.

Chunk content for AI and humans.

Chunking is the practice of breaking content into small, self-contained sections that communicate a single idea clearly and efficiently. This approach improves readability for humans and makes it easier for AI systems to identify, extract, and reuse relevant information.

For AEO, chunking means using:

  • Short sections
  • Clear subheads
  • Bullets
  • Code or callout blocks

Every key section should be able to stand alone as a complete answer. If a paragraph only makes sense in the context of the full page, it’s harder for an AI model to quote or summarize it confidently.

Important note: There are many criticisms of chunking content because it reads like “use paragraphs.” And while that is part of it, chunking content isn’t just about implementing paragraphs. The concept of chunking is designed to help writers get the most important information out first. Instead of overwhelming objective facts with opinion or nuance, chunk content so the fact comes first, then your opinion later; don’t combine the two.

How to build authority so answer engines trust you.

The importance of showcasing authority became prominent among SEO specialists, alongside Google’s Experience, Expertise, Authority, and Trust (E-E-A-T). Emphasis on authority signals seems to carry on into answer engine optimization.

The following principles help ensure your content remains authoritative (and extractable) regardless of how many AI or Google’s EEAT updates occur.

  • 1. Show expertise and author identity.

Showcasing expertise starts with the content itself. Clear explanations, confident language, and evidence of real-world experience signal credibility to readers, Google, and AI systems.

This includes:

  • Referencing first-party research
  • Citing reputable sources
  • Demonstrating depth on the topic rather than surface-level commentary

If your content doesn’t clearly reflect expertise, no amount of technical optimization will compensate for it.

Important note: Demonstrating expertise isn’t just a content decision; it’s a technical one.

Within the HTML of your website, you can add or reinforce author bios, credentials, and references to help AI understand your content and find more words to cite. You do this through the schema. JSON-LD schema improves AI extraction and citation of content.

Schema lives in the HTML and can surface detailed information about a person (an author on your site or a team member), including their role, experience, areas of expertise, and publications. Since it’s in the HTML, AI crawlers can read it and summarize it in the answers.

While schema is (currently) just more words on a site for AI crawlers, it’s an excellent tactic for SEO, so there’s every reason to use it.

Why I like schema: In some cases, adding or improving schema can show a tangible impact within days. In my experience, rich snippets or knowledge panels can appear shortly after implementation, a reminder that this work pays off for SEO and benefits the AEO strategy.

Interested in schema? Read my article Schema markup for AEO: How to implement it to boost answer engine visibility in 2026

2. Diversify citations across platforms that AI engines favor.

Answer engines don’t rely on a single source type; you can’t just optimize your website and expect this to be enough. When people search for AI, they’re looking for third-party validation and branded content. For example, research shows that 32% of buyers discover new B2B vendors using generative AI. To discover vendors using AI, searches are likely looking for “the best [solution] for [highly detailed problem].”

No marketer should expect branded content to be consistently cited in searches like this. There needs to be proof, and AI tools pull from a mix of brand-owned content, trusted publications, expert commentary, documentation, and community-driven platforms.

Here’s an example:

screenshot from AI Mode shows how AI doesn’t always cite a product’s website as the source, suggesting that PR must form part of answer engine optimization strategy.

The search in the previous image shows three sources. They’re industry-expert listicles, not content from the recommended company's website.

That means building authority for AEO requires more than publishing on your own site; it requires earning high-quality mentions in the places AI engines already trust and cite.

A digital PR approach works best here.

Focus on:

  • Contributing genuinely helpful, non-promotional insights to industry publications, podcasts, reports, and expert roundups.
  • Prioritize clarity and usefulness over links or brand mentions.
  • Ensure consistency in how other sites talk about you by providing brand guidelines.

When multiple credible sources consistently reference your expertise, AI systems are more likely to cite your brand accurately as part of an answer.

Once those mentions exist, marketing teams can measure how their brand appears in AI-driven results. HubSpot’s AEO Search Grader benchmarks brand visibility in AI answer engines. This AI search tool makes it easier for marketers to understand where the brand is appearing, where they’re missing, and how citation patterns change over time.

Read more on AI visibility: Quick Guide to AEO with HubSpot.

3. Keep facts fresh and consistent everywhere.

AEO specialists must work toward earning consistent citations. To some degree, what generative AI tools produce is out of a brand’s control, but maintaining consistency across names, product descriptions, locations, and other attributes increases the likelihood of AI citing information about your brand that is correct.

This mirrors the logic behind local SEO and Name, Address, and Phone number (NAP) consistency. When AI systems pull information from multiple sources, even small discrepancies can lead to outdated and incorrect answers being surfaced.

That’s why it’s critical to regularly update the key pages, profiles, and feeds that AI engines are most likely to revisit.

Pricing is a particularly important example. AI tools surface pricing information quickly and prominently, and accurate, accessible pricing can actively influence buying decisions.

In his article, AI tools are already reshaping B2B purchasing behavior, Constantine von Hoffman explains, “AI can compress buying cycles dramatically for larger companies with complex, committee-driven purchasing processes. Stakeholders can rely on AI-generated shortlists built around specified criteria, shifting the onus to vendors to maintain explicit, searchable, and accessible content — especially pricing — on their websites.”

In the same piece, Hoffman interviews Chris Penn, Co-founder and Chief Data Scientist at TrustInsight.AI. Penn describes asking Gemini’s Deep Research to find alternatives after his existing SaaS provider raised prices. Within minutes, the AI produced a shortlist based on publicly available information, and he switched vendors without ever engaging a traditional sales process.

The takeaway is clear: when facts like pricing, positioning, or availability change, they need to be updated everywhere — quickly. In an AI-driven buying journey, stale or inconsistent information doesn’t just create confusion; it can cost you the deal before your team even knows a decision is being made.

4. Publish first-party insights AI can’t find elsewhere

One of the strongest authority signals you can send to answer engines is originality. First-party insights, proprietary data, internal benchmarks, unique frameworks, or firsthand observations give AI systems concrete references that don’t already exist elsewhere on the web.

This kind of content is harder to replicate, easier to attribute, and more likely to be cited because it adds net-new information to an answer. Even small original insights, when clearly explained and well structured, can significantly increase the likelihood that your content is surfaced and trusted in AI-generated responses.

In theory, being the source of new information should increase your chances of being cited by AI tools.

How to measure success from your AEO strategy.

Although there’s a clear overlap between SEO and AEO strategy, measuring AEO requires going beyond traditional SEO metrics. Clicks are no longer an important metric; marketers must capture how AI-driven discovery influences real buying behavior.

Monitor citations and mentions across engines.

Citations and mentions are a useful signal that your AEO strategy is working, but they need to be interpreted correctly.

AI visibility is volatile. Sources change based on freshness, phrasing, personalization, and how a question is framed, so it’s normal to see movement week to week.

Because of that, monitoring AEO performance requires a mix of periodic manual checks and dedicated tracking. Manually reviewing how your brand appears for priority questions across different AI tools helps you assess accuracy, positioning, and context. Tracking over time allows you to spot patterns.

Pro tip: Xfunnel measures LLM visibility and AI-driven search performance, showing which content AI systems surface and how often. It’s useful for spotting patterns, gaps, and competitive movement, especially when paired with traffic and conversion data.

Screenshot from an XFunnels shows how marketers can measure their AEO strategy by analyzing how their site is performing in AI tools.

Traffic

AI-driven experiences may reduce clicks overall, but traffic still matters. AI tools do send referrals, and traffic remains a reliable indicator of discovery and relevance.

Unlike pure visibility metrics, traffic is tangible. Looking specifically at traffic from AI sources helps you understand whether your content is being used as a starting point for deeper research.

In my own reporting, I’ve seen clear year-on-year growth from AI-driven traffic alone:

  • January 2025 saw a 40% increase compared to January 2024
  • January 2026 saw a 257% increase compared to January 2025

Pro tip: Don’t just look at totals. Review which pages users land on from AI referrals. That insight shows you which topics, formats, and questions are actually earning citations and clicks.

Conversions

Conversions tell you whether AI-influenced visibility leads to action. Track form submissions, demo requests, and content downloads associated with AEO-optimized pages.

Assisted conversions are especially important. AEO often influences early-stage consideration rather than acting as a last-click channel, so its value may not show up in simplistic attribution models. If AI exposure is introducing better-informed prospects into your funnel, conversion trends will reflect that over time.

Revenue

Revenue is how to drive tangible business value from AEO.

Close the loop on leads generated from AEO. You can track which source sent a lead, for example, a referral from ChatGPT that filled out a contact form, and ask sales how the lead progressed. If a sale converts the lead, then AEO specialists can take some credit for it.

Over time, strong AEO performance should correlate with higher-quality inbound leads, more educated buyers, and shorter sales cycles. If AI tools are helping prospects pre-qualify vendors before they ever speak to sales, that efficiency shows up in revenue data.

In my own client marketing, I’m finding that AEO leads convert 7.12% of their AI-referral traffic compared with 1.37% of their traditional-SEO traffic.

Connect visibility to pipeline in your CRM.

Smart CRM connects AEO visibility to pipeline and revenue metrics

AEO only becomes strategically valuable when visibility connects to business outcomes. By tying AI-driven discovery to on-site engagement, opportunities, and revenue within your CRM, you can demonstrate how answer engine visibility drives real pipeline impact.

Using HubSpot CRM, sales and marketing teams can track how AI-influenced traffic engages with content, converts, and progresses through the funnel.

screenshot from hubspot’s deal stage progress shows how hubspot crm provides a timeline of events for all leads that were generated from aeo strategies.

This makes AEO measurable in the same way as other growth channels — not as a vanity metric, but as a contributor to demand, pipeline, and revenue.

Answer engine optimization mistakes to avoid.

Avoiding the following mistakes will help ensure your answer engine optimization strategy strengthens visibility and supports real business outcomes.

When creating your strategy, remember to avoid these mistakes:

  • Treating AEO as a replacement for SEO rather than a layer built on top of strong SEO foundations
  • Optimizing for keywords or prompts instead of real questions, needs, and decision-making context
  • Publishing authoritative content that’s poorly structured, making it hard for AI systems to extract and cite
  • Focusing on visibility or mentions alone without tying AEO performance to engagement, pipeline, or revenue

Frequently Asked Questions About AEO Strategy

Do I need llms.txt if I already have a sitemap?

A sitemap helps search engines discover pages, but llms.txt exposes priority content to AI models for discovery. It’s not a replacement for a sitemap — it’s an additional signal that helps guide AI models toward your most important, answer-ready pages. It also contains more context about the page.

How do I track Perplexity citations or referrals?

You can track citations within Perlexity using tools like Xfunnel, which measures LLM visibility and AI-driven search performance.

Track referrals in your analytics using source/medium data. You’ll be able to see exactly how much traffic was referred to your site from any AI tool.

What is the best way to balance human readability with AI extractability?

Write for humans first, but structure for AI. Use clear questions, direct answers, and short, self-contained sections so the content is easy to read and extract without sacrificing depth.

When should I use Speakable versus FAQ schema?

Use FAQ schema for pages that answer multiple discrete questions in text-based formats. Use Speakable schema to mark short sections that are best suited for audio playback, allowing search engines and tools like Google Assistant to identify content for text-to-speech and distribute it through voice-based channels.

How often should I refresh answer blocks and schema?

Refresh answer blocks and schema whenever facts change, and review them at least quarterly. Regular updates help maintain accuracy and signal freshness to both search engines and AI systems.

AEO Strategy is Key

Strong SEO foundations still matter, but AEO strategy emphasizes certain tactics. When you combine granular audience understanding, answer-ready formatting, consistent entities, and measurable impact, you don’t just earn AI visibility — you earn trust at the exact moment buyers are making decisions.

In my experience working in B2B environments, AEO drives traffic and generates high-intent leads for websites. Tools like AI Search Grader make measuring AEO easier by helping you understand where and how your brand appears across AI-powered search experiences — and where there’s room to improve. AEO works best when it’s intentional, measurable, and connected to revenue, not when it’s bolted on as an experiment.



from Marketing https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/enterprise-seo-audit

If you’re not in the trenches of search every single day, it’s hard to know how seriously to take answer engine optimization strategy. There are two dominant camps right now: those who see generative AI as the most disruptive shift search has ever experienced, and those who argue that AEO (or GEO) is simply an extension of traditional SEO. 

Free AEO Grader: See How You Rank on AI Search Results

Predictably, the truth lives somewhere in the middle — a lot of AEO is SEO, with some pivots, enhancements, or attention diverted to prominent tactics that help brands gain visibility in AI tools. On the other hand, you can gain visibility in AI tools without ranking well in traditional SEO listings; the tactics can be separated.

What‘s harder to separate is your brand from the consequences of ignoring AI’s impact on search. Google’s AI Overviews (AIO) is taking clicks from websites; clicks drop by 61% when AIO is present and more alarmingly, your potential customers are busy asking AI tools about brands before they decide to create a shortlist. If your brand isn’t getting visibility for those early searches, you’re out of the race before the buyer has even discovered your website.

If you’re creating an answer engine optimization strategy and you want something more nuanced than “just do good SEO,” this is the article for you. I’ll cover how answer engines choose what to cite, where SEO still does the heavy lifting, and what additional work is required to appear in AI-generated answers.

Table of Contents

AEO strategy foundations: how AI engines and LLMs pick sources.

The models that power LLMs, like ChatGPT, are trained on a combination of:

  • Publicly available internet content
  • Licensed third-party data
  • Information generated by human trainers and users

Together, these sources shape how models understand entities, topics, and relationships across the web.

Read more about the foundation of ChatGPT here.

A common misconception is that LLMs were trained on a bunch of sources and that their answers are now set, but this isn’t the case.

Enter Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG).

RAG improves AI responses by adding external context when a question is asked. Rather than relying only on what a model learned during training, RAG allows it to pull in relevant information to produce (in theory!) more accurate, grounded answers.

Here’s what a basic RAG workflow looks like:

diagram shows a basic rag workflow so marketers can understand how llms work before creating their answer engine optimization strategy.

Source

In this search evolution, your content needs to be retrievable, which means being clear in your content (and in the content others publish about you across the web) about who you are, what you do, and how everything is connected.

Entity clarity and consistency help AI systems confidently identify, extract, and reuse your content, reducing confusion and increasing the likelihood that your brand is cited accurately in AI-generated answers. On top of that, there are technical considerations to account for, such as ensuring key content is accessible in HTML. I’ll cover these tactics later.

Answer engine optimization strategy beyond the basics

If you’re a competent SEO specialist, then the five steps below may feel familiar, but it’s important to list these components of an answer engine optimization strategy because some extra focus is required from SEO or AEO teams if you want to succeed in AI-driven search results.

I’ve covered each component in detail below, but this table provides an overview of how each area is managed in an SEO vs. AEO strategy.

Area

SEO

AEO

Audience targeting

Keyword-driven intent and SERP analysis mean audience targeting can get as granular as SERPs will allow. Sometimes, only broader pages rank for specific keywords.

Answer-driven intent allows for highly specific audience targeting based on roles, use cases, and challenges because AI can match answers precisely.

Landing pages

Pages are sometimes designed to rank broadly, and fewer pages are created to avoid keyword cannibalization.

Granular, audience-specific pages are created to address a single audience and their challenges in detail.

Content formatting

Content is optimized for readability, user experience, and ranking signals.

Content must be structured for extraction, such as question-led subheads and direct answer blocks.

HTML and JavaScript

Search engine bots crawl HTML and render JavaScript to discover dynamically loaded content.

Content must exist plainly in HTML so AI systems can reliably retrieve, parse, and cite it without executing scripts.

Keywords and prompt tracking

Keywords serve as directional signals, but success is judged by whether the content meets needs and drives real on-site outcomes.

Prompts serve as directional signals, but success is judged by whether the content meets needs and drives real on-site outcomes.

Measuring success

Organic traffic, rankings, click-through rates, and tangible business impact, such as conversions, revenue generated, and pipeline influence.

Visibility, citations, and tangible business impact, such as conversions, revenue generated, and pipeline influence.

1. Know your audience on a granular level.

A strong answer engine optimization strategy starts with a deeper understanding of the audience. Yes, traditional SEO typically requires this, too, but with the opportunities created by AEO, it’s extremely shortsighted not to revisit your ideal client profile (ICP) and get granular.

The next section elaborates on the why behind this, but in short, it’s no longer enough to know which keywords a broad market searches for. You need clarity on who is asking the question, why they’re asking, and what kind of answer would genuinely help them move forward.

AEO strategy requires mapping buyer questions to answer types and platforms.

Remember: people are searching for personalized, nuanced, detailed questions in AI search, and if you want to serve your audience via AI, you need to get into the nuance.

Granularity also creates strategic flexibility. You can address specific industries, roles, or use cases without forcing everything into a single, catch-all page — while still benefiting from your broader SEO foundations.

Pro tip: When planning AEO content, write down the exact person you’re answering before you write the answer. If you haven’t created buyer personas, you need them for every decision maker, especially if you’re in B2B.

HubSpot’s Make My Persona helps marketing teams define clear buyer personas by mapping roles, goals, challenges, and decision drivers to a single, consistent profile. Clear personas create stronger entity–intent alignment, making it easier to produce audience-specific answers that AI systems can accurately extract and cite.

screenshot from hubspot’s make my persona shows how marketers can easily create a buyer persona to inspire their answer engine optimization strategy.

Once you’ve established your audience, you can serve them on your site.

2. Create targeted pages that address specific audiences and their challenges.

SEO landing pages have traditionally been shaped by what Google appears to reward in the search results. For example, if a search for “SEM marketing consultant for ecommerce” returns mostly broad SEO service pages, teams often conclude that the safest place to target that term is the broad service page, rather than creating a dedicated landing page for the ecommerce audience.

Here’s the SERPs showing pretty generic Search Engine Marketing (SEM) services.

Google SERPs shows how traditional SEO fails and AEO strategy can help brands get visibility in front of their audiences

While this approach can work for rankings, it’s limiting. Broad pages leave little room to address nuance or fully explain a specific offering. In this case, going deep on the PPC side of SEM might dilute relevance for an SEO-focused page, while keeping it high-level risks underselling the full service altogether. The result is content that ranks but does not effectively address any particular audience.

This is where traditional SEO fails.

With SEO, searchers have to open numerous links and explore websites to find case studies before they can feel confident that the SEM services offered are suitable and that the company excels in their industry.

AEO resolves this problem by summarizing information from across the sources and providing a solid starting point for discovery and further research. AEO-driven search creates far more freedom and opportunity to serve narrow, well-defined audiences with highly targeted content.

Here’s a screenshot of AIO taking a searcher directly to their solution by mentioning brands:

screenshot from aio shows how an effective aeo strategy brings companies to the top of google.

Granular pages that address a specific role, problem, or use case make it easier for AI systems to identify a clean, relevant answer and cite it. A single paragraph can surface in an AI response even if the page itself would never rank on page one of traditional search. This is why smaller brands can now earn top-of-funnel visibility in AI answers, even when their broader SEO performance isn’t especially strong.

Pro tip: If a page tries to speak to everyone, it gives an answer engine nothing specific to quote. The more precisely you define the audience, their challenges, and your solutions, the more likely your content is to be extracted and reused.

3. Format correctly in a way that helps AI

Even the most targeted pages can be overlooked by AI crawlers if the structure makes it hard for AI systems to extract a clear answer.

Content formatting should use question-led subheads, direct answer blocks, and semantic triples. I’m keeping this brief because I explore this in more detail later in the article.

4. Keep content available in HTML.

There are technical considerations that influence the success of an AI engine optimization strategy, and one of the most important is ensuring that content is available in HTML.

Google’s search crawlers can render JavaScript, which means they’re often able to discover text that isn’t present in the raw HTML. As a result, traditional SEO can sometimes rely on JavaScript to load or reveal content dynamically. Content doesn’t have to be included in HTML for SEO That said, this approach still comes with risk; not all rendered content is indexed, especially when it’s hidden behind tabs, accordions, or filters that require user interaction.

AI crawlers don’t behave like Googlebot. They rely on HTML only. If important answers only appear after scripts run, there’s a real risk they won’t be retrieved, extracted, or cited at all.

The takeaway is simple: if content is critical to being understood or referenced by AI systems, it should exist plainly in the HTML, not depend on JavaScript to appear.

5. Don’t get too wrapped up in keywords and prompts.

Over-reliance on keywords has always failed to tell the full story, but with AEO and prompt tracking in the mix, it falls short more than ever.

Keyword data can indicate demand, and prompt tracking can help determine who has visibility and where, but AI tools change their sources a lot, based on what’s recently updated, individual searcher personalization, and, of course, the nuance of prompts is impossible to track.

Is it useful to track keywords and prompts? Sure, but with caveats…

Pro Tip: Don’t get so wrapped up in prompt tracking that it becomes your primary source of success because AEO success isn’t just about whether a prompt triggers a mention. It’s about whether your content genuinely meets a specific need, answers the right question, and supports decision-making. The most reliable signal that your strategy is working is still a tangible impact on your website: engagement, conversions, and bottom-of-funnel outcomes like revenue, not isolated visibility metrics alone.

How to format AEO content so LLMs extract and cite it.

LLMs need content to be clearly structured and easy to extract. The formatting principles below build on familiar SEO best practices but apply them more deliberately so that individual passages can stand on their own within AI-generated answers.

Write question‑led subheads with direct answers.

LLMs are optimized to respond to questions, so your content should mirror that structure.

There’s no strict format, but here’s a guide to help you write succinctly:

  • Write a 40–80-word answer directly under each question. You can elaborate further after the first sentence or two if you want to.
  • Stick to one idea per sentence, so it’s simple.
  • Use clear subject–predicate–object phrasing to reduce ambiguity. More tips on this later.

These formats are not exactly new, and are likely already included in your digital strategy guide, particularly in your SEO blog.

When it comes to AEO strategy, it doesn’t hurt to give this format some extra thought.

Tools like Breeze AI Suite help marketers write content that ranks in AEO and SEO. Breeze AI helps writers research common buyer questions and plan extraction-friendly answers directly inside their workflow. Combined with Content Hub, writing and marketing teams become an unstoppable force. Content Hub operationalizes templates, briefs, and reusable content patterns that support extractable answers at scale.

Combined with HubSpot’s Marketing Hub, markets can orchestrate cross‑channel promotion and nurturing around answer‑ready content.

Use semantic triples

Semantic triples are a writing and structuring technique that expresses meaning through explicit relationships: a subject, a predicate, and an object. This approach makes it easier for AI systems to understand not just the words on a page, but how concepts relate to one another.

HubSpot does this particularly well. Instead of vaguely describing capabilities, HubSpot explicitly states what its product is, what it offers, and how it’s used.

For example, instead of a vague description like “HubSpot offers powerful tools to help businesses grow and improve their marketing efforts.” We use explicit, entity-driven descriptions, like “HubSpot is a CRM platform that provides marketing automation, sales enablement, and customer service tools for B2B companies.”

Broken down into a semantic triple:

  • Subject: HubSpot
  • Predicate: is a
  • Object: CRM platform

In this structure:

  • The subject is a clearly identifiable entity that AI systems can recognize and classify, such as a company, product, person, or concept.
  • The predicate defines the relationship between the subject and the information that follows.
  • The object provides the specific, factual information that defines or explains the subject.

This level of clarity helps AI systems understand not just keywords, but meaning. Use them to identify who the expert is, what they’re authoritative on, and how concepts relate to one another.

Pro Tip: Semantic triples don’t have to take over your writing; just consider them in your next piece. In my experience, with semantic triples front of mind, I use them a lot more now than I did before, and I like them! It makes sense to me that semantic triples lead to unambiguous content, and that must be helpful for AI.

Chunk content for AI and humans.

Chunking is the practice of breaking content into small, self-contained sections that communicate a single idea clearly and efficiently. This approach improves readability for humans and makes it easier for AI systems to identify, extract, and reuse relevant information.

For AEO, chunking means using:

  • Short sections
  • Clear subheads
  • Bullets
  • Code or callout blocks

Every key section should be able to stand alone as a complete answer. If a paragraph only makes sense in the context of the full page, it’s harder for an AI model to quote or summarize it confidently.

Important note: There are many criticisms of chunking content because it reads like “use paragraphs.” And while that is part of it, chunking content isn’t just about implementing paragraphs. The concept of chunking is designed to help writers get the most important information out first. Instead of overwhelming objective facts with opinion or nuance, chunk content so the fact comes first, then your opinion later; don’t combine the two.

How to build authority so answer engines trust you.

The importance of showcasing authority became prominent among SEO specialists, alongside Google’s Experience, Expertise, Authority, and Trust (E-E-A-T). Emphasis on authority signals seems to carry on into answer engine optimization.

The following principles help ensure your content remains authoritative (and extractable) regardless of how many AI or Google’s EEAT updates occur.

  • 1. Show expertise and author identity.

Showcasing expertise starts with the content itself. Clear explanations, confident language, and evidence of real-world experience signal credibility to readers, Google, and AI systems.

This includes:

  • Referencing first-party research
  • Citing reputable sources
  • Demonstrating depth on the topic rather than surface-level commentary

If your content doesn’t clearly reflect expertise, no amount of technical optimization will compensate for it.

Important note: Demonstrating expertise isn’t just a content decision; it’s a technical one.

Within the HTML of your website, you can add or reinforce author bios, credentials, and references to help AI understand your content and find more words to cite. You do this through the schema. JSON-LD schema improves AI extraction and citation of content.

Schema lives in the HTML and can surface detailed information about a person (an author on your site or a team member), including their role, experience, areas of expertise, and publications. Since it’s in the HTML, AI crawlers can read it and summarize it in the answers.

While schema is (currently) just more words on a site for AI crawlers, it’s an excellent tactic for SEO, so there’s every reason to use it.

Why I like schema: In some cases, adding or improving schema can show a tangible impact within days. In my experience, rich snippets or knowledge panels can appear shortly after implementation, a reminder that this work pays off for SEO and benefits the AEO strategy.

Interested in schema? Read my article Schema markup for AEO: How to implement it to boost answer engine visibility in 2026

2. Diversify citations across platforms that AI engines favor.

Answer engines don’t rely on a single source type; you can’t just optimize your website and expect this to be enough. When people search for AI, they’re looking for third-party validation and branded content. For example, research shows that 32% of buyers discover new B2B vendors using generative AI. To discover vendors using AI, searches are likely looking for “the best [solution] for [highly detailed problem].”

No marketer should expect branded content to be consistently cited in searches like this. There needs to be proof, and AI tools pull from a mix of brand-owned content, trusted publications, expert commentary, documentation, and community-driven platforms.

Here’s an example:

screenshot from AI Mode shows how AI doesn’t always cite a product’s website as the source, suggesting that PR must form part of answer engine optimization strategy.

The search in the previous image shows three sources. They’re industry-expert listicles, not content from the recommended company's website.

That means building authority for AEO requires more than publishing on your own site; it requires earning high-quality mentions in the places AI engines already trust and cite.

A digital PR approach works best here.

Focus on:

  • Contributing genuinely helpful, non-promotional insights to industry publications, podcasts, reports, and expert roundups.
  • Prioritize clarity and usefulness over links or brand mentions.
  • Ensure consistency in how other sites talk about you by providing brand guidelines.

When multiple credible sources consistently reference your expertise, AI systems are more likely to cite your brand accurately as part of an answer.

Once those mentions exist, marketing teams can measure how their brand appears in AI-driven results. HubSpot’s AEO Search Grader benchmarks brand visibility in AI answer engines. This AI search tool makes it easier for marketers to understand where the brand is appearing, where they’re missing, and how citation patterns change over time.

Read more on AI visibility: Quick Guide to AEO with HubSpot.

3. Keep facts fresh and consistent everywhere.

AEO specialists must work toward earning consistent citations. To some degree, what generative AI tools produce is out of a brand’s control, but maintaining consistency across names, product descriptions, locations, and other attributes increases the likelihood of AI citing information about your brand that is correct.

This mirrors the logic behind local SEO and Name, Address, and Phone number (NAP) consistency. When AI systems pull information from multiple sources, even small discrepancies can lead to outdated and incorrect answers being surfaced.

That’s why it’s critical to regularly update the key pages, profiles, and feeds that AI engines are most likely to revisit.

Pricing is a particularly important example. AI tools surface pricing information quickly and prominently, and accurate, accessible pricing can actively influence buying decisions.

In his article, AI tools are already reshaping B2B purchasing behavior, Constantine von Hoffman explains, “AI can compress buying cycles dramatically for larger companies with complex, committee-driven purchasing processes. Stakeholders can rely on AI-generated shortlists built around specified criteria, shifting the onus to vendors to maintain explicit, searchable, and accessible content — especially pricing — on their websites.”

In the same piece, Hoffman interviews Chris Penn, Co-founder and Chief Data Scientist at TrustInsight.AI. Penn describes asking Gemini’s Deep Research to find alternatives after his existing SaaS provider raised prices. Within minutes, the AI produced a shortlist based on publicly available information, and he switched vendors without ever engaging a traditional sales process.

The takeaway is clear: when facts like pricing, positioning, or availability change, they need to be updated everywhere — quickly. In an AI-driven buying journey, stale or inconsistent information doesn’t just create confusion; it can cost you the deal before your team even knows a decision is being made.

4. Publish first-party insights AI can’t find elsewhere

One of the strongest authority signals you can send to answer engines is originality. First-party insights, proprietary data, internal benchmarks, unique frameworks, or firsthand observations give AI systems concrete references that don’t already exist elsewhere on the web.

This kind of content is harder to replicate, easier to attribute, and more likely to be cited because it adds net-new information to an answer. Even small original insights, when clearly explained and well structured, can significantly increase the likelihood that your content is surfaced and trusted in AI-generated responses.

In theory, being the source of new information should increase your chances of being cited by AI tools.

How to measure success from your AEO strategy.

Although there’s a clear overlap between SEO and AEO strategy, measuring AEO requires going beyond traditional SEO metrics. Clicks are no longer an important metric; marketers must capture how AI-driven discovery influences real buying behavior.

Monitor citations and mentions across engines.

Citations and mentions are a useful signal that your AEO strategy is working, but they need to be interpreted correctly.

AI visibility is volatile. Sources change based on freshness, phrasing, personalization, and how a question is framed, so it’s normal to see movement week to week.

Because of that, monitoring AEO performance requires a mix of periodic manual checks and dedicated tracking. Manually reviewing how your brand appears for priority questions across different AI tools helps you assess accuracy, positioning, and context. Tracking over time allows you to spot patterns.

Pro tip: Xfunnel measures LLM visibility and AI-driven search performance, showing which content AI systems surface and how often. It’s useful for spotting patterns, gaps, and competitive movement, especially when paired with traffic and conversion data.

Screenshot from an XFunnels shows how marketers can measure their AEO strategy by analyzing how their site is performing in AI tools.

Traffic

AI-driven experiences may reduce clicks overall, but traffic still matters. AI tools do send referrals, and traffic remains a reliable indicator of discovery and relevance.

Unlike pure visibility metrics, traffic is tangible. Looking specifically at traffic from AI sources helps you understand whether your content is being used as a starting point for deeper research.

In my own reporting, I’ve seen clear year-on-year growth from AI-driven traffic alone:

  • January 2025 saw a 40% increase compared to January 2024
  • January 2026 saw a 257% increase compared to January 2025

Pro tip: Don’t just look at totals. Review which pages users land on from AI referrals. That insight shows you which topics, formats, and questions are actually earning citations and clicks.

Conversions

Conversions tell you whether AI-influenced visibility leads to action. Track form submissions, demo requests, and content downloads associated with AEO-optimized pages.

Assisted conversions are especially important. AEO often influences early-stage consideration rather than acting as a last-click channel, so its value may not show up in simplistic attribution models. If AI exposure is introducing better-informed prospects into your funnel, conversion trends will reflect that over time.

Revenue

Revenue is how to drive tangible business value from AEO.

Close the loop on leads generated from AEO. You can track which source sent a lead, for example, a referral from ChatGPT that filled out a contact form, and ask sales how the lead progressed. If a sale converts the lead, then AEO specialists can take some credit for it.

Over time, strong AEO performance should correlate with higher-quality inbound leads, more educated buyers, and shorter sales cycles. If AI tools are helping prospects pre-qualify vendors before they ever speak to sales, that efficiency shows up in revenue data.

In my own client marketing, I’m finding that AEO leads convert 7.12% of their AI-referral traffic compared with 1.37% of their traditional-SEO traffic.

Connect visibility to pipeline in your CRM.

Smart CRM connects AEO visibility to pipeline and revenue metrics

AEO only becomes strategically valuable when visibility connects to business outcomes. By tying AI-driven discovery to on-site engagement, opportunities, and revenue within your CRM, you can demonstrate how answer engine visibility drives real pipeline impact.

Using HubSpot CRM, sales and marketing teams can track how AI-influenced traffic engages with content, converts, and progresses through the funnel.

screenshot from hubspot’s deal stage progress shows how hubspot crm provides a timeline of events for all leads that were generated from aeo strategies.

This makes AEO measurable in the same way as other growth channels — not as a vanity metric, but as a contributor to demand, pipeline, and revenue.

Answer engine optimization mistakes to avoid.

Avoiding the following mistakes will help ensure your answer engine optimization strategy strengthens visibility and supports real business outcomes.

When creating your strategy, remember to avoid these mistakes:

  • Treating AEO as a replacement for SEO rather than a layer built on top of strong SEO foundations
  • Optimizing for keywords or prompts instead of real questions, needs, and decision-making context
  • Publishing authoritative content that’s poorly structured, making it hard for AI systems to extract and cite
  • Focusing on visibility or mentions alone without tying AEO performance to engagement, pipeline, or revenue

Frequently Asked Questions About AEO Strategy

Do I need llms.txt if I already have a sitemap?

A sitemap helps search engines discover pages, but llms.txt exposes priority content to AI models for discovery. It’s not a replacement for a sitemap — it’s an additional signal that helps guide AI models toward your most important, answer-ready pages. It also contains more context about the page.

How do I track Perplexity citations or referrals?

You can track citations within Perlexity using tools like Xfunnel, which measures LLM visibility and AI-driven search performance.

Track referrals in your analytics using source/medium data. You’ll be able to see exactly how much traffic was referred to your site from any AI tool.

What is the best way to balance human readability with AI extractability?

Write for humans first, but structure for AI. Use clear questions, direct answers, and short, self-contained sections so the content is easy to read and extract without sacrificing depth.

When should I use Speakable versus FAQ schema?

Use FAQ schema for pages that answer multiple discrete questions in text-based formats. Use Speakable schema to mark short sections that are best suited for audio playback, allowing search engines and tools like Google Assistant to identify content for text-to-speech and distribute it through voice-based channels.

How often should I refresh answer blocks and schema?

Refresh answer blocks and schema whenever facts change, and review them at least quarterly. Regular updates help maintain accuracy and signal freshness to both search engines and AI systems.

AEO Strategy is Key

Strong SEO foundations still matter, but AEO strategy emphasizes certain tactics. When you combine granular audience understanding, answer-ready formatting, consistent entities, and measurable impact, you don’t just earn AI visibility — you earn trust at the exact moment buyers are making decisions.

In my experience working in B2B environments, AEO drives traffic and generates high-intent leads for websites. Tools like AI Search Grader make measuring AEO easier by helping you understand where and how your brand appears across AI-powered search experiences — and where there’s room to improve. AEO works best when it’s intentional, measurable, and connected to revenue, not when it’s bolted on as an experiment.

via Perfecte news Non connection

jueves, 5 de marzo de 2026

AI and SEO: What AI means for the future of SEO [Expert Tips & Interview]

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rewriting the playbook of so much of our lives — how we interact, how we learn, how we complete daily tasks, and sometimes even what we eat for dinner. So, of course, AI and the future of SEO are no different.HubSpot's AI Search Grader: See how visible your brand is in AI-powered search engines.

It’s been just over three years since ChatGPT took the internet by storm. While AI was technically nothing new in modern consumer (and marketer) lives, this level of AI had never been so accessible to the general public before, and they certainly haven’t taken it for granted. According to McKinsey, half of Google's results already have AI-powered results, and trends predict that number to hit 75% by 2028.

What does this mean for marketers? We’ll unpack how AI and SEO are converging, how AI has changed consumer behavior, and what it holds for the future of SEO.

Table of Contents

How AI is Impacting SEO

This topic is a complicated one. AI is transforming SEO practices. It hasn’t just changed how marketers optimize to get found in search engines; it’s changed consumer search behaviors and even the search engines themselves. It was all a chain reaction, really.

AI changed consumer search behavior, so search engines adopted AI-powered features, and now marketers are turning to new strategies to appeal to AI, while also using AI to expedite and enhance optimization.

Let’s start from the top with the catalyst:

AI has changed consumer search behavior.

Google isn’t the only tech giant consumers turn to for answers anymore. People are increasingly calling out to voice assistants like Alexa and Siri, and asking chatbots like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini their questions.

GWI actually found that 31% of Gen Zers already prefer using AI platforms or chatbots to find information online, while research from Semrush predicts that LLM traffic will pass traditional Google search by the end of 2027.

ai and the future of seo, llm traffic predicted to dominate

On top of that, HubSpot research found that 79% of those already using AI for search believe it actually offers a better experience than traditional search engines. Clearly, consumer search behavior and preferences are shifting, and artificial intelligence plays a large role in this.

AI has changed search engines.

Seeing the popularity of AI platforms, Google began rolling out several generative AI-powered features, such as AI overviews and “AI Mode,” that offer more chatbot-like experiences than traditional search results pages.

ai and the future of seo, ai mode offers experience similar to chatbots

Google reports that over 27% of searches now end without a click as users get what they need directly from these features. And the traffic implications are significant.

Zero-click searches have climbed from 56% to nearly 69% of queries from May 2024 to May 2025, while search referral traffic to 1,000 tracked web domains fell from 12 billion visits in June 2024 to 11.2 billion in June 2025, according to SimilarWeb’s Annual Digital 100 Report.

With AI overviews taking up about 42% of desktop screens and 48% on mobile, organic listings are further down the page, so even once “high-ranking”, highly visited, high-quality content marketing is getting ignored.

Understandably, that makes anxiety a bit high for us marketers, so we’ve had to adapt.

Pro tip: Use HubSpot's free AI Search Grader to check how visible your brand is in AI-powered search engines and identify where you can improve.

AI has changed search engine optimization.

A Semrush analysis of 200,000+ keywords reported that nearly 95% of keywords triggering AI Overviews have no paid ads or minimal commercial value. In other words, it seems Google is deploying AI summaries mainly for informational searches, while keeping transactional content in the traditional SERP format.

Why does that matter? Well, it means the website traffic most at risk is top-of-funnel educational content that typically grabs a lot of clicks for businesses and builds brand awareness — and Google gets to protect its ad revenue. Clever if you’re Google, cruel if you’re a marketer.

But there are ways to fight back.

Marketers need to incorporate answer engine optimization (AEO) into their strategies to help their businesses appeal to AI features in search engines and generative engine optimization (GEO) to cater to generative AI — but those are not the only ways their SEO is pivoting.

Keyword Research and Topic Discovery for AI Search

Old school keyword research focused on matching exact phrases and measuring search volume and keyword difficulty. Keyword research for AI search encompasses intent mapping, topic clustering, and, most importantly, conversational query analysis.

You’ve likely heard it a lot lately — People engage with AI more like they do with other people than they do with search engines. Instead of typing “ice cream shop nyc” (A regular query for me and my sweet tooth), they’d likely say, “What’s the ice cream shop near me?”

Pew Research Center confirms, finding that longer, question-format queries are most likely to generate AI Overview responses.

ai and the future of seo, ai searches trend to be longer

Source

Because of this, marketers need to structure keyword strategies around “what,” “how,” “why,” and “best” queries.

Pro Tip: Build an inventory of the questions your audience typically asks during the buyer’s journey. Connect with sales and customer service to understand the questions they field regularly in each stage.

Mine AnswerThePublic and Google‘s “People Also Ask” (PAA) boxes for your core topics. These reveal what users want answered and what Google’s algorithm considers relevant.

In a very meta twist, many AI tools are also emerging to help marketers optimize for AI.

HubSpot's Breeze, Semrush‘s Copilot, and Ahrefs’ AI Content Helper, for example, have features to help analyze search intent at scale, identify content gaps, and generate topic clusters that map to the full buyer journey — including the conversational, long-tail queries that AI Overviews most frequently address.

HubSpot's Content Hub, in particular, is great for building topic clusters that map keywords to buyer intent and create content that earns citations across both traditional and AI search.

ai and the future of seo, topic clusters

Source

Content Optimization for Machine Learning

Quality is very much a factor in AI and SEO success. Google evaluates websites using its E-E-A-T quality framework (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness), and Google is one of the many sources AI consults in crafting its answers.

AI tries to generate the most helpful, factual answers possible. Making sure your content references trusted sources and thought leaders, and even shares original research and data when possible, is a great way to appeal to this.

In fact, Digital Marketing Institute has found that content enriched with credible citations and statistics improves AI visibility by 30-40% compared to baseline approaches.

Thankfully, AI tools can help you with both content structure and quality. How’s so?

Ask ChatGPT for feedback on how to improve an article draft to better reach a specific audience. It can also help you brainstorm topics, identify knowledge gaps, write metadata, source data, create visual aids, and even proofread for you.

Heck, I used Claude for ideas on this article’s title.

ai and the future of seo, chatgpt can suggest blog article titles

For existing content, try asking your AI system of choice to identify where information has gone stale, suggest updated statistics, and recommend structural changes to improve E-E-A-T signals.

Rather than creating net-new content on every topic, AI tools like HubSpot’s Content Remix can even help you repurpose and optimize content for other media. Learn about more useful AI SEO tools here.

Of course, you always want to review and edit any work you generate with generative AI, but nearly 70% of companies report better returns after integrating it into their SEO and content workflows.

Read: Is AI-Generated Content Good for SEO?: 300+ Web Strategists Weigh In

Technical SEO Automation

Technical SEO is also a big factor in catering to LLMs. Machine learning systems, both Google's and the LLMs powering AI answers, favor content with specific structural characteristics.

More specifically, content with proper schema markup, clear headings, concise paragraphs that directly answer questions, and FAQ sections all improve a page’s “extractability” for AI. As a result, marketers should lean more heavily on structured data, header optimization, and overall page formatting.

Platforms like Screaming Frog, Semrush, and Ahrefs (the fave here on the HubSpot blog team) now also use machine learning to automatically crawl sites, identify issues (broken links, duplicate content, slow page speed, missing schema), and prioritize fixes by estimated impact.

What I can personally confirm: what once required hours of manual audit work can now be flagged, triaged, and assigned in minutes.

Pro Tip: Make sure AI crawlers can access your content. Some sites inadvertently block AI bots through robots.txt rules or JavaScript rendering issues. Generative engine optimization (GEO) guides from Search Engine Land emphasize that content must be technically accessible and machine-readable to have any chance of appearing in AI-generated answers.

How Marketers Can Adapt SEO to AI

In an interview with fellow HubSpotter Curt del Principe, Amanda Sellers, Manager of EN Blog Growth, shared her top takeaways for marketers looking to adapt to AI and the future of SEO:

1. Lean into original, comprehensive data.

“It’s not enough to produce evergreen, factual content anymore because ChatGPT can arguably do that,” Sellers explains. “You want to create content that is citation-worthy.”

A large part of this comes back to how comprehensive your content and answers are. AI reads detail as deeper knowledge and, in turn, credibility worth citing. So don’t just scratch the surface on a topic. Dig deep.

Sellers continues, “While LLMs craft their answers from many sources, you‘re much more likely to help shape the answer if you’re cited as a source. Original data and thought leadership help here.”

That means it’s even better if other websites cite you as their data source. Seeing your information cited and backlinked vouches for your authority even in the eyes of your competitors.

2. Prioritize structure and context.

“Design content with structure in mind,” advises Sellers.

As we’ve discussed, “AI retrieves content in chunks and doesn't ‘understand’ information the way a human would. Writing content in semantically rich sections and strengthening semantic association increases the likelihood of good retrieval and, in effect, visibility.”

What does semantic richness look like?

  • AI-powered search engines change how content is discovered and ranked
  • Marketers use AI tools for keyword research, content optimization, and technical SEO
  • HubSpot’s Breeze suite provides AI-powered tools for SEO and content optimization

It’s statements that are clear and direct; that define explicitly correlations and relationships.

Pro tip: HubSpot Content Hub can help you create structured templates at scale so your team can produce AEO-optimized content more quickly.

3. Expand your presence.

The more often people hear or see things, the more we commit them to memory. AI and LLMs work similarly; the more they see a source mentioned or active across authoritative contexts on the web, the more likely they are to trust them and cite them.

In other words, LLMs are more likely to treat your content as credible and worth citing if your brand is cited in reputable industry publications, discussed in high-quality forums, and referenced in academic or government sources, among other things.

This isn’t just about backlinks and footnotes, however. It’s about establishing proof that your brand is a legitimate subject-matter expert across many different online territories. Think other publications, forums, review sites, and social media platforms.

Here’s what you can do:

  • Publish thought leadership posts or articles on LinkedIn.
  • Create educational video content for YouTube.
  • Participate in relevant Reddit communities and Quora discussions.
  • Guest blog on reputable publications or being quoted/mentioned by them.
  • Create original research and data visualizations that attracts citations.
  • Be interviewed or featured by other trusted sources.

ai and the future of seo, hubspot engages on reddit to help establish expertise

Multi-channel diversification is also built into the Loop Marketing playbook in the Amplify stage. Learn more about it here.

Pro tip: Content Remix can help you with this repurposing in one click.

4. Establish your credibility.

Expanding your presence across the web also helps establish you as a credible expert in your field, but our efforts shouldn’t end there. Showcase your awards, accolades, and social proof on your website.

That means:

  • Industry awards
  • Relevant company history and experience
  • Relevant degrees, certificates, and licenses
  • Customer testimonials
  • Ratings & reviews
  • Case studies

All of these add to your lore as valuable resource to your target audience, search engines, and AI systems.

5. Don’t forget about SEO.

“Feed two birds with one scone,” advises Sellers. “LLMs rely on Google's index for now, so good AEO is dependent on good SEO. Invest in strategies that will help content rank on search and also increase AI visibility.

For example, think about positioning and the unique things your publication can offer that can’t be found elsewhere. That could mean the input of an expert in your field, industry data your company already collects, or even just a fun tone readers come back for.

While AI systems don’t emphasize differentiation, SEO does. So, creating content that also offers unique value from other sources will help you in both arenas.

Frequently Asked Questions About AI and SEO

What is SEO for AI?

SEO for AI — sometimes called Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) or Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) — is the practice of optimizing content to appear in AI-generated answers from platforms like Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini.

While traditional SEO focuses on ranking in search results, AI SEO focuses on appearing in or being cited as a trusted source in AI-generated summaries. But the two are closely related. Both look for accurate, up-to-date, and comprehensive content, an easy-to-follow structure, and technical accessibility, but vary in how.

AI SEO, for instance, favors structured data implementation, a modular content architecture designed for easy extraction, and a presence on authoritative third-party sources when citing pages.

Is SEO still worth it with AI? Is SEO still relevant with AI?

100%. Traditional SEO remains relevant alongside AI-driven strategies. According to Ahrefs, Google still sends 345x more traffic than ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity combined as of September 2025. But the space is evolving.

Organic traffic is likely to become harder to come by as AI preferences expand, but brand visibility, authority, and citations in AI answers will likely prove important throughout the buyer’s journey.

Furthermore, SEO is essentially the foundation on which AI search visibility is built. AI systems like Google's Gemini, ChatGPT, and Perplexity pull primarily from content that has already established authority and trust through traditional SEO signals. More than 99% of AI Overview sources come from pages already ranking in the top 10 organic results.

SEO now needs to optimize for both traditional search results and AI-generated answers simultaneously — not one of the other.

Sites that have strong technical SEO and high-quality authoritative content are best positioned to earn AI citations. Sites that have neglected these fundamentals are doubly disadvantaged as they rank poorly in traditional search and rarely appear in AI answers.

Can SEO be done with AI?

Like most things in digital marketing, yes, AI can help optimize for search engines.

AI tools can assist with:

  • keyword research and topic clustering
  • content brief generation
  • on-page optimization recommendations
  • technical audit automation
  • meta description and title tag drafting
  • content performance analysis.

While AI is a powerful tool for SEO, it should enhance human expertise, not replace it. The winning formula is AI for scale and efficiency, humans for expertise and differentiation.

HubSpot's Breeze tools are designed around this idea, giving marketing teams AI capabilities that amplify their expertise rather than substitute for it.

What is the relationship between AI and SEO?

Today, AI and SEO are linked in several ways.

First, AI is shifting consumer search behavior. Second, AI is reshaping how search engines work: Google, Bing, and emerging platforms use machine learning throughout their ranking algorithms, and generative AI now powers the summaries and overviews users see before organic results. Third, AI has become a core tool within SEO practice — from automated audits to content optimization and competitive analysis.

TLDR: AI is both the environment SEO practitioners work in, and one of the most powerful tools they use to do their work.

Are recent SEO shifts due to AI?

“I believe that the 'Helpful Content' algorithm update (and the broader emphasis on EEAT) is in direct response to AI content creation,” says Sellers. If you’re unfamiliar, she’s talking about a massive update Google made in late 2022 to the algorithm that chooses its search rankings.

That kicked off a long series of additional updates 2023-2025 that aimed to promote content that met Google’s guidelines for quality: Experience, Expertise, Authority, and Trustworthiness (or EEAT) and roll out AI overviews, AI mode, and more.

The goal of EEAT is simple: To make sure that the most valuable content for humans shows up in the search results, instead of content made to please search engines.

“In theory, generative AI becoming accessible for content creators and website owners means an opening of the floodgates for more content proliferation.” But more content doesn’t necessarily mean better content, especially for consumers.

“Generative AI is very good at providing evergreen, objective information (and regurgitating stances that already exist),” Sellers emphasizes. “It’s less good at providing opinions, unique stances, emotional reflection, or first-party research.”

ai and the future of seo, expert quote on including unique value in content

And those are the qualities that are winning in the traditional search rankings right now. Qualities that tend to only come from real-life human experience.

So we’re seeing changes in response to AI, but what about changes driven by AI?

Is AI-powered search changing SEO?

Coming from the front line, most marketers would say very likely, yes.

Though it still dominates globally, holding roughly 89% of the search engine market, Google's search market share dipped below 90% for the first time since 2015 in early 2025. This drop is suspected to be thanks to AI search, as AI traffic began to appear in analytics.

However, it’s worth noting many searches that can be satisfied by ChatGPT would likely have been zero-click searches anyway, meaning the user would have gotten their answer straight from the search results page without ever clicking through to your site.

Plus, Google launched its own Search Generative Experiment (SGE) features in response to the rise in ChatGPT, so even the remaining 89% doesn’t result in the same click or website visit traditional search did.

Has AI changed search behavior?

“Changes in search behavior are difficult to quantify,” Sellers cautions. “Especially since these kinds of macro behavioral changes are slow and widespread.”

“I am starting to see demand loss on some queries where I suspect ChatGPT could probably be more helpful than a blog post,” she says. “But with all the volatility, it's hard to say if AI adoption is the main cause of the loss.”

So, while behavioral shifts are definitely happening, they are currently slow.

What is happening is a significant rise in zero-click searches, and that‘s largely being driven by Google’s own AI Overviews rather than users leaving for ChatGPT. Organic click-through rates dropped to 40.3%, while for news-related queries specifically, zero-click outcomes rose from 56% to 69% year-over-year as AI Overviews rolled out more broadly.

While that's bad news for raw traffic numbers, optimizing for AI search results can still go a long way in boosting your brand's visibility and awareness — especially since early data suggests AI-referred visitors convert at significantly higher rates than traditional organic traffic.

Which makes a lovely segue to the question of how SEO fits into a larger marketing strategy — a question that existed long before AI jumped in to complicate things.

Does AI shift the balance of organic vs. non-organic marketing strategies?

“It’s never good practice to put all your eggs in one basket, however powerful that basket is,” Sellers says. “This is an opinion I held before widespread AI adoption, and it’s an opinion I’ll continue to hold.”

ai and the future of seo, expert quote on diversifying

(For SEOs, this is an opinion often learned after getting burned by an algorithm update.)

“Google is [still] a powerful channel for blogs because organic search (the behavior) is ongoing and repeatable — which makes it very easy to scale and get performance.”

That’s in contrast to channels like email, paid ads, or social media, which require constant attention (or constant budget). But is AI changing the impact of those levers?

“I think that the effectiveness of Google as a channel is decreasing,” admits Sellers. “But the funny thing is… It’s been continually decreasing for my entire career as a content SEO. The introduction of featured snippets, increasing the real estate for Google Ads, the introduction of images and video on the [results page], the rise of zero-click searches … have all reduced the effectiveness of the channel.”

ai and the future of seo, old serp page design

Source

And yet, Google still leads the way.

“We adapt and make new strategies in the wake of those things and still see an incredible volume of demand from search as a result,” Sellers says. “The same will happen through the AI boom.”

SE-Oh, the places AI will go

AI is rewriting the rules of SEO, sure, but it hasn‘t thrown out the playbook entirely. What made great content great before AI still hold: accuracy, clarity, and genuine value for the reader. What’s changed is the game board. We’re not longer trying to conquer just a search engine results page, you're navigating AI systems that synthesize, summarize, and cite.

So yes, AI has changed we decide our dinner menu and how we find the best ice cream shop in NYC — and it‘s absolutely changing SEO. But if there’s one thing Amanda Sellers‘ experience on the front lines makes clear, it’s that change is nothing new for SEO practitioners.

We've survived featured snippets, algorithm updates, and the great zero-click reckoning. The AI era is just the next evolution — and the marketers who lean into it, rather than away from it, will be the ones shaping the future of search.

Editor's note: This post was originally published in March 2024 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.

 



from Marketing https://blog.hubspot.com/marketing/how-ai-is-impacting-seo

Artificial intelligence (AI) is rewriting the playbook of so much of our lives — how we interact, how we learn, how we complete daily tasks, and sometimes even what we eat for dinner. So, of course, AI and the future of SEO are no different.HubSpot's AI Search Grader: See how visible your brand is in AI-powered search engines.

It’s been just over three years since ChatGPT took the internet by storm. While AI was technically nothing new in modern consumer (and marketer) lives, this level of AI had never been so accessible to the general public before, and they certainly haven’t taken it for granted. According to McKinsey, half of Google's results already have AI-powered results, and trends predict that number to hit 75% by 2028.

What does this mean for marketers? We’ll unpack how AI and SEO are converging, how AI has changed consumer behavior, and what it holds for the future of SEO.

Table of Contents

How AI is Impacting SEO

This topic is a complicated one. AI is transforming SEO practices. It hasn’t just changed how marketers optimize to get found in search engines; it’s changed consumer search behaviors and even the search engines themselves. It was all a chain reaction, really.

AI changed consumer search behavior, so search engines adopted AI-powered features, and now marketers are turning to new strategies to appeal to AI, while also using AI to expedite and enhance optimization.

Let’s start from the top with the catalyst:

AI has changed consumer search behavior.

Google isn’t the only tech giant consumers turn to for answers anymore. People are increasingly calling out to voice assistants like Alexa and Siri, and asking chatbots like ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini their questions.

GWI actually found that 31% of Gen Zers already prefer using AI platforms or chatbots to find information online, while research from Semrush predicts that LLM traffic will pass traditional Google search by the end of 2027.

ai and the future of seo, llm traffic predicted to dominate

On top of that, HubSpot research found that 79% of those already using AI for search believe it actually offers a better experience than traditional search engines. Clearly, consumer search behavior and preferences are shifting, and artificial intelligence plays a large role in this.

AI has changed search engines.

Seeing the popularity of AI platforms, Google began rolling out several generative AI-powered features, such as AI overviews and “AI Mode,” that offer more chatbot-like experiences than traditional search results pages.

ai and the future of seo, ai mode offers experience similar to chatbots

Google reports that over 27% of searches now end without a click as users get what they need directly from these features. And the traffic implications are significant.

Zero-click searches have climbed from 56% to nearly 69% of queries from May 2024 to May 2025, while search referral traffic to 1,000 tracked web domains fell from 12 billion visits in June 2024 to 11.2 billion in June 2025, according to SimilarWeb’s Annual Digital 100 Report.

With AI overviews taking up about 42% of desktop screens and 48% on mobile, organic listings are further down the page, so even once “high-ranking”, highly visited, high-quality content marketing is getting ignored.

Understandably, that makes anxiety a bit high for us marketers, so we’ve had to adapt.

Pro tip: Use HubSpot's free AI Search Grader to check how visible your brand is in AI-powered search engines and identify where you can improve.

AI has changed search engine optimization.

A Semrush analysis of 200,000+ keywords reported that nearly 95% of keywords triggering AI Overviews have no paid ads or minimal commercial value. In other words, it seems Google is deploying AI summaries mainly for informational searches, while keeping transactional content in the traditional SERP format.

Why does that matter? Well, it means the website traffic most at risk is top-of-funnel educational content that typically grabs a lot of clicks for businesses and builds brand awareness — and Google gets to protect its ad revenue. Clever if you’re Google, cruel if you’re a marketer.

But there are ways to fight back.

Marketers need to incorporate answer engine optimization (AEO) into their strategies to help their businesses appeal to AI features in search engines and generative engine optimization (GEO) to cater to generative AI — but those are not the only ways their SEO is pivoting.

Keyword Research and Topic Discovery for AI Search

Old school keyword research focused on matching exact phrases and measuring search volume and keyword difficulty. Keyword research for AI search encompasses intent mapping, topic clustering, and, most importantly, conversational query analysis.

You’ve likely heard it a lot lately — People engage with AI more like they do with other people than they do with search engines. Instead of typing “ice cream shop nyc” (A regular query for me and my sweet tooth), they’d likely say, “What’s the ice cream shop near me?”

Pew Research Center confirms, finding that longer, question-format queries are most likely to generate AI Overview responses.

ai and the future of seo, ai searches trend to be longer

Source

Because of this, marketers need to structure keyword strategies around “what,” “how,” “why,” and “best” queries.

Pro Tip: Build an inventory of the questions your audience typically asks during the buyer’s journey. Connect with sales and customer service to understand the questions they field regularly in each stage.

Mine AnswerThePublic and Google‘s “People Also Ask” (PAA) boxes for your core topics. These reveal what users want answered and what Google’s algorithm considers relevant.

In a very meta twist, many AI tools are also emerging to help marketers optimize for AI.

HubSpot's Breeze, Semrush‘s Copilot, and Ahrefs’ AI Content Helper, for example, have features to help analyze search intent at scale, identify content gaps, and generate topic clusters that map to the full buyer journey — including the conversational, long-tail queries that AI Overviews most frequently address.

HubSpot's Content Hub, in particular, is great for building topic clusters that map keywords to buyer intent and create content that earns citations across both traditional and AI search.

ai and the future of seo, topic clusters

Source

Content Optimization for Machine Learning

Quality is very much a factor in AI and SEO success. Google evaluates websites using its E-E-A-T quality framework (Experience, Expertise, Authoritativeness, and Trustworthiness), and Google is one of the many sources AI consults in crafting its answers.

AI tries to generate the most helpful, factual answers possible. Making sure your content references trusted sources and thought leaders, and even shares original research and data when possible, is a great way to appeal to this.

In fact, Digital Marketing Institute has found that content enriched with credible citations and statistics improves AI visibility by 30-40% compared to baseline approaches.

Thankfully, AI tools can help you with both content structure and quality. How’s so?

Ask ChatGPT for feedback on how to improve an article draft to better reach a specific audience. It can also help you brainstorm topics, identify knowledge gaps, write metadata, source data, create visual aids, and even proofread for you.

Heck, I used Claude for ideas on this article’s title.

ai and the future of seo, chatgpt can suggest blog article titles

For existing content, try asking your AI system of choice to identify where information has gone stale, suggest updated statistics, and recommend structural changes to improve E-E-A-T signals.

Rather than creating net-new content on every topic, AI tools like HubSpot’s Content Remix can even help you repurpose and optimize content for other media. Learn about more useful AI SEO tools here.

Of course, you always want to review and edit any work you generate with generative AI, but nearly 70% of companies report better returns after integrating it into their SEO and content workflows.

Read: Is AI-Generated Content Good for SEO?: 300+ Web Strategists Weigh In

Technical SEO Automation

Technical SEO is also a big factor in catering to LLMs. Machine learning systems, both Google's and the LLMs powering AI answers, favor content with specific structural characteristics.

More specifically, content with proper schema markup, clear headings, concise paragraphs that directly answer questions, and FAQ sections all improve a page’s “extractability” for AI. As a result, marketers should lean more heavily on structured data, header optimization, and overall page formatting.

Platforms like Screaming Frog, Semrush, and Ahrefs (the fave here on the HubSpot blog team) now also use machine learning to automatically crawl sites, identify issues (broken links, duplicate content, slow page speed, missing schema), and prioritize fixes by estimated impact.

What I can personally confirm: what once required hours of manual audit work can now be flagged, triaged, and assigned in minutes.

Pro Tip: Make sure AI crawlers can access your content. Some sites inadvertently block AI bots through robots.txt rules or JavaScript rendering issues. Generative engine optimization (GEO) guides from Search Engine Land emphasize that content must be technically accessible and machine-readable to have any chance of appearing in AI-generated answers.

How Marketers Can Adapt SEO to AI

In an interview with fellow HubSpotter Curt del Principe, Amanda Sellers, Manager of EN Blog Growth, shared her top takeaways for marketers looking to adapt to AI and the future of SEO:

1. Lean into original, comprehensive data.

“It’s not enough to produce evergreen, factual content anymore because ChatGPT can arguably do that,” Sellers explains. “You want to create content that is citation-worthy.”

A large part of this comes back to how comprehensive your content and answers are. AI reads detail as deeper knowledge and, in turn, credibility worth citing. So don’t just scratch the surface on a topic. Dig deep.

Sellers continues, “While LLMs craft their answers from many sources, you‘re much more likely to help shape the answer if you’re cited as a source. Original data and thought leadership help here.”

That means it’s even better if other websites cite you as their data source. Seeing your information cited and backlinked vouches for your authority even in the eyes of your competitors.

2. Prioritize structure and context.

“Design content with structure in mind,” advises Sellers.

As we’ve discussed, “AI retrieves content in chunks and doesn't ‘understand’ information the way a human would. Writing content in semantically rich sections and strengthening semantic association increases the likelihood of good retrieval and, in effect, visibility.”

What does semantic richness look like?

  • AI-powered search engines change how content is discovered and ranked
  • Marketers use AI tools for keyword research, content optimization, and technical SEO
  • HubSpot’s Breeze suite provides AI-powered tools for SEO and content optimization

It’s statements that are clear and direct; that define explicitly correlations and relationships.

Pro tip: HubSpot Content Hub can help you create structured templates at scale so your team can produce AEO-optimized content more quickly.

3. Expand your presence.

The more often people hear or see things, the more we commit them to memory. AI and LLMs work similarly; the more they see a source mentioned or active across authoritative contexts on the web, the more likely they are to trust them and cite them.

In other words, LLMs are more likely to treat your content as credible and worth citing if your brand is cited in reputable industry publications, discussed in high-quality forums, and referenced in academic or government sources, among other things.

This isn’t just about backlinks and footnotes, however. It’s about establishing proof that your brand is a legitimate subject-matter expert across many different online territories. Think other publications, forums, review sites, and social media platforms.

Here’s what you can do:

  • Publish thought leadership posts or articles on LinkedIn.
  • Create educational video content for YouTube.
  • Participate in relevant Reddit communities and Quora discussions.
  • Guest blog on reputable publications or being quoted/mentioned by them.
  • Create original research and data visualizations that attracts citations.
  • Be interviewed or featured by other trusted sources.

ai and the future of seo, hubspot engages on reddit to help establish expertise

Multi-channel diversification is also built into the Loop Marketing playbook in the Amplify stage. Learn more about it here.

Pro tip: Content Remix can help you with this repurposing in one click.

4. Establish your credibility.

Expanding your presence across the web also helps establish you as a credible expert in your field, but our efforts shouldn’t end there. Showcase your awards, accolades, and social proof on your website.

That means:

  • Industry awards
  • Relevant company history and experience
  • Relevant degrees, certificates, and licenses
  • Customer testimonials
  • Ratings & reviews
  • Case studies

All of these add to your lore as valuable resource to your target audience, search engines, and AI systems.

5. Don’t forget about SEO.

“Feed two birds with one scone,” advises Sellers. “LLMs rely on Google's index for now, so good AEO is dependent on good SEO. Invest in strategies that will help content rank on search and also increase AI visibility.

For example, think about positioning and the unique things your publication can offer that can’t be found elsewhere. That could mean the input of an expert in your field, industry data your company already collects, or even just a fun tone readers come back for.

While AI systems don’t emphasize differentiation, SEO does. So, creating content that also offers unique value from other sources will help you in both arenas.

Frequently Asked Questions About AI and SEO

What is SEO for AI?

SEO for AI — sometimes called Generative Engine Optimization (GEO) or Answer Engine Optimization (AEO) — is the practice of optimizing content to appear in AI-generated answers from platforms like Google AI Overviews, ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Gemini.

While traditional SEO focuses on ranking in search results, AI SEO focuses on appearing in or being cited as a trusted source in AI-generated summaries. But the two are closely related. Both look for accurate, up-to-date, and comprehensive content, an easy-to-follow structure, and technical accessibility, but vary in how.

AI SEO, for instance, favors structured data implementation, a modular content architecture designed for easy extraction, and a presence on authoritative third-party sources when citing pages.

Is SEO still worth it with AI? Is SEO still relevant with AI?

100%. Traditional SEO remains relevant alongside AI-driven strategies. According to Ahrefs, Google still sends 345x more traffic than ChatGPT, Gemini, and Perplexity combined as of September 2025. But the space is evolving.

Organic traffic is likely to become harder to come by as AI preferences expand, but brand visibility, authority, and citations in AI answers will likely prove important throughout the buyer’s journey.

Furthermore, SEO is essentially the foundation on which AI search visibility is built. AI systems like Google's Gemini, ChatGPT, and Perplexity pull primarily from content that has already established authority and trust through traditional SEO signals. More than 99% of AI Overview sources come from pages already ranking in the top 10 organic results.

SEO now needs to optimize for both traditional search results and AI-generated answers simultaneously — not one of the other.

Sites that have strong technical SEO and high-quality authoritative content are best positioned to earn AI citations. Sites that have neglected these fundamentals are doubly disadvantaged as they rank poorly in traditional search and rarely appear in AI answers.

Can SEO be done with AI?

Like most things in digital marketing, yes, AI can help optimize for search engines.

AI tools can assist with:

  • keyword research and topic clustering
  • content brief generation
  • on-page optimization recommendations
  • technical audit automation
  • meta description and title tag drafting
  • content performance analysis.

While AI is a powerful tool for SEO, it should enhance human expertise, not replace it. The winning formula is AI for scale and efficiency, humans for expertise and differentiation.

HubSpot's Breeze tools are designed around this idea, giving marketing teams AI capabilities that amplify their expertise rather than substitute for it.

What is the relationship between AI and SEO?

Today, AI and SEO are linked in several ways.

First, AI is shifting consumer search behavior. Second, AI is reshaping how search engines work: Google, Bing, and emerging platforms use machine learning throughout their ranking algorithms, and generative AI now powers the summaries and overviews users see before organic results. Third, AI has become a core tool within SEO practice — from automated audits to content optimization and competitive analysis.

TLDR: AI is both the environment SEO practitioners work in, and one of the most powerful tools they use to do their work.

Are recent SEO shifts due to AI?

“I believe that the 'Helpful Content' algorithm update (and the broader emphasis on EEAT) is in direct response to AI content creation,” says Sellers. If you’re unfamiliar, she’s talking about a massive update Google made in late 2022 to the algorithm that chooses its search rankings.

That kicked off a long series of additional updates 2023-2025 that aimed to promote content that met Google’s guidelines for quality: Experience, Expertise, Authority, and Trustworthiness (or EEAT) and roll out AI overviews, AI mode, and more.

The goal of EEAT is simple: To make sure that the most valuable content for humans shows up in the search results, instead of content made to please search engines.

“In theory, generative AI becoming accessible for content creators and website owners means an opening of the floodgates for more content proliferation.” But more content doesn’t necessarily mean better content, especially for consumers.

“Generative AI is very good at providing evergreen, objective information (and regurgitating stances that already exist),” Sellers emphasizes. “It’s less good at providing opinions, unique stances, emotional reflection, or first-party research.”

ai and the future of seo, expert quote on including unique value in content

And those are the qualities that are winning in the traditional search rankings right now. Qualities that tend to only come from real-life human experience.

So we’re seeing changes in response to AI, but what about changes driven by AI?

Is AI-powered search changing SEO?

Coming from the front line, most marketers would say very likely, yes.

Though it still dominates globally, holding roughly 89% of the search engine market, Google's search market share dipped below 90% for the first time since 2015 in early 2025. This drop is suspected to be thanks to AI search, as AI traffic began to appear in analytics.

However, it’s worth noting many searches that can be satisfied by ChatGPT would likely have been zero-click searches anyway, meaning the user would have gotten their answer straight from the search results page without ever clicking through to your site.

Plus, Google launched its own Search Generative Experiment (SGE) features in response to the rise in ChatGPT, so even the remaining 89% doesn’t result in the same click or website visit traditional search did.

Has AI changed search behavior?

“Changes in search behavior are difficult to quantify,” Sellers cautions. “Especially since these kinds of macro behavioral changes are slow and widespread.”

“I am starting to see demand loss on some queries where I suspect ChatGPT could probably be more helpful than a blog post,” she says. “But with all the volatility, it's hard to say if AI adoption is the main cause of the loss.”

So, while behavioral shifts are definitely happening, they are currently slow.

What is happening is a significant rise in zero-click searches, and that‘s largely being driven by Google’s own AI Overviews rather than users leaving for ChatGPT. Organic click-through rates dropped to 40.3%, while for news-related queries specifically, zero-click outcomes rose from 56% to 69% year-over-year as AI Overviews rolled out more broadly.

While that's bad news for raw traffic numbers, optimizing for AI search results can still go a long way in boosting your brand's visibility and awareness — especially since early data suggests AI-referred visitors convert at significantly higher rates than traditional organic traffic.

Which makes a lovely segue to the question of how SEO fits into a larger marketing strategy — a question that existed long before AI jumped in to complicate things.

Does AI shift the balance of organic vs. non-organic marketing strategies?

“It’s never good practice to put all your eggs in one basket, however powerful that basket is,” Sellers says. “This is an opinion I held before widespread AI adoption, and it’s an opinion I’ll continue to hold.”

ai and the future of seo, expert quote on diversifying

(For SEOs, this is an opinion often learned after getting burned by an algorithm update.)

“Google is [still] a powerful channel for blogs because organic search (the behavior) is ongoing and repeatable — which makes it very easy to scale and get performance.”

That’s in contrast to channels like email, paid ads, or social media, which require constant attention (or constant budget). But is AI changing the impact of those levers?

“I think that the effectiveness of Google as a channel is decreasing,” admits Sellers. “But the funny thing is… It’s been continually decreasing for my entire career as a content SEO. The introduction of featured snippets, increasing the real estate for Google Ads, the introduction of images and video on the [results page], the rise of zero-click searches … have all reduced the effectiveness of the channel.”

ai and the future of seo, old serp page design

Source

And yet, Google still leads the way.

“We adapt and make new strategies in the wake of those things and still see an incredible volume of demand from search as a result,” Sellers says. “The same will happen through the AI boom.”

SE-Oh, the places AI will go

AI is rewriting the rules of SEO, sure, but it hasn‘t thrown out the playbook entirely. What made great content great before AI still hold: accuracy, clarity, and genuine value for the reader. What’s changed is the game board. We’re not longer trying to conquer just a search engine results page, you're navigating AI systems that synthesize, summarize, and cite.

So yes, AI has changed we decide our dinner menu and how we find the best ice cream shop in NYC — and it‘s absolutely changing SEO. But if there’s one thing Amanda Sellers‘ experience on the front lines makes clear, it’s that change is nothing new for SEO practitioners.

We've survived featured snippets, algorithm updates, and the great zero-click reckoning. The AI era is just the next evolution — and the marketers who lean into it, rather than away from it, will be the ones shaping the future of search.

Editor's note: This post was originally published in March 2024 and has been updated for comprehensiveness.

 

via Perfecte news Non connection